The Environmental Investigation
Agency (EIA) yesterday released a report showing how over 1.4 million illegal
rosewood logs from Nigeria, worth $300 million, were laundered into China.
The report which was first made
exclusively available to The Guardian by Global Media Max, a strategic
communications services agent to the EIA, claimed that multiple independent
sources told undercover investigators that over $1 million was paid to top
Nigerian officials to release the woods stopped by Chinese authorities. The EIA
is a US-based non-governmental organisation (NGO) founded in 1984 by Dave
Currey, Jennifer Lonsdale and Allan Thornton — three environmental activists in
the United Kingdom — to investigate and expose crimes against wildlife and the
environment. It also campaigns to prevent environmental crime.
Senior
Policy Advisor and Director of Forest Campaigns at the EIA, Lisa Handy, said
the report indicted the Deputy Secretary General of the United Nations and
President Muhammadu Buhari’s former Environment Minister Amina Mohammed who now
faces questions regarding he
“Thousands of permits,” she said, “were
ultimately signed by the then Minister of Environment, Mrs. Amina J. Mohammed,
who currently serves as Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN)”,
according to the report emanating from a two-year investigation by EIA on the
“Rosewood Racket” detailing the journey of illegal African rosewood, also known
as “kosso,” from the remote forests of Nigeria.
Mrs. Mohammed was reportedly
supposed to start her new position as Deputy Secretary-General of the UN on
January 1, 2017, but extended her time as Minister of Environment at the
request of President Buhari to round off critical responsibilities. EIA
investigators said they found that she signed thousands of retroactive CITES
permits in January 2017 as one of her last acts as Minister of Environment, and
just before she was sworn in as the Deputy Secretary-General to the UN.
The permits were reportedly used by
Chinese importers to release over 1.4 million illegal logs that had been
detained at the Chinese border for months, after having left Nigeria in
violation of both Nigerian law and international CITES obligations.Alexander
von Bismarck, EIA Executive Director, who was quoted in a sumarised reported
and later spoke with The Guardian on telephone from his U.S. base, said: “As a
legally binding treaty ratified by nearly all members of the United Nations,
CITES can play a critical role in protecting endangered trees and fragile
forests. The international community needs to urgently bring transparency to
the CITES permitting process in order to fight the organised criminals that
profit from the extinction of endangered species.”
Von Bismarck added: “The power and
reach of organised timber criminals in forest rich countries is overwhelming if
illegal wood is allowed to be sold overseas without consequences.“This is why
we urgently need regulatory changes in consuming countries to stop timber
shipments based on evidence of being illegally logged, transported or traded.
Such laws have already been passed in the U.S. and the EU. This case shows that
China has the ability to take action when it stopped thousands of containers of
illegal rosewood. But the fact that the wood was ultimately released shows that
China urgently needs domestic legislation to ban the import of illegally
sourced wood.”
EIA says the products of the illegal
logging found their way to luxury furniture boutiques in China, “despite
protections placed on this threatened tree species by the CITES.”It further
stated that the exploding Chinese demand for kosso over the past five years had
triggered a series of “boom-and-bust” cycles that led to the depletion of
forests across West African nations.
“In most of the countries, kosso has
been illegally logged in violation of harvest and log export bans, including in
protected areas. Precious trees have been laundered into the international
market through regional smuggling routes, using mis-declaration and
falsification of official documents.”The boom, according to the EIA, began in
Gambia and Benin, but Chinese traders had to rapidly move on through other
countries in the region — before settling on the largest untapped forest
resources of Nigeria — as supply was exhausted in just a few short years.
Since 2013, Nigeria has been
transformed from a net importer into the world’s largest exporter of rosewood
logs, and is to date one of the top wood exporters on the continent. The
unprecedented and uncontrolled level of logging across the country is causing
desertification, imperiling the livelihoods of millions of people, and
threatening national parks and endangered emblematic species such as the most
vulnerable chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes ellioti) in the world.
Kosso was added to Appendix II of
CITES in 2016, meaning that logging and trade must be strictly controlled and
kept at sustainable levels. The results of the new EIA investigation show that
the enforcement of the convention faces serious challenges when dealing with
transnational criminal networks. The report shows how Sino-Nigerian criminal
networks took advantage of an obsolete and opaque permitting system to launder illegal
wood using CITES paperwork.
Efforts to get a response from the
Deputy Secretary General of the United Nations did not yield immediate results
as several telephone calls to her mobile phone which a presidency official said
was roaming, did not go through. There was also no response to a text message
at press time.
But Mrs. Mohammed was quoted last
month as having referred to the permits in an interview last month in her
sprawling 38th-floor U.N. headquarters office in Manhattan overlooking the East
River. The certificates, she said “came in bags, and I just signed them because
that is what I had to do…I don’t remember how many.”
She reportedly described her own
action as part of “a complicated, though legal, balancing act aimed at ensuring
Nigeria’s threatened forests were being harvested sustainably while also
honouring contracts with Chinese rosewood importers and protecting the
livelihoods of a growing number of Nigerians who depend on the timber trade.”
What looked like an official
reaction — though unsigned — came much later through a third party.“The
Secretary-General has been informed by the Deputy Secretary-General about the
reports and reiterates his full support and confidence in her. She, of course,
categorically rejects any allegations of fraud,” Ms Mohammed reportedly said in
response to The Guardian enquiries.
“The Deputy Secretary-General welcomes the effort to shine more light onto the issue of illegal rosewood logging and exportation that she fought hard to address during her tenure in the Nigerian Government. She says that her actions as Nigerian Environment Minister were intended to deal with the serious issue of illegal wood exportation. As a result, she instituted a ban and set up a high-level panel to find policy solutions to the crisis of deforestation in Nigeria.
“Ms. Mohammed says that the legal signing of export permits for rosewood was delayed due to her insistence that stringent due process was followed. She says that she signed the export certificates requested before the ban only after due process was followed and better security watermarked certificates became available.”
“The Deputy Secretary-General welcomes the effort to shine more light onto the issue of illegal rosewood logging and exportation that she fought hard to address during her tenure in the Nigerian Government. She says that her actions as Nigerian Environment Minister were intended to deal with the serious issue of illegal wood exportation. As a result, she instituted a ban and set up a high-level panel to find policy solutions to the crisis of deforestation in Nigeria.
“Ms. Mohammed says that the legal signing of export permits for rosewood was delayed due to her insistence that stringent due process was followed. She says that she signed the export certificates requested before the ban only after due process was followed and better security watermarked certificates became available.”
Asked whether the investigators
actually consulted Mrs. Mohammed, Von Bismarck told The Guardian on telephone
last night that she was reached by Foreign Policy reporter for comments and she
denied that the woods were illegally exported, although there were local laws
banning logging in Taraba and other parts of Nigeria.
Source The Guardian
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