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Corrupt Practices in Liberia Could Mar Community Forestry Benefits
Par: Front Page Africa
Publié: décembre 1, 2016
Pays: Libéria
Type de document: - Autre -
Document ID: 3491
Nombre de vues: 808
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Corrupt Practices in Liberia Could Mar Community Forestry Benefits

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Jonathan Yiah is the coordinator for the Forest Governance Program at the Sustainable Development Institute, a Liberian non-profit that monitors the relationship between investors and communities in the country.

He suspects that many logging applications are being pushed by logging companies who believe they’re a back door to obtaining lucrative contracts at bargain terms without going through competitive bidding.

For a logging company that wants to avoid a potentially expensive competitive bidding process, the temptation to secretly intervene at an early stage in the process and convince community leaders to sign a preliminary agreement might be high.

Yiah says that such an agreement would be unlikely to provide the kind of financial benefits that the community might obtain through competitive bidding or if it’s given legal advice from a third party during the negotiation.