1 Oct, 2012
ABC
A UN envoy has called on the international community to pay more attention to human rights issues in Cambodia.
The call comes amid ongoing land disputes and legal harassment of activists.
Surya
Subedi is the United Nations Special Rapporteur on human rights in
Cambodia and has submitted a detailed report on land rights to the UN
Human Rights Council, following a visit in May.
"I met with a
number of groups of villages who did not know what was happening to the
land around them, so some of them came to know only when a company
representative appeared on the side [of the road] telling them that
land had granted to them in concession," Mr Subedi told "Then the
villages, they started to protest."
Mr Subedi noted the negative effects of economic land concessions -
which are large parcels of land granted by the government, supposedly
for plantations or other big projects that often result in farmers
being forcibly evicted.
He
says a lack of consultation with farmers about land concessions and a
lack of proper compensation were the main sources of tension.
And he warned Cambodia's economic growth needed to be better managed.
"Overall,
the economic outlook looks better, and when you just look at the crude
figure, but if you start scratching the surface, then you come across
all sorts of inequalities within the country, that has been my
concern," he said.
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