A soldier watches while company representatives tear down a house that villagers were building on what authorities claim is company land. Photo supplied |
Villagers clash with workers in Kampot land dispute
The Phnom Penh Post | 14 August 2017
A long-running land dispute turned violent over the weekend as
villagers in Kampot province’s Decho Aphivat commune clashed with
representatives of an agriculture company who had been ordered to tear
down their homes.
Video from the confrontation on Friday shows workers with First
Bio-Tech Agricultural (Cambodia) Co Ltd tearing down half-built homes,
villagers pulling a worker off his motorbike and beating him, and others
breaking the windshield of a company car.
Friday’s violent incident follows a number of other tense
confrontations over the past two months in which residents of Chrey Bak
village have tangled with soldiers and Military Police protecting land
granted in a 2005 economic land concession (ELC) to the company, which
is owned by tycoon Chan Sothea.
According to Seang Chanthorn, 62, her family and others had lived on
the land that now belongs to the company for five years before being
kicked out in 2012. They came back in recent months to reclaim it and to
rebuild their homes, she said.
Now, “we can only watch and see our homes brought down”, Chanthorn
said. “We do not dare to challenge them because they have guns.”
But local authorities said that the land rightfully belongs to
Sothea’s company, which was given 10,000 hectares bordering Bokor
National Park in the 2005 ELC. They contend that families descended on
the area in 2012 and hurriedly built homes before a national land
titling programme began.
Decho Aphivat Commune Chief San Kriya said that a small percentage of
those villagers have returned, but that the majority had never actually
lived there before.
He also denied accusations that he had taken bribes as first clerk of
the commune during the land titling effort after the protesting
villagers claimed that they weren’t given titles because they didn’t pay
off the right people.
“I did not take even 100 riel,” he said. “The ones who say I took
money, say it to me and in front of the law. This is defamation against
me.”
Kriya said the villagers began moving in from surrounding provinces
in July and that some had brought machetes, axes and slingshots to
confrontations with company workers.
He added that the company, which was forced by the government to give
up 7,000 hectares of its concession, had upheld its contractual
obligation to use the land for growing cassava, cashews and other crops.
Authorities said three villagers were arrested in connection with the
violence last week – Proeung Pran, Sar Sey and Chea Sytha – and
authorities are looking to arrest more villagers who they believe
incited the confrontations.
Heng Phearak, an Adhoc investigator in the province, said the human
rights group is monitoring the situation, and that the villagers are
“very angry”, although he noted that it appeared the company does indeed
have rights to the land.
Calls made to First Bio-Tech Agricultural (Cambodia) Co Ltd late Sunday night were not returned.
Kampot Provincial Military Police Commander Keo Sophal said a report
about the incident had been made and sent to the court, but declined to
comment further.
Kampot Deputy Provincial Police Chief Sao Samoeun confirmed that
Military Police and soldiers had agreed to do security for the company, a
practice that is technically illegal but is common throughout the
Kingdom.
Video from earlier this month shows about 30 Chrey Bak villagers on
company land yelling at a group of soldiers, who then fired shots into
the air to scare them off.
Inside Cambodia, Cambodians keep destroying properties belong to others. How can the country prosper and progress?
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