Protective forest
destroyed to build … cemetery
About nine
hectares of the forest protecting against sand encroachment and climate
change have been cleared to give place to a cemetery project covering an area
of 10 hectares in Loc Ha district of Ha Tinh province.
The cemetery project, capitalized at
VND41 billion, is expected to be located on a wide space of sand belonging to
the protective forest in Thinh Loc commune. The project kicked off in June
2013, though the Ha Tinh provincial authorities released a decision allowing
to use the 9 hectares of the protective forest for the project
implementation.
Forest rangers did not know about
project
Nguyen Cong Trinh, Deputy Chair of
Thinh Loc commune people’s committee said local people have been planting
hundreds of hectares of eucalyptus, casuarina forests on the sand hills over
the last 30 years, responding to the state’s policy on afforestation encouragement.
However, in early 2013, the Loc Ha
district people’s committee cleared 10 hectares of protective forest land and
gave to the contractor implementing the cemetery project.
“To date, all the eucalyptus forest
in the district has been destroyed to give place to the cemetery,” Trinh
said.
Meanwhile, Head of the Loc Ha
district’s forest ranger unit affirmed that the unit was not been informed or
consulted with about the project. The forest rangers were not invited to the
meetings discussing the project programming and they did not know that the
project would have direct impacts on the protective forest in Thinh Loc
commune.
“Only when the construction began,
did we know that the protective forest will be destroyed for a cemetery.
Meanwhile, by that time, the decision on allowing to turn the protective
forest into the cemetery project land had not been released the provincial
authorities,” Chinh said.
“After asking the investor to suspend
the project, we had a working session with the Loc Ha district, where we said
clearly that the investor and involved parties need to follow necessary
procedures before starting the project,” he added.
“The forest does not have protection
property”
Tran Tu Anh, Chair of the Loc Ha
district people’s committee, affirmed that the cemetery had been projected
before the district separation.
He also said that the district
authorities had reported about the project to the provincial authorities and
got the nod from the leaders.
Regarding the Decision dated October
8, 2013, the Ha Tinh provincial authorities agreed on taking the 9 hectares
of the protective forest in Thinh Loc commune for the Loc Ha cemetery
project, Anh said that there are some differences in reality. In fact, the
cemetery covers some areas in the forest, but there are no trees there, so
they should not be considered as protective forest.
However, Bui Le Bac, Chief
Secretariat of the Ha Tinh provincial flood prevention committee, affirmed
that the forest in Thinh Loc commune has been playing an important role in
preventing sand from entering the cultivation areas.
He also thinks that the forest needs
to be protected rather than being turned into a cemetery.
Thien Nhien
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Chủ Nhật, 29 tháng 12, 2013
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