Gulf News

LEBANESE VILLAGERS DEFY ILLEGAL LOGGERS

GANGS BLAMED FOR FELLING CENTURIES-OLD TREES

- AINATA, LEBANON

Braving the bitter cold, Lebanese villagers have been patrolling a mountainsi­de in the country’s north, trying to protect trees from loggers who roll in under the cover of darkness.

Near his village of Ainata, “nearly 150 centuries-old oak trees have been felled” in the past year, said Ghandi Rahme, pointing at the tree stumps in the rocky ground around him.

The municipal police officer, 44, is among around a dozen locals who make the rounds on a volunteer basis, seeking to deter loggers who arrive in off-road vehicles and take to the trees with chainsaws.

Lebanon, whose flag bears a cedar tree, is known for its greenery, with forests covering 13 per cent of the Middle Eastern country’s territory, according to official data.

But since late 2019, an economic meltdown has plunged much of the population into poverty, and the local currency has lost more than 95 per cent of its value.

The crisis has left many people without incomes or winter heating, while public services — including forest rangers — are severely underfunde­d.

‘Environmen­tal massacres’

Residents and officials whom AFP spoke to in Ainata and other mountain villages blamed “organised” gangs for felling centuries-old oak and juniper trees. Rahme said residents of “surroundin­g areas” were responsibl­e, adding that he had scared off a group in September.

The Ainata volunteers said they have financial support — mainly from worried expatriate villagers who send money from abroad — to pay for fuel and vehicle maintenanc­e.

Rahme’s cousin Samir, who is also a volunteer, called the tree fellings “terrible” but said the patrols were effective. “We haven’t seen a single case of illegal felling” since they began, said the farmer, 58.

In nearby Barqa, mayor Ghassan Geagea told AFP loggers acting with impunity had cut down scores of trees, including junipers believed to be thousands of years old.

“The state now allocates us a measly budget,” leaving the municipali­ty with few means to tackle the problem, Geagea said.

But he expressed doubt that the existing volunteer patrol would be able to prevent felling in his district’s harder-toreach areas.

Paul Abi Rached, who heads activist group Terre Liban, has decried rising numbers of “environmen­tal massacres” in Lebanon and sounded the alarm over the felling of juniper trees in particular.

Lebanon has the largest juniper woods in the Middle East, according to the environmen­t ministry, and is also home to pine, oak, cedar and fir forests.

Junipers are among “the few trees that can grow at high altitudes”, and they play an important role in replenishi­ng groundwate­r reserves, Abi Rached said.

“If we don’t stop juniper felling, we will be headed for water shortages and drought,” he warned.

In Bsharre, west of Ainata, doctor and activist Youssef Tawk said “it takes 500 years for juniper to grow into a tree” in the wild.

“Cutting down this tree is a crime. For me it’s like killing a man,” said the 68-year-old, who has long fought to protect Lebanon’s environmen­tal heritage.

Near Ainata, activist Dany Geagea — not related to the Barqa mayor — has taken matters into his own hands by helping set up a juniper reserve.

He said around 30,000 trees had been planted in the past two decades but that since September, logging had become a regular occurrence.

Those responsibl­e were rarely arrested and “quickly released, without being investigat­ed”, he lamented.

“Illegal logging is not a new problem, but now it’s become an organised” trade, Geagea said.

“This is Lebanon... even justice is politicise­d.”

If we don’t stop juniper felling, we will be headed for water shortages and drought.”

Paul Abi Rached | Leader of activist group Terre Liban

The crisis has left many people without incomes or winter heating, while public services are severely underfunde­d.

 ?? AFP ?? ■ A municipali­ty policeman stands by a felled juniper tree.
AFP ■ A municipali­ty policeman stands by a felled juniper tree.
 ?? ?? ■ Below: The trunk of a felled oak tree.
■ Below: The trunk of a felled oak tree.

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