The Phnom Penh Post

Bunong families petition PM

- Khorn Savi

FOUR villagers representi­ng more than 1,800 Bunong ethnic families who are embroiled in a territoria­l spat in Mondulkiri province petitioned two ministries and Prime Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday.

They want the authoritie­s to push the local authority to revoke the private ownership of a portion of state-owned land around Doh Kramom Mountain.

Nan Dany, one of the villagers from Sen Monorom town, said he and three others from Koh Nhek, O’Raing and Pech Chreada districts sought interventi­on from the Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Constructi­on and the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts, as well as Hun Sen’s cabinet, in an attempt to reverse the provincial administra­tion’s decision which saw 15 out of 102ha of stateowned land granted to private entities.

Dany suggested that the local authority had defied Hun Sen’s order issued in February, in which the provincial administra­tion was urged to solve the dispute in a proper manner and return the land ownership to the state.

“The [provincial] authority must adhere to Samdech’s [Hun Sen’s] directive immediatel­y. I don’t understand why they hadn’t done so earlier and I wonder what they think about us, the ethnic people,” he said.

Government officials and community representa­tives had once examined and measured the disputed land plot, but no result or solution to the issue has been offered, the petitions said.

It also said a Prakas issued by the Council of Ministers in 2004 dictated that the 102ha belonged to the state. However, private entities managed to “grab” 15ha of it over time, drawing the ire to the local

communitie­s who now battle to reclaim the missing hectares.

Mondulkiri Provincial Hall spokesman Sok Sera claimed the authority paid great attention to finding the right solution to the dispute. He said they had recently submitted a report on the spat to Hun Sen and are expecting the prime minister’s decision.

“Samdech [Hun Sen] is examining the report and we will abide by his decision,” he said.

Sera vowed that the authority would “work hard to solve the spat with peaceful and compromisi­ng means”, adding that “hundreds of families have been living and farming at the foot of the mountain since 1990, long before the prakas was signed”.

However, Dany denied claims t hat ot her people had lived in t he area prior to the pra kas being signed. He said only the homes of Bunong families had been built on the mountain.

In March, Mondulkiri governor Svay Sam Eang announced the nullificat­ion of the provincial administra­tion’s 2015 decision that granted a portion of the Doh Kramom Mountain area to the Ministry of Mines and Energy.

On June 3, 2015, the provincial hall agreed to cede a 5.07ha plot to the ministry for the constructi­on of a mine, energy and petroleum research centre.

But in a letter dated March 18 that was made public three days later, Sam Eang said the government was now planning to preserve the mountain as a cultural centre and enlist it as a world heritage site.

The provincial hall also reversed its previous decisions that granted a 25m by 50m plot and another one measuring the same dimension within the mountain compound to the Department of Industry and Handicraft­s and the Department of Civil Service, respective­ly.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Some 1,800 Bunong ethnic families are embroiled in a territoria­l spat over this disputed land around Doh Kramom Mountain in Mondulkiri Province.
SUPPLIED Some 1,800 Bunong ethnic families are embroiled in a territoria­l spat over this disputed land around Doh Kramom Mountain in Mondulkiri Province.

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