Showing posts with label Rubber Plantation workers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rubber Plantation workers. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

Rubber plantation families denied access to PM [-Hun Xen afraid to meet Khmer villagers?]

Former rubber workers speak with reporters at the Memot Rubber Plantation in Kampong Cham province in September. (Photo by: Sebastian Strangio)

Monday, 03 January 2011
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

About 400 villagers from Kampong Cham province’s Memot district have been refused access to a meeting with Prime Minister Hun Sen tomorrow, out of fear they will disrupt the event with protests relating to a land dispute, residents and officials said.

The people, who come from three villages inside the Memot Rubber Plantation in Tramoung commune, are engaged in a dispute with TTY Corporation Co Ltd, the private firm that has recently taken control of the plantation.

The premier is scheduled to speak with villagers at Memot Bun Rany Hun Sen High School tomorrow to mark the 32nd anniversary of the January 7, 1979 overthrow of the Khmer Rouge.

Local resident Oun Suo Chen said authorities selected about 3,000 villagers to attend Hun Sen’s speech, but that they had barred access to residents from the three villages.


“I asked the commune chief and he said that villagers in these three villages are not allowed to attend the meeting because they have a land dispute, and they are afraid we will bring documents to pass to Hun Sen,” she said.

Another villager, Preab Keo, said that as a Cambodian citizen and supporter of the Cambodian People’s Party, he was disappointed with the lack of action by the authorities in relation to the dispute.

He said he had already prepared documents related to the land dispute to present to the premier.

“The local authorities said that they will take strict measures to not allow villagers from these three villages to meet with the prime minister,” he said. “I wonder if they are afraid we will tell our story.”

He said the Memot Rubber Plantation, in Tramoung commune, contains 950 families who have lived in and worked in rubber plantations in that area for more than 30 years.

Under a recent scheme to privatise the formerly state-run plantations, he said, residents have been pressured to relocate to a new location since 2008.

In total, seven plantations are set to be privatised, including six in Kampong Cham and one in Kratie province. The Asian Development Bank recommended the privatisation of the rubber plantations as part of a general plan to increase the efficiency of the old state-owned enterprises.

Tramoung commune chief Vinh Ny confirmed that authorities would not allow residents from the three villages to attend the meeting with the premier because of their dispute with the rubber firm.

He added and that the government had tried to relocate them to a new location, but that they had refused.

“We are afraid that they will protest if they meet with Hun Sen, because I saw them prepare a lot of documents,” he said.

Vinh Ny added that the authorities had to prepare for the safety of the premier in advance, and that he could not allow the villagers to cause problems during the meeting.

Patrick Pierrat, a consultant with French firm Sofreco, which is implementing the government’s plantation resettlement plan, told The Post in August that few of the people within the boundaries of the plantations had legitimate claims to the land.

“After the [Khmer Rouge period], these plantations were in fact state-run plantations, and the land was government land. After that, the plantations were organised and privately run, but the land belongs to the government,” he said.

Friday, May 09, 2008

Hun Sen's day-dreaming: Rubber plantation workers take their retirement at 55-year-old (sic!); Donations to the poor is an insult on his gov't

Hun Sen: Those who cheated or lied to the former monarch should not be pardoned

Thursday, May 8, 2008
Koh Santepheap
Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

During an inauguration of a rubber plantation and a rubber factory at the Tumring rubber plantation, on 07 May, Hun Sen sternly reacted by saying that: “Those who cheated and lied to the former monarch should not be pardoned. If it were to be in China, for such offense, the offender dead body would be broken apart.”

Hun Sen severely stressed that: “Why did they bring rubber plantation workers to receive gifts from King-Father and Queen-Mother in Siem Reap province, and these workers were all grandpas and grandmas, who would use grandpas and grandmas to collect rubber resin? I believe that King-Father and Queen-Mother did not know about this … But, since they are the children of the former king, so he let them go. But, if it was Hun Sen, I wouldn’t pardon them, this is a scorn on the former monarch, a scorn on workers, and a scorn on the companies.”

Hun Sen said that workers have their uniform, and for example, in the Krek rubber plantation, the company provides a bicycle for each worker to collect rubber resin, when they are done with their work, the workers would leave in their motorcycles. Why would these workers lack foods in the rubber plantations? Workers receive 24 kilos of rice ration each, there is no reason for them to ask for gifts from the former monarch.

Hun Sen asked Kon Sam Ol, the minister of the Royal Palace, to review these cases. He said that: “For those who are 70-year-old, who would still keep them to work? At 55-year-old they would retire already, but here 70-year-old workers (were brought in to receive gifts from King-Father). So they are cheating the former monarch. When the minister of agriculture (Chan Sarun) reported this to me, I asked Kong Sam Ol to report to King-Father and Queen-Mother also, so that they can see, because the rubber factories are protesting as the people who received the gifts were not their workers.” Hun Sen confirmed also: “It is not just this issue, it is a case of lying to the king. The opposition can undertake such action.”

Hun Sen said: “I am taking very strongly against this case, because this is a hot issue. They scorn us in every way, and this is the place where I am leading, I signed the sub-decree and I inaugurated the rubber plantation work ground, they said that in Tumring, there is no rubber, and they reported this all over the world, the opposition and a number of NGOs chimed in. Now, come and see, but they are always doing something wrong against us. They never make any corrections for us at all. They used to support the Khmer Rouge who were attacking us, they never said that the KR were wrong, they are always right, they talked about us being wrong a lot of times.”

Hun Sen also used as an example the KR Tribunal: “They said that the government does not have the goodwill. When we brought the KR leaders to be judged in the tribunal, they only whispered: ‘Very good.’ But they did not make any correction to the articles or TV and radio reports where they talked about. These are the people who do not dare take their responsibility at all. The Cambodians dare to give and take, if Cambodians are fighting each others, then we will have a war and they will be happy, but if Cambodians have peace, like now, they are not happy about it.”

Friday, January 11, 2008

Swedish MPs Saw The Misery Of Rubber Plantations Workers





10 January 2008

On 9 January 2008, two Members of Parliament from Sweden, Mr. Kent Harstedt and Ms. Magdalena Strejffert from the Social Democratic Party, and Mr. Johan Mostrom from the Olof Palme Foundation, went to Kampong Cham province to meet with rubber plantations workers in Chamcar Leu district. They were accompanied by Sam Rainsy and other SRP Members of Parliament and were welcome at Ta'ong commune by about a hundred workers and worker representatives from several rubber plantations. The Swedish parliamentarians saw with their own eyes the misery of rubber plantations workers as described here.

See also the photos of the visit here.

Source: SRP Cabinet