[Background / related]
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Official to Address Vietnamese Land Allegation
Khmer Times | 11 May 2016
Prime
Minister Hun Sen announced yesterday that he will appoint a government
official to answer questions in the National Assembly about economic
land concessions (ELC) allegedly granted to members of the Vietnamese
military in Rattanakiri province.
The
move is in response to a proposal by opposition member Um Sam An, who
is now detained in Prey Sar prison on incitement charges over
allegations he made last year that the government voluntarily ceded land
to the Vietnamese military.
Mr.
Hun Sen said questions posed by Mr. Sam An about the allegedly
Vietnamese-controlled ELC would be answered on a specified date when the
imprisoned politician is present at the National Assembly.
In
March, Mr. Sam An sent a letter to the prime minister demanding an
explanation of media reports that claimed the Vietnamese military had
received 40,000 hectares of land as a secret ELC in Rattanakiri
province, some 600 kilometers northeast of Phnom Penh.
The
reports said three ELCs were granted to four industrial companies
controlled by the Vietnamese military’s Unit 15, which is stationed near
the Cambodia-Vietnam border in Vietnam’s Yalai province. Mr. Sam An
alleged that government documents confirmed that 39,584 hectares of land
is under the control of Unit 15.
According
to the prime minister’s reply, dated March 17 and obtained by Khmer
Times yesterday, an appointed government official will answer the
questions on a date when Mr. Sam An is present at the National Assembly.
Mr.
Sam An’s assistant, Mum Machiko, said he had received the prime
minister’s letter last week and relayed its contents to Mr. Sam An on
Tuesday in Prey Sar.
“Um
Sam An still demands Prime Minister Hun Sen answer himself [at the
National Assembly] rather than appointing a government official because
he [Hun Sen] is highly responsible in this case,” he said.
Mr.
Machiko said Mr. Sam An’s lawyer is now filing a bail request to the
Appeal Court as they wait for Mr. Sam An’s administrative punishment,
which banned him for 15 National Assembly meetings – he has already sat
out nine.
Rattanakiri provincial governor Thong Savon declined to comment yesterday, saying he was busy.
Chhay
Thy, the Rattanakiri coordinator for rights group Adhoc, reported in
early 2012 that the government granted 40,000 hectares for an ELC in the
province to four Khmer-owned companies. Because the ELC cut into
community-owned land, leading to a series of demonstrations, the
Khmer-owned companies transferred their ownership to a representative of
the Vietnamese military, Mr. Thy said.
“Under
the control of the Vietnamese owner, the 40,000 hectares were used to
plant rubber trees, while some parts of the land are disputed by
community members,” Mr. Thy said.

A good Hun Sen is a deposed Hun Sen.
ReplyDeleteHis D days start after the 2018 election, win or lose !!!