Thursday, 10 May 2012
Khouth Sophak Chakrya and Shane Worrell
The Phnom Penh Post
Borei Keila evictees, waiting for the
arrival of UN Special Rapporteur Surya Subedi, cheered as children tore
down signs advertising a motorcycle business on the very land
development firm Phan Imex promised to house them.
When Subedi’s UN convoy arrived
about 30 minutes later, he was mobbed by vocal residents as he was led
on a tour of Borei Keila – past tents, over piles of rubbish and
through swarms of flies.
“I am concerned for your situation,” he told the crowd. “It doesn’t seem to be only a human-rights matter, but also a humanitarian matter.
“The conditions in which you have been forced to live don’t seem to be adequate for the 21st century.”
Villagers have lived under
staircases and near piles of rubbish since Phan Imex, backed by the
Phnom Penh Municipal authority, demolished their homes on January 3.
Others accepted relocation to squalid conditions on the outskirts of the capital and in Kandal province.
“I have made my representation
at a very high level of the government and assure you that I will
continue to do so,” Subedi said.
When asked what he had talked to the government about, Subedi did not say.
“I have intervened in the past and I will do so again after I have studied the petitions very carefully,” he said.
Two buildings, one a warehouse,
have being constructed this year where Phan Imex was to build the
remaining two residential high-rises.
Cheang Sreychorn, a 33-year-old
villager, said residents were angry to see signs advertising a new
motorcycle business on the warehouse.
“We will not allow the company
to do as it wants,” she said as villagers carried kitchenware and
bedding into the “Borei Keila Motorcycle Store”, shortly before its
signs were ripped down.
Ee Sarom, program co-ordinator of the NGO Sahmakum Teang Tnaut, said he hoped Subedi would act on his word.
“We hope [he] will raise this
issue with the government and push for an urgent solution aimed at
reducing this poverty,” he said.
Phan Imex owner Suy Sophan could not be reached for comment yesterday.




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