world news - 10.04.2008
Siberia's black market logging
The only splash of colour is the pale yellow Stalinist tower of the railway station.
A seemingly endless procession of freight trains rumbles past,
south towards China. Some trains are 30 wagons long, all heavily laden
with Russian wood.
Much of this pine, larch, aspen and birch has been cut without a licence and is smuggled out of the country.
Illegal logging has long plagued Russia, but the problem has been
exacerbated in recent years by China's voracious appetite for timber.
Disappearing forests
The Zabakailsky Krai, a region in Eastern Siberia between Lake Baikal
and the Russian Far East, is one of the worst affected areas.
According to the Federal Agency for Forestry, illegal logging here accounts for more than two million cubic metres a year.
The agency warned the region could be stripped of wood reserves in five years if nothing is done to stop the criminal trade.
Last May, Yuri Trutnev, the Russian Minister for Natural Resources,
paid a surprise visit and said he was shocked by what he found.
He complained that "entire bandit villages" were cutting down
trees, loading them on railway sidings and sending them to China.
Vladimir Putin recently described the export of unprocessed timber as "comparable with embezzlement".
"Our neighbours continue to make billions of dollars on Russian timber,
but we are doing very little to create conditions for wood processing
here at home," Putin said.
Chinese wealth
A decade ago, Manzhouli was a dusty border town in a corner of Inner
Mongolia in North East China. Now it is a gleaming metropolis built on
the wealth of timber from the Siberian forests. I understood the
Russian president's resentment.
Standing in a vast lumber yard surrounded by piles and piles of wood, I
saw a forest of cranes and, beyond them, a cluster of brightly-coloured
skyscrapers.
This surreal city plays host to a stream of Russian tourists who travel
for days to buy clothes, cameras and DVDs in glitzy shopping malls.
Guang Delin, the boss of just one of the 70 timber businesses in Manzhouli, took us to lunch at an extraordinary restaurant.
Outside an icy wind blew across the steppe, but inside the atmosphere was tropical.
The restaurant was decorated with lush green plants and fish tanks. On
my way to our table, I noticed a couple of alligators basking on the
edge of an artificial pond.
As I watched waitresses carrying plates of steaming noodles past
tinkling fountains, I thought about a woman I met on the other side of
the border in Russia.
Natasha lives in one of the so called "bandit villages" in Zabaikalsky
Krai, seven hours drive on bad roads from the regional capital Chita.
Her house has no running water — she has to fetch it by bucket from a
nearby well.
"I'm a single mother with three children and one is an
invalid," she told me. "Life is very hard here and now the collective
farm has fallen apart there is almost no work."
Her neighbour, an elderly man in a fur hat, agreed.
"Most people have to work as black market loggers just to survive, to buy bread and feed their families.
"We used to have so much forest round here," he added, throwing
his arms wide open. "But now look — there's almost none left and they
only leave the small, skinny trees — the ones we call toothpicks."
Unlicensed logging
The police have just established a new forestry division to conduct spot checks.
But many points in the new Russian Forest Code contradict each
other. The lack of clarity leaves room for unlicensed logging on a
large scale, with poachers avoiding taxes and pocketing huge sums of
money.
But it can be dangerous to speak out against the illegal trade.
One regional MP, Vladimir Baranov, who also ran a wood processing plant, was shot dead on his doorstep in 2005.
Many, including a fellow MP Viktor Ostanin, believe he was the victim
of a contract killing organised by powerful business interests in the
area who have links with Chinese mafia.
Ostanin, a former intelligence officer, said the best way to fight
illegal logging is to create more jobs in wood processing in Russia.
"Sadly we are allowing the Chinese to buy our forest very cheaply, they
process it and send furniture and flooring to other countries — that
makes no sense."
"What's worse we are destroying our environment. What kind of legacy are we leaving to our grand children?"
But can Chinese companies be blamed for exploiting weak legislation and corruption on the other side of the border?
"I think initially they all wanted to obey Russian laws," Wen Bo, an environmental campaigner in Beijing, said.
"But if the Russians don't care about their own forest, if Russian
officials encourage them to do business illegally, bribing officials
and paying money under the table, they soon learn how to do business in
such an environment."
Crossing Continents reports on the illegal logging in the
Siberian Taiga on BBC Radio 4 on Thursday 10 April at 1100 BST,
repeated Monday 14 April at 2030 BST.
The vast forests of Eastern Siberia, known as the Taiga, are a
goldmine for Chinese wood traders, who send raw logs over the border to
serve their home country's booming economy. But much of the wood trade
is illegal.
With its barbed wire fences, smashed windows and crumbling apartment
blocks, the border town of Zabaikalsk looks like an abandoned army
garrison.
See also:
- — Timber industry is in trouble
- — Russia: First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov proposes to set up a cluster of wood-working companies in the Russian Far East
- — Russia Plans Timber Tracking to Control Illegal Logging
- — New Zealand Wood welcomes forestry productivity indicators
- — European paper/forest products companies face continued decline in credit quality



