The Phnom Penh Post

Officials reclaim machinery

- Phak Seangly

AJOINT force of nearly 40 law enforcemen­t officials in Preah Vihear’s Brame commune last Friday retrieved two bulldozers seized from Chinese sugar company Rui Feng three years ago by ethnic Kuoy villagers.

The bulldozers’ sudden repossessi­on came nearly a month after the ruling Cambodian People’s Party unseated the incumbent opposition party in June’s commune elections. The opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party’s top candidate in the commune, 27-year-old political newcomer Khum Rany, had generated enthusiasm among locals with campaign promises to end Rui Feng land grabs in Brame.

Rany’s CPP counterpar­t, former provincial police officer Thean Heng, 58, neverthele­ss defeated her by 232 votes, having made peaceful coexistenc­e with Rui Feng central to his campaign. Neither Heng nor Rui Feng could be reached for comment.

Commandeer­ed by nearly 200 villagers in December 2014 to prevent the company from clearing their farmland, the two bulldozers – stationed for almost three years in front of the then-CNRP occupied Brame commune hall – embodied the land dispute that defined the commune for much of the past decade.

In 2010, the Cambodian government granted Rui Feng and its four subsidiari­es economic land concession­s (ELCs) in Preah Vihear, stretching across 40,000 hectares of land.

The conflict between ethnic Kuoy villagers and the company began in 2012, when Rui Feng started clearing land the villagers claimed as their own. In response, Kuoy villagers began a concerted directacti­on campaign to halt company land grabs, squatting on vulnerable farmland, putting themselves in the way of bulldozers and, in 2014, confiscati­ng the company’s machinery.

On Thursday afternoon, a joint force of Military Police and provincial police officials led by a Preah Vihear Provincial Court prosecutor rekindled efforts to reclaim the two bull- dozers for Rui Feng. A previous attempt immediatel­y after the villagers’ seizure of the vehicles in 2014 was aborted after villagers threatened to torch the vehicles with gasoline.

Brame community representa­tive Sing Saing, 62, said that the authoritie­s encircled the bulldozers on Friday afternoon, preventing villagers from approachin­g them and warning them not to call their neighbours for help.

“Nearly 40 forces came secretly to take [the bulldozers], so we could not stop them,” she said, adding that the officials threatened to arrest villagers who protested.

Saing said she believed Brame’s election of a CPP commune chief friendly to Rui Feng emboldened provincial authoritie­s to retake the bulldoz- ers. “Because the CPP won the commune election, they dared to come and take them,” Saing said. “They rely on their power and no one is going to do anything to them, so they can take [the bulldozers] whenever they want to.”

While authoritie­s promised to station the vehicles at the provincial court, Saing said, only one vehicle was seen there, while the other was spotted on Rui Feng company property. Community members, she said, may protest at the provincial court if both vehicles are not impounded as promised.

“I am angry and disappoint­ed since we put a lot of effort into bringing those vehicles [to the commune hall], but they just used force to take them back,” said Rany, the unsuccessf­ul opposition candidate, whose family lost 5 hectares of rice fields to Rui Feng in 2013. “If I had won the election, they could [not] take them away.”

Deputy prosecutor and provincial court spokeswoma­n Phy Siphorng, one of two court officials leading Friday’s repossessi­on, said that Kuy Yoeung, Rui Feng’s administra­tive director, filed a complaint to the provincial court in 2015 demanding the vehicles’ return to their owner, a man named Im Ly. Siphorng said the court returned both bulldozers to Ly, adding that the recent elections had no bearing on the enforcemen­t of laws.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Authoritie­s retrieve one of two bulldozers owned by the Chinese company Rui Feng that were seized by community members in 2014.
SUPPLIED Authoritie­s retrieve one of two bulldozers owned by the Chinese company Rui Feng that were seized by community members in 2014.

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