The Phnom Penh Post

Illegal gold mine shafts in Kratie being filled in

- Phak Seangly

ELEVEN illegal gold mine shafts in Kratie province – including two in which several deaths occurred – are being filled in by authoritie­s after villagers repeatedly ignored orders to cease operations there, officials said yesterday.

Sok Kiriroth, director of the provincial Department of Mines and Energy, said that officials had inspected the illegal mining site at O’Droun, in Sambor district’s O’Por village, over the past two weeks. Villagers were still secretly operating there, despite having been asked to stop several times, he added.

About 20 officials, including National Military Police, on Friday used an excavator to start dismantlin­g and filling in the shafts, Kiriroth said.

“We always educated and cracked down on them several times, but when we go [to the site] they stop, and when we leave, they resume,” he said.

“They never stopped permanentl­y, so we used the machinery to bulldoze and fill the shafts.”

Some of the shafts are up to 30 metres deep. Kiriroth added that some of the villagers recognised that their operations were illegal and didn’t protest, and some voluntaril­y dismantled their own constructi­ons above the shafts.

Four pieces of machinery were confiscate­d and im- pounded at the Department of Mines and Energy.

In August, four miners died in two separate shafts during incidents that were caused by cave-ins. The operations were allegedly taking place inside the perimeter of a Chinese mining operation named Xing Yuan Kanng Yeak, which had complained before. Contact details for the company weren’t available.

Sok Yoeun, O’Por village chief, said 174 migrant families are living at O’Droun and some

They never stopped permanentl­y, so we used the machinery to bulldoze and fill the shafts

had settled there between 1980 and 1990, well before the company arrived in 2006.

“The company has attempted to dismiss villagers from its land, but they disagreed because they arrived earlier,” he said.

O’Droun is around 15 kilometres down a bad road from the O’Por village office. Yoeun said villagers had suggested that national authoritie­s create a new village for them before the 2013 national election, but never received a response to the request.

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