Global Witness - Breaking the links between natural resources, conflict and corruption

image of man panning diamonds

keyword

campaign/category

language

sort by

type






Unscrupulous timber company behind bids to log Liberian forests

Briefing Document – 15/07/2009

Three firms linked to Malaysian timber giant Samling, a company notorious for destroying tropical forests and abusing local communities, have been considered for major logging contracts in Liberia because of flaws in the bid evaluation process, Global Witness has discovered.

Alpha Logging, Atlantic Resources and Southeast Resources are all linked to Samling through their ownership structures. Samling is a highly predatory group of companies which has made huge profits at the expense of poor people.

If the contracts go ahead, this will be a major step back for the Liberian government, which has spent 5 years and lots of money reforming the forest sector and instituting a system of checks and balances, following years of civil war fuelled by illegal logging.

The Inter-Ministerial Concession Commission in Liberia approved the contracts and the Legislature ratified them.

The latest news is that Global Witness has issued a press release urging the Liberian President not to sign the logging contracts.

Read Global Witness's response to the news of ratification.  

Read the original press release, which outlines how the three companies are connected to Samling.

Samling wrote to Global Witness refuting the allegations. Read the correspondence.

The three companies bidding for the contracts also refuted Global Witness's claims. They issued a joint statement, to which Global Witness responded.

Read some background on how illegal logging funded the civil war in Liberia

Read Global Witness' brief on a background investigation into the logging companies.

Read Global Witness' letter to the FDA on the background investigation into the logging companies.

Read Global Witness' memorandum on the failures of the due diligence report.

 

DonateDonate Button graphic

Latest Publications

March 2010

DR Congo: ex-rebels take over mineral trade extortion racket
Former rebels from the Congrès national pour la défense du peuple (CNDP) have established mafia-style extortion rackets covering some of the most lucrative tin and tantalum mining areas in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Global Witness reported today following four weeks of research in the region.

Global Witness concerned at choice of new Ukraine energy minister
Global Witness is concerned that Yuri Boyko, a controversial figure from the murky past of Ukraine’s gas industry, has been put back in effective charge of a key gas supply route from Russia to the European Union.

Landmark oil and mining transparency initiative faces credibility test as key deadline passes
The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), a pioneering initiative to bring more openness to the world's oil and mining industries, faces a major credibility test after 20 out of 22 countries failed to meet a key deadline today.

Global Witness urges Cambodia’s donors to condemn sponsorship of military units by private businesses
Aid donors to Cambodia, including the US, EU, Japan, China and the World Bank, should send a strong message to the government that they will not countenance the bankrolling of Cambodia’s military by private businesses. This call follows the announcement last week by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen of the formation of 42 official partnerships between private businesses and Cambodian military units.

February 2010

A near miss? Lessons learnt from the allocation of mining licences in the Gola Forest Reserve in Sierra Leone
Between 2005 and 2007, two mining licences were issued in the Gola Forest Reserve in Sierra Leone, even though the area was a proposed national park. This new report identifies weaknesses in Sierra Leone's natural resource governance and attempts to draw lessons for the future.

Parliamentary committee report on libel, privacy and press freedom not strong enough to defend public interest reporting
A report on press standards, privacy and libel makes broadly sensible recommendations but does not go far enough to allay fears that England's laws are a barrier to public-interest campaigning.

Campaigners criticise proposals to define palm oil plantations as forests
The Ecosystems Climate Alliance today criticised the EU and Indonesia for attempting to reclassify palm oil plantations as forests, saying this would be a step backwards in efforts to halt climate change though preventing deforestation.

28 countries accused of facilitating money laundering … but key offenders missing
An international financial crime watchdog has named and shamed countries that are failing to stop dirty money entering the financial system, a move welcomed by Global Witness. However, conspicuously absent are major financial centres and secrecy jurisdictions, many of which also have serious weaknesses in their anti-money laundering regulations.

Metals in mobile phones financing brutal war in Congo
Metals found in everyday electronics items, such as mobile phones and computers, are being mined illegally in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and funding a conflict that has caused millions of deaths, said Global Witness on the opening day of the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

Browse publications listred arrow pointer graphic

Get a text-only version
of this page
red arrow pointer graphic