(Radio Free Asia)
2012-08-03
Cambodia sends soldiers to help provide land titles to villagers lacking the documents.
Cambodian authorities have dispatched soldiers to villages to help
people register their land in a bid to ameliorate widespread land
disputes in the country, but rights groups say the move does not go far
enough.
The Ministry of Land Management, and the National Committee for Land
Dispute Resolutions this week sent 700 soldiers to work as volunteers to
register the land for the villagers and help them obtain land titles.
The project is effectively aimed at helping survey and demarcate the
land for villagers who are the actual owners of the land but have no
documents to back their claims.
The soldiers were the second batch in the project after authorities
sent 1,100 soldiers to measure land and provide land titles to 35,000
families in 20 provinces.
The project is funded personally by Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has
called it a “historic” mission to “eliminate land disputes” in the
country.
Hun Sen’s son Hun Manit, deputy secretary general of the National
Committee for Land Dispute Resolution, addressed the soldiers on
Thursday, warning them not to take bribes while registering the land.
“Your tasks are not to resolve land disputes or play the role of
judge. You are assigned to measure the land according to the people’s
legal ownership,” Hun Manit said.
“We should not be a headache for the villagers; we must remain innocent,” he said.
Land disputes are an everyday occurrence in Cambodia, where rights
groups say some 300,000 people have been forced off their land over the
past decade.
The government has granted millions of hectares of land in
concessions to private developers, in some cases pitting residents
against developers and sparking protests.
Hun Sen said the project will help ease land disputes, warning
critics on Wednesday not to accuse the soldiers of taking sides in the
disputes.
“The soldiers will measure land that has [clear] legal ownership, and
land that remains under dispute is not part of their work,” he said.
Long-term solution needed
But NGO and opposition party members were wary that the project,
which is funded with Hun Sen’s personal money, was part of a ploy to
gain political support for the ruling Cambodian People’s Party.
Sia Phearum, director of the Housing Rights Task Force, an NGO
coalition that works to prevent forced evictions and housing rights
violations in Cambodia, said sending soldiers to register land would not
be enough to solve the issue of land disputes in the long run.
“From what I have observed, the prime minister’s effort is not sustainable,” he said.
“This is just for showing that the prime minister wants to put an end to land disputes.”
He said land disputes should be resolved through the court system and
that the government should focus on making existing state resources
more efficient in dealing with them.
Cambodia’s land issues date from the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime,
which forced large-scale evacuations and relocations throughout the
country, leaving who owned what land under question.
This was followed by mass confusion over land rights and the
formation of squatter communities when the refugees returned in the
1990’s after a decade of civil war.
Hun Sen has publicly spoken out against an increasing number of land
seizures. But rights groups questioned his commitment to protecting the
Cambodian people from illegal land grabs and forced evictions since he
authorized land concessions to three private companies in May, just
after announcing a moratorium on further grants.
Reported by Sok Serey for RFA's Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
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