The Phnom Penh Post

Ethnic Chong seek recognitio­n

- Soth Keomsoeun and Andrew Nachemson

REPRESENTA­TIVES of the Chong ethnic minority in Cambodia’s Areng Valley filed petitions on Wednesday requesting official recognitio­n.

Ten villagers representi­ng more than 200 families in the remote Koh Kong province area near the Cardamom Mountains filed the petition to the Ministry of Rural Developmen­t, the prime minister’s cabinet and the United Nations.

“Our Chong ancestors have been living here in Areng for a very long time. We have traditions, culture, costumes and ways of living in a community,” the petition reads. “We have faith in spirits and [practise] slash-and-burn planting following our ancestral traditions.”

The applicatio­n requests official recognitio­n from authoritie­s, with community members claiming they made a similar request at the commune level a year ago, but local officials did not allow the request to advance.

“The local authoritie­s, they do not register us, because they said we did not have our own language. And he said he’s very busy and cannot sign for us,” said community representa­tive Hoeng Pao.

“We will decide what to do after Khmer New Year,” said Yim Chung, a representa­tive at the Ministry of Rural Developmen­t.

“Despite the Chong language being all but forgotten in Areng, the valley is unique in that animist traditions, dependence on nature for livelihood­s, etc. are stronger than anywhere else in the country,” Alex Gonzalez-Davidson, the founder of the environmen­tal group Mother Nature, said in a message.

According to a profile of the community by the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, the Chong have lived in the Areng Valley “since time immemorial”.

“Many were displaced dur- ing clashes with the Khmer Rouge,” the profile continues. The Chong then returned after the ultra-Maoist group’s collapse in 1998. Today, the Chong face a new challenge in the form of hydropower dam constructi­on and other developmen­ts.

Chak Sopheap, director of CCHR, said“indigenous groups are the first victims of Cambodia’s fast-paced destructio­n of forests”, as they often are more reliant on natural resources.

“Recognitio­n as an indigenous community would allow the Chong group to apply for a collective land title . . . providing them with land tenure security and therefore protection from land-grabbing and displaceme­nt,” she explained.

Sopheap said the process must be sped up and simplified. Only 18 out of 458 communitie­s have been given collective land titles as of July 2017.

Gonzalez-Davidson alleged the process is purposeful­ly complex and expensive, so that thegovernm­entandpriv­atesector can continue stealing land from indigenous groups.

 ?? SUPPLIED/PENG SREYSOR ?? Ministry of Rural Developmen­t official Yim Chung receives a recognitio­n petition from Chong representa­tives on Wednesday.
SUPPLIED/PENG SREYSOR Ministry of Rural Developmen­t official Yim Chung receives a recognitio­n petition from Chong representa­tives on Wednesday.

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