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Environmental groups to Japan: stop importing illegally logged timber

A coalition of environmental NGOs have called upon Japan to adopt stronger measures to block illicit timber imports, alleging that Japanese companies are buying illegally logged wood from Samling Global, a Malaysian logging company.



In a open letter addressed to two Japanese trade associations, the group urges Japan “to close the doors to illegal wood and support ethical forest management.”



“Japanese consumers don’t want to be party to forest crime,” the letter states.



The group cites evidence from an independent investigation which found Samling had engaged in illegal logging in the Malaysian state of Sarawak.



“Field research and satellite image analysis conducted by Earthsight Investigations in 2009 in the Baram River basin in Miri division found that Samling’s operations were illegally logging in a National Park, outside concession boundaries and in prohibited steep slope and riverine buffer areas within concessions; logging without Environmental Impact Assessments; clearing forest in excess of limits, and logging undersize and protected trees,” the letter states. “In 2008 the Malaysian Auditor-General also found evidence of illegalities in Samling concessions in Sarawak. This evidence was sufficient for Ethical Council of the Norwegian government’s Pension Fund Global to divest from the company, and your attention is directed to the findings of that report.”



The letter says that Japan has fallen behind the U.S. and Europe on laws prohibiting imports of illegally logged timber.



The coalition includes the Environmental Investigation Agency (US & UK), the Climate Justice Programme (Australia), Forests of the World (Denmark), Friends of the Earth US, Global Witness (UK), the Humane Society International (Australia), the Rainforest Action Network (US and Japan), Rainforest Foundation Norway, Friends of the Earth Japan, Greenpeace Japan, the Japan Tropical Forest Action Network, The Sloth Club (Japan), HUTAN Group (Japan), and the Sarawak Campaign Committee (Japan).



The text of the letter:





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