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22/08/2008
International Construction Review (ICON)
“The World Bank has pointed out that other countries in the region (such as Vietnam) have managed to achieve equitable growth in a manner that benefits society as a whole and contributes to a far more sustainable form of stability than the CPP’s mix of repressive political tactics and short-sighted economic rapaciousness.” - Rhodri Williams, international expert on housing rightsAs investors poise to spend billions making Cambodia’s undeveloped coast the next hotspot for sunseekers, human rights groups fear that violent and illegal mass evictions will increase to make way for the resorts and supporting infrastructure.
Land-grabbing is reportedly rife in a country still recovering from the devastation of the Khmer Rouge regime and conflict with neighbouring Vietnam. In February this year Amnesty International estimated that 150,000 people around the country were at risk of forcible eviction as a result of land disputes, seizures and new development projects.
As investors prepare to turn Cambodia’s undeveloped coastline into the next big Asian holiday destination, civil society organisations say the housing and land rights of residents are being trampled on.
The plans for development are significant. A recent example came to light on August 17 when Cambodian conglomerate Royal Group told the Financial Times newspaper it was raising US$2 billion from private investors, together with Hong Kong-based Millennium Group, to develop Koh Rong, an island nearly the size of Hong Kong off the coastal municipality of Sihanoukville.
At nearly 8000 hectares and largely forested, the scope of the development would be huge and would likely require an airport. According to one press report the Cambodian government will not release figures of how many people live on the island, though it has conducted a census there.
The Financial Times also reported that MPDI, a subsidiary of Seng Enterprise, one of Cambodia’s leading construction companies, is working on another US$2bn project with unnamed US, Japanese and Middle Eastern investors to triple the size of Kep, a neglected former French colonial resort. The paper reported that land along a 6km stretch of coastline will be reclaimed and luxury towers and bungalows will house about 10,000 families.
Dan Nicholson, Asia Pacific coordinator for the Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions (COHRE), told iCON his organization had “grave fears” about the rights of people living in areas pegged for development.
“We hear many reports about proposed tourist developments around the coastline. Some estimates are that 45% of the country has been sold off in various forms to developers, mainly coastal areas and islands.
“Evictions in Cambodia are frequently carried out violently, with no regard to the human rights of those affected, and in violation of Cambodian law. Military police are often used, even though this is illegal. Very often those evicted in fact have legal rights to the land, under the 2001 Land Law, but this is ignored by a corrupt judiciary and government.”
In one case in April last year soldiers and police armed with guns and electric batons violently evicted approximately 105 families from Pram Muoy Village near Sihanoukville to back a claim of ownership by the wife of a local high-ranking official. Houses were burnt to the ground and 18 villagers and two police were injured.
“More than a year later,” Nicholson said, “the community is living along the road, adjacent to their old land, under tarpaulins in conditions resembling an IDP (internally displaced person) camp. The land has been fenced off but remains unused.”
The issue of land ownership in Cambodia is murky at best. Rhodri Williams, an international expert on housing rights, notes that traditionally in Cambodia title was established through cultivating the land, and lost when it fell into disuse. The French, who colonized Cambodia in the mid-1800s, tried to move from use-based to title-based ownership but this didn’t take root much outside the cities.
In 1975 any question of who owned what became academic when the Khmer Rouge launched a programme of wholesale agrarian collectivization that emptied the cities and forced the population to work on farms. The Khmer Rouge fell in 1979 but it wasn’t until the mid 1980s that the government de-collectivised land and property. It then began granting concessions to private companies to exploit natural resources, but it fell to local authorities to administer this process and corruption was rife.
Cambodia’s 300-mile coastline has never been heavily populated but after the mass uprootings during the Khmer Rouge era, in which an estimated fifth of the population was killed, people began settling there because their own towns and villages had been destroyed. They supported themselves by fishing, subsistence farming or running small businesses.
In the 90s the central government in Phnom Penh designated the entire coast and its islands as State Public Land that could not be bartered or developed.
According to an article in the Guardian newspaper (See “Country for sale”, 26th April 2008), by 2006 these coastal communities had schools, political representation, and many householders even had papers, stamped by the Sihanoukville governor, Say Hak, which guaranteed them the permanent right to stay under the 2001 Land Law.
But in July 2007, Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen, of the Cambodian Peoples Party (CPP), changed the designation of the southern islands so they could be sold.
“By March this year,” wrote the authors of the Guardian article, “virtually all Cambodia's accessible and sandy coast was in private hands, either Cambodian or foreign. Those who lived or worked there were turfed out - some jailed, others beaten, virtually all denied meaningful compensation. The deals went unannounced; no tenders or plans were ever officially published. All that was known was that more than £1,000m in foreign finance found its way into the country in 2007, a 1,500% increase over the previous four years.”
Dan Nicholson of COHRE told iCON that under international law, evictions should only be carried out in exceptional circumstances, and when all feasible alternatives have been explored with the communities. He said that where evictions are justified there must be adequate consultation and notice and the evictions must be humane. Evicted communities should be compensated for their losses, and provided with adequate alternative housing.
“Although Cambodia has ratified the major international human rights treaties, there is currently no law regulating eviction here,” he said. “Domestic laws are in any case frequently ignored by government, police and courts to push through development projects, including tourist development.
“Everyone can see the potential for Cambodia to develop a stronger tourist industry. However, it is essential that this doesn't happen at the expense of the housing and land rights of local communities. Current signs are not good.”
Cambodia lost no time issuing an official response to both the Guardian article and the Amnesty International report. In a letter to the Guardian, Cambodia’s ambassador to the UK, Hor Nambora, accused the paper of trying to discredit the ruling CPP in the run-up to July’s general election, in which Prime Minister Hun Sen was returned to office.
The ambassador (see www.cambodianembassy.org.uk) did not refute the article’s specific assertions but recalled the country’s difficult past and said the government doesn’t ignore “the tactics used by some foreign companies”. He went on to claim that “All applications to buy land are carefully scrutinised by the Cambodian Investment Board which is committed to ensuring that the rights of the Cambodian people are not infringed.”
To Amnesty International, Hor Nambora wrote countering that the government planned to distribute concession land to some 10,000 poor families in the provinces and cities as part of a Land Allocation for Social and Economic Development (LASED) Project for 2008.
He also said Cambodia is committed to improving governance and is working with the World Bank, the EU, UK and Japan, who together provided US$70m to help reform public financial management, private sector development, natural resource and land management from 2007 to 2010.
However expert Rhodri Williams told iCON that this may be just a smokescreen.
“The problem,” he said, “is that the international cooperation tends to focus on lengthy drafting processes for laws and by-laws and programs, et cetera, that are so rarely implemented on the ground that it is hard to avoid the inference that they are little more than a diversion.
“Meanwhile, development is clearly going on, but taking place in a manner that tends to be to the detriment of all but the rich and connected.”
He added: “The World Bank has pointed out that other countries in the region (such as Vietnam) have managed to achieve equitable growth in a manner that benefits society as a whole and contributes to a far more sustainable form of stability than the CPP’s mix of repressive political tactics and short-sighted economic rapaciousness.”
cambodia lacks this maybe due to years of isolation and uneducated leaders. why not pressure to education the cambodian leaders to create a sound equitable development while at the same time balance to benefit society at large just like what they observed in vietnam, for example. and stop trying to isolate cambodia. this is what you get when you work hard to isolate cambodia from the rest of the world. the better solution in this modern day era is to integrate cambodia or educate or introduce cambodian leaders (all leaders) to understand and learn from other know-how or experienced countries out there so they can in turn help their own people. isolation or punishing due to differing political ideology will not help cambodia, instead, work together to educate and show them how to do it the right way so the whole cambodia can benefit as well, not just a small group of privileged leaders and their families and friends and associates, etc... this is why thinking in term of national interest in the utmost important and i can not say this enough. remember one nation can only be as strong as its educated population because without the majority of people in a nation, there is no nation, at least not a respectable one at that.
ReplyDeleteif a leader is too self-absorb and not thinking in the big picture or well-being of its people and nation, then that leader is only hurting his own country and people and nobody else. so, help your people by being fair and sound in every situation. and stop depend on just one individual, work as a group to get things done the right way because like in the past tragedy, when those few individual died of old age or whatever, cambodia is left to swim in the middle of the ocean without any life support. i hope cambodian leaders can learn from the past and let's make the future better by working toward a common goal in nation development. like any teamsports, one cannot win alone without the help of your teammates. thank you and god bless cambodia.
That's show the goverment of faked PHD from Hanoi Vietnamese mother fucker!
ReplyDeleteis this happening now or was it 10 years ago? is this some sort of political attack again? one has to wonder!
ReplyDeleteit's hard to please everyone. that said, there are still alot of work to be done in cambodia as cambodia is crying out for better way of life. thanks to many years of wars and of course the KR atrocity did not help that a bit. so, don't stop there, keep working on it for the sake of good balance development in cambodia as a nation like cambodia cannot afford to sit around and wait forever to develop due to this small social problem. so, be fair to cambodia, people. god bless cambodia.
1:37 AM are you stupid, or your family just like that?
ReplyDeletecan you read today news?
Great Leader
ReplyDeleteIn both Economic and politics leadership matters more than does any other personal factor. A country with a first-class leader can punch above its weight class.
No, size does not matter, but courage, judgment, discernment and humor are indispensable.
Moral couragement is matters most. It is the willingness of a leader to stick to his/her beliefs, to pursue a course of action in the face of overwhelming criticism, great adversity and, not least, the faintheartedness of friends and allies. This kind of courage is always in short supply--and never more so than Cambodia today.
A single spasm of courage is not enough. It is that which is shown over the long haul that demands the most of a man or woman and ultimately brings the best results for us all.
Courage without Judgment is pointless and may be dangerous. What makes a person judge wisely? It is not intelligence, as such. Clever people with enormously high IQs often show scarifyingly bad judgment. Nor is it education.
Being able to judge well is often linked to an ability to mix with and learn from other people--not so much from experts but from common people, those who lack the arrogance of power or the desire to show off their intelligence but who nevertheless think deeply about life's trials. A person of judgment develops the habit of asking questions of such wise people and listening to their replies.
In running a country or stimulate the economy, with a sense of priority, leader is faced with countless problems, huge and insignificant, and has to make decisions about all of them. Clever leaders often have a habit of pouncing on minor issues and pushing them at all costs, even to the detriment of their real interests. Sorting out the truly big from the small takes an innate horse sense that's not given to most human beings. It has little to do with intelligence, but it is nearly always the hallmark of a great leader.
When a great leader needs an advice, he/she rarely turn to someone with first-class honors from a top university. He/she turn to someone who has knocked about the world and cheerfully survived the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Although not a scholar by any gauge, but one almost invariably judged correctly on the few big issues that really matter.
I can feel the sense of wise patriotixm of elite Cambodians here. And allow me to share my lesson of history here:
ReplyDeleteUntil now have I better clearly realized the "poor mentality of Cambodians". Its leaders, except during King built Angkors, are
"own interests/powers-motivated"
rather than put the national's crying or interest on top as the priority during their reign. The leaders by all means have established "the system" to secure their, clan's interests and power rather to establish a strong foundation for the nation to growth. Let us talk about Khmer history in the past and as well as from the so-called founder of Reas Nyum, Norodom Sihanouk. The kings all believe they are "God" and their sole decisions should be highly-valued. And the result: Khmer falled from Kingdom Empire to this size of torn-apart land. And Sihanouk, coz of self-pride and ambition to win over Lon Nol, invited Pol Pot to come in Power. Result: the massacre of own blood. You see the moving trend of Cambodia is that: "More blood of Cambodians have been and will continuouly be spilled" and the country downwardly become "weaker and weaker, smaller and smaller". And now Hun sen any better??? any strong, healthy foundation for the nation to grow??? Corruption, illegal immigration, killing own people, compatriots to defend self-family's interest and powers!!!!! Any slight difference and isn't it in the past footprints of the leaders in the past?????
I sadly say that the more time Cambodia is under such leadership of self-family interests/power and those leaders do not establish strong, healthy foundation for the nation, then not in the long run Cambodia will be torn-apart and fall under neighboring's colonization. And Cambodians historically known as elites of the empire will call themselves "aliens" living in own their mother-land.
May god blesses Cambodia...
Thanks 1:24 AM and 4:10 AM. Your ideas are constuctive...
ReplyDeleteLook 12:06 PM. So stupid idea, a real diot.
May Buddha blesses Cambodia, not god as 95% of Khmers are buddhists.
"We believe these truths to be self-evident." It's a great clause to live by for anyone who believe that's everyone is "created equal".
ReplyDeleteI'd like to assert this remark by Mr. Goethe, "thinking is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough; we must act."
All I wish is that Khmers stand up and fight for the common cause.
Look at Picture..
ReplyDeleteI am strong man But with Only my own Poor people..
When Foreing agressors ... I am so soft/peaceful.... I wish to have beenm awarded Peace Nobel Prize.. reagrdless My territory lost............
Siam Army destroyed the GPS Machine of one of the High Rank Delegates including Minister of Fine Art.... to Taman Temple...
Thisd act is very Barabrous and Critical as looking down on Khmer Government..........
I am still patient, Soft...
When we comare the Siam Khmer Border Dispute/Agression... to land Grabbing by high Rank Government Officials with Poor people and Compare to the Local traffic Accident(between a High Rank Clan and normal MotoCyler I met yesterday..... the strongest use Gun to fire and the Poor Motocycler be quiet.. and drove away however he respected to trafic Law...
This situation isd very similar to Border Dispute with Thai while Cam Party keep quiet.......
Excellency General Oknha Advisor Achar Knoy(Phd. Bandit from Pahok Chamroeurn aVichea Univ. PPenh)