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Communiqués de Presse of Saturday, 28 May 2016

Source: survivalinternational.org

WSF partners with logging company destroying 'pygmy' land

"Pygmy" children

WWF-funded ecoguards have evicted Baka tribespeople from their forest home, and been complicit in serious human rights abuse

A French logging company and official partner of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) is deforesting a huge area of rainforest in southeast Cameroon without the consent of local Baka "Pygmies" who have lived there and managed the land for generations, Survival International has learned.

Rougier is described as an "integrated forest & trade company" and a large "forest operator" in a WWF press release and report. It is felling trees in an estimated 600,000 hectare area, which is more than is permitted under Cameroonian law.

Rougier has also been denounced by Friends of the Earth for its activities in Cameroon, which have included illegal price-fixing, illegal logging outside a concession, felling more trees than authorized, and illegally exporting rare timber.

WWF has stated that it would never partner with a company operating on indigenous land without the consent of the indigenous people. In entering this partnership with Rougier, it has violated its own policies on indigenous peoples.

Survival recently wrote to the CEO of Rougier asking whether he believed his company had acquired the Baka's consent for the logging. In response Rougier simply said that: "Baka communities are aware of our existence and operation."

Under Cameroonian law, the Baka are often criminalized as "poachers" when they hunt to feed their families. In a map produced by Rougier, all Baka forest camps within one concession are labelled as "poachers' camps."

In February, Survival filed an OECD complaint against WWF for funding abusive anti-poaching squads in Cameroon, who have used violence and intimidation to deny tribespeople access to their land.

According to a recent report produced by the EU, not a single logging company is operating legally in Cameroon. Experts say that no logging activities are being carried out at sustainable levels.

Evidence shows that tribal peoples are the best conservationists and guardians of the natural world. Despite this, WWF has preferred to partner with international corporations that destroy the environment's best allies - tribal peoples.