‘State land’ eviction looms
Authorities in Pailin province’s Sala Krao district on Saturday
gave 19 families 15 days to dismantle their houses and vacate an area
officials maintain is state land, despite the fact that the land was
given to them by local authorities more than a decade ago.
“The provincial authorities told us not to build houses, and ordered
us to move out in 15 days, and accused us of illegally settling on
reserved state lands,” she said.
However, Samath said, the land in question was granted in
five-hectare parcels to local families in 2000 by Pailin governor Y
Chhien, who even handed out axes, hoes and machetes through the deputy
commune chief so that villagers could clear and cultivate the land.
In 2005, she continued, a rubber plantation company called Sophany
Export and Import started began encroaching on their land, and in 2006,
after villagers protested against the company, authorities declared the
area state land, and set it aside for a proposed airport.
Prak Sophima, a coordinator with the rights group Adhoc, said
yesterday that negotiations between authorities and villagers had
yielded no resolution.
“In the negotiation, on the villagers’ side, some families asked the
authorities for compensation – five hectares of land per family, like in
2000, and land certificates for them – and some wanted to give up two
hectares of land to the state as reserved land for their future plans
[while keeping their other three hectares], but the authorities claimed
that they could only give 20-metre-by-50-metres [0.1 hectare] per
family,” she said.
Pailin provincial deputy governor Kert Sothea acknowledged yesterday
that authorities had granted the land to villagers, but said that later
the land had to be taken back after provinces were instructed by the
government to set aside parcels of state land for future development.
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