Wednesday, June 20, 2012
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) |
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.
Kuch Veng pointed out that in
all land disputes, it was only ever the villagers charged and hauled
before the courts, while the powerful companies seemed to escape the
court system completely.
“Related to the speech made by
Prime Minister Hun Sen last week, we victims don’t believe that it can
be settled fairly. Even though we [villagers] have seen his words, the
low-level officials do not follow at all,” he said.
“[Hun Sen] promised that if he
could not fight against illegal logging, he would behead himself, so I
am interested in the prime minister’s words,” Kuch Veng added, saying
that villagers embroiled in land disputes were too afraid to report
abuse to low-level officials, because those officials were too corrupt.
Chen Sorn, another villager
embroiled in a land dispute with the company in Kbal Trach commune, said
that he felt fear after learning of the court charging Kuch Veng and
summoning him to answer questions.
Or Ny, Pursat provincial court
clerk, said that the court has issued a summons for Kuch Veng as soon as
he was charged, but that he did not receive it because he was not at
home. The clerk said the court would continue to seek the villager
activist’s appearance.
Some 12,000 families are
currently involved in land disputes on a Pheap Imex economic land
concession that spans two provinces and more than 315,000 hectares.
In Pursat province, 8,200
families from 13 communes and 59 villages are disputing 13,116 hectares
in the Krakor, Kravanh and Pursat city districts.
In Kampong Chhnang, 3,800
families in two districts – Boribo and Toek Pos – are battling over
approximately 7,500 hectares.
Eighteen villagers received
court summonses last year regarding complaints filed by Pheap Imex for
incitement, destruction of property and the preventing of development.
Pursat provincial governor Khoy
Sokha said he has formed a committee to begin discussions about how to
obey Hun Sen’s instructions to award land to villagers in land disputes.
“We have done according to the
prime minister’s recommendations and this is the first step. So later,
if villagers are getting upset, the authorities will cut the land from
the company to hand over to the villagers,” he said.
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