Myanmar
Exploits Forests For Political Gain, Watchdog Says
Rampant
logging in Myanmar by the ruling junta, rebel groups
and foreign companies threatens to destroy that
country's rich forests, an international watchdog
group said yesterday.
According
to a report by the London-based Global Witness,
Myanmar's forests - nicknamed "brown gold"
by the local population and comprising 60 percent
of the world's teak trees - have been the victim
of political and economic exploitation by the junta
(Darren Schuettler, Reuters/Planet Ark, Oct. 9).
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Conflict of Interests: The Uncertain Future of Burma's Forests
accuses Myanmar's government of giving logging concessions
to rebel groups in order to keep them at peace, resulting
in deforestation in cease-fire areas. Myanmar is also known
as Burma (Vijay Joshi, Associated Press/Environmental News
Network, Oct. 9).
The
military government "remains resolutely in power, sustained
by its control over natural resources, in particular timber,"
says the watchdog group.
The
regime itself uses revenue from timber to put down insurgent
groups still at war, while rebels chop down and sell trees
in order to pay for their campaigns.
The
report also suggests that Myanmar has used "resource
diplomacy" in order to maintain friendly relations
with neighbors China and Thailand. Tens of thousands of
Chinese laborers are employed in the timber trade in Myanmar
and charge exorbitant prices for their work, says the report.
Profits have generated political cooperation: both China
and Thailand have criticized the U.S. and European sanctions
imposed on Myanmar after the detention of pro-democracy
leader Aung San Suu Kyi (Schuettler, Reuters/Planet Ark).
In
2002, logging made up 9.3 percent of reported foreign-exchange
earnings of the junta, but Global Witness estimates that
the real number is at least double that.
"There
is a lot of hypocrisy there," Global Witness researcher
Simon Phillips told the AP. "They (the Chinese) are
simply exporting their environmental burden to Burma"
(Joshi, AP/ENN).
Copyright,
UN Wire, Year 2003 . http://www.unwire.org/UNWire/