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Topic Review
Offline robin des bois
Membre Honorable
MemberMemberMemberMemberMember


Posts 4922
Registered 23/03/2004
Location Nantes
posted on 23/11/2011 @ 11:42
[PhnomPenhpost et Courrierinternational] CAMBODGE : un pays dépecé

- sur ce lien du PhnompenhPost, :


http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/201111215...ational-news/kingdoms-three-year-land-rush.html-


- cet article en anglais

Kingdom’s three-year land rush .

May Titthara
Monday, 21 November 2011 .

.
Photo : Kampong Speu villagers clash with authorities over land.


The government has granted more than 7 million hectares of land to private companies through concessions since 2008, with 222 private companies claiming more than 2 million hectares alone in economic land concessions, rights group Adhoc said yesterday.

Ouch Leng, head of Adhoc’s land program, said that data from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and government sub-decrees revealed that the government had granted about 2,153,408 hectares in economic land concessions to private companies.

He added that the total figure reached 7,021,771 hectares out of a total 17,651,500 hectares in the Kingdom since 2008, if mining and forest concessions for logging purposes are included.


“If we add all the concessions, including forest concessions and mining concessions, the government granted about 7,021,771 hectares,” he said, adding that about 1,101,080 hectares awarded were classified as protected land.

Ouch Leng said that the government had granted about 3,400,000 hectares in forest concessions and 1,468,363 hectares in mining concessions.

“In 2011, the government granted more land in protected areas than in previous years, now we are left with about 386,294 hectares of land and about 664,624 hectares of forest land [in protected areas],”
he said. “Our land is nearly finished; the government should stop providing economic land concessions to private companies.”

He added that if the government did not stop awarding the land concessions, there would be no resolution to land disputes and the land protest movement would continue.

Ou Virak, director of the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights, said that it was surprising the government had granted so much land to private firms and that the concessions affected many people, including ethnic minorities who had lost their traditional farmland. “It does not just affect people, our forests are also destroyed,” he said.

Chut Wutty, director of NGO Natural Resource Protection Group, said that rubber plantations in particular had grown in popularity and private companies planted rubber trees without thinking about natural resources. “[Concessions] have a serious impact on our villagers of whom 80 per cent depend on rice farming,” he said.

Chan Tong Yives, secretary of state at the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, said yesterday that he was not sure how much land the government had granted to private companies and referred questions to the Ministry’s under secretary of state Ith Nody.

“I think that report is not true, we don’t give that much land,” he said.

- avec ce résumé sur Courrier international

CAMBODGE : un pays dépecé

22.11.2011

© AFP

Depuis 2008, le gouvernement a accordé des concessions à des sociétés privées sur plus de 7 millions d'hectares (le pays s'étend sur 18 millions d'hectares), dont près de 5 millions sont consacrés à l'exploitation forestière ou minière. Telle est la conclusion à laquelle est parvenue l'ONG de défense des droits de l'homme Adhoc et dont The Phnom Penh Post se fait l'écho. "Il ne reste presque plus de terres ; le gouvernement doit cesser d'octroyer ainsi des concessions aux sociétés privées", enjoint Ouch Leng, d'Adhoc.
Outre la menace qui pèse sur les ressources naturelles, ce sont aussi les conséquences sur les habitants privés de terres qui inquiètent la société civile cambodgienne.

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