The Star Malaysia

Chopping down timber cartels

MACC raids logging firms believed involved in shady deals

- For reports by MUGUNTAN VANAR

Graft busters have uncovered an unholy alliance - logging firms cutting s hady deals with government officials. In the hunt for concrete evidence, MACC raid ed three timber giants hoping to un earth documents that could point to t e previous state administra­tion’s t ies with cartels which have been plundering Sabah’s rich forests f or years.

KOTA KINABALU: Graft-busters have begun moving against Sabah’s powerful timber cartels, conducting simultaneo­us raids on three logging companies in Sandakan and Tawau. The Sabah Forestry Department headquarte­rs was also raided.

Sources said a team of Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission (MACC) investigat­ors went to the department in Sandakan yesterday morning, spending several hours searching for important documents.

“They were looking for certain licensing documents,” said a Forestry Department source.

The investigat­ing team was looking for logging deals signed by the previous Barisan Nasional state government, headed by former chief minister Tan Sri Musa Aman.

Sabah Conservato­r of Forests Datuk Sam Mannan was attending a conference in Kuching when the raids were conducted.

The department head gave no indication if he was aware of any MACC probe at his department.

It is learnt that during the raids by three separate MACC teams at the logging company offices – two in Sandakan and one in Tawau – documents pertaining to logging were seized.

It is understood that the companies raided belonged to the “big three” Sabah loggers who had allegedly obtained major logging concession­s across the state.

Neither MACC deputy commission­er for operations Datuk Azam Baki or Sabah MACC chief Sazali Salbi could be reached for comment over the raids.

The raids came in the wake of Chief Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Shafie Apdal ordering a log export ban that was, among others, aimed at breaking up a timber cartel that had been monopolise­d by one party for more than a decade.

Shafie had said that the timber “extraction, buyer and seller” were all one group that had monopolise­d the trade that brought little direct spin-offs to the people and the economy.

A crackdown on illegal logging last month revealed that government-linked and publiclist­ed companies were among more than 10 concession­aires investigat­ed for breaching forestry laws in Sabah.

Over 40,000 logs, worth millions of ringgit in taxes alone, were seized from commercial forests and forest reserves in Tongod, Sandakan, Ranau and Kalabakan between July 5 and 14.

The new state government has restored the special committee under the Chief Minister’s Department to oversee all logging-related activities and to also enforce and execute laws under the Forestry Enactment 1968.

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