Showing posts with label Choeng Sopheap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Choeng Sopheap. Show all posts

Friday, August 17, 2012

Cambodia's islands up for grabs [-A country for sale ... down to the last island, if it is not given to Vietnam yet]

A view from the pristine beaches on Koh Rong island, off Sihanoukville. The island is one of 28 in Cambodia earmarked for development. Photograph: Will Baxter/Phnom Penh Post

Friday, 17 August 2012
May Titthara and David Boyle
The Phnom Penh Post
Some of the most audacious Cambodian island developments have been connected to shady individuals, including convicted pedophile Alexander Trofimov, who allegedly drove to his resort on Koh Pos from prison regularly before he was pardoned by the king last year.

Adhoc’s list of soon-to-be concessionaires includes a veritable who’s who of controversial development including LYP Group (Koh Kong Knong), TTY Corporation Co, Ltd (Koh Koan) and Try Pheap Company (Koh Tonsay), all firms that have been involved in major land disputes.
More than 180,000 hectares on 28 of Cambodia’s 64 islands were reclassified as state private property for 31 companies seeking land concessions between 2008 and 2010, government sub-decrees reveal.

The reclassification sub-decrees, compiled by investigators at the rights group Adhoc, pave the way for firms to secure 99-year leases to develop hotels, resorts and casinos, mostly on islands dotted across the coasts of Preah Sihanouk, Kampot, Kep and Koh Kong province.

They include already popular destinations off Preah Sihanouk and Kep province such as Koh Tonsay (Rabbit Island), Koh Russey (Bamboo Island), Koh Rong, Koh Rong Somleom and Koh Takhieo, as well as far more obscure enclaves.

Experts in the investment and conservation communities have told the Post that on top of these land reclassifications, many of which have since gained final approval, plots have been earmarked for development by private firms on almost every single island in the Kingdom.

Friday, August 03, 2012

Despair in Pursat as students begin to exit [-Another one of Hun Xen's flip-flopping policies]

Youth volunteers depart Phnom Penh last month to take part in a government-initiated land measurement program. Photograph: Heng Chivoan/Phnom Penh Post

Friday, 03 August 2012
May Titthara
The 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.

The amendment means students will no longer measure disputed land and has prolonged the original six-month timeframe of the project.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Fear accompanies summons over land disputes

Kuch Veng speaks to a police officer outside the Ansar Chambak commune office in Pursat province’s Krakor district last year. Photograph: May Titthara/Phnom Penh Post

Choeng Sopheap (aka Yeay Phu, in red skirt), walking next to Kep Chuktema, is the owner of Pheapimex  (Photo:Koh Santepheap)
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

Less than a week after Prime Minister Hun Sen called for land to be returned to villagers embroiled in land disputes, a Pursat province villager has been summonsed by the court in a scenario many see as all too common in these disputes.

Kuch Veng, a representative of villagers in Krokor district was charged with incitment in late May for leading other villagers in a bid to stop Pheap Imex company from clearing their farm land, but only found out that he had been charged on Monday.

I am afraid because I did not do anything wrong – I and other villagers just prevented the company from clearing rice fields and crops, because what the company did was wrong and they [authorities] accused me,” he said.

Monday, May 07, 2012

សុខ​ចិត្ត​ធ្វើ​ចំណាក​ស្រុក​ទៅ​ស្រុក​គេ​ទាំង​ខុស​ច្បាប់​គ្រាន់​បើ​ជាង​រស់​នៅ​ក្នុង​សង្គម​អយុត្តិ​ធម៌?

សពប៉េ​អឹមដែល​ត្រូវ​គេ​ចោទ​ថា បាន​បាញ់​សម្លាប់​​ឈុត វុទ្ធី​។ រូបថត សហ​ការី

Monday, 07 May 2012
វិភាគសង្គម ដោយ តុងសុប្រាជ្ញ
The Phnom Penh Post
មាន​សេដ្ឋីៗ​មួយ​ចំនួន​តូច ​ដែល​រាស្រ្ត​តែង​តែ​យំ​តវ៉ា​យក​ដី​ពួក​គាត់​មក​វិញ​រាល់​ថ្ងៃ ​ដូច​ជា​យាយភូ​ យាយ​ផាន​ ឧកញ្ញ៉ា​លីយ៉ុង​ផាត់​ ជា​ដើម​ បែរ​ទៅ​ជា​មាន​ដី​ដល់​ទៅ​​រាប់​លាន​​ហិក​តា​ទៅ​វិញ​?
ជា​លក្ខណៈ​ធម្ម​ជាតិ​របស់​មនុស្ស បើ​កាល​ណា​រស់​នៅ​គ្មាន​អ្វី​ហូប​ ឬ​ក៏​ហូប​មិន​គ្រប់​គ្រាន់​ហើយ គឺ​ខិត​ខំ​ព្យាយាម​យ៉ាង​ត្រដាប​ត្រដួស ​ទៅ​រក​ទីទួល មាន​សុវត្ថិ​ភាព​ ដែល​មាន​អាហារ​ហូប​ដើម្បី​ឲ្យ​បាន​រស់។​ ព្រោះ​គាត់​ ពុំ​ទាន់​បាន​ឆ្លង​ផុត​ពី​តម្រូវ​ការ​ជា​មូល​ដ្ឋាន ​ដូច​ទ្រឹស្តី​របស់​លោក​«ម៉ាស្លូ» ដែល​មនុស្ស​ត្រូវ​មាន​អាហារ​ សម្លៀក​បំពាក់ ​និង​ជម្រក​សមរម្យ​។​ ការ​ដែល​គ្មាន​​អ្វី​ហូប​ ​គឺ​ជា​កត្តា​ចម្បង​ធ្វើ​ឲ្យ​ពួក​គាត់​ ក្លាយ​ទៅ​ជា​មុខ​សញ្ញា​ជា​ជន​ងាយ​រង​គ្រោះ ​និង​ងាយ​ស្រួល​ក្នុង​ការ​អូស​ទាញ​កម្លាំង​ពល​កម្ម​ទៅ​ធ្វើ​ការ​នៅ​ក្រៅ ស្រុក​ដោយ​ប្រើ​ឃ្លា​មួយ​យ៉ាង​សាមញ្ញ​ថា៖ «​គេ​បបួល​កុំ​ឲ្យ​ខាន​ បើ​គេ​បាន​កុំ​ស្តាយ​ក្រោយ​!​»

ប្រសិន​បើ​យើង​មាន​ពេល​ សាក​ល្បង​ទៅ​លេង​កម្សាន្ត​នៅ​ទីក្រុង​បាង​កក​ជា​ពិសេស​នៅ​តំបន់​សេដ្ឋកិច្ច​ សង្គម​វិត​ (Sukumvit​ area)​ យើង​នឹង​ឃើញ​ពលករ​ខ្មែរ​មួយ​ចំនួន​ ដែល​ជា​អ្នក​លក់​តាម​ហាង​ អ្នក​រត់​តុ ​អ្នក​ធ្វើ​ម្ហូប​នៅ​តាម​ភោជនីយ​ដ្ឋាន​ អ្នក​ធ្វើការ​នៅ​តាម​បារ​ អាច​និយាយ​ភាសា​ថៃ​បា​ន​យ៉ាង​ល្អ​ ហើយ​នៅ​តាម​ផ្លូវ​ដើរ​កាត់​ទទឹង​មហា​វិថី​សង្គម​វិត​នោះ ​យើង​នឹង​ជួប​អ្នក​សុំ​ទាន​ដែល​ភាគ​ច្រើន​ជាជន​ជាតិ​ខ្មែរ។​ ពួក​គាត់​ក៏​បាន​ប្រាប់​យើង​ទាំង​ទឹក​ភ្នែក​ទឹក​សម្បោរ​ថា គាត់មក​ពី​ស្រុក​ភូមិ​ណា​ មក​តាម​រយៈ​អ្នក​ណា ​និង​ពីមូល​ហេតុ​ដែល​បានជំរុញឲ្យទៅ​ទី​នោះ​ផងដែរ។​

ពលករ​ខ្មែរ​ខ្លះ​ទៀត​ ទៅ​ធ្វើ​ការ​លំបាកៗ​ហួស​កម្លាំង​ជាង​នេះ​ទៅ​ទៀត​ដូច​កញ្ជះ​គេ​ បុរសៗ​គ្នា ខ្លះ​នេសាទ​ធ្លាយ​ទៅ​ដល់​ប្រទេស​ឥណ្ឌូ​នេស៊ី​ ឯ​ស្រ្តី​វិញ ខ្លះ​ក្លាយ​ទៅ​ជា​ទាសករ​ផ្លូវ​ភេទ​ក៏​មាន​ ខ្លះ​ក៏​ធ្លាក់​ខ្លួន​ញៀន​ថ្នាំ ​ខ្លះ​ឆ្លង​ជំងឺ​អេដស៍​ និង​ខ្លះ​ត្រូវ​បាន​គេ​ជួញ​ដូរ​ផ្លូវ​ភេទ​។​ ថ្មីៗនេះ​មាន​ពលករ​ខ្មែរ​ស្លាប់​ជា​ហូរ​ហែ​ ខ្លះ​ស្លាប់​ដោយ​សារ​គេ​ធ្វើ​បាប​ឲ្យ​ធ្វើ​ការ​ហួស​កម្លាំង​ ដោយ​សារ​គ្រោះ​ថ្នាក់​ចរាចរណ៍​ក៏​មាន​ ខ្លះ​ស្លាប់​ដោយ​សារ​ទៅ​ចូល​កាប់​ឈើ​ប្រណីត​ខុស​ច្បាប់​ក៏​មាន​។​ យោង​តាម​ក្រសួង​មហា​ផ្ទៃ​ បាន​ឲ្យ​ដឹង​ថា​ ពលករ​ចំណាក​ស្រុក​ ១២០០០​ នាក់​ ត្រូវ​បាន​បញ្ជូន​ពី​ក្រៅ​ប្រទេស​មក​កម្ពុជា​វិញ​ ក្នុង​ឆ្នាំ​ ២០១១។

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Villagers seek Buddha’s help

On 11 April 2012 at around 10:30 a.m, about 30-40 villagers from Kbal Trach commune,Krakor district, Pursat hold a Buddhist ceremony for a pray for their lands and forests to be safe from Pheapimex Company. (Photo by Chundy)
Thursday, 12 April 2012
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

More than 100 Pursat villagers who had lost faith in the court system and government invoked ancestor spirits and called on Buddha yesterday to help them resolve their land dispute, village representatives and an NGO spokesman said.

Village representative Kuch Veng said the group, from Krakor district’s Kbal Trach, Chhoeu Tom and Ansar Chambak communes, celebrated a traditional ceremony in Kbal Trach.

Proceedings had included monks being asked to bless villagers who opposed Pheapimex Group’s development of their land, he said.

We asked the ancestor spirits to insult the company and the people involved in taking over the villagers’ land.

In 2000, Pheapimex, which is owned by Choeng Sopheap, was granted 315,000 hectares of land in Kampong Chhnang and Pursat provinces as an economic land concession.

Villagers Pray for Their Lands and Forests to be Safe from the Pheapimex Company

On 11 April 2012 at around 10:30 a.m, about 30-40 villagers from Kbal Trach commune,Krakor district, Pursat hold a Buddhist ceremony for a pray for their lands and forests to be safe from Pheapimex Company. (Photo by Chundy)

The offerings for the spirit (Arak/Neak Ta = The conservators of the territory and forestry) to go into the human body (Roub Snong; the woman in the middle). Starting from around 01:00 p.m of 11 April 2012 until around ) 2: 50 p.m, but it doesn't work. By the belief, it should be held on Tuesday or Saturday, or it won't work like this one. The villagers of around 50 including 30 women do it for their talk to the Arak/Neak Ta to help protect their lands and forests from Pheapimex Company. (Photo by Chundy)

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Pursat Pheapimex protest

Hundreds of villagers from Pursat province’s Kbal Trach commune protested outside Pheapimex Group’s Krakor district office yesterday. (Photo Supplied by CLEC)
Wednesday, 04 April 2012
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

About 300 people from six villages in Pursat province’s Kbal Trach commune protested yesterday outside Pheapimex Group’s Krakor district office, the latest confrontation in a land dispute that stretches back 13 years.

Villager representative Duok Sary said they had come to demand that the company explain why it had taken their land and destroyed their property.

“The company did not explain to us, but the commune chief said the company had signed a lease with him that showed the use of our land was only temporary. But the company tore up the document and he [the commune chief] had no evidence against the company,” Duok Sary said.

Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Protest of Kbal Trach villagers against Pheapimex Company

Dear All:

Attached are the pictures of about 300 villagers from Kbal Trach commune, Krakor District of Pursat doing a protest in front of Pheapimex company to stop the company bulldozers from clearing their land this morning (03-04-12). The villagers demanded the company stop the clearance and demarcate the land where the company would take, and making sure their land is not affected. They also asked the authority to establish a social land concession program for most of them having no land and not enough land for farming.

No company reps came for any talk to the villagers.

The commune chief of Kbal Trach commune (Duong Sarin 012 480 609) who was also there for his support for peaceful resolution from the company intervened he had just suggested to the Krakor district governor to arrange another discussion between the company and villagers in the next two days.

The villagers were back home at around 02:00 p.m. in their hope to meet with the company again in the next two days under the facilitation of the district government.

(All Photos: Community Legal Education Center (CLEC))



Wednesday, January 25, 2012

«​ខ្ញុំ​ភ័យ​ខ្លាច​ថា បន្ទាប់​ពី​ការ​បោះ​ឆ្នោត​ឃុំ​សង្កាត់​រួច​ហើយ ពួក​គេ​នឹង​​មក​ដន្តើមយក​ដី​យើង​ជាថ្មីម្តង​ទៀត​» - ស្គាល់ហើយក្រយ៉ៅហ៊ុនសែន!

មន្ត្រី​ CPP​ ទៅ​សន្យា​ឲ្យ​អ្នក​ក្រគរ​យក​ដី​ពី​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​ភាពីម៊ិច​វិញ

Tuesday, 24 January 2012 12:06
ម៉ៃ ទិត្យ​ថារ៉ា
The Phnom Penh Post
ខ្ញុំ​គិត​ថា អ្វី ​ដែល​ពួកគេ​ធ្វើ​គ្រាន់​តែ​ចង់​ឲ្យ​យើងបោះ​​ឆ្នោត​ឲ្យ​ពួក​គេ​ ​ពី​ព្រោះ​វា​​កើត​ឡើងយូរ​មក​ហើយ​ ​ហេតុ​អ្វី​​ក៏​ពួក​គេ​មិន​ដោះ​ស្រាយឲ្យយើង
ពោធិ៍​សាត់ៈ អ្នក​ភូមិ​ក្នុង​ឃុំ​ត្នោត​ជុំ ​ស្រុក​ក្រគ​រ​​ ខេត្ត​ពោធិ៍​- សាត់​ ​ដែល​មាន​​ជម្លោះ​ដី​ធ្លី​​ជា​យូរ​មក​ហើយ​ជា​មួយ​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន ភាពី​ម៉ិចគ្រុប​ ​ដែល​​ជា​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​របស់​​លោកស្រី ​ជឹង សុភាព​ ដែលគេ​ស្គាល់​ យាយ ​ភូ បាន​ទទួល​ការ​ប្រគល់​ដី​ឲ្យ​វិញ​បន្ទាប់​ពី​ពួក​គេ​​បាន​នាំ​គ្នា​ធ្វើ​ការ​តវ៉ា​​ចំនួន​បី​លើក​​កាល​ពីខែ​មករា។

លោក គួ​ច វេង ​តំណាង​អ្នក​ភូមិ​បាន​ថ្លែង​ថា ​កាល​ពី​ថ្ងៃ​ទី​២១ ខែ​មករា មាន​សមាជិក​គណបក្ស​ប្រជា​ជន​កម្ពុជា​(CPP)ម្នាក់​ មក​ពី​ភ្នំ​ពេញ​ ​​អម​ដោយ​អភិបាល​ស្រុក​ក្រគរ​ ​បាន​មក​ជជែក​​នឹង​អ្នក​ភូមិដែល​​នាំ​គ្នា​ធ្វើ​ការ​តវ៉ា​​នៅ​មុខស្នាក់​ការ​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​ក្នុង​ស្រុក​ក្រគរ​ ដោយ​សន្យា​ថា អ្នក​ភូមិ​អាច​ទៅ​បោះ​បង្គោល​​លើ​ដី​ដែល​​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​បាន​ឈូស​រួច​ហើយ​។ លោក​បាន​បន្តថា​៖ «​ឥឡូវ​នេះ​ អ្នក​ភូមិ​បាន​នាំ​គ្នា​​ទៅ​បោះ​របង​នៅ​លើ​ដី​ដែល​​ត្រូវ​បាន​ឈូស​ឆាយ​ដោយ​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​ ហើយ​​សង្ឃឹម​ថា ជម្លោះ​នេះ​នឹង​មិន​កើត​មាន​ជាថ្មី​ទៀត​​ឡើយ​»។

លោក​បាន​បន្ត​ថា ​បុរស​ម្នាក់​ដែល​អះអាង​ថា ​ជា​សមាជិក​គណ​បក្ស​ប្រជា​ជន​កម្ពុជា​នៅ​រាជ​ធានី​ភ្នំ​ពេញ​ បាន​សន្យា​ថា ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​នឹង​​មិន​យកដី​ពីប្រជា​ជន​ទៀត​ទេ​។ តែ​លោក​នឹក​បារម្ភ​​ថា ​៖ «​ខ្ញុំ​ភ័យ​ខ្លាច​ថា បន្ទាប់​ពី​ការ​បោះ​ឆ្នោត​ឃុំ​សង្កាត់​រួច​ហើយ ពួក​គេ​នឹង​​មក​ដន្តើមយក​ដី​យើង​ជាថ្មីម្តង​ទៀត​»។

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Villagers wary of Pheapimex olive branch [-Election is near, that's why the CPP is trying to soften land disputes]

Tuesday, 24 January 2012
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

A deadly land dispute in Pursat province ended over the weekend with a victory for the villagers, but they said yesterday this might have more to do with the upcoming commune elections than a change of heart within the company owned by the wife of a senator.

The villagers from Tnort Chum commune in Krakor district said Pheapimex Group – which is owned by Choeng Sopheap, wife of Cambodian People’s Party Senator Lao Meng Khin – had agreed to return disputed land to them, following intervention by a group of CPP members from Phnom Penh on Saturday.

I am afraid that after the commune election, they will take over our land again,” Kouch Veng, a representative of the villagers told the Post yesterday. He explained that the CPP members and the district governor had met with the villagers on Saturday while they protested in front of the company’s office, telling them they could erect a fence around land they had farmed.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Pheapimex under fire again

Villagers protest outside a makeshift office owned by the Pheapimex company in Pursat province’s Krakor district yesterday. (Photo Supplied)

Tuesday, 17 January 2012
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

A land dispute in Pursat would not be resolved until authorities and the private company involved, Pheapimex Group, held a meeting with villagers to explain how much land would be developed in Krakor district’s Tnort Chum commune, an Adhoc spokesman said yesterday.

As police investigate the apparent murder of 42-year-old cassava plantation supervisor Chang Fi Yiek, who was shot dead in broad daylight on Friday, more than 200 residents called for their rice fields not to be cleared in a protest yesterday in front of the offices of Pheapimex, which is owned by Choeng Sopheap, wife of Cambodian People’s Party senator Lao Meng Khina.

Provincial Adhoc co-ordinator Phuong Sothea said villagers had a right to know how much of their land would be developed.

If they cannot do this, villagers will not stop protesting,” he said.

In January, 2000, the government signed an agreement with Pheapimex that granted it 315,028 hectares in Kampong Chhnang and Pursat as an economic land concession to grow cassia.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Pursat village chief: “I’m no longer afraid of death because I serve the gov’t since 1986”

Thou Samuth (Photo: Monduleko, RFA)
LAND-GRABBERS Choeung Sopheap (L) and Lao Meng Khin (R) next to Sihamoni. This land-grabbing couple owns the Pheapimex company
Pursat village chief leads protest against the Pheapimex company

25 Dec 2011
By Mondul Keo
RFA
Translated from Khmer by Soch
Click here to read the original article in Khmer
Thou Samuth said: “I’m no longer afraid of death because I work to serve the gov’t since 86 (1986). Since I got out school, I served the nation since then up to the point that I cannot help the people resolve this problem. They [Pheapimex] encroached on my people’s properties, and they also affected me, don’t they know how much I suffer? I saw the people suffering with my own eyes, and I have to help them. I saw the forestry department chief, the environment chief, the company, they are all inflicting suffering on the people and I have to help the people, I don’t want to be the village chief anymore.
Land dispute between the Pheapimex company and villagers in Krakor district, Pursat province, still drags on the past many years without any solution in sight.

Thou Samuth, the Kralanh village chief in Pursat province, gave an interview after Pheapimex pulled back out its [land clearing] equipments on 23 December 2011.

Recently, Pheapimex cleared land and it encroached on farmlands belonging to 24 villagers in Kralanh village, Kbal Trach commune. The affected area measures about 50 hectares. The land clearing operation also encroached on land owned by the Kralanh village chief and this led to his extreme anger.

Thou Samuth then led the villagers to protest to demand that Pheapimex put an end to the land clearing operation.

Thou Samuth and about 100 villagers reacted strongly against Pheapimex which encroached on land belonging to the villagers.

Thou Samuth – the Kralanh village chief in Kbal Trach commune, Krakor district, Pursat province – indicated on 23 December that Pheapimex cleared land by violating properties belonging to 24 families. The size of the encroached land is about 50 hectares, of which 4 hectare belong to him personally.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Dam Sleng Ban Phler Sleng - "Growing Strychnine Tree": Op-Ed by Khmer Borann

Click on the article in Khmer to zoom in

Boeung Kak residents protesting while holding Hun Xen and Bun Rany's pictures

Voting for the CPP did not stop the forced evictions in Boeung Kak Lake

Police violence against Boeung Kak Lake residents protesting against Shukaku Inc.

Sand pumping to drown houses belonging to Boeung Kak Lake residents


Choeng Sopheap (aka Yeay Phou) (L) and Lao Meng Khin (R) standing in a photo op with Cambodia's king
The moral of the story:

It's time to tear down the strychnine tree and replace it with a mango tree instead

It's time to vote out the CPP and replace it with the opposition party instead

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Road blocked in Pheapimex protest

Choeung Sopheap (right) is the owner of Pheapimex. She is also a crony of Hun Xen and Bun Rany Hun Xen (Photo: Koh Santepheap)
Villagers block National Road 5 in Pursat province’s Krakor district yesterday as part of a protest against the alleged clearing of their land by local firm Pheapimex.

Wednesday, 22 September 2010

Khouth Sophakchakrya
The Phnom Penh Post

David Pred, executive director of Bridges Across Borders Cambodia, described the Pheapimex concession as “the poster child for all that is wrong with the Royal Government’s policy of granting large-scale land concessions to private firms”.
MORE than 300 villagers gathered yesterday in front of Krakor district hall in Pursat province and blocked National Road 5 to protest the alleged clearing of their farmland by the local company Pheapimex.

“Our livelihoods rely on farming and collecting forest products, but now the company has bulldozed and confiscated about 3-4 hectares of rice fields from each family,” said Phorn Chea, a 50-year-old villager from Kbaltrach commune.

Ngeth Theavy, a coordinator for the local rights group Adhoc, said district authorities refused to meet with the villagers yesterday to discuss their complaint. Police also prevented the villagers from entering the district hall, which prompted them to block traffic on National Road 5 for about 30 minutes.

“The villagers demand that the company stop bulldozing their farmland and rice fields as well as the natural forest,” she said.

In 1997, Pheapimex was granted a 315,028-hectare land concession spanning Kampong Chhnang and Pursat provinces. The company, which is owned by Choeung Sopheap – the wife of Cambodian People’s Party Senator Lao Meng Khin – has come under fire because the concession is far in excess of the legal limit of 10,000 hectares.

Ngeth Theavy said the company planned to “develop agro-industry plantations such as acacia, cassava and other crops”.

Im Sarith, Krakor district governor, said he could not prevent the company from clearing land because of the 1997 concession agreement, and said the company had provided many jobs to local residents.

“We will visit the people’s rice fields on Friday,” he said. “We can ask the company to give back the rice fields if we find out that the company has bulldozed and confiscated rice fields belonging to the villagers.”

But Pheapimex representative Ty Kim Tok denied yesterday that the company had encroached on villagers’ land. “We can give the land back to them if they give evidence showing that the land belongs to them,” he said, and added that around 8,000 hectares had been planted so far.

David Pred, executive director of Bridges Across Borders Cambodia, described the Pheapimex concession as “the poster child for all that is wrong with the Royal Government’s policy of granting large-scale land concessions to private firms”.

“The concessionaire appears not to have complied with any of the ... safeguard provisions in the Sub-decree on Economic Land Concessions,” he said.

“If it is allowed to continue, the ramifications are going to be devastating for untold numbers of affected families in Pursat and Kampong Chhnang.”

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Ministry building sold off to developer

Hun Xen's cronies: Lao Meng Khin (under the umbrella) and Chhoeung Sopheap aka Yay Phu (in red blouse) (Photo: CPP)
A monk walks past the Ministry of Cults and Religions’ National Committee for Organising National and International Festivals on Tuesday. (Photo by: Heng Chivoan)

Thursday, 25 March 2010
Cheang Sokha and James O’toole
The Phnom Penh Post


OFFICES of the Ministry of Cults and Religions have been transferred to local investment company Pheapimex in a property deal that some observers say is an example of the malfeasance that characterises the Kingdom’s public land management.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, officials from the Ministry of Cults and Religions’ National Committee for Organising National and International Festivals said they had received a letter from Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) lawyer Khiev Sepphan dated last Friday that asked them to vacate their offices on Sisowath Quay by the end of the month.

“If you do not follow this notification, the lawyer will make a report to the CPP office to pursue further measures,” read the letter, a copy of which was obtained by the Post.

The letter instructed the officials to move to new offices at the General Inspectorate for the National Buddhist Education of Cambodia and hand over control of their current facilities to Choeung Sopheap, owner of Pheapimex and wife of CPP senator Lao Meng Khin.

Accounts of how the deal had been brokered differed among ministry officials.

One said that Minister of Cults and Religions Min Khin had sold the building to Choeung Sopheap last April, whereas another said the building was being exchanged for Pheapimex land near the Council of Ministers to be used by Prime Minister Hun Sen.

But regardless of how the deal was made, one official said, staff at the committee had been dealt with unfairly.

“We know that the current office has been sold to the private company, but we don’t understand why they used the CPP name to influence us,” he said, adding that the new proposed facilities are too small and lack meeting rooms.

“If they keep us working there without a proper location, that would be unacceptable,” he said.

Khiev Sepphan said he was simply acting on Min Khin’s behalf, declining to discuss specifics of the deal.

“I have informed His Excellency Min Khin that he should negotiate with those officials so that both sides can reach a solution,” Khiev Sepphan said.

Min Khin said Tuesday that he was too busy to comment, and Choeung Sopheap could not be reached for comment.

Legality questioned

The Pheapimex transfer is just one in a series of deals over the past few years in which government facilities have been offered to private companies with ties to the CPP. Former Ministry of Tourism facilities on Monivong Boulevard and Phnom Penh Municipal Police headquarters on Street 51 are now controlled by the Phanimex development company, and land near the National Assembly that once held the Bassac Theatre is now controlled by the Royal Group, as is the former site of the National Radio headquarters in Daun Penh district.

Yeng Virak, executive director of the Community Legal Education Centre, said such transfers of state public property were illegal under the Kingdom’s 2001 Land Law, which states that state public properties may not be transferred to private hands unless they “lose their public-interest use”. This provision was reinforced in a 2005 sub-decree.

To our knowledge, there’s no such law on transfer of this state public property to state private property,” Yeng Virak said, arguing that this process is instead carried out through methods that “supersede the law”, with sub-decrees issued to convert public property to private property after deals have already been made.

“Very often, the public does not know the justification for conversion,” Yeng Virak said. “Nobody knows.”

Sam Rainsy Party spokesman Yim Sovann said the companies benefiting from such transfers are not subject to a competitive, public bidding process that could ensure that they pay market prices for the property.

“The most powerful politicians are behind these companies. These companies can do whatever they want in Cambodia, especially they buy or swap or transfer the state property,” Yim Sovann said.

Sung Bonna, president of Bonna Realty Group, said property transfers must be conducted in a transparent manner, though he added that it was unsurprising that just a small group of companies appear to have benefited from such exchanges.

“So far, it’s not so many people that can afford to do this,” he said. “We do not say that it’s negative ... countries in development always have this kind of thing.”

Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan referred questions to the Ministry of Land Management, where spokeswoman Nun Theary said she did not have information on the issue at hand.

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Oddar Meanchey invaded by a black-clad 5-star general and his stylishly-clad Madam?

Hun Xen in black-clad uniform saluted Cambodia's flag, but somehow, the rug seems out of place at the frontline (All photos: DAP)

The stylishly-clad Madam Hun Xen and her entourage of crony tycoons and power-abusers, including the CPP tycoon-senator-cum-land-grabber Lao Meng Khin and his wife, Chhoeung Sopheap (aka Yeay Phou) of the Pheapimex Co.

A row of soldiers, but all wearing different uniforms from one another?

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Boeung Kak lake latest city sell-off [-Developer Shukaku Inc. is headed by Lao Meng Khin, the husband of Choeng Sopheap of Pheapimex]

By Allister Hayman and Sam Rith
Phnom Penh Post, Issue 16 / 03, February 9 - 22, 2007

Thousands of Phnom Penh's residents who live around Boeung Kak Lake may have to pack up and move after the Municipality's signing of a lease for an 133 hectare area.

Signed by Governor Kep Chuktema, the deal includes at least ten of the 24 villages that surround Boeung Kak - including the bar-lined strip known as "The Lake" - and will lead to the displacement of more than 3,900 families and hundreds of businesses.

The 99-year renewable lease was signed February 6 and was reportedly worth $79 million, with little known developer Shukaku Inc paying $0.60 per square meter for the leasehold.

Municipal officials said the developer plans to build a commercial and residential area, which will include shops, hotels, apartments, a university and a "green zone."

Though the plan does not specifically refer to the fate of the lake, with Boeung Kak consuming 90 hectares of the 133-hectare leasehold, economic logic and precedent suggest it will be filled. Last year, a 119-hectare land fill on the eastern shore of Pong Peay lake in the Tuol Kok district was completed as part of the "New Town Project."

Confusion now clouds the fate of the International Dubai Mosque, which lies within the leasehold.

Mosque Imam San Morhamin, 75, said he is uncertain about the future of the mosque, but said Chuktema told him that the mosque's land would not be included in the leasehold.

"We were given this land by Sihanouk in 1969," he said. "I believe it is a state asset."

Shukaku Inc is headed by Lao Meng Khin, also a director of controversial logging giant Pheapimex, which is accused of land grabbing and deforestation in Pursat province.

According to Global Witness, Pheapimex is a major donor to the ruling Cambodian Peoples Party and both Khin and his wife Choeng Soheap - the owner of Pheapimex - enjoy close relations with Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Chuktema said on signing the agreement that the project was in line with the muncipality's plan for the beautification and development of Phnom Penh. Chuktema said municipal authorities would begin work immediately to notify residents and owners in the area to discuss their future.

Nuon Sokchea, a lawyer at the community legal center's public interest legal advocacy project, said she has serious concerns about the deal after a lack of consultation with the community and a lack of disclosure on the part of the developer.

"According to the law the government cannot give the lake to a private company to develop as it is public property," she said. "We are really concerned how the development will affect the people and hope it will not override their land rights."

Residents and business owners along the lakeside who spoke to the Post on February 8 were either unaware of the concession or had only read about it in a local newspaper. Many of them have lived in the area for more than a decade and claimed legal ownership of their land. None had received notification from the municipal authorities and many were worried.

Tauch Sarim, 64, the owner of the popular Lakeside Guesthouse, was shocked when he heard the news.

"It seems like I will be losing everything," he said. "When I heard this, the hair stood on the back of my neck."

Sarim said he has owned his business since 1998, and the prospect of a lakeside guesthouse without a lakeside was devastating.

"Before I heard they would take only a part of the lake, so I think that's okay. Our government has a plan to develop the area. But now it's not good. It means they take the whole area."

Sarim said he had received no information about compensation, only that the municipal authorities would "come and talk to us about moving."

Daun Penh district Deputy Governor Ek Khun Doen told local media on February 8 that the residents of the district were living on the land illegally and the area "belongs to the state."

But when contacted by the Post, Doen retracted his claim. "I don't know for sure whether the people in that area own their land or not," he said.

According to Sangkat Srah Chak Commune Chief, Chhay Thirith, all the villagers affected have legal title to their land. "Those villagers in the ten villages affected are living legally, as accepted by the Ministry of Interior," he said.

Cambodia's 2001 Land Law prohibits deprivation of ownership without due process and grants the right to apply for a land title to someone who has been in possession of a private property for five years. Article 44 of the Constitution states that the government can only deprive someone of property for "public interest" purposes and requires the payment of fair and just compensation.

Thirith said he did not know what would happen to the residents, as he had not been informed of the municipality's plans. He said he hoped the development would be in accordance with Hun Sen's stated policy of removing residents to housing within the district, rather than relocation to the city's outskirts.

When contacted by the Post, Chuktemna refused to comment further on the plans. But Soun Rindy, spokesperson for Deputy Governor Pa Socheatvong, said the municipality was determining a plan for the residents, with those who are part of their community group treated differently to those who are not. "The municipality is organizing a policy to deal with the people who are living in the community," he said.

Last July, in a public relations exercise, municipal officials took residents of Boeung Kak's Village 22 to tour a housing complex constructed by Phanimex in the Borei Keila district.

Deputy Municipal Governor Mann Chhoeun said at the time he considered this kind of "in the place" development a possible solution for the Boeung Kak evictees. But Chea Sivorn, 47, a resident of Village 22, said she visited the complex and was not impressed.

"The building was too high and the apartments were only four by six meters. It is too narrow," she said.

Sivorn and other residents of Village 22 said they wanted the developer or the municipal authority to buy the land off them at a fair price so they could buy another property of their choosing.

"We won't just agree to be moved to some place like Borei Keila," Sivorn said.

Other residents, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they feared they would be forcibly removed to the outskirts of the city, like the evictees from Tonle Bassac, where there is a lack of amenities and the price of services is high.

Despite talk of "in the place" development, they said the muncipality's track record of forced land evictions gave them little cause for confidence.

"I don't know how I can live in the outskirts and support my family," a long-term resident of Village 6 said. "We will have income loss and spending increase. I fear I will lose everything."