THE CROOKS IN CAMBODIA ARE THESE MEN : SOK AN & Khaou Chuly
 
Friday, June 19, 2009

Villagers curse Mondulkiri plantation 




Khaou Chuly, the Sino-Cambodian tycoon cursed by ethnic Phnong

A Phnong woman attends a traditional ceremony Tuesday in Mondulkiri's Pouteut 
village to appease their ancestors and protect their land from a local rubber 
plantation. (Photo by: Bill Herod)

Friday, 19 June 2009
Written by Sam Rith and Sebastian Strangio 
The Phnom Penh Post


Ethnic Phnong community resorts to tradition in dispute with Franco-Cambodian 
rubber venture.

ETHNIC Phnong villagers in Mondulkiri's Bou Sra commune held traditional 
ceremonies Tuesday to appease ancestral spirits and curse a joint 
French-Cambodian rubber plantation they say has robbed them of large tracts of 
communal farmland, participants said.

The ceremony took place in Pouteut village, which lies inside a 10,000-hectare 
rubber concession granted to the Khaou Chuly Co and French rubber giant Socfin, 
they said.

"Residents sacrificed a buffalo, dedicating it to the spirits of our ancestors 
and the neak ta spirits who look after the forests, to help protect our 
remaining land," said a Phnong community representative who did not want to be 
named.

"According to our traditional beliefs, if the company continues clearing the 
land [it] will meet problems."

Bill Herod, an adviser for Village Focus Cambodia who works with Phnong youth, 
said the ceremony, which took place next to a large rubber company excavator, 
began with the beating of traditional gongs before the buffalo was sacrificed 
and its head placed on an altar.

After village elders drank ceremonial rice wine from earthen jars, the 
villagers then cooked and ate the meat, he added, sharing it with local police.

Pouteut village is one of seven villages in Bou Sra commune that claim to have 
been affected by the rubber companies, which were granted their first 
2,500-hectare concession in late 2007 and began clearing forest early last year.

Tensions came to a head in December, when angry villagers, claiming the 
destruction of spirit forests and rotational farmland, torched and smashed 
machinery belonging to Khaou Chuly Co in the commune's Bou Sra village.

"If the company continues clearing the land [it] will have problems."So far, 
the community representative said, Socfin has cleared about 200 hectares of 
rotational farmland in the vicinity of Pouteut village.

"We want to keep the farmland and forests not only for human beings, but also 
for wild animals.... We do not want to allow any company, whether Khaou Chuly 
or the French company, to clear the land and forest any further," he said.

Saving the situation
When contacted Wednesday, Socfin General Manager Philippe Monnin declined to 
comment on the situation.

But in an interview at Bou Sra in April, he told the Post the company was 
trying to enlist the support of international development agencies - including 
the French government's French Development Agency - to offset the negative 
impacts on local communities.

Mondulkiri Deputy Governor Yim Lux said Socfin was offering compensation to 
people who had lost farmland, but added that villagers were making confusing 
claims.

"We have already measured the land that belongs to them, but they are claiming 
more forest land that does not belong to them. For this, they have to adhere to 
the law," he said.

But Herod said that despite the relaxed atmosphere Tuesday, locals were still 
uncertain about the rubber plantation and what its long-term impact would be.

"[The Phnong] didn't know which way to turn. They are still unclear about 
exactly what's happening ... or where they're supposed to farm," he said.

"From the perspective of the [Phnong], the giant machines ploughing their 
forests, rice fields, gardens, graves and other spiritual sites are weapons of 
mass destruction."
Click to Read More...

Lighting Scheme Has ‘No Affect’ on Temples: Council 




(Photo: Dap-news)

By Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
19 June 2009


Council Minister Sok An told the National Assembly Friday that a system of 
outdoor lighting at the Angkor Wat temples will not hurt the ancient structures 
and could be a boon to tourism.

“The heat from the lamps is 50,000-times weaker than the sun and less than the 
moon,” Sok An said, citing lengthy studies prior to the beginning of the scheme.
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