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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2004/8/10/features/8571664 & sec=f\

eatures

 

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Tuesday August 10, 2004

The Thai link in poaching

By HILARY CHIEW

 

THONG De, one of the two Thai poachers caught stealing gaharu at the

Endau-Rompin National Park last month, is no ordinary poacher.

 

The 44-year-old hails from Prachantakham district of Pachinburi province in

central Thailand – a place notorious for its agarwood poachers. As enforcement

tightened at the Khao Yai National Park, poachers like Thong headed for the

kingdom’s southern national parks and Malaysian forests.

 

Established in 1962 and covering 2,168sqkm, Khao Yai is Thailand’s third

largest national park, and has been the epicentre for illegal agarwood

extraction for some 15 years. But with the exodus of poachers to Malaysia,

agarwood harvesting in Khao Yai has declined.

 

 

 

”There are at least 1,000 Thai poachers in Malaysia. About 80% of poachers in

my village are working there and four more are leaving for Malaysia today,” says

former poacher Sompong Prajobjan.

 

He says Thai poachers have entered Malaysian parks since the 1980s, but their

numbers and the pace of extraction have escalated in recent years.

 

“The syndicate makes all the preparation like arranging transportation, lodging

along the way and the immigration and custom clearance. I was told that rangers

avoid and ignore the poachers. So it is easy for them to operate as long as they

want in the forests. They know that the penalty (in ringgit) is higher than in

baht but that has not deterred them as there have been hardly any arrests,” says

Prajobjan.

 

He doubts that the recent arrests in Malaysia would stop the poachers. “They’re

not afraid of jail or fine. Some have been jailed many times.”

 

Khao Yai authorities last year detected eight middlemen who organise trips to

Malaysia, Laos and Cambodia. The middlemen either work for distillation

facilities around the park or own the plants.

 

Park protection division chief Prawatsart Chanteap says one factory owner

claimed to have imported agarwood from Malaysia but could not produce any

importation documents.

 

“Intelligence gathered showed that he is involved in sending poachers to

Malaysia and that his wife often travels there to handle the customs

procedures.” He says the operator was fined 50,000 baht (RM5,000) and is

standing trial for illegal factory operation.

 

Following government raids, Chanteap says some distillers have gone

underground, further complicating enforcement. He says the law requires

registered factories to use only legally-imported Aquilaria as raw material and

distillation facilities cannot be set up near national parks and protected

areas.

 

However, conservation group WildAid claims that inspecting officials made

visits only to collect bribes; which explains the continuous presence of these

factories around Khao Yai.

 

 

 

A Wildaid report last year found three registered factories in Nakhon Nayok

province while the park management says there are 11 distillers in Prachinburi

and Nakhon Rachasima provinces. These provinces around Khao Yai form the biggest

agarwood processing centre in the region.

 

A joint survey by Wildaid and the Wildlife Conservation Society on the agarwood

crisis in Khao Yai indicates that in the past, collectors took only high quality

agarwood which middlemen sold to dealers in Bangkok. When factories began

operating near villages, it became easier for collectors to sell low-grade wood,

causing indiscriminate tree-cutting. As high-grade wood grew scarce and

Malaysian middlemen were sending mostly agarwood in low quality powder form,

distillers decided to get the valuable wood themselves by sending poachers to

Malaysia.

 

Chanteap says the syndicate operates with little resistance at Thai border

checkpoints. The importers run the risk of being fined a mere 10,000 baht but

there have never been any seizures.

 

Over at the Malaysian side, Chanteap says he was told that little attention is

paid to the woodchips. He says the Thailand Ministry of Natural Resources and

Environment and the Thai Customs have been alerted of the illegal trade. He

believes the syndicate can only be stemmed with co-operation between both

countries.

 

<A HREF= " /lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2004/8/10/features/8468647 & sec=features " >The

stench of greed</A><BR>

<A

HREF= " /lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2004/8/10/features/8591383 & sec=features " >From

poacher to farmer</A><BR>

<A

HREF= " /lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2004/8/10/features/8504528 & sec=features " >High

volume of trade in agarwood</A><BR><p>

 

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