The Phnom Penh Post

Authority warns port officials of action

- Long Kimmarita

THE Preah Sihanouk provincial authority has warned it will take legal action against the Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port if it continues to unlawfully demolish compartmen­ts in a 50-year-old building where port staff members live.

On Tuesday, the Preah Sihanouk provincial administra­t i v e working g roup, t he Department of Land Management, the Department of Culture, and a group of officials inspected the constructi­on site located in Group 5, Village 2, Commune III, and warned port officials to stop the demolition of roofs and walls.

It was the second warning issued to the port, with the first coming on March 26 for the same offences, according to Preah Sihanouk Provincial Hall spokesman Kheang Phearum.

He said if port officials don’t heed their final warning, the authoritie­s will implement measures according to the law.

Phearum conceded that the state-owned building is old and may be dangerous, but it wasn’t for port officials to decide its fate.

“The work is in the hands of the experts who have to check legal documents to see if the building needs to be lawfully demolished or not.

“Once the legality of the matter is understood, the owner may, in fact, be allowed to demolish or renovate the building in compliance with the law,” he said.

Preah Sihanouk provincial Department of Land Management deputy director BunVutha, who inspected the building, told The Post that more than 20 compartmen­ts in the structure serve as homes for the port’s staff.

He said the area is under the control of the state, and since the building is 50 years old, the port must write to the relevant department­s requesting to officially inspect it.

“We have instructed the workers and representa­tives of the autonomous port not to continue demolishin­g and repairing the building until it has been pro per l y re quest e d and approved by a profession­al official inspecting it,” he said.

Port representa­tive Srun Lim said that because the building is so old and leaky, the port management decided to make immediate repairs at the request of staff who encountere­d difficulti­es while living there.

He said after receiving the new guidance, the port would immediatel­y file an applicatio­n to repair the building following legal procedure. However, he could not confirm when it would submit the necessary documents.

“We did not ask for permission because the building was very leaky and our workers requested assistance, so we just repaired it, thinking it would be okay.

“Then they came down and banned us from working on it. And now, we were advised to ask for permission, so we are preparing to do it,” he said.

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