Plot thickens for evictees
Scores of families in Phnom Penh’s Borei Keila community tore
down a corrugated metal fence and took up temporary residence in
developer Phan Imex’s unfinished Building 9 as anger over
smaller-than-promised relocation plots boiled over yesterday morning.
The occupation began after local and municipal authorities came to
the site yesterday to measure plots of land for displaced families
embroiled in the long-running land dispute. The plots became a point of
contention, however, when it was discovered they were only three-by-four
metres – half as big as the four-by-six-metre plots residents were
promised, Borei Keila resident Chher Phan said.
At about 11am yesterday, the Borei Keila families could be seen
making themselves at home in Building 9, sweeping out the building’s
dusty one-room apartments and laying down floor mats for seating. Some
gathered to chat in the open-air portions of their newly claimed flats.
Chhay Kimhorn, who also claimed a room in Building 9, said that even
though the building was incomplete – many rooms sported uneven concrete
and gravel floors rather than tiles – the occupiers would hold out until
an agreement was reached, “even if there is a violent crackdown”.
Development at the site has been stalled for years after Phan Imex
declared it had run out of money, and yesterday building occupier Chum
Ngan said that if the development was bankrupt, the building should go
to the community.
Phan Imex chief Suy Sophan could not be reached for comment yesterday.
There were no police in sight for the better part of yesterday’s
occupation, but Prampi Makara district governor Sorm Sovann called the
action a “serious offence”, brought on by a small group of
rabble-trousers.
“We are sorry that they believed the incitement by a small group of
people and broke the law by breaking into the building without
permission,” he said. “We will take administrative measures when we get
orders from our superiors.”
Municipal spokesman Long Dimanche said yesterday that authorities had
called for a handful of community representatives to come to City Hall
today for talks, but residents were adamant yesterday that the entire
community accompany them in the interest of “transparency”.
And while Dimanche also said that yesterday’s action “is against the
law, obviously, and interrupts the resolution-finding process”, he would
not say how authorities planned to deal with the break-in.
However, after Veal Vong commune chief Keo Sakal visited the building
around 4pm yesterday counting occupants and asking them not to stay the
night, occupier Has Chenda said that she was “afraid of security”
evicting them at night.
“Maybe they will come to take us away,” she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment