Skip to main content

Villagers in Phnom Penh's Russey Keo meet with governor to discuss road

Resident's of Phnom Penh's northern Russey Keo district meet with Governor Chea Pisey yesterday to air their grievances over planned road construction. Sreng Meng Srun

Soth Koemsoeun | The Phnom Penh Post 
Publication date 06 March 2018 | 10:22 ICT

The governor of Phnom Penh's northern Russey Keo district met yesterday with hundreds of villagers to hear their grievances over the planned construction of a road – and potential displacement of residents – along an existing unused stretch of railroad track.

Governor Chea Pisey clarified that the planned 4.6-kilometre stretch of road will be 30 metres wide, with an additional 15 metres on each side of the road slated to be cleared for sidewalks. The road would run through Kilometre 6, Russey Keo and Tuol Sangke communes.

Keng Narun, one of the representatives of the approximately 1,000 affected families, said it was the additional 15 metres the government required on either side of the road that left locals most unhappy, as they may result in some families either having to move elsewhere or losing a portion of their land.

Pisey declined to comment after the meeting.

Municipal Governor Khoung Sreng on Thursday visited the site of the construction and promised compensation for affected villagers.

Siak Tepy from the Housing Rights Task Force said he expects authorities to solve the case smoothly given that it is an election year.

“They do not want the solution like in Boeung Kak or other chronic land disputes and they are gravely concerned about this [image] problem,” he said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Hun Sen’s lawyer receives promotion

Ky Tech, lawyer for Prime Minister Hun Sen, speaks with reporters after filing a complaint against former Funcinpec official Lu Lay Sreng last October. Pha Lina Mech Dara | The Phnom Penh Post Publication date 07 March 2018 | 07:32 ICT After leading the legal team that won the widely condemned dissolution of the CNRP at the Supreme Court in November, Ky Tech, lawyer for the Council of Ministers and Prime Minister Hun Sen, has been given a rank equivalent to minister just weeks after he was inducted into the CPP’s Central Committee. Tech has filed a slew of defamation cases against ex-opposition leader Sam Rainsy on behalf of Hun Sen, and represented the Interior Ministry in its legal effort to disband his Cambodia National Rescue Party. A royal decree, signed on February 3 by acting head of state Say Chhum, elevated the lawyer to the rank of minister. Cambodian People’s Party spokesman Sok Eysan said that the promotion reflects Tech’s achievements for the people, including the CNRP’s d...

Im Chaem converts to Christianity

Former Khmer Rouge cadre Im Chaem reads a Bible at a makeshift church next to her house in Anlong Veng district, Oddar Meanchey province on February 25. Tang Chhin Sothy/AFP The Phnom Penh Post | Publication date 06 March 2018 | 07:05 ICT by Suy Se and Sally Mairs, AFP Breaking into a broad smile, former Khmer Rouge cadre Im Chaem describes the relief she has felt since her baptism – part of a new spiritual journey for the 75-year-old after she dodged charges of crimes against humanity. “My mind is fresh and open with blessings from God,” the frail but sharp-tongued grandmother told AFP from her stilted wooden home in a village outside Anlong Veng, the dusty Cambodian border town where the Khmer Rouge fought their last battles. From radical communism to Buddhism and now Christianity, Im Chaem’s latest conversion marks another twist in a tumultuous life. She was until recently facing charges of murder, enslavement, imprisonment and other “inhumane acts” linked to her time as a distr...

Bhutan showcase: Film fest to feature flicks from over the hills and far away

A screenshot from The Prophecy, which will screen this evening at the Cambodia International Film Festival. Photo supplied Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon | The Phnom Penh Post Publication date 07 March 2018 | 07:44 ICT With three feature films at this year’s Cambodia International Film Festival, the Buddhist mountain Kingdom of Bhutan this week gets a rare moment in the spotlight for Phnom Penh’s audiences. In town for the screenings, actor Loday Chophel breaks into a smile when asked how he came to play the leading role in The Prophecy, one of just a handful of movies produced by his country each year. “Can I tell you?” he asks tentatively before launching into an explanation. Born in an eastern roadside village called Wamrong, consisting of no more than 15 houses perched on a mountainside, the 38-year-old recalls that there was just one television set in the whole town, at a local convenience store. “I would go sneak in and watch films,” he says. TV and film was a novelty at the time...