While opposition leader Sam Rainsy announced in October he had received the prime minister’s word the dam would not move ahead this mandate, yesterday’s announcement was the first from Hun Sen himself.
‘Don’t talk about Areng’
Prime Minister Hun Sen for the first time yesterday publicly
announced that construction of the Areng Valley dam would not go ahead
in this mandate, issuing the promise in a speech that sought to curb the
outpouring of criticism over the abrupt deportation of anti-dam
activist Alex Gonzalez-Davidson.
The premier yesterday said that the valley – home to one of the
Kingdom’s most unspoiled forests, and a hotbed of biodiversity – should
be left to younger generations.
However, he was also steadfast in his support for the continuation of
controversial assessments of the dam site, admonishing critics to drop
the matter; then, in the same breath, he expressed doubt that the
project should ever move forward.
“I would like to say do not talk about the Areng Valley anymore,” he
said. “Study it more clearly; and I think even if we study it clearly
until 2018, we cannot develop it. And in my opinion, I want to leave it
for the next generation.”
While opposition leader Sam Rainsy announced in October he had
received the prime minister’s word the dam would not move ahead this
mandate, yesterday’s announcement was the first from Hun Sen himself.
Hun Sen also took the opportunity yesterday to defend his decision to
deport Gonzalez-Davidson, saying the deportation was a matter of law,
not an attempt to score a political victory.
He accused the Spaniard of inciting Cambodians to block a group
intent on assessing the environmental impact of the dam, and called on
Cambodians to redirect their love of the Khmer-speaking activist – who
has achieved a measure of celebrity for his opposition to the dam –
towards the Areng itself.
“We do not want to win or to lose, but the law is the law, the state
is the state, sovereignty is sovereignty,” he said, adding that input
from Western-based activists was not particularly welcome. “They logged
all the timber in Europe for development and then they advise Asia? We
accept recommendations, but not too extreme.”
In an apparent joke, the premier also threatened to deploy heavy
weapons to the area if activists there attempted to form an “autonomous
zone”.
“If you want to make an autonomous zone [in Areng], please come, and
we will put BM21 [multiple-rocket launcher vehicles] in that area, but I
don’t accuse them seriously like that,” Hun Sen said.
The joke, however, had ominous undertones, given that claims of
“autonomous zones” have precipitated tragedy in the past. In 2012, land
disputants in Kratie province’s Pro Ma village were accused of a
“secessionist” plot, and evicted from their homes in a swift and violent
military operation that saw a teenage girl shot to death by security
forces.
Despite the seeming ambivalence towards the Areng dam in yesterday’s
speech, in a letter sent to National Assembly President Heng Samrin last
month, Hun Sen stressed the importance of weighing the benefits of
development against conservation, even suggesting that “hydropower would
become a participant to help preserve and maintain the remaining
forest”.
Gonzalez-Davidson, speaking from an undisclosed location yesterday,
said that the premier’s speech presented something of a mixed bag.
“Hun Sen’s statement is the first time he has verbally mentioned
Areng dam himself, which might open up new possibilities,” he told the Post.
“It is possible that he is trying to give a stick (my deportation) to
civil society/opposition party, and a carrot (the alleged cancellation
of the Areng dam) to the Cambodian people. The problem is that, as we
have seen in Cambodia time and again in the last few years, ‘research’
and feasibility studies are just an excuse for district/provincial
elements of the ‘government’ to make money out of mining, logging, et
cetera.”
Sin Samnang, another member of Mother Nature, said yesterday that the
residents of the Areng Valley also held mixed feelings about the
address, welcoming the premier’s promise to halt construction, while at
the same time expressing concern over continued studies, and the return
of representatives of the dam’s Chinese builder, Sinohydro.
Independent analyst Ou Virak, however, said that yesterday’s speech
could represent a genuine about-face on the part of the premier, an
attempt to win populist points after being chastened by an election that
saw his party – campaigning exclusively on his popularity – endure huge
losses.
“I think he could be changing course. He’s been saying some things
before the deportation of Alex as well,” Virak said. “I don’t know, but I
strangely believe him this time.”
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