China's State Forestry
Administration (SFA) has blasted local authorities and private
companies for flaunting the law by chopping down forests to make
way for new transport links.
The Communications Bureau of north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region has been
found to have illegally expropriated 356.14 hectares of forest and
felled 6,170 cubic meters of trees to build a freeway.
The incident tops the ten most severe local government
transgressions discovered by the administration in an inspection of
forest land use in 203 counties since 2005, SFA spokesman Song
Qingyao told a regular press conference on Wednesday.
The next on the list was an incident involving the
Forestry Bureau of Yuexi County of Anhui Province which connived with the
province's Liuqian Highway Company by privately granting the latter
a felling license which led to the illegal expropriation of 120.68
hectares of forest and the loss of 4,727.2 cubic meters of
trees.
Another five local government departments who were
found to have ignored regulations are the Zhejiang-Jiangxi
electrified railway transformation commanding center, the
Agricultural Bureau of the Dahinggan Mountain region in the
northeast, the Pingxiang Road Bureau of Jiangxi Province, the Baise Road Bureau of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and the
Dacheng Railway Expansion Commanding Center of Sichuan Province.
These departments were responsible for the loss of
635.55 hectares of forest, 86 percent of the total area of forest
illegally confiscated for the construction of railways, roads,
hydropower stations and transmission lines.
The remaining three cases involved 22 mines of
Fengcheng City of Liaoning Province, the Dashawan Hydropower
Station Development Company of Tibetan Autonomous County of Muli in
Sichuan Province and five limestone factories of Fenyi County in
Jiangxi Province.
"The inspection has unveiled many severe problems that
must not be ignored," Cao said.
"Such behavior reflects a dangerous attitude held by
some government departments who only look to immediate interests
and deprive the future generation of benefits," Cao
said.
He said the administration had notified the relevant
provincial governments and urged them to dole out the necessary
punishments.
"Forestry authorities at various levels should not
discard their duties but rather strengthen the management and
supervision of forest land," Cao said.
(Xinhua News Agency February 8, 2007)
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