Home » Campanha Despejo Zero » Alerta Despejos Zero: denuncie a ameaças de despejos forçados e demolição! » Boeung Kak Lake, Phnom Penh

Mostra/Nascondi il menu

Campanha Despejo Zero

Boeung Kak Lake, Phnom Penh

Titulo:
Boeung Kak Lake, Phnom Penh
Tipo de despejo:
Devido a obras de infra estrutura e mega projetos , Devido a políticas de desenvolvimento urbano , Devido a privatizaçao do setor de habitação e terras públicas
Área geográfica:
Asia
País:
Cambodia
Cidade:
Phnom Penh
Localidade/Bairro:
Boeung Kak Lake
Nome da comunidade ou do núcleo familiar ameaçado de despejo:
Boeung Kak Lake Villages 1, 2, 4, 6, 20, 21, 22, 23, and 24
Número estimado das pessoas afetadas (em número):
20000
Grau posse:
Inquilinos , Propietário
Características econômicas:
Misto
Características sociais:
Nenhum destes
Grupo de idades:
Mistos
Informações sobre a história e antecedentes do caso:
Spanning 90 hectares in central north Phnom Penh, Boeung Kak Lake is one of the only large open spaces left in Cambodia’s capital city. Prior to the recent evictions, approximately 4,000 families lived on and around the lake, with many depending on the lake for their livelihood. Families have been living around the lake since the early 1980s, when they returned to the city following the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime. Most of these families have legal rights to their land under Cambodia’s 2001 Land Law.

Despite the legitimate claims to the land of many of the residents around Boeung Kak, when the titling team from the World Bank-financed Land Management and Administration Project (LMAP) adjudicated the area in early 2007, the residents were denied title en masse. In the same month, the Cambodian government entered into a 99-year lease agreement with a private developer, Shukaku Inc., over 133 hectares including the lake and surrounding areas. Shukaku Inc. is headed by Lao Meng Khin, a Senator and major donor to the ruling Cambodian People’s Party, who is also director of the controversial logging company Pheapimex.

Families living in the development zone began facing pressure and intimidation to leave the area in August 2008, when the developer commenced filling in the lake as part of its development plans. While few details about the development have been made public, it is estimated that approximately 20,000 people will be displaced. Included in this figure are the more than 1,500 families that have already been evicted without their land rights being properly adjudicated and acknowledged. In the absence of any legal protections, these families accepted inadequate compensation under conditions of duress. This was in direct violation of Cambodian domestic law and international human rights law, as well as the World Bank’s Policy on Involuntary Resettlement, which the Cambodian government was contractually bound to respect in conjunction with LMAP.

Water levels in the remainder of the lake, which continues to be filled in with sand, have been rising since the onset of the rainy season in Cambodia, reaching critical levels in late August and inundating more than 1,000 residents’ homes with sewage-contaminated water. Residents have had to wade through knee and hip-high, unsanitary water to reach their homes, while others were forced to seek shelter elsewhere, as their homes were uninhabitable due to the flooding. Residents and local rights groups believe that the continued pumping of sand into the lake, and the inefficient drainage measures, indicate that the flooding is a deliberate measure to increase pressure on residents to move away from the area.

Nevertheless, since July 2010, residents have begun again to discuss their own alternatives to the development company’s plan to remove them from the area, including for some households, the demand that the government issue land title deeds for the land they currently occupy, and for others, the demand for a land-sharing arrangement that would enable them to settle on a smaller plot of land in one area of the development project. Since August, residents have stepped up their advocacy to demand that the government address their problems in a series of demonstrations targeting the Municipality of Phnom Penh. Unfortunately, as in all previous efforts to appeal to the authorities to find a satisfactory resolution to the conflict, these demands appear to have also fallen upon deaf ears. Moreover, the scale of violence and intimidation deployed against residents has also escalated and, in several recent incidents, their peaceful demonstrations have been violently suppressed by government security forces.

As the people of Boeung Kak Lake are trying to stand up, assert their housing rights and demand justice, the developer, Shukaku Inc., with the collusion of the Cambodian government, is pushing ahead with what amounts to the de facto forced eviction of the remaining residents around the lake by inundating their houses with sand and water. In early November 2010, Boeung Kak Lake Village 1 was buried under sand, making it the third out of nine villages around the lake to have been evicted.
Niveis da causa e responsabilidades:
Local , Nacional
Violações dos artigos e normas internacionais:
Convenção Internacional sobre a Proteção dos Direitos de Todos os Trabalhadores Migrantes e Membros das suas Famílias , Convenção Internacional relativa ao estatuto dos refugiados (1951)
As razões dadas para o despejo, oficial e nao oficial:
February 2007: Municipality of Phnom Penh signs a 99 year lease agreement with Shukaku, Inc., giving it the right to develop a 133 hectare area including Boeung Kak Lake that had previously been classified as state public property.

August 2008: Shukaku Inc. begins to pump sand into Boeung Kak Lake in preparation for commercial development, pressuring residents to leave, as the sand filling causes flooding and undermines the stability of houses built on the water.

November - December 2009: Under conditions of duress, residents of Boeung Kak Lake Villages 2 and 4 are compelled to move away from the area without adequate compensation or resettlement.

August 2010 - present: Escalating use of violence by the authorities to disrupt and disperse Boeung Kak Lake residents exercising their right to peaceful demonstration.

November 2010: De facto forced eviction of residents of Boeung Kak Lake Village 1 by directing a flow of sand and water toward their houses, resulting in the houses being buried.
Principais acontecimentos ocorridos em conexão com o despejo (datas, ano e hora):
N/A
Nome das autoridades que estão ou planejam realizar o despejo:
Municipality of Phnom Penh, which is colluding with the developer, Shukaku, Inc.
Nome das organizações envolvidas, suas forças e fraquezas, suas abordagens para o problema:
N/A
Nome das agências, ONGs ou instituições de apoio que trabalham na comunidade:
Housing Rights Task Force
Medidas tomadas ou propostas até o momento pela comunidade e / ou pelas agências ou ONGs que apóiam para resistir ao despejo e / ou para buscar soluções alternativas:
The residents of Boeung Kak Lake have filed legal complaints, repeatedly petitioned the Municipality of Phnom Penh, and held several small-scale demonstrations targeting the relevant government agencies. Furthermore, they have petitioned the UN Secretary-General, developed their own alternative plan for settlement, and attracted substantial media coverage.
Alternativas ou soluções possíveis oferecidas ou propostas pelas autoridades locais ou nacionais às comunidades afetadas:
Compensação , Realocação
Estratégias e acções futuras previstas ou discutidas para lidar com o caso ou outros despejos:
Continued advocacy to stop the sand filling, stop the evictions, and persuade the government to open negotiations with the residents.
Datas importantes previstas para (precisar de que se trata e quando vai ocorrer: dia, mês, ano):
N/A
Autor (nome, endereço e responsabilidade):
N/A
Organização / relatórios organizações:
N/A
Relacionamento com a Aliança Internacional de Habitantes (AIH) das organizações comunitarias apresentando o caso:
Outro
Carregar imagem:
Data do relatório:
13/11/2010
Editor:
Jeff Wong