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Mixed signals from the crown? Queen knights logging tycoon while Prince fights deforestation

Tiong Hiew King, founder and chairman of the Rimbunan Hijau Group, a Malaysian logging firm notorious for large-scale destruction of rainforests, has been knighted by Queen Elizabeth, a move which environmentalists say directly conflicts with her son’s campaign to save global rainforests. Prince Charles established the Prince’s Rainforests Project in 2007 and has become increasingly vocal in his calls to conserve forests.



The Bruno Manser Fund (BMF), a Swiss NGO that campaigns on behalf of forests and forest people of Sarawak, a state in Malaysian Borneo, immediately condemned Queen’s decision to honor Tiong.



“Tiong is unfit for such a distinction, Queen should deprive him of his knighthood,” the group said in a statement. “The Queen has awarded a knighthood to a Malaysian timber tycoon whose companies have been destroying the world’s tropical rainforests for decades and have been heavily involved in illegal logging activities.”



Tiong was knighted by the Queen in recognition of his “services to commerce, community and charitable organisations” (PDF) in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Environmentalists have fiercely criticized Rimbunan Hijau, the largest logging operator in PNG, for alleged human rights abuses, corruption and environmental damage.



“Ironically, the Queen has thus decorated one of the main responsibles for the illegal exploitation of Papua New Guinea’s tropical forests,” said BMF.



“To knight the PNG rainforest mafia is a calamity of the highest order,” Glen Barry, founder and director of the forest advocacy group Ecological Internet, told mongabay.com via email. “These are rainforest-destroying criminals. Whose side is UK’s monarchy on anyway besides there own?”



Rimbunan Hijau has operations in Cambodia, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and Russia, among other countries. Tiong founded the firm in 1976 and today is one of Malaysia’s richest men, with a net worth of more than a billion dollars according to Forbes.


UPDATES


22-June-2009 A reader points out that the Queen herself didn’t make the decision to knight Tiong:

23-June-2009. BMF reports confusion of whether Tiong was actually knighted.

25-June-2009. BMF expresses doubts Tiong was knighted.

30-June-2009. Tiong newspaper attacks the Bruno Manser Fund

1-July-2009. UK officials distance themselves from timber tycoon’s knighting









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