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Tiger cub video triggers WWF call to save forests

EU-Liberia strike deal to stem illegal logging
Brussels (AFP) May 9, 2011 - The European Union on Monday signed a deal with Liberia requiring exports of its wood products carry a certificate of origin, the sixth agreement of its kind aimed at fighting illegal logging.

Under the deal, Liberia, which holds over half the remaining rainforest in west Africa, by 2014 will license all wood products including furniture and wood chips used for bio-fuel.

"I am pleased to see that yet another country joins our common fight against illegal logging," said Development Commissioner Andris Piebalgs.

"This commitment will contribute to sustainable development and poverty alleviation in Liberia on the one hand, and will benefit the European consumers."

Struck in Monrovia, and aimed at backing Liberia's forestry reforms, the deal aimed at improving transparency in timber trade is the sixth between the EU and timber producing countries: Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana and Indonesia.

Stronger control of logging will also enable Liberia to stop illegal deforestation and environmental degradation that contribute to climate change, the EU said in a statement.

According to EU estimates, between 20 and 40 percent of industrial wood production, valued at an estimated 10 billion dollars a year, is derived from illegal sources, with up to 20 percent finding its way into the EU.

Illegal logging was rampant during Liberia's prolonged civil war in the 1990s and timber revenues were used to sustain the conflict.

The World Bank estimated that corruption linked to the industry may have cost Liberia as much as half the entire country's budget at the time.

by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) May 9, 2011
Conservation group WWF on Monday urged timber firms to drop plans to clear Indonesian forest areas where infra-red cameras have captured footage of rare Sumatran tigers and their cubs.

The video, recorded in March and April, shows two mothers with four cubs and another six of the critically endangered big cats in the Bukit Tigapuluh wildlife reserve in eastern Sumatra.

"That was the highest number of tigers and tiger images obtained... we've ever experienced," WWF tiger researcher Karmila Parakkasi said in a statement.

The WWF said the 12 tigers were concentrated in locations with good forest cover, including in a land concession belonging to Barito Pacific Timber, which it described as a wood supplier to regional giant Asia Pulp and Paper (APP).

"This video confirms the extreme importance of these forests in the Bukit Tigapuluh ecosystem and its wildlife corridor," the WWF's forest and species programme director Anwar Purwoto said.

"WWF calls for all concessions operating in this area to abandon plans to clear this forest and protect areas with high conservation value," he added, urging authorities to manage the zone "as part of Indonesia's commitments to protecting biodiversity".

There are fewer than 400 Sumatran tigers left in the wild, among a global tiger population of just 3,200 -- down from 100,000 a century ago.

WWF spokeswoman Desmarita Murni said that Jakarta designated the Bukit Tigapuluh area as one of six priority tiger conservation zones during last year's Tiger Summit in Russia.

"They have to ensure that its commitment is well implemented," she told AFP.

APP denied WWF's claims that Barito Pacific Timber is its subsidiary or supplier. "It's not related whatsoever with our group," a spokeswoman said.

Barito Pacific Timber could not be reached for comment.

Environmental activists say that Sumatran tigers are increasingly coming into contact with people as a result of their natural habitat being lost due to deforestation for timber and palm oil plantations.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has been under pressure from environmentalists to implement a promised two-year moratorium on the clearing of natural forest and peatland, which was due to begin January 1.

Norway agreed in May last year to contribute up to $1 billion to help preserve Indonesia's forests, in part through the moratorium.

WWF warned last year, during the Year of the Tiger, that the species is on course for outright extinction by 2022 -- the next Year of the Tiger under the Chinese calendar.

Thirteen countries host fragile tiger populations -- Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Russia, Thailand and Vietnam.

Russia is the only country to have seen its tiger population rise in recent years. It had just 80 to 100 in the 1960s but now has around 500 -- raising hopes that the majestic creature can be saved if decisive action is taken.



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Russian police arrest 25 activists in highway protest
Moscow (AFP) May 8, 2011
Russian police on Sunday arrested 25 activists as they held a protest against the felling of a forest outside Moscow to build a disputed highway. Among those detained were the campaign's coordinator, Yevgenia Chirikova, liberal Yabloko party leader Sergei Mitrokhin and the leader of an opposition left-wing movement, Sergei Udaltsov, who spoke to AFP from a police station. "We were detain ... read more







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