HAGL has constantly been at the centre of controversy over its agricultural investments in Cambodia. Last year, UK-based NGO Global Witness published a report accusing the company of illegally logging outside concession areas and of being in possession of at least 47,000 hectares of economic land concessions – almost five times the legal limit.
Sexual abuse among claims against HAGL
Sexual assault and the annihilation of sacred graveyards are
among the many claims levelled at Vietnamese Rubber giant Hoang Anh Gia
Lai (HAGL) by villagers in Ratanakkiri province, a report by the World
Bank’s investment arm reveals.
In February, 17 indigenous communities that accused HAGL of land
grabbing filed a complaint with the World Bank’s International Finance
Corporation (IFC) – which invests in the rubber producer via an
intermediary fund called Dragon Capital Group. The submission triggered
an investigation by the IFC’s internal watchdog, the Compliance Advisor
Ombudsman (CAO).
In an initial assessment dated May 12 and published on its website, the CAO documented villager claims against HAGL of depleted fish levels in waterways, encroachment and destruction of sacred land, deaths of hundreds of livestock, and, in one of the more shocking accusations, sexual abuse by company employees.
“The communities also shared with CAO that there were two instances
of sexual assault by Company workers, resulting not only in individual
duress, but also impacting how women in the village go about their daily
activities to avoid potential harm,” the CAO report reads.
HAGL declined to respond yesterday, but from the company’s
perspective laid out in the May 12 CAO assessment, the agriculture giant
maintains it has abided by Cambodia’s laws, though conceded it could
have initially done more for villagers evicted to make way for the
development.
“The Company recognizes that it had not put greater focus on
developmental opportunities for local communities earlier in the
development of their operations,” the statement reads.
Affected villages contacted yesterday were not privy to the cases of
assault but claimed continued mistreatment at the hands of HAGL workers,
including the theft of farming equipment.
“We think that they did this because they did not want us to do any
farming on the land that they cleared,” Romam Tham, a farmer from Kak
village, said yesterday.
The Post reported last week that HAGL had suspended work on three of
its projects in Ratanakkiri from May 1 to November 30. An April 28
company memo instructing the suspension did not detail the reasons for
halting work, but noted the response followed a meeting with the IFC’s
ombudsman on April 2.
The Washington-based CAO reiterated its message via email that its
report states both villagers and HAGL have agreed to a dispute
resolution process that the IFC’s ombudsman will facilitate.
HAGL has constantly been at the centre of controversy over its
agricultural investments in Cambodia. Last year, UK-based NGO Global
Witness published a report accusing the company of illegally logging
outside concession areas and of being in possession of at least 47,000
hectares of economic land concessions – almost five times the legal
limit.
Eang Vuthy, executive director of NGO Equitable Cambodia, which is
working with affected families, said yesterday that having an open
dialogue was an important step, but that there was still work to be done
in achieving an appropriate resolution.
“It is important to give it a try for all parties to meet and talk,”
he said. “If we can’t address the problem we will consider [the] next
stage.”
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