Saturday, 16 March 2013

Watching the vanishing forests of the Congo on Kinshasa highways

I snapped this picture of a flatbed logging trailer on Lumumba

Boulevard in the Kinshasa N'Djili commune with my iPhone from the roof

of the broken-down car that was to take us for our usual weekend

outing to Maluku, the small port and fishing community on the Congo

River Channel, about 120 km northeast of the Congolese capital.



Logging trailers of this kind are ubiquitous in Kinshasa where at

times--like three weeks ago in the southwestern Mbensenke Futi

area--they cause mayhem, destruction and death among unsuspecting

Kinshasa pedestrians when cables securing logs snap and spill their

cargoes onto crowded streets.



The Mbensenke accident I just alluded to involved a logging trailer

barreling down the slope of a hillside road and attempting a hard turn

without slowing down.



The jolt made the logs wobble uncontrollably, causing the metal straps

to snap, the forwarder and the trailer to overturn, and the bulky logs

to roll onto the highway--instantly killing a half-dozen pedestrians.

The drunk driver, who'd miraculously survived, fled the scene on foot

and is still at large.



But besides these horrendous traffic accidents, the frequency of these

logging trailers could frame and support the narratives of advocacy

groups such as Global Witness that allege that "in the future, there

will be no forests left" as the November 2012 Global Witness report is

titled.



This sounds like the alarm issued a few years back by the WWF about

"empty forests" (i.e., forests without games) in the DRC.



And, by the way, those logging trailers seen on Kinshasa streets

originate from Maluku where the port is so insignificant and so out of

sight to attract the attention of conservation and civil society

groups. Those logs come from upstream, from the rainforest of the

Equateur Province.



According to Global Witness, the industrial deforestation now taking

place in the Congo was hastened by a combination of logging reform

laws hijacked by the elite, a languishing "Community Forest

Management" decree, and the active encouragement of World Bank's

foresters.



A press release by Global Witness introducing its October 2012 report

titled "The art of logging industrially in the Congo" states (I

reformat for readability):



"The "Artisanal Logging Permits" are designed to allow Congolese

communities to carry out small-scale logging in their forests.



"But in practice, they are being used by foreign loggers to exploit

Congo's forests on an industrial scale, primarily for buyers in China.



"DRC is the second most forested country on earth and 40 million

Congolese depend on the forest for income, food, building materials or

medicine.



"However, decades of weak laws and poor government have allowed

logging companies to plunder the forests, with very few benefits

reaching communities.



"A 2002 freeze on the creation of new logging concessions was designed

to stop the expansion of industrial logging until long-promised

reforms of the sector have been carried out.



"However, this misuse of artisanal permits has provided a way for

officials and loggers to continue opening up new swathes of forest to

industrial logging."



According to that press release, the report "finds [that] 146

artisanal permits have been handed out to loggers in Bandundu Province

alone since 2010, affecting an area equivalent to over 11,000 football

pitches."



As for the so-called "forest community management," the press release

had this to say:



"A draft Decree on Community Forests would allow communities to play

more of a role in managing forests and to benefit from properly

managed artisanal logging. However, the decree has been awaiting

signature by the DRC's Prime Minister since 2010."



The press release also read as if lifted from a page of the book "Law

and Disorder in the Postcolony" edited by Comaroff and Comaroff in

which it is evinced that the uncanny proliferation of laws in

postcolonial states is often accompanied and offset by massive

instances of scoffing of the same laws:



"The Congolese authorities have been routinely breaking their own laws

when handing out these logging permits.



"This should set alarm bells ringing for anyone who is buying hardwood

from DRC and working to comply with US and EU laws against importing

illegal timber."



(Source: http://www.globalwitness.org/library/widespread-abuse-logging-permits-opens-congo's-forests-more-destruction)



Another Global Witness press release issued in February 2013 reads in

part (once again, I reformat for readability):



"An independent evaluation leaked earlier this week found that the

World Bank's support for the logging of tropical rainforests is

failing in its key aims of preventing their destruction and addressing

rural poverty.



"But, according to sources in the Bank, its forestry department is

refusing to reconsider its approach, is lobbying the Board hard to

avoid being held accountable for its failures, and has stated its

intention to continue supporting tropical forest logging.



"The World Bank's evaluation confirms what has long been obvious –

cutting down trees on an industrial scale is not the way to preserve

the world's remaining tropical forests or help the people that live in

them." said Rick Jacobsen, Head of International Forest Policy at

Global Witness. "When Bank Board members meet on Monday to decide next

steps, they need to act on the evaluation's findings and demand that

the Bank pursue alternatives to industrial logging in tropical forests

that better help the poor and preserve forests."



"Over the years, the World Bank has supported the expansion of

industrial logging in some of the world's most important and

endangered rainforests in countries such as Cambodia, Cameroon,

Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia, and Liberia. In Cambodia,

Congo and Liberia this prompted formal complaints from communities

living in the forests that the Bank was harming their livelihoods.

[...]



"The Bank's foresters remain in denial and resistant to all efforts to

hold them accountable to the people whose interests they are supposed

to serve. In the meantime, the evidence continues to pile up that

industrial logging in tropical forests mainly benefits a few

international logging companies and corrupt government officials,"

said Rick Jacobsen. "Increasingly, scientific research is revealing

that the decades-old dogma about the benefits of industrial logging is

more about politics than science, and is certainly not backed up by

the reality on the ground. The Bank and its member governments have

avoided this reality for too long; now they need to take action."



(Source: http://www.globalwitness.org/library/world-bank-refuses-review-support-logging-tropical-rainforests-despite-criticism-its-own)



In the meantime, disenfranchised residents of the republic can only

watch powerlessly the merry-go-round of logging trailers on Kinshasa

highways and pray that they don't happen to be in the proximity when

these road mastodons go rogue!



***



PHOTO: Alex Engwete

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