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Minister Admits Conflict of Interest While Denying Same Offense

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Top: Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Cooper Kruah “relinquish” his stakes in Universal Forestry Corporation (UFC) to his son Prince Kruah. Picture Credit: Facebook/Emmanuel Fred


By James Harding Giahyue

MONROVIA – Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Cooper Kruah has admitted being in a conflict of interest with his continued involvement with a company currently mining and logging in Liberia. He faces dismissal, fines, and imprisonment.

The Postmaster General established Universal Forestry Corporation (UFC) on September 9, 1986, with an initial 25 percent shares. That was reduced to five percent when the company amended its article of incorporation in 2007 and remains that way, The DayLight investigation found. However, Kruah claims there was an amendment to UFC’s article of incorporation in 2019, even though we confirmed the status of the document at the Liberian Business Registry less than 24 hours before our initial publication.

Kruah had denied us an interview on the matter when we contacted him in November last year. “Publish anything you want to,” the Minister said after we denied his request not to have the conversation off the record.

“Debunking” our findings, Kruah said he turned his shares over to his son in July 2019, unlawfully increasing the family’s equity in the company to 15 percent.  

“I want to use this medium to set the record straight that there has been an amended article of incorporation to the Universal Forestry Corporation and I relinquished my share to my son [Prince Kruah]…,” Minister Kruah said in a statement on Sunday. “This amendment of the Article of Incorporation is the best evidence for the public.”

Prince Kruah has 15 percent of the company’s shares, according to a legal document Minister Kruah presented, seen by The DayLight. The rest are held by Edward Slangar, former advisor to the late President Samuel Doe (10 percent), Jin Kyung, a foreign national (70 percent) and Narayan Vasnani, another foreign national (5 percent).

While The DayLight is investigating Kruah’s claim,  he is still in violation of the laws governing the two industries as well as the Liberian Constitution and the Code of Conduct for Public Officials, provisions of the statutes show.  

Minister Kruah’s claim to have turned over his equity in UFC to his own son is still a violation of the Minerals and Mining Law of 2000. The law mandates officials of government to “dispose of such mineral right or place such mineral right in a blind trust.” A blind trust takes care of private investment interests without the interference of the owner.

Minister Kruah has benefited from UFC, at least up to the time he claimed to have surrendered his shares to his son. UFC has had 11 mining licenses since his appointment in February 2018, records of the Ministry of Mines and Energy show.  

Of the nearly one dozen UFC mining licenses, 10 are for semi-industrial-scale gold mining, prospecting,  and dealer licenses, and the other is a diamond broker license. Four of these permits are still active. The company operates mines and dealerships in Montserrado, Grand Bassa and Nimba.  

The company produced 16.85 kilograms of gold, valued at US$313,525 in the 2018-2019 fiscal year, according to the Liberia Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (LEITI). It was one of the biggest contributors to the mining sector that year. From that period to last year, it paid the government US$99,545, according to the Liberia Revenue Authority (LRA).

Under the mining law, Kruah faces a US$2,000 fine, a 24-month prison term, or both penalties if convicted of the offense.

The DayLight has reached out to the Ministry of Mines and Energy on the matter. We will update this report once it makes a statement on the Kruah’s illegal involvement in UFC.   

‘Influence and control’

UFC has an agreement with Sehzueplay Community Forest in Nimba County, which was signed on January 30, 2020.

Kruah so-called relinquishment of his shares to his son also breaks the National Forestry Reform Law.   That law compels an official of government to transfer ownership of the “entity outside the person’s influence and control, such as an unrelated individual or a blind trust…”  

In fact, the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) approval of that deal breaches the Ten Core Regulations, the detailed rulebook of the logging industry. Regulation 103-07 in particular disqualifies companies whose shareholders are relatives of members of the government for logging licenses.   

The shareholders’ page of Universal Forestry Corporation’s article of incorporation shows 15 percent shares for Prince Kruah, the son of the Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Cooper Kruah.

The Managing Director of the FDA Mike Doryen told The DayLight in a mobile phone interview that the agency was investigating the matter. “Rest assured, we will take the appropriate action,” Doryen said. “I will not protect any official of government who breaks the law.”

Conflict of interest carries a fine between US$10,000 and up to three times the sum Kruah has received from his equity in UFC, or a prison term of up to 12 months, according to the forestry law.

It is not the first time that the Kruah-associated UFC has violated forestry legal frameworks. It was involved in the notorious  Private Use Permit (PUP) Scandal, in which an estimated 2.5 million hectares of forests—or 23 percent of the country’s landmass—was illegally awarded to logging companies. A government-backed inquest found the company broke the law in different instances while logging in Geetroh, Butaw District of Sinoe County between 2010 and 2012. That investigation found that UFC did not have an environmental permit or a certificate to harvest trees and that it paid community benefits into a personal account. UFC’s PUP and 62 others were canceled and a moratorium remains in place on the permit.  

The Kruahs’ stakes in UFC are also a breach of the Code of Conduct, which defines conflict of interest as “when a public official, contrary to official obligations and duties to act for the benefit of the public, exploits a relationship for personal benefit.” Under this law, he faces a fine, suspension and dismissal, among other penalties.

The Code of Conduct has its roots in the Liberian Constitution, which says, “No person, whether elected or appointed to any public office, shall engage in any other activity, which shall be against public policy, or constitute [a] conflict of interest.”

The DayLight is running a three-part series on UFC that also focuses on the company’s other illegalities and failure to pay communities’ benefits.  

Minister Breaks Laws With Shares In Mining and Logging Company

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Top: Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Cooper Kruah illegally holds a five percent stake in a mining and logging company. Illustration by Leslie Lumeh


By James Harding Giahyue

Editor’s Note: This is the first of a three-part series on Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Cooper Kruah’s conflict of interest as a shareholder in Universal Forestry Corporation, a mining and logging company operating in Grand Bassa and Nimba.


MONROVIA – Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Cooper Kruah holds shares in a company actively mining and logging in Liberia, a violation of laws governing the two industries as well as a breach of the Liberian Constitution and the Code of Conduct for Public Officials, an investigation by The DayLight has found.

Kruah holds five percent of the shares in Universal Forestry Corporation (UFC), according to the firm’s legal document. UFC has had 11 mining licenses since his appointment in February 2018, records of the Ministry of Mines and Energy show. The company had held a few logging concessions prior to Kruah becoming a cabinet minister. However, it began to acquire a flurry of mining licenses after he became the Postmaster General. The company currently has a logging agreement.

Of the nearly one dozen UFC mining licenses, 10 are for semi-industrial-scale gold mining, prospecting,  and dealer licenses, and the other is a diamond broker license. Four of these permits are still active. The company operates the mines and dealerships in Montserrado, Grand Bassa and Nimba. One of its goldmines in Nimba had been the setting of a 2019 mine accident, which killed at least five people, according to the BBC.

The company produced 16.85 kilograms of gold, valued at US$313,525 in the 2018-2019 fiscal year, according to the Liberia Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (LEITI), one of the biggest contributors in the sector that year. From that period to last year, it paid the government US$99,545, according to the Liberia Revenue Authority (LRA).

His equity in UFC is a violation of the Minerals and Mining Law of 2000. The statute debars “the President of Liberia, the Vice President of Liberia, any member of the National Legislature, Justices of the Supreme Court and Judges of the subordinate courts of records, cabinet ministers, managing directors of public corporations during their tenure in office.”

Kruah had established UFC in 1986 with an initial 25 percent shares, which reduced to five percent when the company amended its article of incorporation in 2007, the document shows. Its other shareholders include Edward Slangar, former advisor to the late President Samuel Doe, and B.J. Kim and Jin Kyung, two foreign nationals. Kruah also serves as the secretary of the company’s board of directors and has been cited in official communications, seen by The DayLight, as its lawyer.

To prevent a conflict of interest, the law mandates a government official to either “dispose of such mineral right or place such mineral right in a blind trust,” a business that takes care of private investment interests without the interference of the owner. There are no records that Kruah, who has been fighting cybercrimes,  has done either of those things.   

Kruah faces a US$2,000 fine, a 24-month prison term, or both penalties if convicted in a court, according to the mining law.

A mine in Nimba County operated by Universal Forestry Corporation, one of whose shareholders is Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Cooper Kruah. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

The Ministry of Mines and Energy did not respond to The DayLight’s queries for comments on the matter up to press time. We will update this report once it does.  

UFC also has a logging agreement with Sehzueplay Community Forest in Tappita District, Nimba County,  the same region the company operates the majority of its goldmines. The agreement for the 8,690-hectare rocky woodland was signed on January 30, 2020, nearly two years after Kruah’s appointment.

That, again, breaks the National Forestry Reform Law, which rules out public officials from holding any logging permit above one percent. Like the mining statute, the forestry law compels an official of government to transfer ownership of the “entity outside the person’s influence and control, such as an unrelated individual or a blind trust…” There are no records that Kruah has done that as well.    

The Forestry Development Authority (FDA) approving UFC’s agreement with Sehzueplay with Kruah one of the company’s shareholders also breaches the FDA Ten Core Regulations, a set of dos and don’ts of the logging sector. Regulation 103-07 in particular disqualifies companies whose shareholders are members of the government from being prequalified for logging licenses.   

The Managing Director of the FDA Mike Doryen told The DayLight in a mobile phone interview that the agency was investigating the matter. “Rest assured, we will take the appropriate action,” Doryen said. “I will not protect any official of government who breaks the law.”

Conflict of interest carries a fine between US$10,000 and US$25,000, up to three times the sum Kruah has received from his equity in UFC, or a prison term of up to 12 months, according to the National Forestry Reform Law.

It is not the first time that UFC has violated forestry legal frameworks. It was involved in the notorious  Private Use Permit (PUP) Scandal, in which an estimated 2.5 million hectares of forests—or 23 percent of the country’s landmass—was illegally awarded to logging companies. A government-backed inquest found the company broke the law in different instances while logging in Geetroh, Butaw District of Sinoe County between 2010 and 2012. That investigation found that UFC did not have an environmental permit or a certificate to harvest trees and that it paid community benefits into a personal account. UFC’s PUP and 62 others were canceled and a moratorium remains in place on the permit.  

Kruah’s stakes in UFC are also a breach of the Code of Conduct, which defines conflict of interest as “when a public official, contrary to official obligations and duties to act for the benefit of the public, exploits a relationship for personal benefit.” Under this law, he faces a fine, suspension and dismissal, among other penalties.

The Code of Conduct has its roots in the Liberian Constitution, which says, “No person, whether elected or appointed to any public office, shall engage in any other activity which shall be against public policy, or constitute [a] conflict of interest.”

Jin Kyung, UFC’s general manager, denied Kruah is a shareholder in the company. Kyung said the copy of the company’s legal documents The DayLight has was not genuine but refused to share his copy, claiming it was a private document. That claim is wrong as a company’s article of incorporation is a public record under the Business Corporation Act and the Freedom of Information Act as well as the logging law.

Kruah did not grant The DayLight an interview on his violations, asking us to “publish anything you want to” in November last year. He had accepted our request for an interview but insisted we did not record the conversation.

The news comes barely a week after the Liberia Anti-Corruption Commission (LACC) called for the prosecution of several officials of government, including Minister of Agriculture Jeanine Cooper, for alleged conflict of interest.

Some of the logs Universal Forestry Corporation illegally felled in the Sehzueplay Community Forest in Nimba County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

This story was a collaboration with the Center for Transparency and Accountability of Liberia (CENTAL), with funding from the Swedish Development Agency (SIDA). It is an activity under the CENTAL’s ongoing National Integrity Building and Anti-Corruption (NIBA) program.

Three Suspects on the Run for Killing Sea Turtle

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Top: (L-R) Godpower Sayon, Austin Paye and Enoch King escaped while they were being held in a withholding cell to be taken to court when they escaped. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue


By Gabriel M. Dixon

BARCONNIE –  Three men accused of killing a sea turtle in Grand Bassa County have broken jail, days after they were arrested, the office of the County Attorney said.

Godpower Sayon, 26, Austin Paye, 22, and Enoch King age 23 had been turned over to the Office of the County Attorney on Monday evening for trial the next morning but escaped. The court had closed when the three suspects were brought in late evening hours, according to Grand Bassa County Attorney Randolph Johnson.   

“Unfortunately, the withholding cell was broken into,” Attorney Johnson told The DayLight in a mobile phone interview. “We learned that they are in the same neighborhood [where they were arrested].”

The FDA and other agencies have expressed concern over how the accused escaped the custody of the police and have called for an investigation into the matter.

“The depot commander where the jailbreak occurred was immediately released from his post, and ordered to write a situation report giving a clear understanding of how the inmate escaped from jail,” James Flomo, FDA’s regional forester told The DayLight. The Grand Bassa police headquarters did not grant our request for an interview on the matter.

How they were arrested

The suspects had been detained by community volunteers monitoring the beaches of Bleewin Harmonsville for killing the turtle in the early morning hours of last Saturday.

The dead sea turtle the men were arrested for. Picture credit: Daniel Lawubah

“They were held by my frontline conservationists and turned over to me with a dead sea turtle. It was how I turned them over to the police,” said Alphonso Dennis, Town Chief of Bleewin. 

Bleewin is one of the towns that make up the Barconnie-Harmonville Authorized Community Forest, which was established in 2017. The community decided to conserve its 123-hectare seafront woodland due to the importance of the coastal forest to endangered marine species like sea turtles, sharks and rays. Since then, the people of Barconnie have benefitted from training conducted by different conversation groups to help them properly manage and sustain their conversation efforts.   

“Strong awareness has been ongoing in our community from day to day. The sea turtle, we all are aware. So, everybody in the community is aware of the restriction on the killing of endangered species,” Dennis told The DayLight.   

The Three suspects do not deny their crimes.  Paye, the main suspect, said he saw the turtle while doing his “normal hustle” along the beach that morning. “I killed the turtle,” he said. 

The other two suspects, Sayon and King, admitted to assisting him in allegedly committing the crime.  All three men pleaded for mercy while being taken back to jail after our interview.

Liberia’s wildlife and environmental laws prohibit the killing of endangered species. The three suspects allegedly committed multiple offenses under both laws.

They risk paying a fine of US$250 to US$5,000 or four to six-month imprisonment in line with the National Wildlife Conservation and Protected Areas Management Law of Liberia. They may also perform community service in addition to a fine imposed by a court for violating the Environmental Protection and Management Law of Liberia.   

The incident comes at a time when the Government of Liberia desperately strives to fight wildlife crimes and improve the country’s conversation image globally. But, according to a report by the West Africa Biodiversity and Climate Change (WABiCC), a USAID-sponsored program, the lack of a strong legal framework and weak enforcement are the challenges the government should address to save the country’s biodiversity. 

Daniel Lawubah of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in Grand Bassa County had hoped that the suspects were convicted.

“There should be an example set,” said Lawubah,  “so people will be deterred from doing evil.”

  

Company Cuts About US$2M Logs Outside Concession

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Top: Some of the logs that Sing Africa likely illegally harvested in the Bluyeama Community Forest in its sawmill in Zorzor, Lofa County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue


By James Harding Giahyue

Editor’s Note: This story is the first of a three-part series on the illegalities of Sing Africa Plantation Liberia Limited, a Singaporean company logging in Zorzor, Lofa County.


BALAGWALAZU, Zorzor – A logging company cut trees worth an estimated US$2.2 million outside its contract area in Lofa County, a huge violation in forestry that carries one of the industry’s heaviest penalties, an investigation by The DayLight has found.

Between 2018 and last year, Sing Africa Plantation Liberia Limited illegally harvested probably 5,693 logs or 32,576 cubic meters of woods in Bluyeama Community Forest in the Zorzor District on Lofa’s border with Gbarpolu, according to our calculations of official records of the company’s production during that period. The harvest took place in a portion of the forest not included in its contract with the community. The majority of the logs are ekki wood,  one of the most expensive tree species on the world market.

The illegal harvesting breaks the National Forestry Reform Law. The Forestry Development Authority (FDA) has admitted its approval of the harvesting was a breach of legal requirements.  

“The problem was that we had a plan that was developed by our technicians—I must admit that did not go [through the legal process],” the FDA’s Managing Director C. Mike Doryen told The DayLight in an interview. “What the company did was to take advantage of the flaws we had in the plan and extended their operations in that area, which was not a good thing.”

Those flaws have taken a toll on the FDA, though.

In January earlier this year, four top-level managers were suspended after an inquiry by the Ministry of Justice found out the agency had granted several companies excess forests to harvest. They include Jerry Yonmah, the former technical manager of the commercial department, Simulu Kamara, Abraham Sheriff and Jesse Varney, the technical manager, director for operations and director for a database of the legality verification department (LVD), respectively. Their suspensions followed two reshuffles at the agency in November last year and January earlier this year. All four men resumed work after their suspension was lifted recently.

Doryen, who directly sanctioned Sing Africa’s illegal harvesting, blamed the situation on capacity and function issues within the FDA’s legality verification and commercial departments, which deal with contracts.

“That was the problem,” Doryen said. “It was obvious if the commercial man is not with these people, there is a likelihood that there are going to be some compliance issues. Now the government has started to help us. We have two staff to be assigned to a company.”

The news comes barely seven months after a report by a conglomerate of civil society organizations found that logging companies in Grand Bassa cut trees worth nearly US$2.5 million, reminiscent of the Private Use Permit scandal roughly a decade ago.

The DayLight summed up Sing Africa’s harvesting records for the four-year period and found the total volume of the logs from the illegal sub-sections of  forest known in forestry as “blocks.” Afterward, we grouped all the logs by tree species and multiplied each group of the species by the prevailing prices on the international market. Then we summed up the values of all species to get the total value of the illicit woods.

It could be more or less than US$2.2 million worth of logs. More because our calculations excluded the company’s 2019-2020 felling. Less in that, we were uncertain that few of the controversial blocks were actually outside Sing Africa’s contract area. That is the case due to the fact that the company’s approved operational plans include blocks covering the entire forest. 

‘We saw them’

It was the leaders of the community forest that raised the alarm over the issue two years ago, which led the FDA to investigate the matter in January earlier this year. Findings of that investigation, seen by The DayLight, showed that locals had informed the FDA about the unlawful harvesting since 2020. It also revealed that Sing Africa had left some of the trees in the forest it illegally felled as early as 2017.

“The area they (Sing Africa) said they were not going to work, we saw them cutting blocks there. After that, they went there in 2021 and started cutting logs,” recalled Gayflorson Korballah, one of the community leaders who detected the illegal harvesting in an interview in a town called Balagwalazu. In normal forest practice, blocks, which measure 100 square kilometers, are determined by the size of the contract area and duration of the contract.

Two workers of Sing Africa take a nap on one of the logs the company illegally cut in August 2021. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

Sing Africa had rejected the portion of the forest at the center of the illegal harvesting because Ecowood, another company, had operated there before, according to Alexander Songu, the head of the community-forest leadership. Songu said the community tried to persuade Sing Africa to sign for the entire forest but failed. The parties sealed their deal in January 2016 for 44,444 hectares, leaving out 5,000 hectares of Bluyeama’s total forestland, the agreement shows.

The DayLight saw ample evidence of the illegal harvesting, including a number of the stumps of the illegal logs with tracking barcodes. We traced some of the logs to a sawmill run by the company in that area and in its log yards on the Gbarnga-Lofa and Buchanan-River Cess highways. We even witnessed three trucks transporting some of them to Monrovia on the 12th of last month at 6:45 pm, beyond the legal time for the transport of woods. It was unclear whether the company obtained a permit for that transport, as the nightly movement of logs is almost completely prohibited.

Likely unlawful transport aside, the haulage of the logs is a violation of  Regulation 118-17 on Confiscated Log, Timber and Timber Products. That regulation provides that illegally harvested logs must be confiscated following a court order, which has not taken place near five months since the FDA launched its inquiry. In fact, the company is currently seeking a permit to export the logs it has transported to the Freeport of Monrovia, according to Moses Monorporlor, one of its managers.

In a separate interview, Atty. Gertrude Nyaley, the technical manager of the legality verification department of the FDA, said the agency would not grant Sing Africa an export permit for any illegal logs.  “We know how to trace each and every standing tree to the blocks from where they come,” said Nyaley, who led the department’s inquiry on the scandal.  

The FDA is matching reports from its legality verification and commercial departments, and conducting a third investigation on the matter before finally taking any actions, according to Doryen.  “Eventually, we are going to take some actions. We are in a better position now to be faster,” he said, adding the agency now had two of its staff with each company and their salaries increased by US$125.  

Sing Africa denies any wrongdoing. Mukesh Gupta, its CEO, insists his company has not broken any laws. He said they had been transparent in their operations.

“No, we are not logging outside of the concession,” said Gupta, three of whose relatives own the company,  in an interview with The DayLight. “We have cut those blocks, and FDA is aware of this,” he said, adding that the company’s agreement with the community covers all 49,444 hectares.    

Apart from Sing Africa’s agreement with Bluyeama, other evidence does not support Gupta’s claims. Sing Africa has been paying the community US$30,555.25 for land rental fees against the portion of the forest provided in their agreement, not the entire forest, according to records of the payments. In Liberian forestry, a community’s land rental fee is 55 percent of the product of the total size of the contracted forestland and US$1.25, the rate for a hectare.  

If convicted by a court, Sing Africa faces a fine twice the value of logs it illegitimately felled in Bluyeama, a six-month prison term, or both, according to Regulation 118-17. Under the regulation, it is an offense if a company cuts logs outside its permit area intentionally or negligently.

“If the investigation proves that I am wrong, FDA has all right to penalize me,” Gupta said. “If I am not wrong then there is no way they can penalize me.”

Sing Africa transports some of the logs it may have illegally harvested in the Bluyeama Community Forest. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

Fugitive Businessman Abandons Logs in Cape Mount

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Top: Logs, abandoned by Alma Wood in Vanjah Village, Grand Cape Mount County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue


By James Harding Giahyue and Varney Kamara

Editor’s Note: This is the second of a series on the aftermaths of timber sale contracts (TSCs) across the country, which were canceled in March 2021 following years of illegitimacy.  


VANJAH VILLAGE – The company of a Lebanese businessman fleeing the law abandoned an unspecified number of logs in Grand Cape Mount County, with the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) doing little to address the problem, an investigation by The DayLight has found.

In 2018, Alma Wood Corporation (Liberia), co-owned by El Zein Hassan, abandoned the woods in a small-scale logging concession in the Gola Konneh and Porkpa Districts of Grand Cape Mount County. Hassan fled the country the following year over a debt lawsuit with  Afriland Bank, leaving the logs unattended in different locations in the area.  

“There are many logs left abandoned and damaged in the bush,” Aaron Quaye, a community leader, told The DayLight. There are over 5,000 cubic meters [of logs] in the forests.”

This reporter saw scores of the woods scattered across the forest, the company’s log yard in a town called Mafalla, another town named Gohn  and Vanjah Village. Some locals were burning the logs to make charcoal in Mafalla.   Quaye said there were more logs in forests but The DayLight could not reach them due to the difficult road network in that region.

The DayLight’s calculation of the company’s official production and export records between 2018 and 2020 shows that it did not ship 519.267 cubic meters of logs it harvested in that area. That number could be more, given that the records only show the company’s 2018 production in the concession affecting Vanjah Village and Benduma town, where Quaye lives, not the forest around Bong Village, where Alma Wood also operated.

Woods are abandoned if they are “unattended” between 15 and 180 working days depending on their location, according to Regulation 116-17 on Abandoned Log, Timber and Timber Products. It was created in 2017 and repealed certain sections of Regulation 108-07 that narrowed the definition for “abandoned logs” as logs outside a contract area without tracking barcodes.

The regulation requires the FDA to notify the public over a long period once it learns of the situation. Ruth Varney, the agency’s representative in the western region, confirmed to DayLight the community had told her about the abandoned logs.

Logs Alma Wood abandoned in a forest not far from Vanjah Village in the Porkpa District of Grand Cape Mount County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

In April earlier this year, the FDA gave all logging companies a one-month period to declare logs they have harvested as it takes inventory of probably abandoned logs countrywide. That deadline has expired a month ago and the agency said it would begin auctioning the woods this month.

“Those who did not remove their logs as per the stipulated time, the lawyer will now go to the court to seek judicial action to have the logs confiscated the auctioned,” said FDA’s Managing Director Mike Doryen in a rare interview with The DayLight. “That is a problem that we must solve.”

It was unclear whether the FDA has exhausted a mandatory process in the regulation in order to auction the controversial logs, taking 114 working days or just under six months. Within this time, it needs to investigate, possibly remove the woods to a safe location and make several public notices through the media and its website. It is only when no one claims the logs after that process that the FDA can obtain a court warrant for the auction.  Doryen did not show any evidence that these things have been done.

Locals are using some of the woods abandoned by Alma Wood in its log yard in Mafalla, Grand Cape Mount County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

Besides, Alma Wood’s own legal nightmare makes it even harder for a normal auctioning. Earlier this year, the FDA disapproved a deal for the logs to be sold to East End, a company owned by former Minister of Justice Cllr. Benedict Sannoh, over Alma Wood’s lawsuit. The agency learned that the logs had been used as collateral for Sky Insurance Company to pay the bail for Hassan’s release by the Commercial Court in Monrovia.

Hassan had taken a US643,000 loan from Afriland Bank missed several payment deadlines, according to several people familiar with the case (all parties to the case denied The DayLight access to court filings and an interview). Hassan would escape the country thereafter. Efforts by The DayLight to contact him or representatives of the company were not successful.     

It is not just Hassan’s dealing with the court that is unlawful. Alma Wood’s operations in Porkpa and Gola Konneh are also illegal. Five-thousand-hectare logging concessions, known across the forestry sector as timber sale contracts (TSCs), are meant for only firms with at least 51 percent Liberian shareholdings. The company’s two operations in Cape Mount were some of five illegal deals the FDA signed or sanctioned that we and the Community of Forest and Environmental Journalists (CoFEJ) exposed as part of an investigation on TSC across the country. The one in Quaye’s community is called TSC A11 and the other one is TSC A16. Hassan and Radwan Darwiche, a Senegalese man, equally share the company’s  500 stocks, according to its legal documents. It had been subcontracted to the two TSCs in 2016 by Bassa Logging Company, a Liberian firm, and Sun Yeun, a 98 percent Chinese-owned firm, which also breaks the National Forestry Reform Law.

The two TSCs and nine others in Cape Mount, Grand Bassa, Gbarpolu and Bong County overstayed their legal timeframe of at least five years. All lasted for more than a decade combining to establish some of the most chaotic forest licenses of the postwar era.

Josephus Bank, the CEO and co-owner (one percent shareholder)  of Sun Yeun claimed that the company had changed shareholders in an interview with us but did not present any evidence. The company has not changed shareholders since its formation in 2008, the documents we obtained from the Liberian Business Registry show. He blamed the FDA for the abandonment of the logs.

Quaye said Clarence Massaquoi, the CEO and co-owner of Bassa Logging, visited the forest last month with an “investor.” Massaquoi did not respond to specific queries on the matter in a WhatsApp chat.

“FDA contributed to those logs being there today. When Alma Wood’s contract expired, I wrote the FDA informing it about logs being [in the forest]. FDA delayed and I wanted to sell at the time,” Banks said in that interview relative to the logs in TSC A16. The FDA refuted that claim.

A pile of logs that Alma Wood abandoned in Vanjah Village, Grand Cape Mount County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

Massaquoi faces a heavy penalty to redeem the logs amid Hassan’s escape, under the regulation on abandoned logs. He is required to first pay an administrative fee associated with, including the probable transport, storage, security and public notification associated with the woods. Penalties include a payment two times the volume of the logs in question by the legal fees for their stumps. Stumpage fees are calculated based on percentages of the international prices of categories of logs. The regulation was formulated to minimize the waste of forest resources and compel legal compliance in the harvesting and shipment of logs.

Quaye, who savored an opportunity to join his community’s forest management leadership in 2016, just before Alma Wood signed an agreement with them, said they were the biggest losers in everything. FDA had canceled all TSCs in March last year but did not see to it that communities get their benefits, leaving Alma Wood indebted to him and other villagers. Bassa Logging/Alma Wood owes affected communities US$56,550 in land-related fees, according to official documents. It did not pay villagers a cent for the trees it felled, fees for scholarships and a handpump, Quaye said.

“We regret all these things that are happening to our community,” Quaye said. “We are regretting because it takes so many years for trees to get mature in the forest. Our forest is depleted without any benefit that communities can point to.”  

The FDA told an annual meeting of forestry players in March earlier this year that it would work with the union of community leaderships to address overdue payments and other benefits. He restated that in our interview with him.

“We didn’t do that (addressing benefits and other issues),” Doryen said, “but we will do it now.”

This story was a production of the Community of Forest and Environmental Journalists (CoFEJ) of Liberia and The DayLight.   

Government Agent Connives With Illegal Miners in River Cess

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Top: One of several pits Gbarwor has dug in Sand Beach, River Cess. The DayLight/Varney Kamara


By Varney Kamara


SAND BEACH – Illicit miners are threatening the existence of a famous town in River Cess County with the help of an official of the Ministry of Mines, an investigation by The DayLight has revealed.

Gbarwor Corporative Society Inc. does not have a license for its operations in the Morweh mining district, where Sand Beach is located, according to records of the Ministry of Mines and Energy. The company’s only active license is for a semi-industrial goldmine in Grand Kru County, the records show as of June 16. It held a gold dealer’s license for Montserrado County, which expired last January, and two gold prospecting licenses in the same Grand Kru and Grand Bassa, respectively, both of which expired in 2019. It had another semi-industrial gold mining license also in Grand Bassa canceled in 2020.

But the company has a memorandum of understanding with chiefs and elders of the Central River Cess District, approved by Amos Wiahtoe, the representative of the ministry in that region, known in the industry as a mining agent. The region is part of the Cestos River gold belt and has a huge likelihood for gold, attracting many miners, including illicit ones.

Gbarwor promised to pay US$250 for teachers every quarter and US$1,000 scholarships for students each year, and erect handpumps to mine in their community, according to the document seen by The DayLight. The chiefs also pledged to the company protection of its properties and operations. It is an artisanal mining deal but the company operates a semi-industrial, using heavy-duty equipment, showing it is cheating the chiefs in the process.   

Liberia’s Minerals and Mining Law prohibits mining without a license, and Wiahtoe’s responsibility is to enforce the law in that area. Wiahtoe declined an interview over his involvement with the illegal deal.

The Ministry of Mines and Energy, which regulates the sector, said it would investigate the matter. Locals’ interference is one of the challenges the ministry has faced for decades but evidence of collusion of its agents is rare.  

“We will recall those that are involved and take the necessary action,” said Obediah Arku, the inspector general for mines, in an interview with The DayLight.

The company and Wiahtoe face a fine of up to US$2,000, a two-year prison term, or both, if convicted by a court, as per the mining law.

The company mines right within the town, threatening the homes of its 3,000 inhabitants. There were large pits everywhere.

“We are not safe here. The guys are digging all behind our houses. This place will soon finish,” said Joseph Flomo, one resident.

“We have children, women, and elderly people here. Any one of us could fall into these big holes, and that will be a problem for the community. We are in serious trouble,” Prince Sawyeh, another resident, who worked with the ministry before, said.

It was unclear who is the owner of Gbarwor, as there are no records of the company at the Liberian Business Registry. James Clarke, who is named on the ministry’s records, declined to comment.

Monoculture Plantations Have Long Harmed Communities and their Ancestral Lands. A New Tool Seeks to Change That.

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Indonesian and Liberian community leaders have developed a tool to help companies track the impacts of their plantations across supply chains


Top: Annie Gboyah, Peter K. Ben and Thomas Y. Kpue of the Jogbahn clan stand on the boundary line between the oil palm plantation land and their lands. Photo Credit: Isabel Albee for Rights and Resources Initiative


By Mina Beyan

Editor’s Note: The views expressed in this op-ed are exclusively those of the author, not necessarily The DayLight.

For a century, Liberia’s rich lands have attracted multinational corporations to source natural resources like rubber and oil palm. Today, over 10 percent of Liberia’s land mass is owned and occupied by four major oil palm companies.

This massive allocation of arable farmlands and forests to foreign investors has not come without a cost. Many communities who have lived and farmed on the lands for generations found that their land was taken without their free, prior and informed consent. Communities in Grand Cape Mount, Bomi and Maryland counties are now left without land, livelihoods, or food and clean water sources. Importantly, the communities have no clear way to find redress for their grievances.

Across the world, there is newfound energy toward sustainability, and more consumers are unwilling to buy products linked to environmental and human rights abuses. Emerging policies in the European Union would require human and environmental rights due diligence for all products imported into European markets. Global brands like Nestle and Unilever, which source palm oil from places like Liberia, are adopting “forest positive” policies, pledging to use their supply chains to eliminate deforestation and contribute to rural livelihoods in their sourcing areas. But with supply chains spanning continents from rural Liberia to the Peruvian Amazon, to the forests of Sumatra, and Indonesia, this will be difficult to achieve.

To address this need, the Liberian-based CSO-Oil Palm Working Group and the Indonesian-based AsM Law Office, with support from the global nonprofit Rights and Resources Initiative, have developed a tool for communities and companies to monitor the impacts of land-based investments on the communities’ ancestral lands. The tool involves engaging with local communities as partners and sources of timely and accurate information on supply chain impacts – linking corporate policies to data collected by communities.

Why is this important for companies? Community sourced data on the impacts of supply chains benefits everybody, including corporations and their consumers. With reliable information and formal access to communities, companies will be able to address potential harms caused by their operations so that they can comply with the stricter regulations on sustainable supply chains.

At the same time, the tool will equip governments with data on how companies are affecting their citizens and communities. And most importantly, local communities will finally have a seat at the table to discuss how their lands are utilized – and the opportunity to benefit, not suffer, from the wealth of resources in their ancestral lands.

Mina Beyan is a Programs Director at the Social Entrepreneurs for Sustainable Development (SESDev) in Liberia. She works with local communities to monitor and report on oil palm companies’ activities, and to help enhance compliance with voluntary commitments and laws. Mina is also a key member of the CSO Oil Palm Working Group, based in Monrovia, and sits on the National Oil Palm Platform of Liberia (NOPPOL) secretariat as a CSO representative.

Indonesians Share Oil Palm Experiences with Liberians

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Top: A swathe of palm plantation in Butaw, Sinoe County. The DayLight/Harry Browne


By Varney Kamara

MONROVIA – A team of Indonesians from communities affected by palm plantations has shared their experiences with actors in the Liberian oil palm industry, introducing a new monitoring tool that builds a relationship between villagers and investors.

Indonesia is the world’s largest producer of palm oil. The southeastern Asian nation has rapidly expanded its oil palm plantations in recent decades, accounting for 50 percent of global oil palm production.

With its vast experience in the industry, stakeholders in the Liberian palm are hoping to learn new lessons to improve governance in the country’s battered oil palm sector that has seen years of human rights violations and bad labor practices

The Liberian oil palm sector has seen a horde of protests and court actions over the last decade.  In May 2020, Golden Veroleum Liberia (GVL), the country’s largest oil palm company, illegally dismissed 433 employees, sparking outrage across communities in Liberia’s southeastern Sinoe County. In Grand Cape Mount County, on the country’s western frontiers, villagers across the Mano Palm Oil Plantation areas have been at loggerhead with the company over its failure to implement corporate social responsibilities.  

“Liberia needs a chamber that will help to mitigate conflict and develop policies about sustainability and human rights,” said Adinko, a senior human rights lawyer who headed the team at the event in Congo Town. “You need a community business, NGO, finance, and partners to talk about how to make the palm oil industry better in your country.

“You need to increase the smallholders in Liberia. You need to have an inclusive business sector, build capacity and provide backup to join with the big economy in your country,” Adinko added.

The event marked the end of a weeklong training of civil society actors on community-based monitoring (CBM), an approach designed to ease tension between communities and oil palm investors.   

CBM is expected to mitigate these challenges, tasking multinationals to demand companies abide by existing laws and policies governing the sector. It was organized by Social Entrepreneurs for Sustainable Development (SESDev) with funding from the Rights and Resources Institute (RRI), an international non-governmental organization working to ensure better forest reforms and a forest economy.

“We are now understanding how things have moved from bad to good between companies and communities in other countries,” said James Otto, a lead campaigner at Sustainable Development Institute (SDI). “We wanted to understand what tools and approaches they are using. That gave rise to this exchange.” 

Dr. Michael Lartey, the general manager for the sustainability of Golden Veroleum Liberia (GVL), said the success of the program will hinge on the commitment of companies and communities alike.  

“The expectation is that whatever we will come up with, whether by MoUs or other social agreements, they must be done through the free prior and informed consent (FPIC) process,” Lartey said.  

Abandoned Logs Turn Out as Collateral in Illegal Deal

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Top: Some of the logs Sun Yeun/Alma Wood illegally harvested and abandoned in a log yard in MaFalla, Grand Cape Mount County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue


By Varney Kamara

Editor’s Note: This story is part of a series on abandoned logs, which highlights the failure of the forestry sector to prevent the waste of much-needed forest resources across the country. 


BONG VILLAGE, Grand Cape Mount – An unlawful deal for a company to purchase a consignment of logs illegally felled and abandoned in a forest in Grand Cape Mount County has stalled after authorities found out the woods are collateral in a lawsuit.  

In 2018, Alma Wood Corporation (Liberia) Limited felled the logs as part of a logging concession the forestry sector calls Timber Sales Contract Area 16 or TSC A16 in the Gola Konneh District. The company’s owners reportedly fled the country, leaving the logs there until the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) canceled the contract last year.

Sun Yeun, the original holder of the contract,  and the community forest development committee (CFDC) of that area, tried to sell the logs to East End Logging Company, owned by former Minister of Justice Benedict Sannoh, earlier this year. But the FDA disapproved the deal because Alma Wood had used the logs as a surety to obtain a US$643,000 loan from Afriland Bank.

The bank had sued Alma Wood after the period of the loan elapsed. El Zein Hassan, the company’s CEO had been arrested but was released on bail, with Sky Insurance Company filing his bond. Hassan would later flee the country and the court ruled that the insurer seize the logs, according to several individuals familiar with the case. (Our own efforts to obtain the court’s file on the case did not materialize. We will update the story with details from the document once we obtain it).

Afriland Bank and Sky Insurance declined to speak on the matter.

The forest where the logs were harvested has been marred by irregularities from the very beginning. Covering 5,000 hectares, TSCs are meant for companies that have at least 51 percent Liberian shareholdings. They were meant to empower Liberians following 14 years of civil war during which time local businesspeople were marginalized by foreign firms that supplied warring factions with arms. But TSC A16 was awarded to Sun Yeun, 98 percent of whose shares are held by a Chinese businessman named Wei Zhang, according to the company’s legal documents.

Also, the subcontract deal between Sun Yeun and Alma Wood was illegal as the latter company’s equity stakes are equally shared between Hassan, a Lebanese and a Radwan Wardwiche, a Senegalese tycoon, according to Alma Wood’s legal documents.

The contract also overstayed its legal timeframe of at most five years, remaining active for more than a decade having been issued in 2009. The board of directors of the FDA had illegally extended the contract alongside 10 others in 2017 but recalled that move in March last year.

Some of the logs Sun Yeun harvested and abandoned in its log yard in Mafala, Grand Cape Mount County. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue

Josephus Banks, Sun Yeun’s CEO and one of two of the company’s Liberian shareholders claims that the company is not majority Chinese-owned but has failed to show any proof. He also argued in an interview with The DayLight, that its subcontract deal with Alma Wood was not illegal.  

The logs in question are abandoned as per law. Depending on their location, logs are abandoned if they are “unattended” between 15 and 180 working days, according to Regulation 116-17 on Abandoned Logs, Timber and Timber Products. In this case, the logs are abandoned because they have remained in the forest for over 60 working days.

Banks blames the abandonment of the logs on the FDA.

“FDA contributed to those logs being there today. When Alma Wood’s contract expired, I wrote the FDA informing it about logs being on the lining. FDA delayed and I wanted to sell at the time,” said Banks. Locals also said they informed the FDA about the logs in 2019, with Ruth Varney, its official responsible for the western region, confirming that to The DayLight in a mobile phone interview.  

In April earlier this year, the FDA gave all logging companies operating in the country a month grace period to declare the trees they have felled, even though FDA should have companies’ production and export records.   

“We should be headed for auction this month (June) [in the eastern region] and then the exercise will continue in the northern region and then go down south and western part,” said Mike Doryen, FDA’s Managing Director, in an interview with The DayLight.

“The court is going to make a determination, and that is what we will follow,” Doryen added in reference to the Alma Wood case.

It would have been another violation had the FDA approved East End’s purchase of the abandoned logs. The regulation on abandoned logs requires the FDA to transport the logs to a safe location and reenter them into the government tracking system known in forestry as the chain of custody (CoC). An auction only can take place after a court warrant if no one claims the woods following months of a mandatory, legal notice. If Sun Yeun wants to redeem the logs, it would have to do that within 14 working days of the FDA’s seizure, provide proof of ownership and pay an administrative fee for each of the logs.  Those requirements have yet to be met.

But the case between Alma Wood and Sky Insurance in Monrovia has dashed the hopes of locals, who had wanted the logs sold to get overdue benefits now that TSCs are no more. Sun Yeun owes the villagers here and a nearby concession (TSC A15) a combined US$190,900 for land-related fees, official records show. It also owes affected communities US$3,000 for scholarships and failed to build 10 latrines and one handpump, according to Jaycee Farr, the general secretary of the community forest development committee, which manages villagers’ logging-generated benefits.

“We are happy that people came here to buy the logs. If the logs are sold, the communities will be able to get something as their benefits,” Farr said. “If the government is saying TSCs are canceled, and then companies are owing communities, how will the communities benefit from whatever things they own, or whatever things that have been taken away from them?”

Banks, Sun Yeun’s CEO, refutes Farr’s comments as a “blatant lie.

“Of all the TSCs that were operating in this country, I was the most potent TSC holder. We (Sun Yeun) brought in more than US$5 million worth of equipment, brand new, not used,” he said, even though records of the company show otherwise. The US$190,874.50  his company owes the two communities is the second-highest debt for land rental fees —next to Bulgar and Vincent Timber Company—among former TSC holders, official documents show.   

At an annual meeting of the Liberian government, the European Union and civil society in March, the FDA promised to work with the National Union of Community Forest Development Committee (NUCFDC) to address TSCs’ arrears, according to records of the event.

Doryen said the FDA was committed to that plan. “Yes, we didn’t do that (addressing benefits and other issues) but we will do it now,” Doryen added.

Funding for this story was provided by the Liberia Media Center (LMC). The DayLight maintained complete editorial independence over its content.

Communities Aid Company Break Logging Laws, Hurting Themselves

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Top: Varguaye is one of the towns affected by Akewa’s operations in the Gola Konneh Community Forest. The DayLight/James Harding Giahyue


By Emmanuel Sherman

Editor’s Note: This story is the second of a two-part series on Akewa Group of Companies’ operations in Liberia, focusing on the shortcomings of communities where the company operates. The first part emphasized the contribution of the Forestry Development Authority to the firm’s violations.   

VARGUAYE, Grand Cape Mount County – Something did not seem right to Willie Williams about Akewa Group of Companies’ tax clearance when it bid for the Gola Konneh

Community’s Forest. So, Williams, who had just been elected chairman of the community assembly of Gola Konneh (a powerful body in community forestry), wrote the Liberia Revenue Authority (LRA) to verify the document.  

It turned out Akewa’s tax clearance was fake as Williams had suspected all along. The tax clearance Akewa had submitted was “forged and was definitely not obtained from the LRA,” the agency said in a letter dated March 25, 2019. The communication added that the tax clearance Akewa presented belonged to Tiger Quarry, a mining company.

Williams’ effort to disqualify Akewa was opposed by other members of the leadership and county officials.  Furious over that, he resigned and Akewa went on to win the bid for the 49,179-hectare forestland, beating Green Wood, Auzy International, Sing Africa Plantation Liberia Limited and Master Logger some of whose credentials were legitimate. Not long after that, Akewa signed the agreement with Gola Konneh. No records show it was punished.   

“I am not responsible for [the] fake tax payment. Forestry Development Authority (FDA) is there and has oversight, not me. I can’t do their work,” said James Momo, chief officer of the Gola Konneh’s community forest management body, in a mobile phone interview. “We wanted somebody that we could work together.”

Forestry laws do not back Momo’s claims. The Community Rights Law of 2009, with Respect to Forest Lands, which was created when Momo was a senator of Grand Cape Mount County, gives communities that very right. “Communities have the responsibility of ensuring transparency and accountability in community forest resource management,” the law says.

The FDA refutes his comments. Managing Director C. Mike Doryen tells The DayLight in an interview that Akewa later presented a genuine document before acquiring Gola Konneh. “We prevented Akewa from doing further business until they could provide [their] tax clearance The clearance was given, they rectified it and they paid a fine and that’s how we resumed business with them,” Doryen adds without showing any proof of the fine.

Liberian laws require harsh punishments for faking a tax clearance. Under the National Forestry Reform Law, a person could get a 12-month prison term for forging bidding documents or a US$10,000 fine, or both. That person faces up to five years in prison under the Penal Code, as using false information in bidding constitutes perjury under Regulation 103-07 of the FDA Ten Core Regulations. They could pay a fine for breaking the Revenue Code as well.

The situation in Gola Konneh is typical of the contributions of community forest leaders to Akewa’s violations of forestry laws and regulations, spanning over a decade. While the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) has unlawfully approved one Akewa project to another and violated its own laws during this time, villagers have aided the company in exploiting themselves.

Starting logging operations in 2008, Akewa is one of the most infamous companies in the postwar forestry sector, dogged by irregularities.  Apart from its tax clearance scam, it has been involved in the industry’s biggest scandal and has been indebted to communities every year.

Doryen says the Liberian government had given Akewa and other companies more time pay all overdue debts. “At one point in time companies requested from the previous government to give them time to settle forest-related fees because they were not making a profit,” Doryen says. There was flexibility applied to some of these things at the time.”

‘I blame the elders’

Expectedly, the expectations of townspeople in Gola Konneh over Akewa have not been met as it has not lived up to the agreement. Akewa owes the community US$83,620 in land rental and scholarship fees. The company has not paved roads, constructed handpumps, erected latrines and provided an ambulance for affected communities it is obligated to do within the first three years of its operations, according to the agreement.   

The parties signed a memorandum of understanding in November last year, giving Akewa up to August later this year to make all payments. It, however, has already missed monthly deadlines in the new payment scheme, according to Abraham Sirleaf, the chairman of the community assembly, Williams’ successor.     

“The company has not employed a single youth,” says Abubaker Jalloh, a youth representative, in reference to a clause in the agreement. “I regret why Akewa took our forest.” 

“I blame the elders and other big people of the county for not allowing us as [community assembly] members to decide which company we wanted, and they took Akewa,” says Miatta Pratt, a member of the community assembly. 

Gola Konneh has itself to blame, according to Bonathan Walaka, the national facilitator of the National Union of Community Forest Management Body (NUCFMB), which advocates for community forest leadership. Shortly before the  Akewa agreement, Gola Konneh’s leaders visited the Beyan Poye Community Forest to share experiences. Walaka says Gola Konneh leaders ignored what they learned from their Beyan Poye counterparts.

Logs at the roadside into Gola Konneh Community Forest. The DayLight/Emmanuel Sherman

“The forest governance of Gola Konneh didn’t follow the due-diligence process properly before contract negotiation with Akewa because the company has noncompliance issues with Beyan Poye,” Walaka tells The DayLight in an emailed interview.

Beyan Poye has had a worse experience with Akewa over their 2017 agreement. The company owes the Margibi community US$85,679 for the rental of its land and the logs it harvested there between 2018 and 2021, according to that community’s leadership. With an exception of a lone handpump, the Nigerian company has also not fulfilled its promises to the community. Now both parties are embroiled in arbitration, with the community opting to terminate the contract with the company following nearly five years of chaos.

But Beyan Poye could have prevented this from happening if they had paid attention to Akewa’s track record. It was not Akewa’s first logging deal in the Gibi District, after all.  In the early 2010s, it had obtained a private use permit (PUP) there, including a large portion of the Beyan Poye today. That PUP and 62 others, covering 2.5 million hectares of forestland or 23 percent of the country’s landmass, had been illegally awarded. They became the biggest scandal in the postwar logging industry: the private use permit (PUP) of 2012. Then-President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf signed an executive order canceling all of them after an official inquest.

The investigation found villagers in Gibi did not consent to the Akewa’s use of their land, its PUP overlapped with private property and was never resolved, and that the company did not have a business plan, a major prequalification requirement that provides information on the companies’ technical and financial capacity to operate and pay dues.

That was not the only record Beyan Poye had at its disposal. Akewa had left a similar trail in  Compound One in Grand Bassa County, just across the Farmington River. It had logged there for nearly nine years, leaving that community with a stretch of dirt road and US$10,000, according to the community’s leadership. In March last year, the FDA canceled that contract, known in forestry as timber sale contract area three (TSC A3). Akewa still owes that community US$11,624 for rental of its land, according to official records, and an unspecified amount for logs it harvested there, according to the community leadership.  

Beyan Poye ignored all those things and leased its 33,380-hectare forest to the company.  

“[We] the community people were ignorant of the forest procedures,” says Jehudi Barnyou, chief officer of Beyan Poye’s community forest management body. “We did not go on any training to know how it works.”

“We had no experience yet,” says Amos Boyer, co-chairman of the community assembly of Beyan Poye, who as commissioner of the Gibi District in 2017 introduced Akewa’s owner and CEO Abigail Funke Odebunmi to the community. “Having all the needs for road connectivity, we were very much eager.  Since it was logging business, we felt we were blessed.”

Loretta Pope-kai, a lead campaigner at Foundation for Community Initiative (FCI), thinks communities have to do better in managing their forest to harness their benefits.

“Community forest governance structures have the power to develop their communities. Ignorance is never an excuse,” Mrs. Pope-Kai says. “If they continue like this, they will continue to push themselves into poverty and underdevelopment.”

Akewa did not respond to any of The DayLight’s queries for comments. Mrs. Odebunmi initially agreed to speak with us in December last year—after many failed attempts—and then declined a formal interview when we finally met her. We emailed her our questions as she had requested but she still did not respond. She again ignored our WhatsApp message in April earlier this year.

This story was produced by the Community of Forest and Environmental Journalists (CoFEJ)  of Liberia

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