CNRP to gauge land dispute
Lawmakers-elect from the Cambodia National Rescue Party are
scheduled today to visit families in Koh Kong province affected by a
long-running land dispute with Union Development Group, just weeks after
the company destroyed dozens of homes there.
Rights groups say that Chinese-owned Union Development has burned
down some 45 homes belonging to villagers in Koh Kong’s Botum Sakor
district over the past few weeks to make way for its 45,000-hectare
resort, and CNRP chief whip Son Chhay said yesterday that party
officials will travel there to assess the situation.
Chhay added that after the assessment, he would attempt to broker a suitable resolution on residents’ behalf.
In May 2008, the government gave Union Development a 99-year lease on
36,000 hectares of land in Kiri Sakor and Botum Sakor districts to
develop their resort. In August 2011, the government granted the company
another 9,100 hectares to construct a reservoir and hydropower dams.
The projects affect more than 1,100 families.
Neang Boratino, a coordinator for rights group Adhoc, applauded the
CNRP delegates’ initiative and said that the families whose houses were
burned down still haven’t been offered compensation.
“Thus far, [villagers] have not had any resolution yet,” he said.
“What the CNRP lawmakers are doing is right, because they are
parliamentarians and they have to visit people who are suffering. We
also ask lawmakers from other parties to do so.”
Botum Sakor district governor Khim Chandy said that authorities had
promised to resolve the situation, and that villagers were welcome to
build temporary shelters in the interim, but said that full resolution
was out of his hands.
Company representative Ly Teuk Hay could not be reached for comment yesterday.
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