Tuesday, June 19, 2012
https://www.box.com/s/a8fa2eb13bd74317b2d6
Media Statement
Jun. 19, 2012
Originally posted at: http://cambodiatrainspotter.wordpress.com/2012/06/19/stt-releases-losing-the-plot-a-new-report-on-household-debt-in-railways-relocation-sites/
Local urban NGO Sahmakum Teang Tnaut
(STT) has released a new report entitled Losing the Plot: Rapid Assessment of
Household Debt in Trapeang Anhchanh. Based on interviews
with 12 households relocated to Trapeang Anhchanh site as part of the ADB
and AusAID-funded railways rehabilitation, the report
sheds light on one of the most tragic outcomes of what has been
presented as an aid project: the unmanageable debts taken on by
relocated households.
Envisioned as a prelude to a
more comprehensive study on the situation in Trapeang Anchanh, the rapid
assessment shows how the railways project continues to be in violation of the ADB’s
Involuntary Resettlement Policy, as well as AusAID’s guidelines on
resettlement – relocated households are not at the same,
or a better, living standard compared to pre-project levels.
Instead, the report shows how the combined
effects of inadequate compensation, a dearth of practical advice,
reduced incomes resulting from lack of income-generating opportunities,
and unsustainable and spiraling levels of debt mean that just eight
months after resettlement, households in Trapeang Anhchanh are severely
overdue with their interest repayments. Having used their plots as
collateral for the loans, several
households are on the verge of losing their homes and their land.
The report also shows that the
incomes of households living in Trapeang Anhchanh have fallen under the
national poverty line, and that many appear in need of humanitarian
assistance to survive.
“It is simply unacceptable that a
so-called ‘aid project’ is pushing people into poverty and
landlessness,” said Nora Lindstrom, Programme Development Manager at
STT. “We have highlighted issues surrounding resettlement to the ADB and
AusAID for well over two years, including warning them against
relocating people to Trapeang Anhchanh, but it appears our – as well as
the communities’ – advice and pleas have fallen on deaf ears.”
“As a matter of urgency, we call
on the Cambodian government as well as the ADB and AusAID to take
measures to ensure no household relocated under the project loses their
plot due to debt ,” said Ee Sarom, Programmes Coordinator at STT. “The
project parties should also provide debt relief, in the form of
repayment of loans, to affected families.”
According to the ADB, the
ongoing rehabilitation of the railway in Cambodia involves the
resettlement of approximately 1,050 households from their homes along
Cambodia’s railway tracks to designated resettlement sites. At least 161
households must be relocated in Phnom Penh. Implemented by the Royal
Government of Cambodia, the project is primarily funded by the Asian
Development Bank (ADB) and the Australian Agency for International
Development (AusAID).
Households affected by the
project are entitled to compensation in accordance with the Project’s
Resettlement Plans, which must be in compliance with ADB’s Safeguard
Policies. The first paragraph of the ADB’s Policy on Involuntary
Resettlement (1995) outlines its guiding principle:
“People who may be adversely
affected by the development intervention should be consulted;
compensated for their losses; and assisted to rebuild their homes and
communities, reestablish their enterprises, and develop their potentials
as productive members of society at a level generally at least
equivalent to that which was likely to have prevailed in the absence of
the development intervention. Attention to such matters is especially
important when the people who may be adversely affected are poor and
vulnerable.”
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