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Wednesday, July 29, 2009

DR Congo needs clear logging policies: Greenpeace


Kinshasa(AFP) --

Greenpeace has urged authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo to clarify reforms bringing transparency to the logging sector in the world's second biggest rainforest after the Amazon.

The "objective is still far from being reached," the global environment campaign group said in a letter to the minister of the environment, a copy of which was given to AFP on Tuesday.

"It is urgent to have clarifications of the current situation, marked by irregularities."

Since 2002, the Congolese government has obtained World Bank support in a plan to convert existing logging rights into concessions and impose a temporary freeze on further concessions. The aim was to bring order to the sector and cut down the illegal logging of precious timber.

Greenpeace said that reforms "seem to be only a fig leaf that can barely hide the anarchy in the exploitation of lumber, both industrially and by artisans, in the forested provinces."

It said there have been serious abuses, and that it was worried about "the opacity surrounding implementation" of the reforms.

The Congolese government should "not miss out on the opportunities presented by international attention to the exceptional wealth of Congolese forests," Greenpeace said in the letter.

Among "serious irregularities," Greenpeace cited a difference of 2.9 million hectares of forest where logging was allowed between the 9.7 million hectares officially announced at the beginning of 2009 and the 12.6 million shown on a ministry of the environment map.

"The government has now committed to a legal review of the logging industry and we are calling on them to maintain and enforce the moratorium - withdrawing any illegal concessions," Greenpeace said in a separate statement on its website.

"Currently the review is characterised by secrecy and sloppiness so we?re demanding the international community and the DRC Government ensure this review process is completely transparent, the moratorium is maintained and enforced and that a participatory land use plan is put in place," it said.

The organisation also protested at special exemptions granted to concession holders whose rights were invalid and the failure of the government to publish a list of logging companies currently authorised to work in the vast central African country.

There is also concern for the well-being of the estimated 500,000 Pygmies living in the rainforest.

"The communities see the loggers come to cut and take away wood. Their role is reduced to that of helpless witnesses of the degradation of their forests and their means of subsistence," Greenpeace said in the letter.

"It is time to save the primary forests still intact in the DR Congo and to support models of management that are genuinely sustainable and of local development that benefit the Congolese."

After the Amazon in Brazil, Congo has the second largest rainforest on the planet at 86 million hectares (212 million acres), of which nearly 60 million hectares (148 million acres) are exploitable.

It also constitutes about 60 percent of all forests in the Congo basin.


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