By Associated Press,
The Washington Post
Updated: Monday, May 7, 2012
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia’s
Prime Minister Hun Sen (pictured) on Monday temporarily suspended new land
concessions to private companies in an effort to ease political pressure
over an issue that has triggered social unrest and occasional violence.
The timing of Hun Sen’s action seemed to reflect his usual
political astuteness, coming less than two weeks after the slaying of a
prominent local environmentalist investigating illegal logging turned
the spotlight on shady practices involving government land. The April 26
shooting death of Chut Wutty by a military policeman near where a
Chinese company is building a hydropower project drew worldwide
condemnation.
Monday’s directive also came during a visit of a special United
Nations envoy on human rights, Surya P. Subedi, who stated that he plans
during his weeklong mission to examine the situation of land
concessions and “their impact on the human rights of local communities.”
Land
concessions have been the focus of allegations of land-grabbing by big
businessmen tied to corrupt officials and triggered violent clashes when
residents were forcefully evicted.
The directive said its purpose
was to strengthen the effectiveness of land management and that
concessions will be revoked from licensed companies that fail to honor
their agreements, such as by illegal logging or reselling the land. It
did not say how long the suspension would last.
Such concessions
typically involve clearing forest land for plantations to grow cash
crops such as rubber, cassava, oil palm and sugar cane.
The
Cambodian human rights organization Adhoc reported in March in its
annual report that more than 2 million hectares (4.9 million acres) of
land, mostly forest, had been granted by the government to 225
companies, foreign and domestic. Up-to-date figures were not available
from the government.
Adhoc’s report said that the concession land issue was at the center of chronic land disputes.
In
one such case in January this year in Kratie province, private guards
shot and wounded at least four people in a group of about 100 villagers
who were trying to stop bulldozers from destroying their cassava
plantation.
Ny Chariya, the chief investigator for Adhoc, said
Monday he welcomed Hun Sen’s directive as a means of reducing the number
of land disputes, but was unsure whether it would be fully implemented.
He
said thousands of families had been affected by such land disputes, and
as many as 200 displaced people faced legal action for their
resistance.
1 comment:
Fuck you ah kbotjeat huncent cut off your head like your have said that if you can't control illegal logging you will "cut off your head and throw away" because of illegal logging thstwise Chut Vuthy is death,keep your words your idiot !
you let this foreign company rent the land for 99 yrs,whatta hell you are thinking?..99yrs, your fuckin' families will be death long before the lease is expire,than the foreign company will own that land , how you are going to kick their grandkids out of the land they were born on!???
you are fuckin' dumb beyond my comprehension,i thought you fuckin' head has brain in it....all the Cpp that given land concession to foreigners were foreigners
themselves,disguises as khmers work in Cpp
govt to destroy khmers, enrich themselves,their families and gave a small percent to you Huncent
because they knew that you are[huncent] too dumb to know...
go to hell Ah kbotjeat huncent....
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