The Phnom Penh Post

Flooding reaches Srekor village

- Phak Seangly

RISING waters caused by heavy rains and the closure of the Lower Sesan II hydropower dam’s gates reached Stung Treng’s Srekor village on Friday, causing some of the village’s last holdouts to begin evacuating.

Threatened by the Lower Sesan II dam reservoir’s rising waters, Srekor village and nearby Kbal Romeas village continue to house hundreds of ethnic minority villagers who refuse to abandon their ancestral homes.

Srekor village representa­tive Fut Khoeun said water levels rose substantia­lly on Friday, leaving parts of the village under more than a metre of water.

“At some locations, the water is about 1 metre high, and some others are about 1.5 metres,” said Khoeun. “About 20 to 30 households face serious flooding and [their inhabitant­s] left for a safer place temporaril­y,” Khoeun said.

Khoeun added that besides damaging property, the flooding would damage the papaya, banana, melon, gourd and sugarcane crops that the villagers depend on for their livelihood­s.

Stung Treng Provincial Hall spokesman Men Kong said that the water has begun to recede.

“There is no serious situ- ation. [The villagers] moved their cattle to a safe location,” Kong said. “People could travel in and out of their houses to safe places via small boats.” He added that a force of 50 provincial authoritie­s, including police, Military Police and medics was stationed near the village and prepared to assist its residents.

Though Kbal Romeas village did not yet experience flooding, villagers there continue to log bamboo branches in hopes of making their homes float in the event of a flood.

The executive director of NGO Forum, Tep Vannara, said that his organisati­on yesterday morning held a meeting in Srekor with about 100 participan­ts from Srekor and Kbal Romeas. Yesterday’s gathering, he said, took place in order to prepare for another meeting taking place today in Stung Treng town, in which around 35 representa­tives from both communitie­s will meet with representa­tives of the Ministry of Mines and Energy and the provincial government.

“The villagers want to remain in the old village, and if the old village floods, they want to move to a safe area nearby,” said Touch Thou, NGO Forum’s policy monitoring coordinato­r. “They don’t want the company or the government to force them to move from the old village.”

Thou said that members of 12 NGOs, including 3SPN, My Village and NGO Forum would also be present.

 ?? MOTHER NATURE ?? Srekor village pagoda was partially submerged on Friday following heavy rains and the closing of several gates of the Lower Sesan II hydropower dam in Stung Treng province.
MOTHER NATURE Srekor village pagoda was partially submerged on Friday following heavy rains and the closing of several gates of the Lower Sesan II hydropower dam in Stung Treng province.

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