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Wildlife guide Armand Marozafy shows how precious rosewood trees are
illegally logged in Madagascar.
Rosewood traders turn up in villages on the Masoala peninsula with
cash and rice. They want local people to help them find precious
rosewood trees in the dense forest, and then to haul the heavy logs
out.
The illegal trade is irresistible to poor communities. Local people
used to make money from tourists who came to see the lemurs - primates
found only in Madagascar.
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We are all making a big effort just to survive. So we have no choice -
we have to work in the rosewood business =94
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Anonymous illegal logger
This was a national industry worth more than $400m (=A3256m). But last
year's military-sponsored change of government has frightened off all
but the most intrepid international travellers.
In March 2009, Marc Ravalomanana was forced into exile and replaced as
president by Andry Rajoelina, a 36-year-old former mayor of the
capital, Antananarivo.
The international community deemed this a coup and refused to
recognise the new regime. Large donors like the World Bank, the
European Union and the United States withdrew all but humanitarian aid
from President Rajoelina's government.
This has had a dramatic impact as more than half of Madagascar's
budget had come from international donors.
Illegal logging on the rise
Since the political crisis began, the forests of Madagascar have been
plundered. In 2009, loggers took an estimated 100,000 rosewood and
ebony trees from the national parks of north-east Madagascar.
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In pictures: inside the illegal logging gangs
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Rosewood grows slowly, taking more than 100 years to reach maturity.
Logging this rare species is unsustainable.
The exploitation of rosewood was banned in 2000 in Madagascar. Since
then, government orders have occasionally allowed logging, but never
at the levels seen recently. Poverty, corruption, an economy in free-
fall and a lack of political will have all contributed to the trade.
In a village close to the Masoala National Park, a headman who did not
want to be identified because logging is illegal, said that all the
young men in the village make money from rosewood.
"Since the political crisis began life is very hard. Rice is
expensive, and this village doesn't have enough to feed everyone all
year. We are all making a big effort just to survive. So we have no
choice - we have to work in the rosewood business."
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He said the men who do the back-breaking work dragging the logs out of
the forest are paid $2.50 a day. Merchants pay $50 (=A332) for a log
that is 3m long. That same timber will fetch more than $1,300 (=A3832)
at the main Madagascan port of Toamasina.
"We make a tiny amount of money from this business. Everything is
illegal. Everything is corrupt."
And this is a very lucrative business. It has been estimated that
rosewood worth $220m (=A3141m) was exported from Madagascar last year.
Most of it was destined for China, where demand is fuelled by a
growing middle-class with a desire for imperial-style furniture. In
June this year, alone, 79 containers of rosewood were shipped out -
cargo worth some $16m (=A310.2m).
Environmental damage
Loggers fell many other trees to ease access to the rosewood, creating
a real threat to Madagascar's unique wildlife.
"The loggers go a long way into the forest to find the rosewood," says
Armand Marozafy, who has been guiding in Masoala for more than 15
years. "They only carry rice with them. But that's not enough to eat,
so they make traps for the lemurs. Sometimes they even shoot them."
The Director of the Masoala National Park, Haja Salava, is shocked by
what is happening.
"There was always rosewood logging in the park, but since 2009 it's
the worst thing I've ever seen. The only thing we can do is identify
where it's happening and inform the forestry service or the police. We
need a sustainable solution, and a political one."
The administration of Andry Rajoelina has recently become more
proactive, and officials have raided properties where rosewood logs
were hidden.
"Logging licences were issued before the transitional government came
to power last year," says Serge Rainaivo, a close political ally of
the president and a minister in the transitional government.
"Protecting the environment is one of our top priorities. We are
tackling this problem - it's prohibited to log and export rosewood."
The port of Maraonsetra is a hub for the transit of illicit rosewood.
And at a time of severe economic hardship in Madagascar, it has
provided a business bonanza for many of the local cargo boats.
Armand Marozafy has witnessed the shipments coming and going:
"Normally I see around two big boats a week. That's at least 100
tonnes of rosewood that has been lost from the forest."
More on This Story
Related storiesIn pictures: inside the illegal logging gangs 04 AUGUST
2010, AFRICA
Misery in Madagascar after coup 29 JULY 2010, AFRICA
Madagascar delivers plea on aid 29 JULY 2010, AFRICA
In pictures: Madagascar's troubled environment 24 JUNE 2010, AFRICA
Major decline in illegal logging 15 JULY 2010, SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
EU to keep Madagascar aid block 04 JUNE 2010, EUROPE
Rajoelina 'will not run in polls' 12 MAY 2010, AFRICA
AU acts against Madagascar leader 18 MARCH 2010, AFRICA
Lemurs butchered in Madagascar 20 AUGUST 2009, EARTH NEWS