Permalink: https://www.media.greenpeace.org/archive/Hardwood-Logging-Workers-in-DRC-27MZIFJJOHU08.htmlConceptually similarHardwood Logging Workers in DRCGP0STQTXICompleted★★★★Hardwood Logging Workers in DRCGP0STQRONCompleted★★★★Hardwood Logging Workers in DRCGP0STQRO0Completed★★★★Hardwood Logging Workers Receive Their Salary in DRCGP0STQTX6Completed★★★★Hardwood Logging Workers Receive Their Salary in DRCGP0STQTXGCompleted★★★★Campfire in a Lumberyard in DRCGP0STQTWVCompleted★★★★Hardwood Logging Workers in DRCGP0STQROKCompleted★★★★Illegally Logged Hardwood in DRCGP0STQROLCompleted★★★★★★Illegally Logged Hardwood in DRCGP0STQROQCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STQTWUHardwood Logging Workers in DRCLumberjacks rest and roast an animal on the fire before going to work.In original language:伐木工人在火堆前烤火,准备去伐木。伐木工人在火堆前烤火,准备去伐木。Locations:Africa-Democratic Republic of the Congo-Katanga ProvinceDate:22 Aug, 2016Credit:© Lu Guang / GreenpeaceMaximum size:5249px X 3499pxKeywords:Cooks-Day-Forestry-Forests (campaign title)-Illegal logging-KWCI (GPI)-Local population-Loggers-Meat-Men-Outdoors-People-Small group of people-Smoke-Timber industryShoot:Illegal Logging of Hardwood in DRC and Its Trading in ChinaPterocarpus tinctorius, or Mukula tree, is a rare and slow-growing hardwood unique to southern and central Africa. Mukula has been illegally logged and traded from Zambia and DRC to China for the last decade, feeding the increasing demand of "rosewood" in the Chinese market.Chinese photographer Lu Guang traveled to Katanga province in the DR Congo as well as eastern China documenting the expanding Mukula industry. The project, commissioned by Greenpeace, follows its supply chain from the DRC, where it’s used for traditional medicine, dye, and a source of pollen for bees used in honey production—to processing centers in China and upscale furniture showrooms.Related Collections:Illegal Logging of Hardwood in DRC and Its Trading in China (Photos & Video)