Villagers address a panel of lawmakers at CCHR’s land forum in Samuth Krom village, Seda commune, in Ratanakkiri province’s Lum Phat district yesterday. Photograph: Pha Lina/Phnom Penh Post |
Tuesday, 31 July 2012
Bridget Di Certo and Phak Seangly
The Phnom Penh Post
In Lum Phat district’s Seda commune,
the message from villagers attending yesterday’s Cambodian Center for
Human Rights’ land forum was clear: We’ve been duped.
The mixed Khmer and ethnic minority
villagers said they were coerced
into accepting the phenomenally low price of US$150 per hectare of land
from the DM Group and other private plantation companies and
were forced to thumb-print documents leaving them with effectively no
legal recourse – and no land – plunging the semi-nomadic community into
even greater poverty and
uncertainty.
Kuch Moly, a Funcinpec lawmaker
who sat on the three-person panel at the forum alongside Seda commune
chief Thom Phain, rebuked villagers for filing complaints when they have
already accepted compensation.
He and fellow lawmaker Ou
Chanrith, from the opposition Human Rights Party who also sat on the
panel, were handed a complaint thumbprinted by 29 families whose houses
had been burned to the ground by the DM Group in June of last year.
“Villagers who have accepted the
money for the land and have thumb-printed documents must remove their
name from the letter for me to accept it,” Moly said, drawing a furious
reaction from some participants.
Counter-intuitively, he also
acknowledged it was hard for villagers at the grassroots level to draw
attention to their problems.
“The local authorities often
report good things to Prime Minister Hun Sen, but they do not report
when there is something bad in their area. This forum is a good chance
for villagers to say their problems,” he said.
Soeung Sarath, 50, who had his
leg blasted by a provincial policeman moonlighting as a DM Group
security guard in 2008, attended the forum. The leg later had to be
amputated.
“This was a warning shot,” he
said at the forum. “This is a lesson,” he said, for what happens when
you attempt to protect your land.
Although problems with
authorities have somewhat abated, villagers said they were not “buddies”
with the local authorities.
Initially, a small crowd of
about 50 waited expectantly to talk to lawmakers and rights groups.
CCHR said this was because the
authorities had told the villagers over the weekend that the forum would
be cancelled, after cracking down on a training workshop held on
Friday.
However, about half an hour into
the forum, a crowd of more than 200 had gathered. The ruling Cambodian
People’s Party commune chief was also one of the latecomers and took his
seat as one of three on the panel addressing the crowd.
Seda commune has no electricity
and no running water. Stacks of drying, chopped wood are stashed under
the simple wooden houses that are not separated by fences or roads.
The company had given the
villagers US$150 per hectare of land they took for a plantation. A
long-term resident said he had purchased a hectare of land for $600 in
2004, and now he could sell it for $50,000.
The indigenous people, who did
not have land titles, were faced with a choice: accept the nominal $150
payment, or don’t and have the company take their land anyway.
Villager representatives at the
forum delivered desperate soliloquies of hardship, discrimination and
fear for the future.
A Tampoun ethnic minority
participant, Pang Nhoy, 67, said that in his village, people had been
farming since 2002, but in 2011 DM Group came to measure and control the
land.
“We ethnics can only do farming;
we are not able to do business. Please find justice for us, or we get
poorer and poorer until we die one day,” he shouted.
“You are not right that you get
my land and burned down my cottages. We are ethnics, so we are not human
beings? It is not acceptable. I beg the lawmakers here please help us,”
he implored, drawing impassioned cheers from the forum participants.
Opposition Human Rights Party
lawmaker Ou Chanrith, who sat on the three-person panel, said indigenous
people in Ratanakkiri lack education on their land rights.
“They agree to sell their land,
agree to a very low price and now they want their land back, but there
is nothing that can be done,” Chanrith said, adding that despite their
complaints to authorities, they had been told to accept the money and
leave.
Speaking by telephone, DM Group
Ratanakkiri manager Thvar Kanoun rejected the grievances of the
villagers.
“There is no land-grabbing from
those people. They cleared the company’s lands and we gave them $150 per
hectare to stop clearing, not to buy from them,” he said, adding that
the company had never used security guards on them.
“We used to have land dispute
with them, but it was completely solved.”
DM Group has been cultivating
rubber trees, cassava and soy beans, Kanoun said, but he did not know
the total hectares owned by the company.
Pav Hamphan, Rattanakiri
provincial governor, criticised yesterday’s forum.
“I do not understand. Human
rights workers [CCHR] often educate at the disputed area. It is a
useless forum and is not an educational forum because it does the same
thing – nothing,” he said.
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