Cambodian Troops Bulldoze Villagers' Crops in Bid to Seize Land
RFA | 29 September 2015
Members of a forest community in northwestern Cambodia’s Banteay Meanchey province have meanwhile reported moves by armed troops to confiscate land to build a camp following clashes with Thailand in 2008.
Cambodian land rights activists hold a banner in front of the
National Assembly building during the 29th World Habitat Day in Phnom
Penh, Oct. 6, 2014. AFP
Troops assigned to a light infantry unit destroyed village fields
in southern Cambodia’s Kampot [where Vietnam's strongman and Vietnamese tycoon national Sok Kong rules from Bokor] province on Monday in a bid to expand the
property used by a commune set up for retired army soldiers, sources
said.
Crops and fruit trees were destroyed in the operation as
about 30 soldiers armed with sticks and knives moved in with bulldozers
against villages surrounding the Decho Akpewat commune, vowing to return
on Wednesday to finish their work, one village chief told RFA’s Khmer
Service.
“We can’t stop villagers from protesting, and other villagers are going to lose their land and face similar problems,” he said.
No
injuries were reported in Monday’s action, and RFA’s requests for
comment on Tuesday from infantry unit commander Kong Lam, who led the
operation, were unsuccessful.
Cambodian soldiers have regularly
encroached on villagers’ land since 2006, when a commune for disabled
veterans was first established in the area, Tith Khieu—a villager whose
fields were cleared on Monday—told RFA.
Villagers will now actively resist further action by the troops, he said.
“We
will seize and burn the soldiers’ equipment if they continue to destroy
our crops,” Tith Khieu said, adding that the villagers are determined
now to protest even against armed troops.
“We have no choice,” he said. “We will protest even if we die.”
Forest areas also cleared
Members
of a forest community in northwestern Cambodia’s Banteay Meanchey
province have meanwhile reported moves by armed troops to confiscate
land to build a camp following clashes with Thailand in 2008.
“Since the military moved in, it has been clearing more of the forest every day,” one source told RFA in an earlier report.
Villagers
have asked a rights group in neighboring Oddar Meanchey province to
file a complaint against the encroachment because local authorities have
refused to take action to block it, the source said.
The seizure
of land for development—often without due process or fair compensation
for displaced residents—has been a major cause of protest in Cambodia
and other authoritarian Asian countries, including China and Myanmar.
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