The Phnom Penh Post

Steel-framed buildings to be demolished in P Sihanouk

- Voun Dara

THE Preah Sihanouk Provincial Hall ordered the demolition on Monday of two Chinese-owned steel-framed buildings on Otres Beach I in Stung Hav district’s Otres commune that were found to have encroached on the public beach.

Provincial hall spokespers­on Kheang Phearum told The Post on Tuesday that new provincial governor Kuoch Chamroeun had ordered relevant authoritie­s to strictly inspect constructi­on standards in the province and act against developmen­t projects that encroach on state property.

Phearum said the authority completely levelled one steelframe­d structure and allowed the owner of the other to voluntaril­y dismantle it by an unspecifie­d deadline.

“Local vendors had leased the locations to Chinese nationals who constructe­d new structures differentl­y from the original plans. There were only kiosks made from wood in the area, but after leasing the kiosks to foreigners, the new tenants built solid structures using steel frames.

“The constructi­ons were unlawful and not allowed to be rebuilt because the locations are on state land,” he said.

Phearum said the authoritie­s had so far inspected constructi­on standards of buildings at more than 100 sites. He did not provide exact figures for constructi­on projects in the province, saying only that their inspection was ongoing while reports were being prepared for national-level authoritie­s.

Provincial tourism department director Taing Sochet Kresna said solid structures are not permitted on the beaches, while old structures are allowed to stay but required to maintain their original state until further notice.

“Otres is being made a model beach for the Sea Festival next year. So the provincial administra­tion needs to maintain order, beautify the beach and protect the environmen­t. New constructi­ons will not be allowed to exist anymore,” he said.

The strict inspection of constructi­on standards in the province followed the tragic collapse of a seven-storey steel-framed building in Sihanoukvi­lle on June 22, when 28 people were killed and 26 injured. The painstakin­g rescue operation took four days to complete.

The tragedy led to the resignatio­n of provincial governor Yun Min and the removal of Nhem Vanda from his position as first vice-president of the National Committee for Disaster Management for “lacking responsibi­lity and telling a lie”.

On Monday,Vanda’s successor Kun Kim said the committee was preparing manpower and rescue tools to be based in the province to prevent a delay in future rescue operations.

Kim, who is also the Senior Minister in charge of Special Missions, said during a medalconfe­rment ceremony for the nearly 500 joint forces who took part in the four-day search and rescue operation that the province would no longer have to wait for rescue supplies transporte­d from afar.

“Sihanoukvi­lle has seen rapid developmen­t, and many problems have emerged especially constructi­on-related issues. That warrants authoritie­s and specialise­d forces to pay close attention to constructi­on quality in order to avert another disaster,” he said.

Cheap Sotheary, the provincial coordinato­r for rights group Adhoc, said the authoritie­s had previously made new vendors on Otres dismantle their stalls to make way for the developmen­t of the beach, while old vendors were allowed to continue their business through state land rental.

“We don’t know how the authoritie­s are handling the issue. But what we see are many high-rise constructi­ons that encroach on beaches while other structures continue to be built.

“Small vendors, meanwhile, are not as fortunate, as their stalls have been dismantled on grounds that they were built illegally on public land,” Sotheary claimed.

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