Two Kraol Indigenous People Accused of Encroaching on Ministry Land Fail to Appear in Court

Two Kraol Indigenous People Accused of Encroaching on Ministry Land Fail to Appear in Court

The Kratie Provincial Court summoned two Kraol indigenous people from Srae Chis commune to appear in court for questioning this week for allegedly illegally encroaching on protected areas, but the two villagers did not show up.

Read the full article at: Two Kraol Indigenous People Accused of Encroaching on Ministry Land Fail to Appear in Court | CamboJA News

Environment Ministry Asks Kraol Indigenous People to Apologize For Burning Down Building

Satellite Data Shows Protected Areas Faced Brunt of Deforestation in 2022

New satellite data reveals that Cambodia’s remaining dense forests were further depleted last year, with four major protected areas and national parks registering higher deforestation than in 2021.

 

Read full article at: Satellite Data Shows Protected Areas Faced Brunt of Deforestation in 2022 | CamboJA News

Cambodia: China’s ‘Belt and Road’ Dam is a Rights Disaster

A large-scale, Chinese-financed hydroelectric dam in northeastern Cambodia, completed in 2018, has undermined the lives and livelihoods of thousands of Indigenous and ethnic minority people, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The Lower Sesan 2 dam, one of Asia’s widest dams, flooded large areas upstream of the confluence of the Sesan and Srepok Rivers, two tributaries of the Mekong River.

Read the full article: https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/08/10/cambodia-chinas-belt-and-road-dam-rights-disaster

Further reading:

https://www.ft.com/content/731211dd-bd9a-4a07-8bf1-f46fe88fc8a5

https://www.rt.com/news/531661-cambodia-china-dam-human-rights/

https://www.globalconstructionreview.com/news/chinese-funded-hydropower-dam-cambodia-rights-disa/

https://www.rfa.org/english/news/cambodia/dam-08132021191857.html

https://4fag.com/cambodia-s-chinese-financed-dam-violated-rights-of-thousands-of-indigenous-people-report-40230.html

https://www.voanews.com/east-asia-pacific/china-and-cambodia-urged-rethink-dam-compensation-packages

https://www.then24.com/2021/08/12/hrw-report-chinese-funded-dam-in-cambodia-violates-the-rights-of-thousands-of-indigenous-peoples/

https://english.alarabiya.net/News/world/2021/08/10/China-financed-Cambodia-dam-destroyed-livelihoods-of-tens-of-thousands-Report

https://www.ucanews.com/news/compensation-review-urged-for-people-displaced-by-cambodian-dam/93641#

https://www.visiontimes.com/2021/08/14/chinese-built-dam-in-cambodia-creates-a-human-rights-disaster.html

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/8/11/china-belt-and-road-dam-a-rights-disaster-for-cambodia-report

Indigenous people in Mondulkiri disappointed with the French court’s rejection of their lawsuits

Indigenous people in Mondulkiri Province express frustration with the French court’s dismissal of their previous lawsuit against Bolloré and ordered them to pay a fine of over 20,000 euros to the parent company.

The disappointment comes after a court in Paris, France, on July 2 dismissed a lawsuit filed by an indigenous group in Mondulkiri Province and ordered more than 20,000 euro payments to the French Bolloré.

In 2019, nine indigenous representatives sued in a French court after filing a lawsuit in 2015 against Bolloré, a major donor to three companies, including Coviphama, Varanasi and Setheikola, but the three companies sold shares to Socfin.

In a statement issued by the Bunong community of Mondulkiri Province on July 14, 2021, 97 families called the decision of the Nanterre court in Paris “unfair and unacceptable.”

Indigenous groups said in a statement that they could not accept the French court’s ruling that the Bunongs in Busra had no right to occupy the land under Cambodia’s laws. They call such arguments in violation of Cambodian land law and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

According to the statement, Bolloré, the current owner of Socfin in Cambodia, has invested in rubber plantations on the plantations and spiritual forests of the indigenous people of Bunong from 2008 to the present.

The same source claimed that after receiving the investment right, the company cleared the forest, the spiritual forests, taboo forests, and the daily food source of the indigenous people without settling compensation for them.

In addition to the forest clearing, 15 communities have been sued in court and some are still in custody because the company has sued them after they protested against the clearing of land and the forest on which they depend.

Mondulkiri Indigenous Community Network Land and Forestry Human Rights Coordinator Kreung Tola said they and their lawyers had already appealed Nanterre’s decision to the Court of Appeal, hoping that the supreme court will help find justice for them.

“We hope that the Court of Appeal in France will judge, refer to indigenous-related laws and consider international law,” he said. So we will receive fair because our people are definitely victimized; we are the real owners of the land, not like the French court we are not the people living in Busra commune, Pichreda district, Mondulkiri. So we can not accept their rejection.”

ADHOC Community Empowerment Program Officer Pen Bunnar considers the French court’s decision to be unfair to indigenous peoples. On the other hand, the factors that lead to indigenous peoples suffering like this, he said, are because the government provides economic land concessions to companies without studying the impact on the people.

“That’s right,” he said. Each concession must have an impact study! And it is clear that our leaders have said not to trade rubber trees for the dense forest, so we see that it is contrary to the government’s commitment to providing economic concessions not to affect dense forest and semi-dense forest, especially indigenous areas, forest land, and burial areas! “And it not only affects the forest, but it also affects the ancestral traditions that they have preserved for years.”

Mr. Pen Bunnar urged the Cambodian government to study, research and address the impact on the people before deciding to grant land concessions to any company to develop so that people do not suffer further.

Original story at: https://vodkhmer.news/2021/07/15/indigenous-people-express-frustration-over-french-court-rejecting-their-lawsuit/

More reading((https://vodkhmer.news/2021/07/15/indigenous-people-express-frustration-over-french-court-rejecting-their-lawsuit/))((https://www.farmlandgrab.org/post/view/30377))((https://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/bunong-group-attends-french-court-hearing-over-land-dispute))((https://www.fidh.org/IMG/pdf/summary_report_cambodia_khmer_novembre_2011.pdf))((http://www.ecosocc.gov.kh/images/regulations/20190826091603_Anukret_231_BK_2013.pdf))

Mondulkiri’s tourism master plan green lit, waiting for final approval

The draft for Mondulkiri’s tourism development master plan 2021-2035 received endorsement from the National Tourism Development Committee according to press release on June 29.

Read the full story at: https://www.khmertimeskh.com/884075/mondulkiris-tourism-master-plan-green-lit-waiting-for-final-approval/

Asiatic golden cat caught on camera in Ratanakkiri

The rare Asiatic golden cat has been detected in natural protected areas in the Kingdom’s northeastern province of Ratanakkiri.

Ministry of Environment spokesman Neth Pheaktra said on June 28 that according to images collected by specialists, the cats were captured on automatic cameras in Ratanakkiri’s Virachey National Park.

Pheaktra said Virachey is an ASEAN national heritage park and is rich in biodiversity. The research team for the ministry’s Department of Conservation of the East Mekong River Area had placed cameras there from March to May and caught many images of rare animal species.

Read the full story at: https://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/asiatic-golden-cat-caught-camera-ratanakkiri

First commercial gold mine online

Australian miner Renaissance Minerals (Cambodia) Ltd on June 21 began the commercial operation of its $120 million Okvau Gold Project in the northeastern province of Mondulkiri, becoming the Kingdom’s first gold producer.

Located in the Okvau area in southwestern Mondulkiri province’s Keo Seima district, the mine’s processing plant was inaugurated by Minister of Mines and Energy Suy Sem.

Sem said the facility started processing ore from the mine, casting gold alloy bars and stamping its first dore bar on June 21. Construction of the plant and key infrastructure for the site began in mid-2020, he noted.

“The gold mining site and processing plant have the capacity to process nearly two million tonnes [of ore] a year,” he said.

Reportedly able to produce dore bars containing 90 per cent gold, Renaissance’s operation will be in compliance with recognised international standards.

An earlier report outlined an initial Life of Mine (LOM) of eight years, with an average of three tonnes of gold produced each year.

Read the full story at: https://www.phnompenhpost.com/business/first-commercial-gold-mine-online

Elephants still have presence in Kingdom: ministry

ASIAN elephants maintain a significant presence in the Kingdom, despite indications of very high extinction risk, according to Ministry of Environment spokesman Neth Pheaktra on July 2.

Also known by their scientific name Elephas maximus, the pachyderms have been classified as ‘endangered’ in the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s (IUCN) Red List since 1986.

Pheaktra pointed out that cameras in the Kingdom’s protected natural area have captured the giant mammals on numerous occasions, even calves.

“These calves are the hope of conservationists and environmentalists in Cambodia and the result of forest and habitat protection, as well as efforts to safeguard the Asian elephant,” Pheaktra said.

Asian elephants are the largest living land animal in Asia, with tusks that can grow as long as 1m, according to experts. They have five toes on each foot, but typically only have four nails on their back feet, though not without exception.

There are an estimated 400-600 elephants in the Kingdom, mainly concentrated in the Cardamom mountain range, the northern plateau of the Tonle Sap Lake and the eastern highlands of Mondulkiri province, which are rich in biodiversity, according to Pheaktra.

He said more than 70 elephants have been domesticated.

As a token of its commitment to protecting the dwindling population of the hulking animals, the Kingdom in 2005 created the Cambodian Elephant Conservation Group, he said.

And providing further evidence of devotion, Pheaktra noted that the 2020-2029 Action Plan for the Conservation of Asian Elephants was set up with a budget of around $40.5 million from the government, NGOs and development partners.

Source: https://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/elephants-still-have-presence-kingdom-ministry

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