The Phnom Penh Post

Holdouts in Borei Keila accept compensati­on

- Masy Kuoch

A HANDFUL of holdout families have accepted compensati­on to leave their homes in Borei Keila, following individual negotiatio­ns with district authoritie­s yesterday.

Borei Keila is one of the longest-running land conflicts in the country, with developmen­t company Phanimex having agreed in 2004 to build 10 buildings in the area for residents to relocate to in exchange for the land they lived on, but building only eight. Hundreds of families were left without a permanent home when authoritie­s violently evicted them in 2012.

A group of 11 families was given a deadline of December 22 to accept compensati­on or leave empty-handed, though the deadline passed with no takers as holdouts continued to squat in a dilapidate­d building at Borei Keila. Last week, one of the families quietly accepted compensati­on, and yesterday one of the community’s representa­tives followed suit.

Ngov Nary, a vocal protester and representa­tive of 11 families who were offered compensati­on, said she had accepted $16,000 yesterday. “I don’t want to spend much time on this case anymore. So I accepted it,” she said.

Another representa­tive of the now nine families, Sar Sorn, said the others would continue to protest.

Out of another group of 30 holdout families, 10 were offered monetary compensati­on, and 10 were offered relocation to Andong village, while the remaining 10 were offered nothing, but have remained part of the negotiatio­n process. Of the 30, 16 accepted compensati­on last week. The remaining 14, however, continued to hold out, saying compensati­on remained too low and the relocation site too remote. Nonetheles­s, three more of the 14 families accepted relocation to Andong yesterday without monetary compensati­on, according to representa­tive Sok Srey On.

Va Sophy, who was among the three families, was already experienci­ng buyer’s remorse yesterday. “I already accepted and signed, but now I feel a little bit of regret,” she said. “I should have asked for more money. I got only the house [at Andong], but I need some money too.”

Vann Sophath, a project coordinato­r for the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, welcomed the authoritie­s’ “nonviolent” approach of negotiatin­g, but noted that families might have only grudgingly accepted compensati­on.

“We are happy to see this approach continue until the end, even though we know that most of the families who had accepted the solution [accepted it] as they have no choice,” he said in a message.

District Governor Lim Sophea could not be reached.

 ?? ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY LEONIE KIJEWSKI ??
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY LEONIE KIJEWSKI

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