The Phnom Penh Post

Pheapimex ties ‘cause for concern’

- Jack Davies

ALEX Corporatio­n, the firm behind a proposal for an ambitious Mondulkiri mining project, appears to be ultimately owned by ruling party Senator Lao Meng Khin and his wife, Choeung Sopheap, the Post has discovered, a scenario rights groups say should give cause for concern.

The Ministry of Environmen­t announced last Friday that it is currently examining the environmen­tal impact assessment (EIA) for a planned 26,000-hectare mining project spanning O’raing district and Sen Monorom town in southern Mondulkiri.

An official from the ministry’s EIA evaluation department said earlier this week that Alex Corporatio­n had given its word that it would not provoke conflicts with communitie­s affected nor forcibly evict any that reject compensati­on offers.

But Alex Corporatio­n’s apparent owners have a long history of involvemen­t in such conflicts, not only in southern Mondulkiri but across Cambodia.

Meng Khin and Sopheap were described in a 2007 US Embassy cable as the Kingdom’s “Power Couple”. A 2009 report by Global Witness found that they held the rights to at least 7 percent of all land in Cambodia, primarily through the Pheapimex Group, of which Sopheap is chair.

In 2004, Pheapimex entered into a joint venture with a Chinese plantation firm Wuzhishan. That year, several protesters were injured by a hand grenade while demonstrat­ing against the joint venture’s Pursat province economic land concession (ELC).

The following year, the joint venture was granted a 336square-kilometre wood pulp ELC in southern Mondulkiri. But, according to a 2007 UN human rights office report, before the concession had even been officially granted, the company had already begun working on land inhabited by the indigenous Phnong community. The outline of that ELC is near identical to that of the area Alex Corporatio­n has proposed to begin mining for bauxite next year.

No publicly available document explicitly links Meng Khin and Sopheap to Alex Corporatio­n. However, its chairperso­n, Lau Zhong Yao, is a director of Pheapimex Group, Wuzhishan and a third Meng KhinSophea­p venture, Cambodia Internatio­nal Investment Developmen­t Group (CIIDG).

Alex Corporatio­n’s registered office is in the same building as CIIDG and an accountant for Alex Corporatio­n told the Post yesterday that its owners are the same as CIIDG’s.

Rights groups representa­tives yesterday said that Alex Corporatio­n’s connection to the Pheapimex owners warrants vigilance. Eang Vuthy, executive director of Equitable Cambodia, has worked for many years on a dispute surroundin­g another of the couple’s high-profile developmen­t projects.

Starting in 2008, thousands were evicted from their homes around Phnom Penh’s Boeung Kak lake to make way for a real estate project led by the Meng Khin-headed Shukaku Inc. The project is still yet to materialis­e, while many evictees remain homeless and uncompensa­ted.

“We’re involved in a case with [Sopheap] and Lao Meng Khin and there’s always problems,” Vuthy said. “So what I can say is they have to disclose everything and follow the law, and the government has the responsibi­lity to make sure the company respects the law and the rights of the local people.”

Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phil Robertson took a stronger line via email yesterday: “These villagers in Mondulkiri should recognize now that if Alex Corporatio­n gets the green light from the government for this huge mining project, the history of the people behind this company indicates these villagers are going to be project cannon fodder, to be pushed off their land whether they agree or not, likely with a pittance for compensati­on.”

Kreung Tola, a representa­tive of the Phnong community in O’Raing district, yesterday said the community had been given no documentat­ion regarding the project and that they objected to it at a recent meeting with Alex Corporatio­n and the authoritie­s. The project EIA found 90 percent of affected communitie­s believed the project would negatively affect them.

With the exception of the accountant, other representa­tives of Pheapimex, CIIDG and Alex Corporatio­n this week were either unreachabl­e or declined to comment.

 ?? MAP DATA ©2016 GOOGLE ?? A map of an area of Mondulkiri province showing overlaying territory between a Pheapimex-Wuzhishan joint venture ELC, and an explorator­y mining area proposed by Alex Corporatio­n.
MAP DATA ©2016 GOOGLE A map of an area of Mondulkiri province showing overlaying territory between a Pheapimex-Wuzhishan joint venture ELC, and an explorator­y mining area proposed by Alex Corporatio­n.

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