Friday, 03 August 2012
By May Titthara
Phnom Penh Post
Nineteen families from Pursat
province’s Prangil commune, plagued by a long-running land dispute with
developer Pheapimex, are in despair now that student volunteer surveyors
cannot help them reclaim land they say is rightfully theirs.
Villager Tes Chhieng Ly said that the residents would be forced to take protests to higher levels, after their plans to plead for help from student volunteers measuring their land were thwarted by Wednesday’s policy backflip by Prime Minister Hun Sen.
“Now, we don’t know what to do because volunteering youths are told that they have no obligation … we seem hopeless,” Chhieng Ly said.
Prime Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday revealed he had revised his land titling program – announced in June – which aimed to alleviate land disputes by employing over 2,000 university students, at $7 a day, to demarcate villagers’ land in state forests, former timber concessions and economic land concessions. [$7 a day, $210 a month in salary, so why are they called volunteers? Regular soldiers only earned about $50 a month].
The amendment means students will no longer measure disputed land and has prolonged the original six-month timeframe of the project.
However, when contacted by the Post yesterday, government spokesmen Phay Siphan and Press and Quick Reaction Unit spokesman Ek Tha both said they had no further details on the program revision or how and when it would be implemented.
His announcement contradicts what Minister of Land Management Im Chhun Lim declared in June – that student workers would indeed be posted to areas where “plenty of land conflicts have occurred”.
About 12,000 families are tangled in land disputes on a Pheapimex economic land concession that extends over both Pursat and Kampong Chhang provinces and covers over 315,000 hectares.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY CLAIRE KNOX
Villager Tes Chhieng Ly said that the residents would be forced to take protests to higher levels, after their plans to plead for help from student volunteers measuring their land were thwarted by Wednesday’s policy backflip by Prime Minister Hun Sen.
“Now, we don’t know what to do because volunteering youths are told that they have no obligation … we seem hopeless,” Chhieng Ly said.
Prime Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday revealed he had revised his land titling program – announced in June – which aimed to alleviate land disputes by employing over 2,000 university students, at $7 a day, to demarcate villagers’ land in state forests, former timber concessions and economic land concessions. [$7 a day, $210 a month in salary, so why are they called volunteers? Regular soldiers only earned about $50 a month].
The amendment means students will no longer measure disputed land and has prolonged the original six-month timeframe of the project.
However, when contacted by the Post yesterday, government spokesmen Phay Siphan and Press and Quick Reaction Unit spokesman Ek Tha both said they had no further details on the program revision or how and when it would be implemented.
His announcement contradicts what Minister of Land Management Im Chhun Lim declared in June – that student workers would indeed be posted to areas where “plenty of land conflicts have occurred”.
About 12,000 families are tangled in land disputes on a Pheapimex economic land concession that extends over both Pursat and Kampong Chhang provinces and covers over 315,000 hectares.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY CLAIRE KNOX
1 comment:
Cambodian army should remain on training don't be too relax, you will learn from another mistake like you did in the past...Enemy will find you or strike you when fall relaxing....
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