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| Add captionHomes in Meanchey district’s Thnout Chhrum village are surrounded by sand that is being pumped into Boeung Tumpun lake yesterday. Photograph: Pha Lina/Phnom Penh Post |
Monday, 17 September 2012
Post Staff
The Phnom Penh Post
Under a proposed 2011 development, dubbed AZ Town, roads, including the 60-metre Hun Sen Boulevard, would cross the lake or pass near it.
Villagers
living in raised houses on the capital’s Boeung Tumpun lake fear their eviction is on the horizon
as sand pumping increases at the site, they said
yesterday.
“I do not know why they are
pumping sand into the lake,” said Kong Sopheak, 31, a resident of Thnout
Chrum II village in Meanchey district. “But I have just overheard that they plan to
build a supermarket and department store and construct roads.”
In recent months, heavy
machinery has been at work at the Boeung Tumpun site. Sand pumping has
increased, and workmen, including one yesterday who said he was from
Vietnam, have been regulars at the lake.
“I’m very concerned about eviction,”
Keang Sok, a resident of nearby Chak Angre Leu commune’s Prek Takong
village, said.
“We do not have land titles, but
we have a small land paper note issued from the municipal authority,
saying we have been here since 1984.”
Under a proposed 2011
development, dubbed AZ Town, roads, including the 60-metre Hun Sen
Boulevard, would cross the lake or pass near it.
AZ Town, a satellite city
similar to Camko City, and the associated Hun Sen Boulevard would be developed by
four firms – AZ Group, ING
Holdings, Daun Penh Construction Group and SMEC International,
according to documents obtained by the Post. None of these companies
could be reached for comment yesterday.
Sok Lida, research project
manager of land and housing rights NGO Sahmakum Teang Tnaut said his
organisation had identified 28 poor urban communities that could be
affected by development at the lake.
“Based on data from 2009
published in The 8 Khan Survey, about 2,000 families live in these 28
communities. Given the experience of the residents of Boeung Kak lake,
STT is concerned about the impacts of this potential development on the
current residents around Boeung Tumpun,” he said.
Long Kim Heang, a communications
officer with the Housing Rights Task Force, said yesterday that many
villagers on or around the lake were not aware of what development was
planned.
“Until now, they don’t know
what’s happening,” she said. “Some people do not care and do not think
they will be evicted. Others are worried.”
HRTF had been offering legal
advice to villagers about a possible forced eviction.
“What people want, if they do
have to move, is proper compensation. They don’t know what they will
get.”
City Hall spokesman Long
Dimanche said yesterday that he needed more to time to look into the
issue before he could comment further.
Deputy Director of Phnom Penh’s
Department of Public Works and Transport Moeung Sophan could not be
reached for comment yesterday.
Meanwhile, Boeung Kak residents
held a demonstration in which they burned effigies of “corrupt
officials” to mark a year since homes authorities destroyed homes at
their site.
“The [effigies] represent the
corrupt officials who robbed us of our land,” said evictee Heng Mom.

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