June 23, 2014
BOTUM SAKOR DITRICT, Koh Kong province – About 50 families
gathered under a timber roof here Sunday among muddy fields granted to
them as compensation after China’s Union Development Group (UDG) began
to turn their coastal homeland into a $3.8-billion tourist mecca.
The families, who now live in timber houses dotting the barren land
20 km from the coast, were expecting a visit from Surya Subedi, the
Nepalese academic on his 11th tour of Cambodia as the U.N.’s human
rights envoy, who was apparently curious about their grievances.
Since 2010, when the Union Development Group began construction on
its 45,000-hectare land concession carved out of a national park two
years earlier, more than 1,000 families have been expelled from the
forested cape they once farmed and fished to support themselves.
Most say they were forced to accept compensation packages when
construction on the 25-year project started, after local authorities and
sometimes even soldiers threatened violent evictions and homelessness
if they did not yield.
As recently as February this year, two Chinese staff from UDG
allegedly threatened to unleash “paratroopers” on the few remaining
families who refused to disappear from the beachside area, which is
already dominated by neo-colonial-style stone buildings and a manicured
golf course. Soldiers armed with AK-47s, who patrolled the road leading
to the development Sunday, had reportedly accompanied the pair of UDG
representatives.
Those who have accepted compensation complain of empty promises.
“We only ask for proper compensation,” said Sok Sann, 56, a villager
now living on the resettlement site. “The company cheated us, telling us
we will have infrastructure here, but there is nothing.”
Mr. Sann said he hoped the U.N. would assist the villagers, who he
said have been without any support from local officials since it became
clear the project was sanctioned by the top levels of government.
“This company is like an elephant, and we are like ants,” he said.
But Mr. Subedi’s planned meeting with the evicted families was not to
be. The rights envoy fell sick in Sihanoukville and returned to Phnom
Penh on Sunday.
In his place, Wan-Hea Lee, the head of the U.N. Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights in Cambodia, met with the villagers in
their homes before heading to the development.
“I’ve just come from a meeting with those affected by the development
by UDG, and I’ve come with an armful of petitions,” Ms. Lee told the
small company delegation that met her in one of UDG’s stone buildings.
Led by Li Tao, the company’s Koh Kong projects chief, the delegation
sat and listened to Ms. Lee, who described UDG’s work on the project
thus far as “frankly amazing” before reeling off a list of complaints
from the villagers.
She listed absence of water and electricity at the relocation sites,
land that is unsuitable for farming, and armed security patrols who both
prevented lifelong fishermen from accessing the coast and threatened
holdout families.
“I am compelled to ask you the question: Are you aware of this?” Ms.
Lee said of the alleged use of soldiers against villagers. “And what
will you do to ensure that violence will not be resorted to in the
future?”
Ms. Lee’s remarks were delivered in a 20-minute block, and translated
from English into Khmer and then from Khmer into Chinese—a process that
rendered precise conversation impossible, and ensured that few
questions were answered.
“Our project has proceeded according to Cambodian law and it has
received authorization from the Cambodian government,” Mr. Li said of
the evictions, with the translation process reversed.
“About 90 percent of the families have already moved to the
compensation site, and they see the compensation as acceptable,” he
said. “There is less than 10 percent left, and those people are
negotiating…to find a solution.”
The development, which is being built in five-year stages, and will
include its own international seaport, airport and multiple hotels, is
already partly operational, with a small group of weekenders Sunday
evening relaxing between the golf course and what is for now the main
office.
“We can’t confirm the opening time. It depends on the world economy
and the Cambodian economy,” said Wang Chao, the communications manager
for UDG in Cambodia, prior to the meeting with the U.N.
Mr. Wang said he was not aware of the U.N. human rights office, but
welcomed its delegation’s visit. He said securing full control of the
45,000-hectare plot from the dispossessed villagers and then
constructing permanent quarters for staff are UDG’s next tasks.
“Then maybe we can invite a world-famous hotel to come in and open 1,000 rooms and tell everyone to come here,” Mr. Wang said.
“It’ll be five-star, maybe even six-star.”
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