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Ecstasy threatens Cambodia’s jungles

E-llusion

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PHNOM PENH // The illegal drugs trade is causing significant environmental damage to parts of Cambodia, according to an international aid agency.

In south-west Cambodia the production of sassafras oil, which is used when making the recreational drug ecstasy, is destroying trees, the local inhabitants’ livelihoods and wreaking untold ecological damage, according to David Bradfield, an adviser to the Wildlife Sanctuaries Project of Fauna and Flora International, who is based in the area.

The sassafras oil comes from the Cardamom Mountain area, one of the last forest wildernesses in mainland South East Asia.

“The illicit distilling of sassafras oil in these mountains is slowly but surely killing the forests and wildlife,” Mr Bradfield said. “The production of sassafras oil is a huge operation, which affects not only the area where the distilleries are actually located, but ripples outward, leaving devastation and destruction in its wake.”

The livelihoods of more than 15,000 people who depend on hunting and gathering to survive in the wildlife sanctuary are at risk from the sassafras production operations, which pollute water and kill wildlife.

Cambodian sassafras oil is highly sought as it is of the highest quality – more than 90 per cent pure, according to the head of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in Cambodia, Lars Pedersen. It is a major precursor drug used in the production of ecstasy.

“Massive amounts of sassafras oil are smuggled every year into Vietnam and Thailand from Cambodia,” he said.

Sassafras Oil is made from the roots of the rare Mreah Prew Phnom tree – also known as Cinnamomum parathenoxylon. The roots are first chopped into small blocks of wood and shredded into fibre consistency. This is then put into large metal vats two metres high and about three metres wide. It is distilled over a wood-driven fire for at least five days before the gas is cooled and the oil created.

Apart from depleting the Mreah Prew Phnom, large numbers of surrounding trees are felled to maintain the fires, undermining the area’s biodiversity. At the current rate, Mr Bradfield said, the Mreah Prew Phnom and other species would become extinct in the near future.

Animal life is also threatened. Deep in the jungle, the factories, which have two or three distilling pots each, are heavily guarded and require dozens workers to maintain the stills. These workers live on the surrounding wildlife in the area, with many involved in the commercial poaching of such rare animals as tigers, pangolins, peacocks, pythons, wild cats and wild fowls.

Streams and rivers are being polluted too by the effluent from the oil production. “There are frequently dead fish and frogs floating in the streams near these distilleries,” Mr Bradfield said.

The contaminated water from this area flows down into the rest of Cambodia through the Mekong and Ton Le Sap rivers and, said Mr Bradfield, poses a threat to populations downstream who rely on the rivers for drinking water. “Water tests in the area need to be carried out as a matter of urgency,” he said.

Four years ago the Cambodian government made the production of sassafras oil illegal in an effort to protect the Mreah Prew Phnom tree. Since then the authorities have tried to eliminate the illicit production factories in the Cardamom Mountains with the help of international organisations.

“Law enforcement is the key to suppressing the illegal trade in sassafras oil,” said Mr Pedersen, the Cambodia UNODC chief. “It’s a very lucrative trade, worth millions and millions of dollars.”

About 50 rangers from the forestry ministry, with the support of independent conservation groups and the UN, are currently policing the area; Mr Bradfield refers to them as “the foot soldiers protecting the forests”.

The rangers spend half the month patrolling the dense, leech-infested jungle of the Cardamom Mountains for a meagre salary, Mr Bradfield said, and face the threat of the machine-gun-carrying mercenaries who guard the factories. Many of the factories are also surrounded by anti-personnel mines.

Flora and Fauna International has supported the rangers for years, providing them with uniforms, equipment and training. They assist in building ranger stations and provide technical advice. The UN Development Fund also supported the project between 2004 and 2006.

The rangers’ task is made all the more difficult because of the potential profits smugglers can make from the trade and the lengths they will go to protect their product.

A year ago the Thai authorities seized more than 50 tonnes of sassafras oil near the Cambodian border on its way to China and the US, according to western anti-narcotics agents who declined to be identified, reported to be worth US$150,000 (Dh550,000).

Had it found its destination, where it would have been used to make ecstasy – it would have produced 7.5 million tablets worth more than $150 million, a western anti-narcotics agent said.

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Ecstasy threatens Cambodia’s jungles

Larry Jagan, Foreign Correspondent

Last Updated: January 15. 2009 2:39PM UAE / January 15. 2009 10:39AM GMT

http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090115/NATIONAL/789869245/0/NEWS
 
that's to bad. Can't sassafras be grown in a cultivated field?
 
................... it would have been used to make ecstasy – it would have produced 7.5 million tablets worth more than $150 million, a western anti-narcotics agent said.

$20+ per pill. There they go exaggerating again. A big feelgood ending for the anti-drug authorities who want to shock westerners with a huge amount of money. It's hard not to imagine it was done on purpose to trump the massive social, personal and environmental damage of another country that most westerners don't probably care about, and wouldn't have even heard about unless America had spent a good while bombing the place.
 
well if it was legal there could be regulations, and the trees would flourish, and perhaps even be worshiped. Thats a tree that deserves a hug :)
 
this article is full of shit..
sassafras oil can be produced and distilled from various plant sources for one,
the workers of cambodia are not the main manufacturers of sassafras oil, india is ,and by far!
last but not least...7 mil pills...thats a joke, just holland produces that in a year not to mention canada...
this is all another media elaborate scheme to gain more control over the cambodian govenment by creating a problem so some more tax money gets boomed into some secret project to GLOBALIZE
 
The Cardamon Mountains. It's actually the last place in the world for the Siamease Crocodile and the fresh water Irrawaddy Dolphin (only 50-60 left).

The article states their are Tigers, well it's unclear how many are left but in a 1998 survey they found around 50. That's ten years ago and the Chinese have a massive demand to grind their bones for medicine and eat their dicks so i can't imagine there are any left?

As you can imagine their extremely poor earning 20-40 dollars a month so poaching, logging and jungle meth labs are just the harsh reality.
I'm pretty sure logging for tropical timbers is ALOT more of a problem though especially with the massive government corruption over there I could tell you some storys. . .

It's a very beautiful place in the rainy season with huge waterfalls and low hanging mists. Very sad really but us humans fuck everything up, it's what we do best!
 
You guys are so attached to drugs that you cannot percieve that you may be helping to destroy that forest? Are you serious? The article never said that Cambodia is the only, or even the largest source for the oil. Rather, it yields very pure sassafrass oil. To an Organic Chemist, purity is everything.

But lets try to make ourselves feel better by trying to shift blame, going beside the point saying that the amount of money was exxagerated. We can try to exaunerate our selves by blaming the US for Vietnam, or the war on Drugs. But this is all done to avoid the worst kind of blame. Personal blame. Apparently anyone who spends even 10 dollars on pills is helping to fuel this trade, and the destruction of this forest, because you cant ask where the oil used to make your MDMA came from. If people didnt do MDMA, there would be no reason to cut down the trees.

Just saying, there is enough blame to spread a thick layer every where
 
Sometimes you can put a bunch of pills in a pile and stick your face in and inhale the smell of that sasafrass oil. The smell of the earth getting FU*KED.

Its like if I didn't know better sometimes I'd feel like humans are just animals with brains like a tool they don't understand how to use properly and the world is getting used up and we might not all live forever in perfect peace and harmony in an enlightened utpoian scenario! What if Obama doesn't fix everything!
 
Obama fix everything! What do you mean?

The worlds a pretty huge fucking place!
America has fuck all say in MANY parts of the world and especially now.

No one in Cambodia even likes Americans, Thanks to America, Cambodia is the most heavily mined country in the world!

It was USA who smashed down landmines all along the Vietnam/Cambodia border. And then last year they had the fucking Audacity to ask Cambodia for that money they loaned them.
 
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Ok, then why are they destroying their rainforest to make ecstasy for americans? And if they would do that to themselves for people they hate, who is going to help them besides obama?
 
Ok, then why are they destroying their rainforest to make ecstasy for americans? And if they would do that to themselves for people they hate, who is going to help them besides obama?

Their doing it for money plain and simple, not for Americans, they probably
have no fucking idea what MDMA is.
Harvesting sassafras oil for export to the U.S is in no way a nice gesture to the U.S. They don't give a fuck as long as they get paid.

Do you really think Obama can perform the miracle of stopping the rampant corruption in South East Asia?

I'm 100% positive you have never traveled to a third world country to actually see it, then im sure you would eat those words.
 
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I think this article is an absolute load of shit. Talk about scare mongering. Im suprised they didn't say the people destilling the sassafrass oil were also raping small children in orphanages too. I think that the environmental impact is a drop in the ocean compared to commercial logging, pollution from factories and cars, nuclear waste, rubbish put into landfill ect ect. And the only reason its happening is because its been made illegal. When you consider how fucked up the rest of the world is and how it really is an impossible task to fix all the damage thats already done by greedy corporations and fucking government politicans whats the fucking point. At the end of the day people are gonna want ecstacy, and there will always be people out there that are gonna make the oil and make MDMA.
 
You guys are so attached to drugs that you cannot percieve that you may be helping to destroy that forest? Are you serious? The article never said that Cambodia is the only, or even the largest source for the oil. Rather, it yields very pure sassafrass oil. To an Organic Chemist, purity is everything.

But lets try to make ourselves feel better by trying to shift blame, going beside the point saying that the amount of money was exxagerated. We can try to exaunerate our selves by blaming the US for Vietnam, or the war on Drugs. But this is all done to avoid the worst kind of blame. Personal blame. Apparently anyone who spends even 10 dollars on pills is helping to fuel this trade, and the destruction of this forest, because you cant ask where the oil used to make your MDMA came from. If people didnt do MDMA, there would be no reason to cut down the trees.

Just saying, there is enough blame to spread a thick layer every where


it's hardly fair to blame the end user :\ that's like saying we're all guilty of promoting child labour in china because we bought a few things at walmart. i'll hazard a guess and say that most people responding to this thread with disgust are disgusted by the subversion taking place here. just like the article states:

“Law enforcement is the key to suppressing the illegal trade in sassafras oil,” said Mr Pedersen, the Cambodia UNODC chief. “It’s a very lucrative trade, worth millions and millions of dollars.”

i don't recall ever meeting an environmentalist who sought to cure an ecosystem by fighting a fucking war in it! this is just another vehicle to make us sympathetic for the army fighting the war on drugs; a war that gives the drug industry it's harmful clandestine status; a war that the UN/US is losing, and a war that none of us support!
 
this reminds me of the destruction of california's forests by mexican drug cartels growing ganja.
 
it's hardly fair to blame the end user :\ that's like saying we're all guilty of promoting child labour in china because we bought a few things at walmart. i'll hazard a guess and say that most people responding to this thread with disgust are disgusted by the subversion taking place here. just like the article states:

I hope you're not serious. 8o that is hitler level trolling
 
it's hardly fair to blame the end user :\ that's like saying we're all guilty of promoting child labour in china because we bought a few things at walmart. i'll hazard a guess and say that most people responding to this thread with disgust are disgusted by the subversion taking place here. just like the article states:



i don't recall ever meeting an environmentalist who sought to cure an ecosystem by fighting a fucking war in it! this is just another vehicle to make us sympathetic for the army fighting the war on drugs; a war that gives the drug industry it's harmful clandestine status; a war that the UN/US is losing, and a war that none of us support!


But, people claim to be envirometnalists. They use cotton bags at the grovery store, and drive electric cars. Then they buy MDMA form someone who chops down the rain forest so they can sell you two and a half hours of euphoria. If the person using the drug is not to blame then who is? Thats a very self serving statement. Just like walmart. IF you do not want children the age of 6 to make your clothes, dont buy those clothes. It is that simple. The person who buys questionable products is the one who supports them

So you tell me that people buying illegal antiquities are not single handedly responsible for the destruction of native cultures all around the world, so they can have something that looks nice in their foyer?
 
You guys are so attached to drugs that you cannot percieve that you may be helping to destroy that forest? Are you serious? The article never said that Cambodia is the only, or even the largest source for the oil. Rather, it yields very pure sassafrass oil. To an Organic Chemist, purity is everything.

But lets try to make ourselves feel better by trying to shift blame, going beside the point saying that the amount of money was exxagerated. We can try to exaunerate our selves by blaming the US for Vietnam, or the war on Drugs. But this is all done to avoid the worst kind of blame. Personal blame. Apparently anyone who spends even 10 dollars on pills is helping to fuel this trade, and the destruction of this forest, because you cant ask where the oil used to make your MDMA came from. If people didnt do MDMA, there would be no reason to cut down the trees.

Just saying, there is enough blame to spread a thick layer every where


um.. you do realize that this is caused by the fact that it is illegal in the first place... right?
 
You guys are so attached to drugs that you cannot percieve that you may be helping to destroy that forest? Are you serious? The article never said that Cambodia is the only, or even the largest source for the oil. Rather, it yields very pure sassafrass oil. To an Organic Chemist, purity is everything.

But lets try to make ourselves feel better by trying to shift blame, going beside the point saying that the amount of money was exxagerated. We can try to exaunerate our selves by blaming the US for Vietnam, or the war on Drugs. But this is all done to avoid the worst kind of blame. Personal blame. Apparently anyone who spends even 10 dollars on pills is helping to fuel this trade, and the destruction of this forest, because you cant ask where the oil used to make your MDMA came from. If people didnt do MDMA, there would be no reason to cut down the trees.
Just saying, there is enough blame to spread a thick layer every where

^^^^ Very Well Said
 
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