Historical background, see:
The Vietnamization of Kampuchea: A New Model of Colonialism
Vietnamization of Cambodia
Last year, the firm said it was looking to expand its agricultural operations in the Kingdom. In 2013, the group came under fire when NGO Global Witness published a damning report on Vietnamese rubber concessionaires in Cambodia, which alleged that HAGL held land through its subsidiaries totalling about 47,000 hectares – almost five times the legal limit.
HAGL makes deal with villagers
A "major breakthrough" has been reached in discussions between
Vietnamese rubber giant Hoang Anh Gia Lai and 11 indigenous communities
in Ratanakkiri province that have lost land and resources to the
company’s plantations.
During a three-day meeting with community representatives, NGOs and
its own subsidiaries, the firm, commonly referred to as HAGL, reiterated
its pledge “not to carry out any further clearance or development” in
these areas before making a slew of additional commitments to the
affected villages, according to a joint statement issued by the
participants on Saturday.
The two sides have been embroiled in a years-long dispute over
economic land concessions (ELCs) run by subsidiaries of HAGL, which
residents claim have encroached on land that they legally own and depend
on for their livelihoods.
Among the allegations, HAGL is accused of widespread deforestation
outside of its concession boundaries, polluting streams with chemicals
used in its plantations and even sexual abuse.
Commitments made in last week’s talks included repairing and maintaining roads and bridges that have been damaged by its operations, and only using chemical products that comply with environmental regulations.
HAGL also agreed to organise joint visits to each of the 11 affected
villages with local authorities, NGOs and other relevant stakeholders to
determine whether it has encroached on community land. If violations
are found, HAGL will “offer compensation” or “return the land to the
community”, the statement adds.
The pledges follow a landmark agreement last week with three other
indigenous communities – Ket, Nay and Kachout villages – which lie
within HAGL ELCs but had not yet been directly affected by encroachment.
The company apologised to all 14 communities for the impacts of its
operations, and offered representatives of each village a 400-kilogram
cow and $500 “as an offering for their spirits”, the statement says.
It also agreed to restore affected water sources and to “adopt an
operational grievance mechanism in relation to their agribusiness
operations in Cambodia”.
Sal Hleuy, 60, a representative of Kachout village, said he was
“happy” with the outcome of the talks but “would like to see all of the
promises on paper and their actions afterwards”.
Representatives of HAGL could not be reached yesterday.
Last year, the firm said it was looking to expand its agricultural
operations in the Kingdom. In 2013, the group came under fire when NGO
Global Witness published a damning report on Vietnamese rubber
concessionaires in Cambodia, which alleged that HAGL held land through
its subsidiaries totalling about 47,000 hectares – almost five times the
legal limit.
Eang Vuthy, executive director of Equitable Cambodia, said last
week’s negotiations marked a “positive step forward” for the dispute’s
resolution.
“This is a good result and we hope that the company will follow
[through on] their commitments, continue to engage and make further
progress.”
The Vietnamization of Cambodia is on its way to completion thanks to Ah Kwack Hun Sen who will do whatever it takes to please his master Yuon to stay in power.
ReplyDeleteKI was founded by Mr. Heng Soy (Tan Phalkun) in the sole purpose of giving Khmer people a place to express their opinion freely regarding the situation in Cambodia.
Unfortunately, after his death, these new KI's administrators have turned this blog into a business, highly likely accepting a huge sum of money from Ah Kwack Hun Sen and Yuon. They have successfully chased away the vast majority of Khmer people from that Blog when these crooks required their IDs.
Who dares to say the truth in that KI with their IDs?
A couple of persons still said something bad about Ah Kwack Hun Sen, but how do we know that these critics are real Khmer people? They are maybe just Hun Sen's agents who came here to lure people into Hun Sen's trap ( with their IDs ).
Therefore, those crooks at KI must stop abusing Heng Soy's principals and lift that stupid ID's requirement so that people can say something to help Cambodia.
11:25 AM
DeleteDrink this and cool off, troll!
http://www.slappytickle.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/troll-peeing.jpg