The Phnom Penh Post

Villagers told not to claim land

- Khouth Sophak Chakrya

OFFICIALS of the Kampong Speu provincial environmen­t department have stopped some 300 members of the ethnic Suoy minority from building demarcatio­n posts on a 15ha plot in Oral district.

They said the land is located within the protected Phnom Oral Wildlife Sanctuary and are probing a potential collusion between the ethnic community and land brokers.

Provincial environmen­t department director Em Sokhun told The Post on Tuesday that the 300 villagers represent 300 ethnic Suoy families from Kodontey, Putrea and Tanil villages in Trapaing Cho commune.

He said they had encroached state land i n the sanctuar y, and that each of them had cleared around 500sqm of land and planted the border posts wit hout officia l approval.

“Our officials have explained to them that their activities were against the law, but they refuse to listen and continue to set up the posts on state land repeatedly.

“We suspect that they are being used by brokers who intend to claim the land for personal gain, and we are investigat­ing,” Sokun said.

Khoeun Samrith, a representa­tive of the Suoy ethnic community in Kodontey village, said the land was originally part of Suoy ethnic communal land.

He said the government ceded the land to Cosmo, a private company that had obtained an investment licence to turn the popular Te Teuk Pos hot spring into an ecotourism site.

In 2015, the firm went bankrupt and the land was returned to the government.

Samrith said the Suoy ethnic commu- nity members planted the border posts to prevent outsiders from grabbing the land.

“The land has recently been cleared. When we asked the authoritie­s, especially environmen­t officials managing the area, they said they didn’t know.

“We are worried that the communal land is being cleared and sold to private companies. We are also afraid of being accused of selling the land.

“Hence, to protect the communal land, Suoy ethnic community members from three v illages agreed to reoccupy it, despite prohibitio­n by env ironment of ficia ls,” he said.

Samrith disputed the environmen­t officials’ claims that the communal land belonged to the protected Phnom Oral Wildlife Sanctuary, which is under the jurisdicti­on of the Environmen­t Ministry.

Lem Heng, another Suoy ethnic community representa­tive, said they would not protest if the communal land is included in a state-owned ecotourism project.

Heng said the community worries that the land may have been sold to the company. He said forest in the planned ecotourism site had been cleared, but there had been no noticeable signs of developmen­t in the area.

Oral district governor Muong Phy insisted on Tuesday that the land in question is part of the Phnom Oral Wildlife Sanctuary. He said the actual communal land spans 3085.68ha and has already been registered.

“We suspect the encroachme­nt on the wildlife sanctuary involved collusion with land brokers. Other villagers who have registered their land can sell it after registrati­on.

“But the Suoy ethnic community from the three villages have no right to sell their land because it has already been registered collective­ly as communal land,” he said.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Members of Kampong Speu’s ethnic Suoy families occupy cleared land within the Phnom Oral Wildlife Sanctuary despite authority’s prohibitio­n.
SUPPLIED Members of Kampong Speu’s ethnic Suoy families occupy cleared land within the Phnom Oral Wildlife Sanctuary despite authority’s prohibitio­n.

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