Monday, 25 June 2012
By May Titthara
Phnom Penh Post
Prime Minister Hun Sen has signed off on four more economic land
concessions (ELCs), all in protected areas, despite placing a moratorium
on granting such leases on May 7.
Since the May 7 sub-decree,
the premier has now signed off on seven concessions totalling 56,586
hectares to develop agro-industry, though his cabinet has argued that
three granted on May 18 did not flout the ban because they were ELCs
already in the final stages of approval.
The latest Royal Gazette reveals more than 35,000 hectares were granted in ELCs to four companies on June 7.
When
asked why the leases had been granted in apparent contradiction of the
moratorium, Council of Minister’s spokesman Phay Siphan said he was not
aware of the concessions and believed there were no arrangements for new
ELCs.
“We’re afraid that they just changed the owner from the old document [ELC],” he said.
Khun Sea Import Export was granted 8,200 hectares of land in Oddar Meanchey province’s Kulen Promtep Wildlife Sanctuary,
and A2A Town (Cambodia) Co Ltd received a 9,668- hectare ELC in the
Kirirom National Park that stretches across Kampong Speu and Preah
Sihanouk provinces.
In Mondulkiri’s Phnom Prich Wildlife
Sanctuary, the Lim Royal Joint Company received 9,068 hectares, while
the Roath Sokhorn Company was granted 9,000 hectares in Ratanakkiri
province’s Lumphat Wildlife Sanctuary.
Lim Leang Se, deputy
director of the prime minister’s cabinet, restated the terms of the
moratorium and denied more ELCs had been granted without further
elaborating.
“The premier stopped granting ELCs for private
companies and appealed for specific verification on the documents [for
existing ELCs],” he said.
The moratorium came ahead of commune
council elections on June 3, in which the endemic turmoil and violence
caused by ELCs was a core focus of opposition party campaigns.
Opposition
groups, political analysts and rights groups were sceptical of the
premier’s sincerity given the timing of the moratorium and seized on the
May 18 concessions, which had all the hallmarks of but were not
explicitly titled ELCs, as proof he had never intended to stick to his
word.
On June 14, Hun Sen went further, ordering authorities all
over the country to measure land plots for villagers affected by every
ELC within the country, and to do so within six months.
Opposition
Sam Rainsy Party spokesman Yim Sovann said yesterday the latest ELCs
further confirmed that the moratorium had merely been a political stunt
to curry favour with the electorate and called on the government to stop
granting concessions to private companies.
“The government should grant that land to Cambodian citizens who have no land for farming,” he said.
Am Sam Ath, senior investigator for the rights group Licadho, said Hun Sen was losing the trust of villagers.
“If
he still grants more economic land concessions, it will cause his
low-level officers who are working to settle the land disputes to have
no will to work on that, because they see the government’s measure,” Ath
said.
“Land concessions are the main resources that create land
disputes around the country, so the government should stop granting
economic land concessions, as he [Hun Sen] issued in the directive.”
The rate at which economic land concessions are granted is rapidly accelerating.
The
government granted more than 2.2 million hectares for agro-industry
last year, two-thirds of them in protected areas, according to the
rights group Adhoc.
To contact the reporter on this story: May Titthara at titthara.may@phnompenhpost.com
2 comments:
Don't believe shits that come out of Huncent's mouth,He has the brain size just about the same size as a Champanzee ,how in hell Huncent remembers what he was saying a few weeks back?...Foe don't remember anything..
This how Hun Sen get rich. The investors put in the money and Hun Sen put in land. When they make money they split 50/50.
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