In this Oct. 6, 2012 photo, local workers adjust stones at another dam
construction site by China National Heavy Machinery Corporation on
the Tatay River in Koh Kong province, some 210 kilometers (130 miles)
west of Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
The National Assembly has approved the construction of a
hydroelectric dam on the Sesan River, renewing concerns of villagers who will
be displaced by the dam and of activists who say it will disrupt important fish
migrations.
Some 5,000 people will have to be moved once the 8-kilometer dam is built. In
the National Assembly last week, opposition lawmakers said they wanted the
construction of the Lower Sesan II Dam postponed while more impact assessments
are made and while villagers are properly helped in their relocation.
In a Feb. 15 vote, 82 to 8, the Assembly agreed on the law authorizing the
government to pay the Hydropower Lower Sesan II Company for construction of the
dam. The proposed 400-megawatt dam, to be built 20 kilometers from the
provincial capital of Stung Treng province, will see construction begin later
this year and will cost $782 million. The Hydropower Lower Sesan II Company is
a joint venture between the Royal Group and Chinese and Vietnamese firms.
However, in the session, Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker Nhem Sovann said the law
should not be adopted “until there is a comprehensive study and the
participation of the local community.”
Minister of Industry, Mines and Energy Suy Sem responded to the Assembly, saying
an impact study has already been undertaken and that the dam would provide
social and economic value at minimal cost. Civil society organizations and the
opposition dispute this.
According to a 2009 environmental impact assessment, the dam’s reservoir will
submerge hundreds of thousands of hectares of forest and agricultural land,
displacing around 5,000 people from seven villages. Critics say it could
endanger species of fish that migrant along the Sesan River.
Three separate organizations—the NGO Forum, the Culture and Environment
Preservation Association and the 3S Rivers Protection Network—said in a joint
statement that the law only recognizes six villages and around 800 families,
versus the findings of the impact assessment. The NGO Forum says more than
1,300 families will be affected by the dam.
Chhit Sam Ath, executive director of the NGO Forum, told reporters on the
sideline of the Assembly session that the law was not drafted with full
consultation of local communities. He also said some statistics provided in the
draft do not fully recognize the 2009 assessment. “So wider participation and
transparency of the law are limited,” he said.
While the law was being passed, 12 representatives from the local communities
around the proposed dam site arrived in Phnom Penh to submit a letter to the
Chinese Embassy and the National Assembly, requesting the dam’s construction be
postponed, or canceled altogether.
“And [we] requested other power alternatives besides building dams on
tributaries,” said Nen Sukit, a representative of the communities, which came
from Ratanakkiri and Stung Treng provinces.
So far, there has been no response to the letter.
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