The Phnom Penh Post

Officials stop outsiders travelling to Sesan dam

- Phak Seangly and Martin de Bourmont

P ROVI NCI A L a u t h o r i t i e s deployed police and Military Police officials outside Kbal Romea village in Stung Treng’s Sesan district yesterday to prevent outsiders from entering villages threatened by flooding from the Lower Sesan II dam.

The police blockade came into force Sunday, when authoritie­s detained and questioned 24 members of an indigenous network from Mond u l k i r i p r ov i n c e a t t h e provincial police station.

Vaing Samrith, an ethnic Phnong who works as a translator, said that 20 police and Mi l i t a r y Po l i c e o f f i c e r s stopped him and a foreign photograph­er near the Kroobey Chrom pagoda as they tried to reach Kbal Romea village yesterday morning.

The photograph­er corroborat­ed the story but asked to remain anonymous.

Samrith said that he and his colleague were forced to erase photos they took of the officers. After around 40 minutes, Samrith decided to turn back.

Meng Heng, of the environmen­tal NGO Mother Nature, said three more foreign journalist­s were stopped by police yesterday for about 30 minutes. A video Heng posted on Facebook shows police stopping a crowd of people – including the three foreigners – along a dirt road.

Romea residents and environ- mental activists from Mother Nature finally escorted the journalist­s past the police officials.

Journalist­s seen in the video could not be reached as of press time.

Kbal Romea community representa­tive Dam Samnang said that he expects around 300 people from across Cambodia to gather in his village today for a series of events, including a press conference, traditiona­l prayers and the constructi­on of floating homes for locals in anticipati­on of flooding following the closure of one of the dam’s gates.

So far, he said, only 100 people, mostly members of ethnic minority groups from neighbouri­ng provinces, have arrived, due to police interferen­ce.

Cambodian Indigenous­Youth Associatio­n President Ngach Samin criticised police efforts to prevent outsiders from accessing Kbal Romea and Srekor, pointing to Article 40 of the Cambodian Constituti­on, which protects citizens’ freedom of movement.

Provincial Hall spokesman Men Kong said police were only trying to prevent outsiders from entering the villages for their own good as rising waters caused by the closure of the dam’s doors threatens both Srekor and Kbal Romea with flooding.

Yesterday, provincial authoritie­s released a statement saying that Srekor village will flood on Friday and called on the village’s remaining inhabitant­s to abandon their homes.

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