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Time-out a short one
Nearly four months after a subsidiary of tycoon Kith Meng’s
Royal Group had its contract to log at the Lower Sesan II dam site
suspended over allegations of illegal logging, an agreement to restart
operations – made without the consent of affected communities – is close
to being finalised.
On October 16, the government ordered the contract suspended until
the area could be demarcated, and it called on the Ministry of
Agriculture to establish a commission of inquiry into the allegations.
Four months later, no investigation has taken place.
“The demarcation is finished. A committee is checking all the points
in the field, according to the map provided by the Ministry of Industry.
The field team has not reported back yet,” Chheng Kimsun, country
director of the Forestry Administration, said.
“If everything is a go, we can continue the forestry with the new
demarcation,” he said, adding that he was not aware that any inquiry
into the allegations had ever existed.
The probable renewal of the logging contract, which locals remain firmly opposed to, comes a day after the Post reported that construction at the controversial dam site had already started.
Ang & Associates reportedly signed a joint contract last year
with local businessman Sok Vanna, the brother of Sokimex founder Sok
Kong, to clear the 36,000-hectare site in preparation for the
construction.
By November 13, the ministry had still not responded to the Council
of Ministers’ request for in inquiry, according to a letter obtained by
the Post in November.
Phay Siphan, spokesman for the Council of Ministers, said yesterday
that he had not received an official response from the ministry to this
day regarding the inquiry it was ordered to launch.
“At that time, a number of adjacent areas [to the concession] have
been abused by people cutting logs and bringing them to the concession
area [illegally]. Since then, I have no idea. The request by Council of
Ministers was for the Agriculture Ministry to carry out the inquiry,” he
said.
The Forestry Administration’s announcement comes amid reports that
logging in community forests near the dam concession has been ongoing
since December, despite the moratorium.
Meach Mean, coordinator of the 3S Rivers Protection Network, said
that numerous credible reports had emerged from the area detailing the
movement of trucks illegally transporting timber from community forests
into the concession.
“Many trucks have been exporting timber from the area. Illegal
logging is still going on over the last few months since the government
released the letter about the logging,” he said. “During November, the
logging restarted. In December, up to now, the trucks still export wood
from that area. Illegal logging is still going on and the logs are being
brought into the concession area.”
Representatives of the Royal Group and Ang & Associates yesterday
declined to comment, saying the employees in charge of the logging
contract were unavailable.
Community representatives yesterday delivered a petition to three
government ministries, the Chinese embassy, the Royal Group offices and
the National Assembly, calling for talks to open with the companies
building the dam – the Royal Group and Chinese firm Hydrolancang
International Energy.
Fut Khoeurn, 35, a representative of communities affected by the
dam’s construction, said yesterday that he wanted “the company and the
government to meet with the people face-to-face at the site to see the
real situation”.
Despite the petitioning by the group of community representatives,
which represents more than 10,000 people who will be directly affected
by the dam’s construction, the Forestry Administration’s Kimsun said
yesterday that all sides had agreed to accept the compensation offered
by the authorities.
“The government has certified that they have provided acceptable
compensation and everyone has accepted it. So I do not know about these
people and where they come from,” he said, adding that he had “not yet
gone to the field”.
“They ordered very clearly that relocation and compensation is acceptable for all parties.”
Mean, however, disagreed. “He’s a little bit confused. The 12
communities around the dam site, they have already accepted, but more
than 5,000 families in the reservoir zone have rejected the offer.”
Seak Mekong, Sesan district’s Srekor commune chief, said: “I think it
is unacceptable. The company and the government have seriously violated
the rights of the ethnic people.”
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