Assam cracks down on illegal timber trade: 23 actions, 14 sawmills seized
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Assam Forest Minister Jayanta Mallabaruah on Tuesday, 30 June announced that the state's Forest Department has intensified its crackdown on illegal timber operations, with 23 enforcement actions carried out across Assam as part of a sustained 'mission mode' drive against illegal logging and unauthorised sawmills. The minister confirmed the campaign is already yielding results across multiple forest circles.
Scale of the Crackdown
A total of 14 illegal band saw mills have been seized so far — 11 in the Northern Assam Circle and 3 in the Eastern Assam Circle. In the latest operation conducted on Tuesday in the Lower Assam Zone, forest officials seized and dismantled five illegal band saw mills operating across North Kamrup, Hailakandi, and Sribhumi districts.
What Was Seized
Beyond the sawmills, the Forest Department confiscated three illegal timber shops located in North Kamrup, Hailakandi, and Sribhumi. One timber sizing machine was also seized during operations in Hailakandi district. An infographic shared by the minister on X summarised the 23 enforcement actions taken statewide, underscoring the coordinated nature of the drive.
What the Government Said
Mallabaruah posted on X: 'This is just the beginning. We remain committed to zero tolerance against illegal logging and the illicit timber trade. The drive will continue relentlessly until every illegal operation is brought to justice.' The minister reiterated that the Assam government maintains a zero-tolerance policy against illegal timber trade and views unchecked logging as a direct threat to the state's forests and biodiversity.
Why It Matters
Assam's forests — part of the ecologically sensitive Northeast India biodiversity corridor — have long faced pressure from illegal felling and timber smuggling networks. The Forest Department has been conducting coordinated drives across different forest circles to dismantle sawmills, seize timber-processing equipment, and curb illicit timber transportation. This is the latest in a series of escalating enforcement actions the state government has signalled it will sustain.
What Comes Next
Mallabaruah described the current drive as 'only the beginning,' signalling that enforcement will continue across all forest circles until illegal operations are fully dismantled. The state government is expected to maintain pressure through coordinated inter-district operations, with further seizures likely as the campaign expands beyond the zones already covered.