Photo: Internet, NGOInsider |
Borei Keila families fear crackdown in works
As dusk settled yesterday on Borei Keila – where dozens of
families on Monday stormed into and occupied developer Phan Imex’s
unfinished Building 9 – community members milled about restlessly in an
act of vigilance not unlike circling the wagons.
Fears of a coming crackdown had been stoked at an earlier meeting
where Phnom Penh Governor Pa Socheatvong yesterday warned the families
now occupying the half-built structure at the Borei Keila development
site that authorities could not be held responsible if “any problem
occurred” there, according to community members and City Hall itself.
The meeting between Socheatvong and representatives of the families –
who took up residence in Building 9 as an act of protest against
smaller-than-promised temporary resettlement plots – was ultimately
fruitless.
“He raised the issue of the temporary shelters for us, but when will
we get flats or a real solution? Or will we live in temporary shelters
like this forever?” community representative Prum Siha said.
Borei Keila representative Sar Sorn said yesterday that there were no
guarantees that the temporary shelters wouldn’t simply become
trash-strewn shanty-towns like the community’s current ad hoc relocation
site.
“We’re concerned that the temporary shelters that authorities plan to
build for us will become slums and be cleared again [by authorities]
without compensating [residents],” she said, calling for the permanent
flats promised in 2003 and 2004.
Though City Hall was silent yesterday on how they planned to deal
with the occupiers, Prampi Makara district governor Som Sovann hinted at
a crackdown, issuing a warning letter to the community saying the
district was “preparing a plan for administrative measures”, but without
offering a timeframe.
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