Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Cambodia: Sesan Dam Holdout Families Petition Ministry for Intervention

Cambodia: Sesan Dam Holdout Families Petition Ministry for Intervention

Representatives of holdout families who are refusing to evacuate two Stung
Treng province villages that will be flooded by the Lower Sesan II dam
traveled to Phnom Penh to petition the Mines and Energy Ministry for help on
Friday.

"We wanted the Mines and Energy Ministry to intervene," Sarun Sokhom, one of
the seven representatives, said on Sunday.

The petition had been received and passed to the ministry's general
department of energy and would be discussed with provincial authorities
"soon," said Sour Ponnarith, a general deputy director of the ministry's
department of general affairs.

But while provincial government spokesman Men Kong said the villagers'
request that only some of the dam's 10 floodgates be closed permanently next
month was not an option, he said officials would try to "find a solution for
the families" but would follow procedure where necessary.

The more than 100 holdout families also asked for forces deployed to assist
with emergency evacuation to leave Sesan district's Srekor and Kbal Romeas
villages and for authorities to reopen health services, schools, roads and
bridges in the area, according to Ms. Sokhom.

When testing of the 400-megawatt dam began in mid-June, villagers ignored
authorities' warnings that their homes would be flooded and insisted on
remaining on their land.

Some villagers temporarily moved to a nearby hill when floodwaters inundated
some homes, but returned when the water subsided. The rest of the roughly
5,000 families who live on land that is expected to become the dam's
36,000-hectare reservoir agreed to go to relocation sites set up by the
government.

Public services were removed from Srekor and Kbal Romeas shortly after
testing began and intimidation from the officials allegedly sent to help
increased, Ms. Sokhom said.

"The people want the authorities to provide the public services and we also
asked the authorities to stop discriminating against the ethnic minority
communities in the two areas," she added. "They are interrupting the
people's lives."

Mr. Kong, the spokesman, denied the intimidation accusation. He said
officials had contacted Royal Group, one of two companies developing the
dam, after receiving the request for some gates to remain open.

"They refused, because they cannot produce power if the gates are not
closed," he said.

Um Reth, a representative for Royal Group, could not be reached for comment.

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Link to Original Article:
https://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/sesan-dam-holdout-families-petition-minis
try-for-intervention-134087/


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John Diecker
APT Consulting Group Co., Ltd.

www.aptthailand.com

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