that is changing according to a report from chatham house in london, illegal logging is declining. worldwide, it has gone down by 60% in eight years. chatham house researchers estimate illegal logging has fallen in camera and by -- cameroon by 50%. that in a single decade. that is partly because the governments in these countries have woken up to the ecological damage in their forests and have decided to do something about it. it is also about action west. concerned about forests and the plight of animals, western governments have banned the imports of illegal timber. increasingly, companies have to establish schemes that can trace it would back to its origins. attention now turns to china. its consumption of timber is rising rapidly. but they are making consumer goods and things exported to north america. china could help curb illegal logging further if it, too, signed up not to take lumber stolen from the forests. bbc news. >> it was 15 years ago. now the not-so-boyish take that are back. they are reforming, this time with robbie williams. contain your excitement. they are record