Showing posts with label Illegal land-grabbing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illegal land-grabbing. Show all posts

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Hundreds block road in Kratie land protest [-Hun Xen's PM defending the Viet land-grabbing companies!!!]

Villagers block road during the land-grabbing by the TTY company
Thursday, 22 March 2012
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

Mititary police arrested a man yesterday during a protest that saw more than 300 villagers from Kratie’s Snuol district block national road 76 for more than four hours over a case of alleged land grabbing, villagers said.

The villagers from Pi Thnou commune are embroiled in a dispute with the Dai Nam company and have seen no progress since being promised a resolution by Environment Minister Mok Mareth in January.

“We just want to get a resolution from the authorities,” said 26-year-old Mom Hai, who took part in the protest yesterday.

He said military police arrested 58-year-old Sles Soet yesterday, but released him a short time later.

On Monday, military police had arrested 42-year-old villager activist Noiy Noeun, he added.

Monday, January 02, 2012

Building Democracy via Skype

Monday, January 02, 2012
By Mu Sochua

Sam Rainsy Party - main opposition does not slow down despite absence of their leader in Cambodia.

As senatorial electoral campaign is nearing, all SRP teams are working even harder to ensure all system is secure for president Sam Rainsy to campaign via teleconference.

Amazing results: in the same morning, president Sam Rainsy can travel from Bantey Meanchey, to Kratie- from North West to North East of Cambodia, switching from phones to phones, from communes to communes!

Even from inside the forests of Cambodia, democracy is taking roots.

Over 100 villagers called and connected with president Sam Rainsy to complain about the unjust grabbing of their land by a Vietnamese company in Kratie. The head of the villagers is a woman. They have always voted for the ruling party.

"Silence" is not in the vocabulary of SRP.

Friday, March 11, 2011

SRP MP Son Chhay's letter to Chinese embassy on Chinese investment in controversial Boeung Kak Lake

SRP MP Son Chhay sent a letter to the Chinese Embassy asking for intervention with the Chinese Shukaku Erdos Hongjun Property Development to stop its land-grabbing of lands belonging to 5,000 families in Boeung Kak Lake.

MP Son Chhay Letter to Ambassador of the People's Republic of China in Cambodia on Chinese investment in Bo...

Friday, March 04, 2011

Prey Lang villagers speak out

Chheang Vuthy, from Kampong Thom province, speaks at a press conference in Phnom Penh yesterday organised by NGO Forum in an effort to find a resolution to the Prey Lang dispute. (Photo by: Pha Lina)

Friday, 04 March 2011
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

Representations for villagers embroiled in a land dispute with Vietnamese-owned CRCK Rubber Development Company in Kampong Thom province said officials have used intimidation to halt protests over the company’s development of an area in Prey Lang forest.

The claims were made at a press conference held by the NGO Forum, an umbrella group of organisations operating in Cambodia, during which representatives said local police have compiled a list of villagers they say are inciting others to protest.

Last month hundreds of residents from four provinces surrounding the 200,000 hectare forest defied police and local officials to protest the clearing of sections of the forest by CRCK.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Possible cause for the arrest of Samit Virak: Faking documents

Samnit Virak (3rd from left) and his wife (clad in white) were taken into custody (Photo: DAP-news)
Monday, January 10, 2011
Excerpt from DAP-news

According to Mok Seiha, the military prosecutor, General Samit Virak was accused of involvement in fake land documents in several provinces. However, details of the case are not known yet as the cops are still performing their investigations. Unofficial source indicated that it was the government which brought the case to the tribunal because the suspect was involved with state land. Both the suspect and his wife, an army major but who was clad in white like a nun, were arrested.

General Samit Virak arrested in land issues

General Samit Virak (C) (All Photos: CEN)

Samit Virak (C) taken into custody
10 January 2011
By Sopisith
Cambodia Express News
Translated from Khmer by Soy
While Samit Virak is only a one-star general, a picture of him was found wearing 3-star. The suspect smugly said that he took the picture with three stars while he still look young and handsome and he will be a 3-star general one day anyway.
Phnom Penh - General Samit Virak was arrested and sent to jail this afternoon. The Military Police raided the house of General Samit Virak, the deputy chief of the RCAF technical material department, who is suspected of involvement in land deals.

The raid took place at 11AM on 10 Jan 2011 at the general’s house located on 131 Betong Street, Sunway city, Damnak Thom village, Stung Meanchey commune, Meanchey district. The raid was performed under a warrant issued by Mok Seiha, the deputy prosecutor of the military tribunal.

Thursday, October 07, 2010

Cambodia : Abysmal lawlessness and the powerlessness of the citizens

(October 07, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka Guardian) The first election in post Pol Pot Cambodia was held in May 1993. The new constitution promised a liberal democracy and a system of governance based on the rule of law. However, the country is still in a state of abysmal lawlessness and ordinary Cambodians are powerless. There are no institutions in the country which can offer them any kind of protection. The Cambodian police is in a rudimentary stage of development, is known to be corrupt and completely under the political control of the regime and those who are rich and powerful. Cambodian courts are also known to be corrupt and are used as instruments of political control by way of jailing opposition politicians; people resisting land grabbing; those who express independent opinions and civil society activists who express solidarity with victims of abuse of power. There are no institutions that people can turn to make any complaints or to turn to any kind of help when faced with injustice. And the injustices that the peopl e face are many.

The major complaint everywhere is that of "Land Grabbing". Having a title to a plot of land is normally the ultimate guarantee of some security in this poor country. However, having a title to land is of little use when the same land can be allotted to some company by a government authority, who does not even inform the original title holder when such allocations are made. It is only when the company begins the operation to redevelop the land that the original owners get to know that the land they rightfully own has been given away.

Naturally they protest and at that stage security forces enter the scene and harassment is the result. As the people literally have nowhere to go, they fight back. Then they are brought to courts on all kinds of charges and many are detained. There are thousands of reports of such happenings from around the country. "In the capital, Phnom Penh, 133,000 people -- more than 10% of its population -- are believed to have been evicted since 1990." (This is according to a report of reliable civil society organization).

The result of such land evictions is that those who are displaced are excluded from any benefits, and lose their source of income, they are exposed to poor health and their young face lack of education. In a country, with so little opportunities, eviction from land implies a transformation which ends in destitution. Hopes for stability and a future ends for many. Naturally the women and young and the elderly suffer the most. Naturally, prostitution and other similar problems are on the increase in today's Cambodia.

"The Cambodian courts continue to act on behalf of rich and powerful interests, ignoring the evidence, the Land Law and other relevant legislation, enforcing eviction where ownership remains undecided and imprisoning those who dare to protest", states a report from well known LICADHO, a human rights organization. This view is confirmed by many other organizations and almost everyone.

Cambodian courts are not able to protect land titles. Their function is not the protection of the individual but the interests of those who are in power. The idea of the balancing of interests is an alien concept in Cambodia. The role of the authorities is to protect the state, not the people.

Source: Asian Human Rights Commission

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Investigation Opened Into NGO With Link to Senate President

Hundreds of families worked with agencies in the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee to file complaints Friday against the Drug and AIDS Rehabilitation Center.

Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Monday, 06 September 2010

“After receiving the complaints, the Ministry of Interior has organized specialists to investigate the case, but we cannot immediately get results.”
The Ministry of Interior is preparing an investigation of a non-governmental organization in Preah Vihear province that is associated with the head of the Senate and stands accused of serious human rights abuses, officials said Monday.

Hundreds of families worked with agencies in the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee to file complaints Friday against the Drug and AIDS Rehabilitation Center, which operates nearly 100 kilometers from Preah Vihear town.

The center is run by a man named Pen Lim, who is known to villagers as Sar Chhuon Lim and is a powerful businessman and adviser to Chea Sim, who is the head of the Senate and president of the ruling Cambodian People's Party.

“After receiving the complaints, the Ministry of Interior has organized specialists to investigate the case, but we cannot immediately get results,” the ministry's spokesman, Khieu Sopheak, said Monday.

The Human Rights Action Committee said Monday Pen Lim had taken a land concession for 556 hectares to redistribute to impoverished villagers. Instead, the group alleges, he sold it to them and seized land from another 57 families living nearby.

Villagers say they were either threatened at gunpoint, beaten or had their land stolen by the organization.

Ny Chakrya, chief investigator for the rights group Adhoc, said the Interior Ministry had the right to punish or close the organization.

Pen Lim told VOA Khmer on Monday he was “unconcerned” about the allegations.

“We will see the result of the investigation,” he said.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Confrontation betwen Boeung Kak Lake residents and security force in front of Hun Xen's mansion

Cambodian security officials push Boeung Kak Lake's villagers during a protest near Prime Minister Hun Sen's house in Phnom Penh August 23, 2010. About 100 people from the village on Monday protested against local real estate developer Shukaku Inc. over unfair compensation. The firm has been filling in the lake with sand causing frequent floods at the residents' homes, which prompted the protest. The remaining residents complained of unfair compensation given to them when asked to move out. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Cambodian security officials push Boeung Kak Lake villagers as they hold a protest near Prime Minister Hun Sen's house in Phnom Penh August 23, 2010. About 100 people from the village on Monday protested against local real estate developer Shukaku Inc. over unfair compensation. The firm has been filling in the lake with sand, causing frequent floods at the residents' homes, which prompted the protest. The remaining residents complained of unfair compensation given to them when asked to move out. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

60,000 protest against Cambodia land grab

Tuesday, June 15, 2010
ABC Radio Australia

The United Nations' human rights office in Cambodia has condemned a government ruling that banned a peaceful march by people at risk of losing their land.

Early on Tuesday, dozens of armed riot police blocked several hundred representatives from delivering a petition to the home of the Cambodian Prime Minister, Hun Sen.

Sixty thousand villagers whose land is under threat across the country signed the petition, which calls on Hun Sen to help them.

Instead, the villagers were forced to hand over the petition to officials from Hun Sen's cabinet at a nearby park.

Land-grabbing is arguably Cambodia's most pressing problem, but a weak judiciary has proven no match for powerful interests behind the scourge.

The municipality banned the planned march late on Monday, but did not give a reason for doing so.

The United Nations' local human rights office described the ban as "regrettable", adding that it was given without reason or justification - and therefore contrary to the new law regulating demonstrations.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Video Meeting Joins Local, National Government

By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
11 January 2010


Local authorities and military commanders joined a weekly meeting of ministers Friday through video conferencing in Phnom Penh that officials say will strengthen communication between central government and outlying authorities.

Governors, council chiefs and other officials from 24 municipalities and provinces joined in discussions at the weekly Council of Ministers meeting, along with six commanders from military zones, in what Prime Minister Hun Sen called a historic moment.

The meeting was meant to “speed up” human resources development in technology to provincial and city governors and others, according to a statement from the Council of Ministers.

Yim Sovann, a spokesman for the Sam Rainsy Party, said the opposition supported the measure, “to help promote the prevention of corruption, deforestation, road reparation, project development and the protection of people’s security and safety.”

However, while an effort to strengthen its effectiveness through technology was positive, he said, “the government should additionally increase its willingness to respect and fairly implement the law.”

Land-grabbing and other “injustices” continue to plague the populace, he said.

Ny Chakrya, a lead investigator for the rights group Adhoc, said the video conferencing would provide an element of transparency to the government, while “providing urgent information to local government’s to fulfill their work and to agree on the goals of the government.”

The video conferencing could be shown on television networks for people to watch, he said, “because people sometimes want to know what the cabinet decides and whether the local government fully implements the decisions of the cabinet.”

Monday, December 28, 2009

Svray Rieng villagers under death threat for protesting land dispute

26 December 2009
By Sok Serey
Radio Free Asia
Translated from Khmer by Socheata
Click here to read the article in Khmer


Villagers from Romeas Hek district, Svay Rieng province, indicated that they are threatened with arrest and death when they stood up to protest against a company that cleared lands and destroyed the villagers’ crop.

About 100 Cambodian villagers from Ta Suos village, Tros commune, Romeas Hek district, Svay Rieng province, claimed that a number of villagers where threatened with shooting and killing, arrest, and sending to jail when they prevented machineries from the Peam Chaing rubber plantation company from clearing lands and destroying large number of hectares of their cassava and cashew crops.

Yea Yeng, a Ta Suos villager, declared that large number of hectares of cassava and cashew crops were destroyed from the rubber plantation company’s land clearing operation.

Yea Yeng said: “This morning, 70 to 80 villagers went to protest, to stop them from continuing their land clearing. They did not agree, they scorned us and they wanted to shoot us. They threatened to handcuff us.”

Chhum Chham, another villager, indicated that the situation is very tense right now: “Nowadays, it is very difficult. The villagers are not allowed to take their animals out for grazing. Where should we go look? There is no place for our buffaloes to graze, all our lands are gone, the villagers have nothing now. Our meager vegetable crops were destroyed, that’s why the villagers cannot take it anymore.”

Another villager chimed in: “Our cassava crops are destroyed, that was why we went to stop them. They wanted to beat us up. We surrounded them, not allowing them to beat us. They said that they will beat us and they will handcuff us and send us to jail.”

Regarding the villagers’ accusations above, Pen Ny Den, the deputy director of the Svay Rieng-based Peam Chaing rubber plantation company, said that he did not know about this case.

Pen Ny Den said: “I was actually near there, but I did not know the details. I don’t know if the land was cleared or not because I am in Kampong Som now.”

Nget Nara, a facilitator for the Adhoc human rights organization, said: “We call on the local authority to pay attention and provide appropriate safety to the villagers.”

Victims of the destruction indicated that they came to live in this area since 1979. In 2007, the Peam Chaing rubber plantation company came and laid claim to the ownership of the villagers’ lands.

The company brought in 3 mechanical land clearing equipments to clear the land and to destroy numerous hectares of grown cassava and cashew crops belonging to the villagers.

The villagers and the local authority indicated that the company laid claim to 3,960 hectares of land for rubber plantation. Several hundreds of families from 5 villages are currently concerned about the grabbing of their lands in the near future. The five villages include: Ta Suos, Boeung, Tros, M’reak Teab and Trapaing Peay villages. They are all located in Romeas Hek district, Svay Rieng province.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Land Grab Cambodia


BBC World Service


Synopsis

Cambodia is experiencing what's been called an epidemic of land grabbing. Huge tracts of the country have been granted to private companies for large scale agriculture or other purposes. The government says this will speed development.

But members of the governing elite are accused of receiving the benefits, and many of the original inhabitants have been evicted without compensation.

Some of those who have tried to resist say they have been attacked or threatened. Now huge new deals are in the offing. Rob Walker reports for Assignment.

Broadcasts

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Ax and knife-wielding villagers in Kampot protest palm oil development: Hun Sen's predicted farmers' revolution in the work?

Kampot Villagers Protest Palm Oil Development

By Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
01 June 2009

Around 300 ax- and knife-wielding villagers amassed in protest in Kampot province Monday, claiming a private company was clearing their land.

The company, Camland, has a 70-year license from the government to develop 1,600 hectares of palm for oil in Teuk Chhou district.

One protester, Loey Koun, 42, told VOA Khmer the residents of three villages in the district have long occupied the land of their “ancestors.” If the company does not remove its bulldozers, Loey Koun said, “we will light them on fire.”

Try Chhoun, Kampot coordinator for the rights group Adhoc, said the villagers tried to stop the bulldozers clearing the land, near the villages of Tram Kok, Dong and Kampong Chin. No one was injured, he said.

Kampot Governor Khoy Khun Huor and Teuk Chhou Governor Se Da both declined to comment Monday.

Phrak Putheareak, Camland’s representative, denied the accusations the company was clearing villager land.

“Our company received a license from the government for about 16,000 hectares of land to develop a palm oil plantation over about 70 years,” he said. The company has already cut 3,000 hectares of land, he said and he called on complaining villagers to produce documents of proof.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Cambodia: Eliminating opportunists in land disputes requires effective local administration and proper public consultations

Friday, 20 March 2009
Press Release: Asian Human Rights Commission

The Cambodian government’s drive for the all out development and beautification of urban centres has created one of the most serious problems for its people. This particular problem is widely known as land grabbing. It is characterized by the grabbing of the land belonging to the poor and weak with unjust or no compensation, by the rich and powerful. Over recent years, and very likely in the years to come, land grabbing has and will affect hundreds of thousands of such people.

In many cases, victims of land grabbing have protested their evictions when they felt the compensation was unjust. This resistance has invariably ended up with the authorities using brute force to evict residents from their homes and lands. The latest of such brutal forced evictions took place in January 2009 when, in the early hours of the morning, hundreds of armed police and company workers, backed up by demolition machines, went to demolish hundreds of homes in the Dey Kraham community in the centre of Phnom Penh and forcibly trucked the residents away to a resettlement area.

In many land grabbing cases, the authorities have claimed that opportunist people had moved on to the land and pressed for compensation when such land was state property now used for other purposes or after such land had been made into private property or granted as concession to the rich and powerful for economic purposes. The claim of the presence of such opportunists has weakened the resistance and demand for just compensation of bona fide residents on the concerned land. As mentioned above, when they are poor and weak, such resistance and demands have eventually lead to their forced eviction.

Very recently over 50 people from the remote northern province of Oddar Meanchey went to stage a protest in front the Prime Minister’s residence on the outskirts of Phnom Penh to request him to get fair compensation for them from a sugar plantation company which had allegedly grabbed their land. But this company claimed that it had received this land as a concession from the government for a sugar plantation. The provincial governor, Pich Sokhin, said more than 200 families affected had already agreed to accept compensation ranging from US$300 to 1000 per family. However, Pich said, when the company started the plantation of sugar cane some local villagers and other people from other provinces moved on to the land and built small cottages with the intention of causing trouble and claiming compensation from the company.

Earlier on, in November 2008, armed police and soldiers used force and fire to evict hundreds of families in an area which the authorities said was located in a state-owned land, which was part of the Bokor National Park in the province of Kampot. The park’s director, Chey Uterith, said that those families had built small homes in that part of the park in the previous year. Chey accused them of grabbing the land with the intention of selling it to others. They then move on to a new site and repeat the process.

The presence and demand for compensation of such opportunists who have moved on to the land in dispute, national parks or the like could have been avoided if the concerned public authorities, especially the local authorities, were effective in the administration of the territory under their jurisdiction. As monitors have observed, in all elections, those local authorities are very effective in identifying people who are supporters or not supporters of the ruling party, and use their influence on them and pressurize others to vote for this party.

If they are that effective, they should also be able to identify people who are residents and know the exact location of their homes under their jurisdiction. Furthermore, they should be able to recognize all new people who have moved on to the disputed land and take necessary measures to prevent them from doing so at the outset. They could for instance get court orders to get them out of the land and/or prevent their construction work. At the very least they could distinguish the newly built homes from the older ones of the bona fide residents and legitimate claimants for compensation. The governor of Oddar Meanchey province and the director of the Bokor National Park could have and should have stopped those opportunists from moving on to that land for sugar plantation and that park, respectively, right from the start when they knew of their first move. These two officials have yet to explain their inaction at the time.

Furthermore, the problem with these opportunists could have been avoided. The distinction between them and those bona fide residents and legitimate claimants could be made a straight forward and perhaps disputes could have been avoided altogether if all the concerned authorities were to effectively enforce and comply with the Land Law of 2001 and all the regulations thereof.

The Land Law determines the ownership and acquisition of land. A government Sub-Decree on Economic Land Concession issued thereof, dated 27 December 2005, sets out a detailed procedure to be followed by all concerned authorities before deciding to grant any concession of land for economic purposes. Article 4 of this sub-decree for instance lays down a set of criteria that must be met first. For instance, the use of the land whose concession is under consideration must be consistent with the land use plan adopted by the Provincial-Municipal State Land Management Committee (Criterion 2), and there must be public consultations with territorial authorities and residents of the locality (Criterion 5). Not all residents have to be included in these public consultations, however, when Article 35 of the same sub-decree stipulates that the concession granting authority has to organize such consultations with territorial authorities and “representatives of local residents.”

Large numbers of residents may justify this limitation of consultations to representatives of local residents. But for these consultations to yield binding outcomes and to avoid disagreements and protests from any other residents, the concession granting authority must ensure that these people are genuine representatives of all residents and are not handpicked or selected by it or any other authority or the applicant for the concession, and that these representatives are subject to no influence or pressure whatsoever. Such consultations would help ascertain further the bona fide residents and henceforth thwart any attempt by opportunists to move on to the concerned land to demand compensation.

Effective public administration and compliance with the Land Law and the regulations thereof, especially the Sub-Decree on Economic Land Concession, could not only thwart attempts by opportunist to make money out of moving on to the lands of others, but could also go some way to avoid land disputes and address the land grabbing problem.

About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Canadia Bank's land-grabbing tactic in Reek Reay community: Fenced in the residents and grab their lands

A house in Reek Reay community, Phnom Penh city, is being demolished by the workers hired by the Canadia bank on 15 March 2009 (Photo: Ouk Savborey, RFA)

Canadia Bank starts to demolish Reek Reay community in Phnom Penh city

15 March 2009
By Ouk Savborey
Radio Free Asia
Translated from Khmer by Socheata
Click here to read the article in Khmer


On Sunday 15 March 2009, residents of the Reek Reay community, Group 46A, Village No. 8, claimed that workers for the Canadia Bank used force to demolish their homes, and the workers also fenced the residents, preventing them from leaving or coming into their homes if the residents refused to sell their lands to the Borey Bassac Park Villa company.

Bun That, a young man who resides in Village No. 8, Group 46A in the Reek Reay community, indicated that the bank set a price limit for each plot of land and the home on it to: either (1) $20,000 (in compensation) or (2) a row house measuring 4-meter-by-10-meter located in Dangkao distritct plus $10,000 if the residents agree to leave. If the residents refuse to leave, they will use force to demolish their houses, and they will fence in the residents’ houses to prevent them from leaving or coming into their houses. As of today, the bank’s workers have used force to demolish 9 homes already.

Bun That said: “The Cambodia Bank company fenced us in to grab our land, if we are involved in the sale of our land to other individuals.”

Chan Bunthol, a teacher at Sisowath high school who is protecting his home, said that the Canadia Bank’s workers act like thieves when they are using force to demolish people’s homes during a weekend: “ I don’t have time to go teach anymore now, because I am afraid they will come and demolish my home.”

Heng Samphoas, the president of the Reek Reay community, indicated that, up to now, some of the community residents have agreed to sell their homes to the Canadia Bank: “When they attack (to demolish) houses like this, we, as neighbors who are living nearby and we have not sold our homes yet, we have fear, then they (Canadia Bank) told us to go negotiate. They told us this or that date will be the end of the negotiations.”

Hor Vannak, chief of Village No. 8, Group 46A, Reek Reay community, said that in his village, there are more than 200 families living in more than 200 houses. Most of them are civil servants. He said that the village is connected to the road and the park of the Koh Pech development zone. Later on, the residents received offers to sell their lands and homes by the Canadia Bank and by a number of private groups.

He said that he is not certain about the number of residents who sold their lands to the Canadia Bank and the other private groups: “The region over the Reek Ray dike is located right on the city road, as well as on the path of the bridge crossing to Koh Pech, the second bridge (that is).”

Phal Sithon, the Tonle Bassac deputy commune chief, said that according the directive no. 157, dated 30 January 2009, issued by the Council of Ministers, decided that there will either be a development of the Reek Reay community at the same spot or the residents will receive another house measuring 4-meter-by-10-meter in the suburb as compensation plus $10,000 in cash.

Phal Sithon said: “A portion of the land belongs to Chumteav Hun Neng (Hun Sen’s sister-in-law), and on the other portion, people have built their homes to live on, but the Canadia Bank claimed that it was their land. I saw the development plan signed by Kep Chuktema (Phnom Penh city governor) in 2006, but the residents have been living here since the 90s.”

Regarding this issue, RFA could not reach a representative of the Canadia Bank on Sunday to obtain clarifications on this issue.

Monday, January 12, 2009

China appropriates foreign and domestic land to build its rubber empire

01/12/2009
Denis D. Gray
AG Week (North Dakota, USA)

CHALEUNSOUK, Laos — The rice fields that blanketed this remote mountain village for generations are gone. In their place rise neat rows of young rubber trees — their sap destined for China.

All 60 families in this dirt-poor, mud-caked village of gaunt men and hunched women now are growing rubber, like thousands of others across the rugged mountains of northern Laos. They hope in coming years to reap huge profits from the tremendous demand for rubber just across the frontier in China.

As Beijing scrambles to feed its galloping economy, it already has scoured the world for mining and logging concessions. Now it is turning to crops to feed its people and industries. Chinese enterprises are snapping up vast tracts of land abroad and forging contract farming deals.

Miracle or anarchy?

This quest raises both hope and criticism.

Laos’ Communist regime touts rubber as a miracle crop that will help lift the country from the ranks of the world’s poorest nations. China is expected to consume a third of the world’s rubber by 2020, become its largest car market and put 200 million vehicles on the road.

But some Laotian farmers are losing their ancestral lands or being forced to become wage workers on what were once their fields. Chinese companies are accused of getting rubber concessions from officials and not compensating farmers. They also are accused of violating laws, human rights and the environment, under conditions described by experts as “anarchic.”

“The Chinese companies in the north are a bunch of thugs,” says Charles Alton, a consultant in agronomy for international agencies in Laos. However, Alton says, the “unpoliced, unregulated situation” in northern Laos is ripe for exploitation.

The Chinese deny or don’t comment on such allegations.

“I haven’t heard of the bad behavior of Chinese companies abroad, but Chinese companies which intend to expand abroad must know it is important to have a good relationship with the local people,” says Ju Hongzhen, president of the China Rubber Industry Association.

Worldwide agriculture

China’s State Forestry Administration last year issued guidelines for Chinese firms running overseas planta-

tions. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization also is scrambling to put out guidelines for a fast-moving global scenario.

From Southeast Asia to Africa, the Chinese are farming oil palm, eucalyptus, teak, corn, cassava, sugar cane, rubber and other crops. As in Laos, the industrial-size farms are variously viewed as an ecological nightmare or a big step toward slashing poverty.

In Congo, a Chinese telecommunications giant, ZTE International, has bought more than 7 million acres of forest to plant oil palms. In Zimbabwe, state-owned China International Water and Electric Corp. reportedly received rights from the government to farm 250,000 acres of corn in the south.

Indonesia is moving to develop biofuel plantations with The China National Overseas Oil Corp. The London-based Environmental Investigation Agency, an advocacy group, believes other deals are in the works, often through proxy companies because of long-running anti-Chinese sentiment in the country. The group says the project would destroy natural forest.

In Myanmar, rubber concessions have gone to at least two Chinese companies, Ho Nan Ching and Yunnan Hongyu. Refugees fleeing Myanmar’s military regime say troops are forcibly evicting farmers to make way for rubber plantations, including some run by Chinese enterprises.

A Chinese-Cambodian joint venture, Pheapimex-Wuzhishan, converted land of the Phnong tribal people into a tree plantation 20 times larger than allowed by law in Cambodia, according to the environmental group Global Witness. The group says the concession in Mondulkiri province encroached on grazing grounds, destroyed sacred sites and used toxic herbicides.

Another Chinese enterprise in Kratie province circumvented the size restriction by registering as three separate companies, Global Witness says.

In Beijing, the Commerce Ministry declined to answer written questions about China’s global reach in agriculture or operations of Chinese enterprises abroad except in Laos, where it says companies have a “very strong awareness for environmental protection.” Local residents welcome the new developments because incomes have increased by as much as five times, a ministry statement says.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Son Chhay will take his case against Sok An’s Apsara Authority to the Supreme Court

SRP MP Son Chhay (L) vs Sok An (R), the powerful right hand man of Strongman Hun Sen

Saturday, February 16, 2008
KI-Media

The Appeal Court rejected SRP MP Son Chhay’s case against the forced sale of his 3.14-heactare property in Siem Reap to the Apsara Authority for a paltry sum of $0.50 per square-meter – an amount far lower than market value. Son Chhay alleged that the Apsara Authority would turn around and sell this land to private developer at $40 per square-meter. The Cambodia Daily quoted Son Chhay as saying at the end of the hearing: “This shows clearly that trials in our country are meaningless. The court doesn’t have a duty to find justice, it is a tool used to serve politics.” While Judge Thou Mony denied that the court decision was political, Son Chhay said that he will bring his case to the Supreme Court.