Phnom
Penh
(July 23, 2012) –The Cambodian government has quietly released a draft
agricultural land law could be used as legal cover for land-grabbing and
natural resource exploitation.
As
increasing
violence and human rights abuses related to land conflicts
throughout the country continue to race towards a crisis point, the
introduction of this draft law could not come at a worse time. The law –
officially titled the Law on the Management and Use of Agricultural Land
–
would have grave implications for private landholders, taking away their
ability to make fundamental land use decisions on their own property
under
threat of criminal prosecution.
“The
draft
law appears to create a list of new crimes to threaten small farmers
with, ,” said Chea Sopheak, of the Farmer & Nature Network (FNN).
“Such
interference with private property ownership rights is unjustifiable.”
The
draft
law provides for a sentence of up to one year in prison for any
violation
of the law itself, of any sub-decrees issued under the law, or even of
any
orders issued by the General Directorate of Agriculture (GDA), a body
under the
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF). Given the
incomprehensibly vague nature of several obligations established under
the law,
such criminal liability is inappropriate and susceptible to substantial
abuse.
The
draft
law, for example, provides for the government-led creation of loosely
defined “Agricultural Development Areas” (ADAs) consisting of an
unlimited
number of privately owned plots, of any size. ADAs are established upon
agreement by an undefined majority of affected landholders. Once
established,
private landowners within the zone must implement mandatory development
plans
regardless of whether they agreed to join in the first place. They face
the
threat of jail time if they refuse. There are no provisions that allow
for the
termination or expiration of an ADA, or for private landholders to opt
out.
The
draft
law also requires that all private landholders take action to prevent
or
reverse “soil loss or deterioration.” If such actions are not taken to
the
satisfaction of government officials, the law provides MAFF with a
litany of
powers. A MAFF order under the draft law can, for example, dictate the
destruction of crops without compensation, or can provide for entirely
unfettered MAFF “control” over the offending land. Neither “soil loss or
deterioration,” nor the actions that could be required to prevent or
remedy it,
are defined or limited to reasonable burden or cost.
“We
have the right to choose what we produce on our own land,”Prach
Bunthoeun, of
the Farmer Association for Peace Development (FAPD) commented. “If this
draft
law is passed, farmers could face large obstacles in deciding what they
can
grow. We request that the government guarantee our rights to choose our
activites on our own land.”
Perhaps
most
disturbing, the currently released draft law creates an entirely new
“agricultural land lease” scheme which implicitly overwrites limitations
and
protections currently required of Economic Land Concessions under the
2001 Land
Law and subsequent sub-decrees. There are, for example, no size or
duration
limits, environmental impact assessments, or prior consultation or
consent
requirements related to such leases in this draft law.
Numerous
other
provisions in the draft law are cause for serious concern. It
establishes
a scheme requiring “land conversion permits” for all manner of land use
changes
on private property – regardless of size or impact. It also includes
troublesome provisions related to contract farming. In the event of any
conflict between a farmer and the purchaser, for example, the purchaser
expressly prevails – he or she is entitled to insist on a specific
quantity,
price, and several other key potential contract terms. And finally, the
law
allows the government unfettered discretion in seizing inhabited land to
create
“agricultural bio-diversity conservation areas.”
“This
draft
law poses a serious threat to private property ownership rights –
particularly for smallholder farmers,” said LICADHO Director Naly
Pilorge. “As
land disputes throughout Cambodia continue to grow in intensity and
frequency,
a law related to land management and ownership rights must be drafted
with
transparency and extensive consultations, neither of which have occurred
here.
This draft law must go back to the drawing board.”
“The
government
says that its overall policy is poverty reduction, but this draft
law could hurt our basic rights to use and manage our own land,” said
Theng
Savoeun, of the Coalition of Cambodia Farmers Community (CCFC). “How
will that
help us reduce poverty?”
For more
information, please contact:
Ms. Pilorge
Naly, LICADHO Director, 012-803-650
Mr. Theng
Savoeun , Coalition of Cambodian Farmer Community (CCFC) 015 225 088
Mr. Chea
Sopheak, Farmer & Nature Network (FNN), 016-440-495
Please find attached
a Khmer
and English language version of today's Joint Media Statement ,
Briefing Paper : Cambodia's Draft law on the Management and use of
Agricultural Land ,
In Solidarity
Mr. Theng Savoeun
Secretariat Coordinator of CCFC
Solidarity
House #216AB,Street 271BIS,Trapaing Chhouk Villager,
Sang Kat Toek Thlar,Khan Sen Sok,Phnom Penh, Cambodia,
Sang Kat Toek Thlar,Khan Sen Sok,Phnom Penh, Cambodia,
Phone: (+855) 78 225 088 /
15 225 088
E-mail: ccfc.cambodia@gmail. com
Skype: Theng Savoeun
Website: ccfccambodia. blogspot.com
4 attachments — Download all attachments
![]() | Ag Law
Joint Media Statement - khmer.pdf 69K View Download |
![]() | Draft Ag Law
Analysis-Kh-final-July.pdf 707K View Download |
![]() | Draft Ag Law
Briefing Paper - FINAL.pdf 515K View Download |
![]() | Joint Media
Statement. English.pdf 46K View Download |
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