The sweep led to the arrest of 155 Chinese nationals who had been recruited from neighbouring Yunnan Province to cross the border to cut trees and transport timber. The case caused diplomatic tensions between Myanmar and China when the Chinese labourers were given life sentences in July. Just a few days later, all were freed under a general presidential pardon.
The saga has shone a light on the murky and clandestine trade in illicit timber occurring across the common border between Myanmar and China. For at least two decades, timber extracted from Myanmar’s precious frontier forests in highly destructive logging operations has been flowing into China unhindered. It is an illicit business worth hundreds of millions of dollars a year, making it one of the single largest bilateral flows of illegal timber in the world.
Download the full report in English here.
Tags: ASEAN, China, Environmental and Economic Justice, Environmental Investigation Agency, Human Rights, Kachin State, Logging, Shan StateThis post is in: ASEAN, Business and Human Rights, Crimes Against Humanity, Displacement, Economy, Environmental and Economic Justice, Ethnic Nationalities, Human Rights, Law, Military Regime
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