Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Living on a dwindling trade

 A man loads wood into a charcoal kiln in Battambang province
In Samrong Leu village, a picturesque community nestled deep in the verdant fields of Kors Kralor district, the acrid smell of smoke fills the air.Outside almost every house in this community, billows of smoke continuously emerge from the domes of homemade mud kilns, drifting around the families lounging outside and their children at play.Piles of freshly logged timber are everywhere. When the 10-day to two-week burning and cooling cycle of each kiln is completed, the next batch of logs goes in.Rain or shine in Samrong Leu, producing charcoal is how most people make their livelihoods.
But while demand for charcoal is only increasing as Cambodia’s population grows, forests and trees are disappearing, pushing producers deeper into protected areas to find the wood they need.
“This is my main income, my career, and I support my entire family with it,” says 21-year-old Ra Rey, barefoot as he cakes mud with his hands and slaps it onto his kiln, which sits about 30 metres from his home.

“Before, we used to just cut trees around here, but now that they are gone, we are cutting farther and farther [away].”With prices rising due to low supply, Rey earns about $150 for the more than 3 tonnes of charcoal he produces every month.Like almost everyone in this village of 150 families, Rey is a poor migrant from a different province – in his case, Prey Veng – who was granted land in the area by local authorities.A few years ago, three people were killed by an anti-tank mine in a rice field. After that, villagers say they became more wary of harvesting rice. Given the abundance of trees in the area, many switched to charcoal production.

About six years after he started making charcoal, Rey’s three hectares of land are barren and there are no trees left. He has started logging in a state forest at the base of a nearby mountain instead.
Rey pays off soldiers to be able to use his chainsaw there. Charcoal production without a permit is illegal countrywide, but local authorities here generally turn a blind eye.“They are poor and they have no choice. Making charcoal is illegal, but the authorities have to save the forest or save the lives of the people,” village chief Un Veth says.Wearing a soot-stained shirt, Rey sits atop a pile of logs amounting to almost 60 felled trees. In three weeks, it will all be charcoal.
“I know that this job destroys the forest, but I have nothing else.”

From kiln to cookstove
Despite the increasing availability of other energy sources, such as gas, Cambodians have a cultural attachment to charcoal and wood use in cooking that is hard to shake.In Phnom Penh, 30 per cent of residents still use charcoal, while in rural areas, 48 per cent still use wood and 36 per cent use charcoal, according to GERES, a French NGO that has built 11 sustainable community charcoal production centres in Cambodia.GERES estimates that the Kingdom burns through 500,000 tonnes of charcoal a year, requiring 3.5 million tonnes of wood, but is still studying the problem to come up with a more reliable figure.

Technically, a permit is required from the Forestry Administration for anyone who wants to produce charcoal for commercial use. But the reality is that the entire trade – from the initial producer to the various middlemen and finally the end user – is completely informal and illegal, and often involves bribes being paid along the line.In some places, like Kors Kralor, charcoal is produced in the open on farmland. Trucks piled high with sacks full of the fuel source rumble up and down the road that leads out of this district, heading towards Battambang city and beyond.

But elsewhere, like Phnom Oral Wildlife Sanctuary and Botum Sakor National Park, clandestine operations burn wood in kilns under cover of night, environmentalists say.
According to Wildlife Alliance, areas under its jurisdiction in the Cardamom Mountains in Koh Kong province used to be a hotbed of commercial charcoal production until the conservation NGO increased patrols about a decade ago.In 2011, the organisation destroyed 778 charcoal kilns at just one patrol station at Phnom Oral, in the Eastern Cardamoms, where most of Phnom Penh’s charcoal reportedly originates.“We put the station there because all the charcoal was coming from Oral and through Kirirom National Park and onto National Road 4 to Phnom Penh,” a Wildlife Alliance official says, speaking on condition of anonymity.“We are not arresting them, we are just destroying the kilns.… [Locals] understand [now] it’s not a [viable] business. But people from other provinces still come and try to do it.”In 2013, the group destroyed 416 illegal charcoal kilns across the Cardamoms.
Bags of recently produced charcoal wait for transportation next to kilns in Battambang province’s Kors Kralor district

A complex trade
Romain Joya, biomass energy product manager at GERES, says the charcoal sector’s informality and diversity mean it is very hard to quantify its effects and scale.He says that charcoal producers mostly arrive late in the illegal logging chain, clearing trees that loggers who only want luxury wood and timber have left behind.“It’s very complex. There are many, many different interactions between producers, the [buyers] and economic land concessions [ELCs].”GERES says it believes charcoal makers mainly cause forest degradation rather than deforestation, with concessionaires and big illegal loggers responsible for the latter.Chhim Savuth, director of the Natural Resource Protection Group, agrees.

“There is not a lot of illegal logging related to charcoal production because most of them just go and collect from forests cleared by ELC companies, and they do not go to cut trees from protected areas,” he says.But according to the Wildlife Alliance official, charcoal is “definitely having an impact” on deforestation.“In Oral, you can see a huge amount of hectares – hundreds of hectares – gone because of charcoal.… They are eating the mountain slowly.”According to the Maddox Jolie-Pitt Foundation, which is implementing a project to reduce forest clearing for charcoal and the health impacts of its use, Cambodia’s forests are “shrinking at an alarming rate, partly as a result of solid fuel use”.
Only 8.9 per cent of villagers surveyed in Samlaut district, where MJP works, plan on replanting trees used for energy sources, while 43 per cent plan to log in protected forests when they run out of trees.
Forestry Administration head Chheng Kimsun acknowledges that the illegal industry is contributing to deforestation.

“Every activity which involves the destruction of forest products is contributing,” he says.
“If they were to cut from the state forest, it’s illegal, but if they cut around their farm or something like that, it’s OK.”Kimsun admits illegal logging for charcoal in protected forests was difficult to stop.“If they have no permit, we have to stop them, but we have inadequate staff. It’s very difficult to stop thousands.”

Prices skyrocket
Reflecting the dwindling amount of forest, prices for charcoal have skyrocketed in recent years.
Ny Math, 31, a middleman who sells about 400kg to stallholders in Phnom Penh every day, says prices have more than doubled since he started.“Ten years ago, the price was only 500 riel per kilogram, but now it has increased to 1,300 riel per kilogram, because the producers have difficulty finding the wood to make it with. The forests are less and less.”A Kors Kralor district broker says that she used to pay 3,000 riel for a 50-60kg sack of charcoal, but now pays 17,000 riel.
“I know making charcoal leads to forest loss. I’m so sorry about that, but I have no choice.”

Border chaos claims 2 more

 Cambodian migrant workers crowd into a truck at the border town of Poipet in Banteay Meanchey
A second deadly car accident in as many days has claimed the lives of more Cambodian migrant workers fleeing Thailand in the wake of last month’s military takeover.
At least two undocumented Cambodian workers were killed while driving through Thailand’s Chonburi province to get to the border on Sunday morning, with 18 others sustaining injuries, according to Koy Kuong, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Kuong said the cause of the accident is still unknown, but that the injured workers were taken to hospitals in Thailand.
“Now, we are arranging to send the bodies back home,” he said.

Sunday’s crash occurred less than 12 hours after a blown-out tyre caused a truck in Thailand’s Chachoengsao province to overturn, killing the driver and six undocumented Cambodian labourers, and leaving 13 others seriously injured.Officials said the broker-hired truck had been on its way to the Poipet international checkpoint in Banteay Meanchey province, where streams of returning workers have overwhelmed the border town.

Fuelled by rapidly circulating stories about military raids, detentions and shootings, more than 148,000 workers, mostly undocumented, have fled Thailand in a fear-ridden mass exodus this month.
The number of workers deposited by the truckload has escalated every day until an unprecedented peak on Saturday, when the influx of returning Cambodians reached nearly 44,000. The numbers began to dip Sunday, with just shy of 300 trucks and buses from Thailand bringing nearly 27,000 men, women and children back to Cambodia. Yesterday, even fewer workers made their way across, with the provincial governor’s count at 7,000 as of 4pm.

“We’re not sure why the numbers are lower, but we need to keep preparing food, water and transportation to be ready for them,” said Kor Sumsaroeun, Banteay Meanchey provincial governor.
Sumsaroeun and aid workers yesterday added that the swell of returning workers could spike again.
Thailand’s junta has staunchly maintained over the past week that it has no policy to crack down on workers and denied allegations of abuse.

Repatriated Cambodians, however, told the Post of being rounded up by soldiers and forced to pay bribes upwards of $66 to get out of detention and safely reach the border.
Thai government spokesman Colonel Winthai Suvari yesterday said that officials will be dispatched to areas where migrant workers are concentrated in efforts to learn of underlying problems arising from decades of mismanaged labour policy.Meanwhile, Thai police rounded up 38 Cambodian workers fleeing perceived instability in Thailand via the train station in Thailand’s Hua Hin province.
The workers were detained for prosecution at the provincial police station.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Kuong said officials in Takeo province “are investigating the case”, and concluded that the unprecedented large-scale returns did not reflect any change of policy by the Thai military government.Labour Minister Ith Sam Heng yesterday echoed the sentiment, and urged Cambodians to view the ongoing border crisis as a lessoned learned.“The matter of the returned workers will not change the cooperation between Cambodia and Thailand; the fact is that they are sending back illegal workers,” he said. “I would like to appeal to workers planning to go to other countries: please go legally. If you do not, you will be subject to being sent back home.”

Independent-of-China measures ready, says Deputy PM Phuc


china, independent, economics


Speaking at a Questions & Answers session on June 12, Phuc said the Government has urged ministries, agencies and provincial authorities to anticipate economic scenarios to respond to China’s aggression in both short and long terms.Such agencies have been told to closely monitor the situation and take appropriate measures in areas related to China such as import-export, investment, tourism, and projects with the involvement of Chinese contractors, he said.

“Under the current circumstance, we must further bolster restructuring, enhance competitiveness, and step up international economic integration associated with the diversification of markets and investment sources to avoid relying heavily on a single market,” the deputy prime minister said.
Phuc said China’s illegal placement of Haiyang Shiyou oil rig in Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone and continental shelf has affected the economy but not substantially.“The deployment in early May of the oil rig has caused slight falls in exports, foreign investment, tourism, and aviation. The markets of gold, foreign exchange and equity also fluctuated in the first few days, mainly due to psychological factors,” he said.

In the coming time, the negative impacts will continue in different areas “depending on the relationship between Vietnam and China as well as our foreign policy,” he said.
Vietnam’s economic relations with China are equal and mutually beneficial, so the nation aims to boost economic ties with China, both bilaterally and multilaterally.In answering a question by NA Deputy Tran Du Lich over what breakthrough measures would be taken for Vietnam to become independent of China, Phuc said Vietnam would continue to improve the investment environment, change the growth model, expand markets, including markets for input materials and outlets.
A report by the Ministry of Planning and Investment given at the ongoing NA sitting outlined the economic cooperation between Vietnam and China.

Apart from strong two-way trade of around US$50 billion a year in disfavor of Vietnam, China has offered little official development assistance for Vietnam over the years.
In 2001, China offered US$44.2 million ODA, which rose to US$66 million in 2003, some US$71 million a year later, and US$200 million in 2005. In total, China has pledged US$381 million for Vietnam.Regarding foreign direct investment, China has also pledged US$7.8 billion in 1,029 projects.China has won the biggest number of engineering-procurement-construction (EPC) contracts in Vietnam. Chinese contractors have won 15 of 20 EPC contracts in the electricity sector, and other bauxite mining and coal exploitation projects in Vietnam.

East Sea file: Physical features - Part 2

VOV online introduces a series of stories featuring the East Sea’s development potential, Vietnam’s establishment of its sovereignty over the Hoang Sa (Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelagos, and current territorial disputes in the area.
Vietnam’s waters and continental shelves in the East SeaVietnam’s sea areas, continental shelf and islands in the East Sea cover many different areas, but most typical with noteworthy characteristics are the Gulf of Tonkin, the Gulf of Thailand, the two archipelagoes of Hoang Sa and Truong Sa and a number of other isles and islands.
East Sea, Hoang Sa, Truong Sa, Gulf of Tonkin

Bac Bo Gulf (i.e. the Gulf of Tonkin)
The Gulf of Tonkin is located in the Northwest of The East Sea, it is surrounded by the coast and islands of North Vietnam in the west, by mainland China in the north, and by Leizhou Peninsula and Hainan Island in the East.
It extends from latitude 105°36’ east to longitude 109°55’ east, and from latitude 21°55’ north to latitude 17°10’ north. The area is about 126,250 km2, the width at the widest place is about 310 km and 220 km at the narrowest.
 The Gulf is quite shallow, with the average depth of between 40-50m, and about 100m at the deepest. The seabed is relatively flat with a small gradient. The continental shelf of the natural seaward prolongation of Vietnam continent is quite large, the slope is moderate and there is a deep trough of over 70m near Hainan Island of China.
Its coastline is winding and there are many islands near the coast. In the Gulf, close to the Vietnam side, there are about 3,000 islands, large and small, Bach Long Vi island area is 2.5km2, 100km away from inland Vietnam, 130km away from Hainan Island of China. There are many marine resources (the Vietnamese fish stock here reaches about 440,000 tonnes) and oil and gas reserves.
 The Gulf of Tonkin has two gateways to the outside: the South gateway to the East Sea centre where the narrowest place is about 240 km, the East gateway through Quynh Chau strait, (located between Leizhou Peninsula and Hainan Island) to the North of the East Sea where the narrowest place is about 18 km.
The Gulf of Thailand
 The Gulf of Thailand is located in the southwest of the East Sea, and is bound by the coast of Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, and Malaysia. It covers an area of about 293,000 km2, the perimeter is about 2,300 km, and the length of the bay is about 628 km. This is a shallow bay, the deepest place in which is only about 80m. Phu Quoc Island is the largest of Vietnam here with an area of 567 km2.
 The Gulf of Thailand has a lot of marine resources (the fish stock of Vietnam here is approximately 510,000 tonnes) and there is large oil and gas potential of which several relevant countries are conducting exploration and exploitation.
The Islands and Archipelagos
 The coastal areas of Vietnam has about 2,773 islands, large and small, mainly located in Gulf of Tonkin, the remaining islands located in:
        + The North Central region
       + The East Sea Central area has two archipelagos: Hoang Sa and Truong Sa.
       + The Central, South Central sea areas.
       + The Southwest sea area.
 Based on strategic location and geography, economies, and population conditions, the islands and archipelagos can be grouped as follows:
The outpost island system plays an important role in national national construction and defense. Thanks to the islands, it is possible to establish the waters and airspace of the country, check the operations of ships, ensure national security, economic development, sovereignty and the territorial integrity of the country. Those are the inlands and archipelagos of Hoang Sa, Truong Sa, Chang Tay, Tho Chu, Phu Quoc, Con Dao, Phu Quy, Ly Son, Con Co, Co To, Bach Long Vi, etc.
The large islands have natural conditions favourable for socio-economic development, such as Co To, Cat Ba, Cu Lao Cham, Ly Son, Phu Quy, Con Dao, and Phu Quoc.
The islands near the sea shores and mainland offer resources for the development of fisheries and tourism, and also provide protection for order and security on our country’s sea area and seashores. They are the islands of Cat Ba island district, Bach Long Vi island district (Haiphong), Phu Quy island district (Binh Thuan), Con Dao island district (Ba Ria-Vung Tau), Ly Son island district (Quang Ngai), Phu Quoc island district (Kien Giang), etc.
Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagos
Hoang Sa Archipelago is a coral archipelago, distributed from about meridian 111° to 113° East to latitude 15°45’ North to 17°15’ North, cross-level with Hue and Danang, out at the gateway to the Gulf of Tonkin, in the Northern area of the East Sea, on the international marine route from Europe to the countries in the East and Northeast Asian countries.
Hoang Sa Archipelago comprises over 37 islands, rocks and sandy bars covering an area of about 30,000 km2. It is divided into two groups: the East group is named An Vinh group, with about 12 islands in which there are two large islands of Phu Lam and Linh Con, each island is about 1.5km2 wide.
The West group includes many islands arranged in an arc, hence they are named Luoi Liem group, in which there is Hoang Sa island (with an area of nearly 1km2), Quang Anh, Huu Nhat, Quang Hoa, Duy Mong, Chim Yen, Tri Ton…
The two Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagos assume a very important position for Vietnam. First of all, they are situated in the middle of the East Sea, where the most important shipping routes of the world pass by.
Besides, thanks to their location when stretching along the Vietnamese coastline, Hoang Sa and Truong Sa assume frontal positions of protection for the east side of the country, as well as the seas, and coasts of Vietnam. Economically, the two archipelagos contain many rich and diverse biological resources and minerals, especially oil and gas.

China executes 13 convicted of terrorism

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China executed 13 people Monday who were indicted on terrorism charges related to attacks on public places in Xinjiang province in recent months, according to China's Xinhua news agency.
They were among dozens arrested and publicly tried after a government crackdown on terrorism in the region.Twenty-nine people were killed and 130 injured when men armed with long knives stormed a train station in Kunming in March. The next month, an attack on a train station in Urumqi, Xinjiang's capital, left three dead, including the attackers, and an attack on an Urumqi market in May killed at least 39.Those executed are believed to be close to or part of China's Uyghur minority, a mainly Turkic-speaking Muslim population.

The Higher People's Court of Xinjiang, Uyghur Autonomous Region, found them guilty of organizing, leading and participating in terrorist groups; murder; arson; theft; and the illegal manufacture, storage and transportation of explosives, according to Xinhua.
Some Uyghurs have expressed resentment toward China's Han majority in recent years over what they say is harsh treatment from Chinese security forces and Han people taking the lion's share of economic opportunities in Xinjiang.

Amnesty International said Uyghurs face widespread discrimination, including in employment, housing and educational opportunities, as well as curtailed religious freedom and political marginalization.Dozens of others tried and convicted received sentences ranging from delayed death penalties to life sentences and other lengthy prison terms, according to Xinhua.
Yu Huitang, a spokesman with the Xinjiang Regional Higher People's Court, said in May that "the sentences are a warning to those who have religious extremist thoughts and intend to incite violence."
Chinese authorities say they apprehended more than 200 terror cells in Xinjiang last year and, according to Xinhua, China's leaders have "vowed to resolutely stop terrorism and severely punish terrorists."

Over 100,000 Cambodian migrant workers flee Thailand

 Cambodian migrant workers wait to leave the Thai town of Aranyaprathet, spurred by talk within the community of a crackdown.
Fearful of a crackdown on undocumented workers, thousands of Cambodian migrants clutching children and towing their possessions in sacks and plastic bags, milled into a train station.
They crammed inside in an orderly fashion-- mostly nervous and solemn -- as they waited for the train that will take them back to Cambodia."They told me the Thai military would arrest us, and they would shoot," said Bo Sin, a Cambodian construction worker who was among those departing from the Thai border town of Aranyaprathet.

When asked where he got this information, Bo Sin replied, "It could be a rumor, people are passing along this information."Many of the Cambodian workers echoed Bo Sin's fears. They say they're leaving because of talk of arrest and persecution -- unsubstantiated allegations that the Thai junta vehemently denies.But it has not stemmed the tide of Cambodian workers heading to the borders. About 140,000 migrant workers have fled Thailand causing bottleneck congestion at the border, said Joe Lowry, spokesman for the International Organization for Migration.

"I feel really afraid, and my mother also called me to return home," said Ban Sue, a Cambodian cook who had worked at a Bangkok restaurant.Thailand has been under the control of the military since a coup in late May. Although tackling illegal migration has been one of the junta's priorities, unease over the issue and the sudden change in government may have fueled the migrant workers' concerns.
Thai officials say there is no crackdown on undocumented workers and that it has been spurred by "groundless news reports based on rumors."Neither the junta nor local authorities have issued orders concerning migrant workers, said Sek Wannamethee, spokesman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Thailand in a press release. 

"The rumor which was spread by unknown sources has caused panic among both Cambodian workers as well as Thai employers," he said. "Consequently, a number of Cambodian illegal workers have reported themselves to the Thai authorities to be repatriated voluntarily to Cambodia."
There has been no use of force or killings, Sek Wannamethee said.It remains unclear where talk of a clampdown originated.The International Organization of Migration, an intergovernmental group, estimates there are 150,000 Cambodian undocumented migrants in Thailand with the majority of them working in construction or agriculture.

Thailand is believed to have about two million documented foreign migrant workers from countries including Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos who work in low-paying jobs that Thais are unwilling to do, according to a news service for the U.N. Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Foreign workers are often vulnerable to police harassment and exploitation, advocates say.
"Many of these people are severely economically disadvantaged and have spent all their savings, if they had any, to get this far," said Brett Dickson, IOM's team leader in Poi Pet, Cambodia, in a news release.In recent decades, relations between Cambodia and Thailand have been dogged by border issues, tensions over an area surrounding the ancient Preah Vihear temple, and the 2003 burning of the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh by rioters.