2016-02-02 rfa
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| Land Grab in Cambodia's Pailin Province Stokes Villagers' Ire Land bulldozed in Pailin province is shown in an undated photo. RFA |
Villagers
in Cambodia’s Pailin province are accusing authorities of allowing a
powerful local police officer to grab nearly two hectares of mountainous
public land for his own use.
A
villager from Pailin's Steung Kach commune who spoke with RFA’s Khmer
service on condition of anonymity said that an immigration police
officer named Men Savuth stationed at the Prum border checkpoint near
Thailand had bulldozed the land in the commune's Phsar Prum village and
begun using the land as his own property.
Villagers also contend that higher government officials have turned a blind eye to the activity, he said.
“The
activities of paving mountain land have been seen in the area,
including the recent grabbing of land in two different places: one at
the front of the mountain and another at the back of the mountain,” the
villager said.
RFA’s attempts to reach Men Savuth were unsuccessful.
Kim
Sokha, chief of the Pailin Provincial Department of Environment,
disputed the villagers’ claims, saying that authorities had put a stop
to the land grab, documented the activity, and turned their evidence
over to the courts for adjudication.
“I just want to tell you that the area is under my protection, so I supervise everything,” he told RFA.
“I
won’t let anyone easily grab land or pave in the area. Moreover, I also
have strategic plans for 2016. I will manage to grow trees back on the
mountain,” he said.
Plans to profit
But villagers say that isn’t so, telling RFA they fear officials have plans to profit from the land since it lies near a casino.
“The
mountain zone land that they took and paved will probably be used for
locations to build something, because those areas are close to casino
zones,” said another villager.
The
villagers claim at least four different places in the forest zone near
Phsar Prum village in the Saravan Mountain Range, located about 400
meters from the Khmer-Thai border checkpoint, have been taken over.
While villagers often are accused of improperly using public land, the
rich and powerful get away with it, they say.
In
2015, Pailin environmental authorities had led a group of more than 10
officers to uproot the pumpkin trees which yearly bear fruit belonging
to about 40 village families.
The
government had accused the villagers of illegally growing the pumpkins
in the O’Tavao quarter. While three villagers were summoned for
clarification in the case at the provincial court, it was later dropped
after villagers protested the accusation.
Little hope
Prak
Sophima, provincial coordinator for the human rights organization
Licadho, said there is little hope authorities will crack down on the
land grabs.
“I
would like to appeal to authorities to take action against all
perpetrators of the land grabs, and not only on the and without taking
any actions against the rich and the powerful,” she said.
The
seizure of land for development—often without due process or fair
compensation for displaced residents—has been a major cause of protest
in Cambodia and other authoritarian Asian countries, including China and
Myanmar.
Reported by Hour Hum for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Pagnawath Khun. Written in English by Brooks Boliek.

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