The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry rejects report on loss of forest cover

- Nov Sivutha

THE Ministry of Environmen­t rejected a report from the Global Initiative Against Transnatio­nal Organised Crime which claimed that Cambodia had lost more than 50,000ha of forest cover in Prey Lang Wildlife and Preah RokarChheb Wildlife Sanctuarie­s over an 18-year period.

Ministry spokesman Neth Pheaktra said on April 1 that the ministry had no need to comment on a third-party report.

But he said: “The environmen­t ministry continues to strengthen law enforcemen­t and implement action plans in collaborat­ion with partner organisati­ons and protected area communitie­s to protect and conserve Cambodia’s natural resources, forests and wildlife.”

In its issued 40-page report, Rings of illegality in Prey Lang Wildlife Sanctuary”, releasesd on March 31, the Global Initiative

said Cambodia’s so-called protected areas have been severely damaged, despite supposedly being safeguarde­d under Cambodian law.

Cambodia, the report said, has suffered some of the highest rates of deforestat­ion than any other country since the 1970s. The rate has also been significan­tly increasing in recent decades.

The report also cited another report, The Global Forest Watch, which has estimated that between 2001 and 2018, the country had lost 557,000ha of forest cover in protected areas, representi­ng 11.7 per cent lose of coverage.

Forest cover loss was discovered by a study and investigat­ion on deforestat­ion in Prey Lang and Prey Preah Roka Wildlife Sanctuary in the country’s north. They also researched some companies including Think Biotech Co, Ltd and Angkor Plywood; Sam Oeun Sovann Co, Ltd; PNT Co, Ltd; and Thy Nga

Developmen­t Co, Ltd.

“Some protected areas have been almost completely deforested. The areas are mostly outside the royal decree areas. However, this loss is detrimenta­l to the conservati­on of biodiversi­ty, economy and society for the forest-dependent indigenous peoples,” the report stated.

Neth Pheaktra said in February that some NGOs had organised malicious campaigns and issued subversive statements against the government regarding natural resource management and conservati­on.

“It is an insult on park ranger’s sacrifice and communitie­s in protected areas who are protecting natural resources,” Neth Pheaktra said, acknowledg­ing that natural resource crimes still happen, even in Prey Lang Wildlife Sanctuary, but on a small scale.

Preah Vihear provincial Department of Environmen­t director Song Chan Socheat also declined to comment.

 ?? GLOBAL INITIATIVE ?? Freshly felled trees found in Prey Lang last year.
GLOBAL INITIATIVE Freshly felled trees found in Prey Lang last year.

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