View Full Version : Housing & Relocation issues in Cambodia


SeeMacau
June 1st, 2010, 04:13 AM
Tuol Kork families to move

Monday, 31 May 2010
Khouth Sophak Chakrya and Will Baxter

Officials renege on promises that families would be given a chance to rebuild

RESIDENTS of a Tuol Kork district commune that was the site of a destructive March 8 fire will be relocated to the outskirts of the capital, officials said Sunday, reversing earlier statements that families would be given the option of rebuilding their homes and staying on their current land.

In addition, a May 27 letter distributed to families living in Boeung Kak 2 commune warned that “administrative measures” would be taken to “pull down” any houses rebuilt since the fire, and that officials would “not be responsible for the loss of villagers’ personal property”.

The letter, signed by commune chief Van Sareth, said the homes would be torn down within a week.

Tuol Kork district Governor Seng Ratanak confirmed that all 257 families would be relocated. This would take place, he said, when the 68 families that have not yet agreed to move drop their resistance to the plan.

“We will move them to the new place when the 68 remaining families agree to go as well,” he said, though he did not give a time frame for the relocation.

The fire, which officials have blamed on an electrical short circuit in a resident’s home, destroyed 178 houses as well as 31 dormitory rooms in Neak Von pagoda, leaving 257 families, 181 students and 90 monks homeless.

In its immediate aftermath, local officials told affected families that they could stay in the commune, provided they accept 3.92-by-5.5-metre plots of land – a downgrade for many of the families – and leave sufficient space for the construction of access roads.

Some families have already rebuilt their homes on the site, though Van Sareth said Sunday that the work had not been sanctioned.

“Families who have already agreed to move cannot rebuild wooden homes with metal roofs, and families who have refused to move cannot rebuild without taking measurements from the authorities,” he said.

Relocated families are set to receive 5-by-12-metre plots of land in Dangkor district’s Choam Chao commune.

Duong Sothea, 36, a representative of the 68 holdout families, said they view this deal as inadequate, and that they will continue to lobby officials for the opportunity to stay in Boeung Kak 2.

“Together our group agreed to stay at the fire site even though we will receive smaller plots, so if the authorities now try to force us to relocate we will protest in front of the prime minister’s home and ask him to intervene,” he said.

If the families are forced to move, he added, they will demand “decent compensation”.

A meeting is to be held today between residents and Tuol Kork district officials to discuss relocation and potential compensation for victims of the fire.

Sia Phearum, the secretariat director of the Housing Rights Task Force, said many victims of the fire are concerned that they will end up with nothing.

“Some residents are afraid,” he said. “From previous experience, we know that if they do not relocate they will lose the chance to get some compensation or land.”

Meanwhile, some residents who have agreed to move expressed concern that insufficient progress was being made on the relocation site.

Phal Phorn Nareth, who told authorities she would move with her family to Dangkor district, said she had visited the site regularly and seen little progress.

“Every two weeks I visit the new site to check on the infrastructure system the authorities said they plan to make for us, but so far, there is nothing,” she said.

She added that she does not understand why all the families must wait for the 68 holdouts to agree to relocate before moving.

“Once infrastructure is in place, the authorities should go ahead and send the villagers who have agreed to relocate first,” she said.

Sia Phearum said that, in light of the lack of progress at the new site, officials would have a tough time convincing the holdout families to go along with the plan.

“Here they have schools, electricity, water supply and jobs, which are very important. It is better than at the relocation site,” he said.

He said he will not be surprised if local officials seize the opportunity presented by the fire to clear out the area.

“The local authorities always evict people after there is a fire,” he said. “We don’t want to see the local authorities evict people after the fire because this is a very bad situation. People have lost their homes and their property that they have collected over many years.”

But Ream Samon, another resident who has agreed to move, said conditions are too tough in Boeung Kak 2 in the aftermath of the fire, and that they had ultimately worn her down.

“We are living like animals because the authorities have banned us from building a new home with a metal roof,” she said. “In the daytime it is too hot, and some nights we cannot sleep because of the rainfall.”

Like Phal Phorn Nareth, she expressed frustration that the relocation has not already taken place.

“How long will we have to wait to move to the new place?”

SeeMacau
June 1st, 2010, 04:18 AM
Dey Krohom

Dey Krohom is a small community living in the heart of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Recently the residents of Dey Krohom were forced to leave their homes to make way for new building developments. Some residents were provided with a compensation payment or relocation outside the city, while the remaining residence were left homeless.

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AsianDragons
June 1st, 2010, 07:26 AM
SIEM REAP PROVINCE

THREE families in Wat Damnak village have been given until the end of the month to make way for a new road project, Siem Reap city officials said Wednesday, in the first wave of an eviction that will eventually affect hundreds of people.

Siem Reap governor Tep Bunchhay said authorities have issued a directive ordering the three families in Salakamroek commune’s Wat Damnak village to move before May 30, and stating that 29 other families will be required to move later.

Authorities want the villagers to move to a relocation site in Banteay Srei district’s Run Ta Ek commune. Tep Bunchhay valued the relocation site at US$10,000 per family, including the cost of building materials, and said that each family would also receive 1 million riels ($250) in cash.

Tep Bunchhay said it is possible villagers will receive additional monetary compensation in the future, but he said that the amounts demanded by some – between $5,000 and $7,000 – are unrealistic.

“If they do not go by themselves, we will move them by force,” he warned.

Moeun Naisim, a widow, said she was worried the relocation site would be too far away from her children’s school and hospital.

“I consistently have diseases in my body,” she said. “I do not know what I will do for health care if I live far away.”

However, another villager, Yin Seakleng, said she may accept the relocation offer. “I have only heard what officials have told villagers,” she said. “If it is true, it sounds fair.”

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2010052739322/National-news/wat-damnak-eviction-starts.html

SeeMacau
June 8th, 2010, 04:23 PM
Fire families wait for relocation, new land

Tuesday, 08 June 2010 15:03
Khouth Sophakchakrya

TUOL Kork district officials on Monday told a group of 170 families made homeless by a March 8 fire in Boeung Kak 2 commune that they could be relocated to an undeveloped site in Dangkor district’s Choam Chao commune at the end of the month.

Also Monday, 68 other families that have continued to resist relocation protested in front of City Hall, calling on local officials to grant them land to build new homes at the site of the fire.

At a meeting with the first group of families, held at Neak Von pagoda, Tuol Kork deputy governor Thim Sam An said infrastructure at the Choam Chao district relocation site would not be fully in place before families arrive.

“We cannot connect the electricity and water line, including the drainage system, by the end of this month. We will have to do these things step-by-step after the relocation,” he said. “But if you agree to go, we will relocate you this month.”

Boeung Kak 2 residents and housing rights advocates have criticised the Choam Chao site for its propensity to flood, but Thim Sam An said that the authorities were “making an effort” to fill in flood-prone areas.

Some residents said Monday that they were willing to wait up to two months to be relocated, provided that officials gave them tarpaulins so they could build roofs over temporary shelters in Boeung Kak 2.

“Right now, our roofs are ruined, and we have no money to buy new tarpaulins,” said Sam Sam Ang, a representative of the families. “We ask that the authorities distribute some tarpaulins to us … while we wait for relocation.”

Meanwhile, 68 families that have continued to resist pressure from the authorities to relocate demonstrated in front of City Hall on Monday morning, demanding that local authorities begin allocating plots of land promised to them at the fire site.

Kong Saly, a resident who participated in the protest, said that villagers want officials to distribute 3.92-by-5.5-metre plots of land to each family.

“For three months we’ve waited for the authorities to distribute plots of land to us, but now it’s the rainy season, and our roofs are ruined,” she said.

In the fire’s immediate aftermath, officials told residents they could rebuild in the commune provided that they accepted 3.92-by-5.5-metre plots – a downgrade for many of the families – and left sufficient space for new access roads.

SeeMacau
January 12th, 2012, 05:54 PM
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012011253916/National-news/night-in-cell-for-borei-keila-kids.html

Night in cell for Borei Keila kids

Khoun Leakhana
Thursday, 12 January 2012

About 30 Borei Keila residents, including six children, were being detained in a small cell in Prey Speu Correctional Centre in the capital’s Chaom Chao commune last night after police forced them onto a bus outside city hall on Preah Monivong Boulevard during another day of protests, a detained resident said.

For the second day in a row, displaced residents marched from Borei Keila – where their homes lie in ruins – to the city centre to demand municipal governor Kep Chutema resolve their land dispute and release the eight residents detained during violent clashes in Borei Keila on January 3.

Residents handed Hok Hour Lim, deputy director of the legal office of city hall, a petition at about 10:45am.

Defying an order to go home because they “had no homes”, about 30 of the 45 residents protested throughout the afternoon – chanting slogans through megaphones, waving signs and spilling onto the road – before about 60 police forced them onto a bus about 4:30pm, which drove them to the correctional facility.

Speaking by phone from Prey Speu late yesterday, detained villager Chum Ngan, 36, said all 30 people, including six children, were being detained in a 10 x 10 metre room.

“I heard that the officials said that we have to be detained here until all the old buildings in Borei Keila community are destroyed and the dispute is solved,” she said.

Kiet Chhe, deputy administrative director of municipal hall, defended the response from the authorities, saying residents had been sent to Prey Speu “for their own protection”.

“We took them there to give them protection and vocational training and to support their children to go to school,” he said. “We don’t want their children in their protest because they have to go to school.”

Khiev Malay, 38, said Daun Penh district police had pushed her to the ground and kicked her until she was unconscious during the protest; however, police denied this allegation.

Naly Pilorge, director of rights group Licadho, said residents were being treated as “sub-human” and their detention at the correctional centre was likely to enflame the situation.

“This decision ... is illegal and shocking. If there needed to be any further proof of Prey Speu’s sole purpose, this is it,” she said.

“The goal is likely to get these people out of the way so that the controversy dies down. But this may in fact do the opposite.

“This action really raises the ante in what was already an outrageous case.”

In 2003, Phan Imex agreed to construct 10 buildings on two hectares of land at Borei Keila to house 1,776 families, in exchange for development rights to a remaining 2.6 hectares.

The firm has constructed only eight buildings.