New Vietnam border markers feted
Prime Minister Hun Sen inaugurated two border markers with
Vietnam over the weekend, including one in Ratanakkiri province close to
where some 40,000 hectares in land concessions were revealed last week
to be controlled by the Vietnamese military. [HIGH TREASON!]
Four economic land concessions (ELCs) near the O’Yadav border
checkpoint, where Hun Sen and his Vietnamese counterpart, Nguyen Tan
Dung, presided over the ceremony on Saturday, are linked through their
chairmen to the Vietnamese Army’s Corps 15, according to an
investigation by the Cambodia Daily.
The concessions – Veasna Investment, Chea Chanrith, Rama Khmer and
Dai Dong Duong – cover almost 40,000 hectares in Ratanakkiri, with three
of the chairmen of the companies holding the leases also serving as
commanders of Corps 15 units, according to the report.
The revelation seemingly validated the concerns of critics of the
government’s policy on the border, prompting opposition Cambodia
National Rescue Party president Sam Rainsy to warn that leasing such
large tracts of land to a foreign military was “a serious threat to
Cambodia’s national sovereignty and territorial integrity”.
“Granting 99-year land concessions covering tens of thousands of
hectares in Ratanakkiri province, in an area adjacent to the border with
Vietnam, to the Vietnamese army is a grave error,” he said in a post on
Facebook.
“Each year, land and forest concessions granted by our government to
foreign companies bring to Cambodia less than $10 million, while Vietnam
collects up to $800 million from the timber trade,” he added.
Between February 2011 and August 2012, the four concessions were
quietly transferred to the control of Do Van Sang, commander of Company
75, Pham Van Giang, commander of Company 72, Tran Quang Hung, commander
of Company 74, and Nguyen Canh Quang, chairman of Aphivat Caoutchouc 72
Oya Dav Co, Ltd, which acquired the Chea Chanrith concession, according
to the Daily.
A committee tasked with assessing ELCs is due to probe the Ratanakkiri concessions in the coming weeks, he added.
Hun Sen on Saturday said his government “would work with the
Vietnamese government to guarantee our people have a proper border as a
real international borderline”.
“The border must reflect the real situation of people living along the border to end [the dispute],” he added.
Yesterday Hun Sen presided over the inauguration of another border
post in Takeo province. A joint commission for demarcating the border,
chaired by Kimhong, was set up on December 17.
Chhay Thy, provincial coordinator for the rights group Adhoc, said
the acquisition of the concessions by the Vietnamese companies had led
to a spike in illegal logging, which was only slowed because of protests
from Cambodians living in the area.
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