The Forest Law Enforcement and Governance (FLEG) process aims to combat the threats posed to forests by illegal logging, trade, poaching and corruption.
Illegal logging takes place when timber is harvested, processed,
transported, brought or sold in violation of national laws including:
- Obtaining concessions illegally (eg via corruption and bribery) or without full and informed consent.
- Cutting protected tree species or extraction trees from a protected area
- Taking out more trees, under sized trees, oversized trees than is permitted or trees outside an agreed area
- Illegal processing and export
- Fraudulent declaration to customs of the amount of timber being exported
- Non payment or under payment of taxes
- Use of fraudulent documents to smuggle timber internationally
Illegally
logged timber destroys lives by perpetuating a vicious cycle of
violence, intimidation, corruption and environmental and social
degradation. A ban on the import of wood products from illegal and
destructive sources is the only way to stop illegal logging.
Delegates
to the FLEG East Asia Ministerial Conference, which took place in
Indonesia in September 2001, promised to implement rigorous
measures to stop the illegal trade of timber from the region.
“Countries
from the East Asian and other regions participating in this Ministerial
Declare that we will: Take immediate action to intensify national
efforts, and to strengthen bilateral, regional and multilateral
collaboration to address violations of forest law and forest crime, in
particular illegal logging, associated illegal trade and corruption,
and their negative effects on the rule of law”.
(Bali Ministerial Declaration, 13, September 2001)
Yet little has actually been achieved.
The
FLEG process has the potential to make an important contribution to the
fight against illegal logging, by targeting both the producer
countries (PNG and Indonesia) and consumer countries (China, Japan and
the EU), and ensuring governments prosecute individuals and companies
involved in the illegal timber trade.
Increased regional as well
as international cooperation and resources are key to ensuring the
success of this process. Greater law enforcement, governance and
transparency will be vital components of this effort.
Consumer
countries must recognise that demand from their markets for cheap
timber and wood products is fuelling this environmental disaster.
In
order to ensure the effectiveness of the East Asia FLEG process,
Greenpeace believes the following measures should be adopted in the
immediate short-term by consumer and producer countries:
- Adopt a strong definition of Legality
- Adopt Government Procurement Policies
- Designate official Ports for import/export
- Implement Transparency & Access to Data
- Harmonise customs data & codes
- Adopt legislation to Ban Imports of Illegal timber
- Ensure Civil Society Involvement
Time is running out for the Paradise Forests and an ambitious programme – with real targets and deadlines – is vital.