[Background / related]
Tonle Sap, Environmental Destruction, Fishing, Svay Pak, Criminal Elements] Fleeing Sewage, Houseboat Fleet Floats Into Phnom Penh
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City Hall Denies Sewage Killed Fish, Says Climate Change to Blame
The Cambodia Daily | 4 May 2017
City Hall on Wednesday blamed climate change for fish deaths in the
Tonle Sap river that began earlier this week and drove hundreds of
houseboat owners to relocate, contradicting residents’ accounts of black
sewage discharge preceding the die-off.
“It’s not involved with
the sewage system. It’s caused by climate change making it hot,” said
City Hall spokesman Met Measpheakdey, who based the conclusion on an
internal “group of experts” that he declined to identify.
Reporters
on Tuesday witnessed a canal of black sewage water about 5 meters wide
flowing through a village in Svay Pak commune and into the river, about 2
km north of where residents reported fish dying on Sunday.
Untreated
sewage flushing into the river is common in the area, according to
Piotr Sasin, country director of NGO People in Need who works with
several of Phnom Penh’s riverside communities facing similar sewage
problems.
“There is no sewage system in many of those
communities,” he said in an email. “People have toilets with septic
tanks or their sewage goes to canals…and via them to Tonle Sap river.”
Earlier
this week, hundreds of floating houses that double as fish farms
floated downriver to central Phnom Penh seeking cleaner waters after the
sewage caused their fish to die, residents of the Kilometer 7 area
said.
Phnom Penh’s sewage system is regularly overwhelmed. Most of
the city’s sewage is transported to and processed in natural lakes,
such as Boeng Trabek, but this process has been hampered in recent years
both by development on the lakes and increased pressure on the aging
sewage system.
City Hall has acknowledged the problem in the past,
partnering with the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA) to
create a 20-year master plan for sewage management.
The plan was
finalized in March, according to media reports. Commenting on the plan
at the time, Environment Ministry spokesman Sao Sopheap admitted Phnom
Penh had “a need for a proper sewage treatment plant,” but said funding
sources needed to be secured and further studies conducted.
JICA did not respond to a request for the plan on Wednesday, and Mr. Measpheakdey said he did not have the plan’s details.
Deny, deny, deny that's what they do best.
ReplyDeleteJust give those poor folks some land. Why do you have to be so cruel?
DeletePoster @Anonymous9:23 AM is a Vietnamese dog eater called Drgunzet! This poster is one of the Vietnamese/Yuon land thieves or invaders on the planet. This poster supports his own illegal Vietnamese/Yuon immigrants in Cambodia and also this poster is dreaming of the failure of Cambodia and Cambodian people.
ReplyDeleteVietnam is made up of three parts (North Vietnam belongs to China, Central Vietnam belongs to Champa [Vietnamese land thieves killed all Cham in Champa] and South Vietnam belongs to Cambodia/Khmer). Vietnam and Vietnamese people are ridiculous and hypocrite just like Drgunzet.
9:40 PM
DeleteWell said and agreeable.
Thank you
See? You folks are cruel and selfish, refusing to share lands with those poor folks. God will punish you.
Delete