Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Illegal Logging Stripping Lao Forests (No Preview) -- Just read it


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 288
Date:
Illegal Logging Stripping Lao Forests (No Preview) -- Just read it
Permalink   


All you Lao back in LAOS PEOPLE SOCIALIST REPUBLIC
need to write to your officials and DEMAND them to stop the corruption
by high ranking officials.

Because when the forest is gone.......what is there to see? rock and dirt?


====================================
http://www.rfa.org/english/lao/2007/11/21/lao_logging/

Illegal Logging Stripping Lao Forests

2007.11.21

Logging200.jpg

Workers unload wood at Bangkok's Chao Phraya river. Thailand imports timber from Laos, Cambodia, and Burma after a logging ban was imposed in 1989. Photo: AFP/Emmanuel Dunand

BANGKOK—Timber traders in Laos are still logging through “unofficial” channels despite new government curbs, a well-placed source in Laos has told RFA’s Lao service.

The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the felling and exporting of black-market timber remained widespread. The source blamed systemic corruption among high-ranking officials of the ruling Communist Party.

“At the time that the black-market timber passes through a district, the relevant officials in that district must let it pass right through—if they don’t they will undoubtedly be punished,” the source said

In Laos, black-market timber is known as “timber with a patron,” in reference to a high-ranking official who can afford to ignore laws and regulations on its export.

Recently in Attapeu province as some mai mee kaen was on its way to Vietnam, an Attapeu forestry official asked to review the authorization papers, which displeased the owner of the timber...

Lao source

“For example, recently in Attapeu province as some mai mee kaen was on its way to Vietnam, an Attapeu forestry official asked to review the authorization papers, which displeased the owner of the timber,” the source said.

Drastic decline in forest cover

“Subsequently, there was an urgent official command for that official to move permanently to the education department within 24 hours. This incident created great fear in the rank-and-file of the relevant departments.”

Much of the illegally felled timber finds its way to neighboring China and Vietnam.

Lao forests have declined in density from around 70 percent of the land area in the 1950s to 47 percent in 1992. That percentage is now believed to have fallen below 40 percent.

Lao people have traditionally relied on their forests as non-commercial resources, providing timber for house-building, herbs for traditional medicines, and wild foods.

Veunvang Bouttalath, head of the Lao Forestry Department, has acknowledged publicly that illicit logging remains a major problem.

According to a recent World Bank report, deforestation remains a critical problem in Laos.

Some forests have been replanted several times as a result of fire damage and management failure, "and most performed poorly in strict economic terms."

Official cites new curbs

Forest cover “ranges from about 65-70 percent in the southernmost provinces to only 25 percent in some northern provinces. The largest and least disturbed blocks of forest are in the central and southern part of the country,” the report said. “Surveys suggest that this is being further reduced by an annual 53,000 hectares per year.”

Tamla Amkhathongkham, vice-governor of northeastern Houaphan province, said in a recent interview that Lao officials are working hard at preserving forest cover in Laos.

“Here in Houaphan province, we have...the long-leng tree [Podocarpus imbricatus]. The long-leng tree grows in the swamp bottoms. Now we protect them,” he said.

The government “strictly forbids” the felling of live long-leng trees,” he said.

Original reporting by RFA’s Lao service. Director: Viengsay Luangkhot. Executive producer: Susan Lavery. Written and produced for the Web in English by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.



__________________
"Because I criticized Laos government and it policies, it does not mean I want Laos to remain poor nor do I think Lao people are lazy or uneducated."
Anonymous

Date:
Permalink   

mai mee kaen!! Junior officials don't pao Khene (wind instrument), they pao kaen (blow their patrons) mmppphahahahaha

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 596
Date:
Permalink   

a legal action should be taken and a heavy handed punishment is needed for these damned people who stealing the property of the whole lao people, arrest and death sentence should be applied for those gansters like law against drug ! ! ! !
I am sick of the inerty of the government or perhaps the government members them selves are those gansters that no any law could affect them ? who know ? tinh xang yiep park nok ! cannot speak nor cry ! poor laos, my beloved country !

__________________
Anonymous

Date:
Permalink   

If I were you, I would think first as to RFA's information. Don't believe what people wrote directly. They can write everything bias as nobody can prove.
 
Look at the source of this article. The RFA is the anti-lao government voice which is a tool of old regime.
 
As far as I know, our Prime Minister also concerned about this issue not so long ago, in June of this year. Since then the problem should have found the way how to address the problem. Everywhere, bad people are avalable. But the more important thing is we try to improve.

 


__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard