{"id":20624,"date":"2015-05-25T11:00:35","date_gmt":"2015-05-25T01:00:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=20624"},"modified":"2015-05-22T17:17:56","modified_gmt":"2015-05-22T07:17:56","slug":"thailands-border-timber-war","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/thailands-border-timber-war\/","title":{"rendered":"Thailand\u2019s border timber war"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n The illegal harvesting and smuggling of the rare and valuable Siamese Rosewood (Dalbergia cochinchinensis<\/a>) across the Thai-Cambodian border is an issue that\u2019s landed on ASEAN member states\u2019 desks yet again. On 7 May, the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) outlined the complexities involved in allowing the illegal timber trade to thrive to the 11th Meeting of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) Wildlife Enforcement Network (WEN) in Brunei. To put things in perspective, the operation of the Siamese Rosewood supply chain involves a range of national criminal offences including corruption, fraud, money laundering, and murder. On top of these criminal offences, it\u2019s the strategic implications of this highly profitable (illegal timber trade in ASEAN is estimated to be worth USD 17 billion per year<\/a>), illicit and vertically integrated supply chain that presents a regional security challenge.<\/p>\n Found in Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam, Siamese Rosewood is highly valued by Chinese furniture makers, with small coffee tables being sold for tens of thousands of US dollars each. During the last twelve months alone the price of Siamese Rosewood has tripled<\/a>.<\/p>\n While the EIA stressed the importance of Siamese Rosewood preservation for the region and Australia, the report presents two worrying trends for the greater Mekong subregion. First, the illegal harvesting of rosewood is symptomatic of the environmental sustainability challenges faced by the region\u2019s developing economies. Second, organised crime value chains focused on the illegal timber trade are both integrating and globalising. And so from a regional security perspective, the reporting also underscores the continued evolution of non-political or religiously motivated transnational organised crime in the greater Mekong subregion.<\/p>\n Illegal logging now threatens Siamese Rosewood with extinction<\/a>, despite the fact that the species is protected by national laws in all range states. In 2013, Siamese Rosewood was listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species<\/a> (CITES).<\/p>\n The current exploitation of dwindling supplies of Siamese Rosewood is indicative of the new era of natural resource scarcity in ASEAN. For almost twenty years Indonesia, the Philippines, Brunei and Malaysia enjoyed the benefits of a highly profitable timber resource boom. During this period, many public officials viewed the region as \u2018the land of plenty<\/em>\u2019.<\/p>\n