The Phnom Penh Post

More set to leave B Keila

- Kuoch Masy and Leonie Kijewski

TWO more families have accepted compensati­on to leave the Borei Keila area to make room for developmen­t, as the long-running land dispute creeps ever closer to an end.

Hundreds of families saw their homes destroyed in 2012 to make way for a project by developer Phanimex. Although the majority of residents have since accepted compensati­on or moved to relocation sites, some holdouts remain. One group of 11 families was given an ultimatum in December to accept City Hall’s offers or face eviction empty-handed. They have since been offered more in compensati­on, but all but two families are still holding out.

Danh Kongkea, a member of the group of nine families, yesterday said she was still waiting to hear from the municipali­ty about the next steps. “We will have a meeting again with our group to discuss what we will do next – whether to protest or wait to hear from the municipali­ty,” she said.

Twenty-six of another group of 30 residents have accepted financial compensati­on, a home at a relocation site on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, or both.

The most recent are Kao Chanthou and Moeun Bunthoeun, who agreed on Friday to move to Andong village and accepted $2,000.

Chanthou yesterday said she had no choice but to take the offer. “It is hard for us to wait and get what we want,” she said. “So I have to close my eyes and accept that compensati­on.”

An additional 11 families are also being considered for compensati­on by City Hall, said Vann Sophath, of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights.

City Hall spokesman Met Measpheakd­ey and District Governor Lim Sophea declined to comment yesterday.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A exterior view of ‘Building F’, where many remaining Borei Keila land disputants are squatting.
HONG MENEA A exterior view of ‘Building F’, where many remaining Borei Keila land disputants are squatting.

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