Flooding From Dam Washes Out Homes, Rice Fields in Southern Cambodia
2015-09-16 rfa
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| Water released from the dam at the Kamchay Hydroelectric Power
Plant floods nearby houses and fields in southern Cambodia's Kampot
province, Sept. 15, 2015.
(Photo courtesy of Licadho)
|
Local
government officials in a southern Cambodian province failed to
evacuate villagers in time to prevent their homes and rice fields from
flooding after the operators of a Chinese-built hydropower dam informed
them a day earlier that they would open the facility’s gates to release
excess water from heavy rains, an official said Wednesday.
The
operator of the Kamchay Hydroelectric Power Plant on the Kamchay River
in Kampot province had informed local authorities on Tuesday to prepare
for flooding because it had to open the floodgates of the facility's
dam, said Chhouk district governor Ouk Lay.
“The
company had informed us to evacuate villagers to a safe zone,” he told
RFA’s Khmer Service, adding that the flow of water was too great to for
authorities to contain once it had been released.
The
water from the dam flooded nearby rice paddies and the homes of 1,571
families in three communes in Chhouk district, he said.
So
far, no one has died in the floods, and local authorities are
evacuating villagers and evaluating the flood damage, although they have
yet to complete any estimates of the destruction, he said.
“We
have rented boats to evacuate the villagers,” Ouk Lay said. “The water
is rising slowly, and the Red Cross is handing out [packages of] instant
noodles to villagers directly at their houses. They are safe.”
Chhem
Phalla, a villager whose house was flooded after water was released
from the dam, said the flooding started on Tuesday and spread to several
areas.
“The
water is rising,” he told RFA’s Khmer Service. “The villagers have lost
their livestock and their belongings. We assume that when the water
recedes, fruit trees like the banana and papaya trees, will have been
destroyed.”
The government’s meteorological service has forecast heavy rainfall until Friday.
The
U.S. $280 million, 194-megawatt dam located on the Kamchay River
supplies electricity to Kampot, the capital Phnom Penh and Preah
Sihanouk province.
It
was built and is operated by the Sinohydro Kamchay Hydroelectic Project
Co. Ltd., a local subsidiary of the Chinese state-owned hydropower
engineering and construction company Sinohydro Corp.
The dam was Cambodia’s first large-scale dam project built to ease the country’s chronic energy shortages.
Chinese-backed
hydropower projects constructed in Cambodia’s Mekong River region,
including dams in the southwestern provinces of Koh Kong and Pursat
provinces, have all raised concerns among locals and rights groups about
their social and environmental impacts.
Reported by Chandara Yang for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

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