2014-06-19
Cambodia’s energy minister allayed concerns in parliament over
inadequate compensation offered to villagers who face relocation for a
proposed China-backed dam on a Mekong River tributary, saying the
government has allocated to villagers more than four times the area
taken over for the project.
Minister of Mines and Energy Suy Sem
was summoned to the National Assembly to answer questions on government
policy related to the 400 megawatt Lower Sesan 2 hydropower dam, which
would be constructed along the Sesan River in northeast Cambodia’s Stung
Treng province.
Villagers campaigning against the dam have
expressed concern about compensation for being displaced by the project,
which they say would also destroy protected forest areas, kill rare
fish, and negatively impact local ethnic minority culture.
National
Assembly spokesperson Chheang Von said that lawmakers on the whole
accepted Suy Sem’s two-and-a-half hour explanation of plans to
compensate villagers, the dam’s construction process and its impact on
the environment.
But he cautioned that the dam’s developers should stick to their proposed plans.
“We
can accept this explanation, as long as he promises that he will work
with the companies to implement the plan correctly,” Chheang Von told
RFA’s Khmer Service, adding that lawmakers would also “monitor” the
government project.
“The villagers who agreed to be relocated have made a big sacrifice and we must repay them,” he said.
Studies
have suggested the Lower Sesan 2 project in Stung Treng could displace
5,000 people and adversely affect 100,000 more through a more than 9
percent drop in fish stocks in the Mekong Basin.
Suy Sem’s
explanation to parliament marked the first time the National Assembly,
which opposition lawmakers have boycotted since disputed elections in
July last year, has summoned a government minister to answer questions
on national policy.
During the session, Suy Sem acknowledged that
the dam would impact the environment, but assured lawmakers that
studies would be done ahead of its construction.
The minister
pledged to provide relocated villagers with 1,000 square meters (10,760
square feet) of land to build new homes and 5 hectares (12 acres) of
land for each family to grow crops.
He declined to comment on
potential deforestation that could arise from the project, saying the
issue was not within his ministry’s purview.
Speaking to
reporters after the Assembly session, Suy Sem said that the expected
benefits of the dam outweigh the likely impact of its construction.
He
added that around 910 hectares (2,250 acres) of villagers’ land will be
affected by the project, but the government has reserved about 4,060
hectares (10,030 acres) as compensation.
Continued protests
But
despite Suy Sem’s reassurances that the compensation needs of relocated
villagers would be met, many of those who will be displaced by the
dam’s constructions have continued to hold out and refuse government
offers.
Some of them wanted to remain on their traditional land while others felt that the offered land was less valuable.
Last
month, villagers walked out of negotiations with the government’s
compensation committee, saying their demands had been ignored.
A
villager representative named Ly Bek told RFA that the construction
would directly affect indigenous lands that have long been used for
farming and traditional burial grounds, and that residents would refuse
to leave.
“They can’t leave their ancestors land, so there is no solution,” he said.
A
village official named Sek Mekong said that residents had refused
government offers since December because terms were “vague” and
compensation “fell short of market price.”
He said that if the government continues to push the same policy, he would refuse to participate in relocation talks.
Call for halt
In
December, villagers living along Mekong River tributaries in
northeastern Cambodia protested in front of the Chinese Embassy in the
capital Phnom Penh calling on the authorities to scrap three proposed
China-backed dam projects, including the Lower Sesan 2, citing
environmental and other concerns.
Residents of riparian
communities along the Sesan, Sekong and Srepok rivers presented a
petition to the embassy detailing the plight of the 75,000 people they
say could be directly affected by the proposed dams.
The petition
called on Chinese Ambassador Bu Jianguo to stop Chinese companies
Hydrolancang International Energy and Hounan Group from building the
Lower Sesan 2, which is to be constructed in conjunction with Cambodian
conglomerate Royal Group.
The petition called on the Chinese
authorities to also scrap two proposed, 300 megawatt dams in
Ratanakiri—the Lower Sesan 3 dam to be developed by China’s Sinohydro
Resources and the Srepok 3 dam undertaken by Huadian Hong Kong Co. Ltd.
Land-clearing
preparations for the Lower Sesan 2, which were started in March last
year, were suspended by the government in October, but Suy Sem’s visit
to parliament suggests the project may go forward.
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