Laos:
No Success Like Failure - Policy Versus Reality In The Forestry
Sector
Over the past decade, tens of millions
of dollars have been invested by funding agencies to improve forest
management in Laos with the stated aim of aiding rural development
and livelihood security. Despite these investments – including
multi-million dollar projects backed by the World Bank, the Government
of Finland and the Swedish International Development Cooperation
Agency (Sida), among others – mismanagement of Laos’ production
forests remains the norm.
In the latest edition of Watershed Magazine
(Vol. 12 No. 1, July 2006-February 2007), Benjamin D. Hodgdon,
a forester and social ecologist with a decade of experience in
Indochina, chronicles the experience of an NGO-supported project
recently discontinued by the Lao government to highlight the serious
problems plaguing the country’s production forests.
His article – No success like failure:
Policy versus reality in the Lao forestry sector – offers a rare
glimpse into the real world of logging in Laos, a reality that
stands in stark contrast to the forestry legislation signed by
the government at the behest of its major financial supporters.
The article begins by presenting the
rationale for community forestry in the Lao context, as well as
the development of the Lao version of community forestry focused
primarily on timber production, called “participatory sustainable
forest management” (PSFM). The result of a decade-long policy
process supported by the World Bank and the Government of Finland,
PSFM stipulates on paper that villagers living in or adjacent
to designated production forest areas have the right to be involved
in forest planning and management, and that they are entitled
to a significant percentage of the profits from timber sales.
This is the policy. But the reality
is something quite different.
To illustrate this point, Hodgdon tells
the story of a WWF-supported project that aimed to initiate PSFM
in Xekong Province, a remote and overwhelmingly indigenous province
in the south of the country. The project – implemented in a 10,000
hectare area called Phou Theung – worked with provincial and central-level
government forestry agencies to involve seven villages (ethnic
Krieng, Alak and Souay) in forest planning and management in accordance
with national PSFM legislation.
Over time, however, and especially as
the logging season moved into full swing, serious malfeasance
on the part of the project’s government partners emerged.
“Foresters routinely left their work
with the project or were reassigned to work with companies that
were illegally removing timber from the project area” Hodgdon
writes. Presented with evidence of such malfeasance, provincial
authorities pleaded ignorance or claimed that they were the activities
of “rogue” operations. In reality, however, as the article shows,
such illegal timber removals had “the full knowledge and approval
of government officials.”
As a result of the project’s activities
to improve forest management and implement national law, powerful
individuals in the Department of Forestry and the Xekong provincial
government colluded to discontinue the project, citing the fact
that “only the state” has the right to make decisions about logging.
The closing of the project, Hodgdon
writes, illustrates how many in the Lao government do not support
PSFM, for both political and economic reasons. Politically, the
project represented a shift away from the government in decision
making power over valuable timber resources, while economically
it “translated as less money flowing into the pockets of a connected
few.”
The article concludes by asserting that
without fundamental changes to political and legal institutions
in Laos there is little hope for PSFM to take hold. “In essence,”
says Hodgdon, “democratizing reforms such as the PSFM legislation
require democratic institutions in order to work.”
The full article is available at
http://www.terraper.org/pic_water/Watershed%2012(1).pdf