The Phnom Penh Post Staff
Following the imprisonment of 15 land activists, more
than 100 Cambodian and international NGOs, unions and community groups
have cautioned the World Bank that any resumption in new lending to the
Cambodian government would send a dangerous signal. Their letter to its president, Robert Zoellick, and its president-elect, Kim Yong-jim, is reprinted in its entirety below.
It has recently come to our attention that the World Bank is
considering ending its suspension of new loans to the Royal Government
of Cambodia (RGC) and preparing an Interim Strategy Note to facilitate
new lending. We, the undersigned organisations, write to express our
deeply held view that, despite some positive developments regarding the
Boeung Kak Lake case, now is the wrong time to end the suspension. Doing
so would not only risk undoing gains made, but would also send a
dangerous message to the RGC in light of the spate of recent killings
and unwarranted jailing of activists, including Boeung Kak community
leaders. We believe that these appalling events call not for reward and
the injection of more funds, but rather a coordinated and public
condemnation by the international community, including the World Bank.
The past month has seen a series of shocking and inexcusable events
in Cambodia. On April 26, Chut Wutty, a tireless environmental activist
was shot dead by armed forces after taking two journalists to a logging
area in Koh Kong province. On May 16, Heng Chantha, a 14-year-old girl
was killed by a soldier during a brutal forced eviction of a village in
Kratie province.
On May 22 female residents of Boeung Kak staged a peaceful
demonstration on the sand dunes that cover what was once a village on
the shores of the lake. The demonstration followed thwarted efforts by
one family to demarcate the boundary of their home, which had been
submerged in sand during the filling of the lake. While singing about
their plight, the protesters were surrounded by a mixed force of
military police, anti-riot police and district guards, who used violence
to break up the demonstration and then arrested 13 women, including a
72-year-old. A video clip of these events is available at this link:
www.licadho-cambodia.org
On May 24th the women were convicted by the Phnom Penh court on
baseless charges of inciting others to take land illegally and obtaining
land illegally. Seven of the women were sentenced to two years and six
months in prison, five were sentenced to two years and the 72-year-old
woman, Nget Khun, was sentenced to a term of one year. During the trial,
the police arrested two more Boeung Kak community representatives who
were prepared to testify as witnesses for the 13 women on trial.
We respectfully appeal to you not to authorise re-engagement by the
bank with the RGC under these circumstances and to continue the
suspension until a more strategic and judicious moment for engagement
arises.
We regard the issuance of land titles to 631 Boeung Kak families
earlier this year following the Prime Minister’s sub decree granting the
remaining residents 12.44 hectares of land around the former lake as a
significant human-rights victory. We understand that the principled
stand taken by the World Bank following the Inspection Panel’s findings
of non-compliance with operational policies during the design and
implementation of the Land Management and Administration Project played
an integral part in achieving this outcome. We applaud the bold
leadership of the president in this situation and consider this wise
decision-making to have contributed in no small part to the legal
security and piece of mind that these 631 Cambodian families now enjoy.
Yet, we remain deeply concerned about the 3,500 Boeung Kak families,
who had already reluctantly accepted the inadequate compensation package
and left their lakeside homes under extreme duress, and who now suffer
severe hardship trying to make ends meet each day. We are also concerned
about the 94 families that have been excluded from the benefits of the
Prime Minister’s sub decree and remain under the threat of forced
eviction. Together these families represent an estimated 85 percent of
all Boeung Kak residents who submitted the Request to the World Bank
Inspection Panel.
We are aware that there may be some entry points for UN-HABITAT to
support these displaced and excluded families. We urge the World Bank to
take all possible action to facilitate this support, including through
high-level dialogue with relevant agencies and provision of financing
for remedial action. We also note that there may be other organisations
in a position to operationalise aspects of the Bank Management’s January
2011 Action Plan, including financing measures that respond to the
needs of tenure insecure and resettled communities from the Boeung Kak
area.
The bank should not passively accept the lack of progress in
supporting displaced and excluded groups to date as a fait accompli.
Rather, it should proactively work to identify possible interlocutors to
remedy harm done, and as bank Management itself commits to do, “make
every effort to implement the Action Plan”. If necessary, this should
entail the provision of unilateral Bank support to displaced families
through a trust fund and administered through an NGO or other agency.
The community itself has appealed to president Zoellick to ensure a
fair resolution for the displaced and excluded families before the bank
provides any further financing to the RGC. The public statements made by
bank representatives in August 2011 have led the community to believe
that this would be the case. We note that country director Annette Dixon
stated at the time: “Until an agreement is reached with the residents
of Boeung Kak Lake, we do not expect to provide any new lending to
Cambodia.”
The World Bank lending freeze provided a powerful boost to the
community’s five-year struggle, which has become an inspiration to
marginalised communities throughout Cambodia facing dislocation from
their homes, land and the natural resources that they depend upon for
survival.
We believe that re-engaging now, particularly following the unlawful
arrest and imprisonment of Boeung Kak community leaders, would send a
dangerous message of approval to the RGC and undermine the community’s
hope that they will not be left alone in their stand against the
powerful forces of injustice. Commitments made by the World Bank, either
privately or publicly, should not be reneged upon, or else the
credibility of the bank and its commitment to its safeguard policies and
contractual requirements on borrowers to respect them will be seriously
undermined. Conversely, we believe that if the bank maintains the
freeze until a comprehensive agreement is reached with the requesters,
and the brave human rights defenders of Boeung Kak Lake are released
from prison, it will contribute immeasurably to the twin long-term goals
of a more just and equitable Cambodian society and a more accountable
World Bank.
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