Wednesday, 09 May 2012
Meas Sokchea and Bridget Di Certo
The Phnom Penh Post
Ministry officials were silent yesterday on how exactly they planned to implement Prime Minister Hun Sen’s suspension of any new economic land concession grants and review of existing ELCs.
Both the Minister of Agriculture Chan Sarun and Minister of Environment Mok Mareth could not be reached for comment yesterday and other ministry officials contacted, including Chay Sakun, director in charge of land concessions at the Ministry of Agriculture, declined to comment.
Provincial authorities involved in granting the now-suspended land concessions yesterday said they were ready to implement orders, but had received none.
“But now, we are still waiting for the decision of the relevant ministries such as the Ministry of Agriculture and Ministry of Environment to [tell us how] to enforce this regulation firmly,” Pan Hamphan said, adding that 18 companies held about 80,000 hectares of ELC land in Ratanakkiri.
Kampong Thom’s provincial governor Chhun Chhorn said he was willing and able to cooperate with any instructions he received from the relevant ministries to enforce the premier’s regulation.
“When that regulation is set, we will enforce at that time,” Chhun Chorn said, adding there were 26 companies developing 50,000 hectares of land in Kampong Thom.
However, civil society organisations and opposition parties are concerned the regulation is nothing more than an election ploy.
Rights group Adhoc yesterday highlighted the regulation’s “convenient” timing, which could prove a “waiting period”, noting it would not overrule a law or sub-decree and is easily reversible.
1 comment:
when all Khmer stand up those dogs Viet will search for alsylum in oversea, why not in Viet?
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