The Cambodian government will organize and pay for the resettlement of the villagers who will be displaced by the Japanese-funded bridge that will connect National Road 1 across the Mekong River in Neak Loeung, Finance Ministry officials said yesterday. The japnese government on Wednesday signed a deal for the $131-million bridged, which will span the Mekong River and provide a direct route from Phnom Penh to Ho Chi Minh City.
Cea Pheng Chheang, secretary of state at the Finance Ministry, said yesterday that though the Japanese government will pay for the bridge, Cambodia is financially responsible for the resettlement of the families and businesses who will have to make way for the two-kilometer bridge. “There is a committee responsible for this work…. We are responsible for that, “Mr. Chheang said, adding that he did not know of the details of the resettlement and referred questions to the chairman of the resettlement committee, Nhean Leng, who was unavailable.
Mr Chheang’s statement contradict those made Wednesday by Lim Sidenine, secretary of state for the Ministry of Transportation, regarding the Japanese government’s role in the resettlement process. “The Japanese counterpart has already provided resettlement and compensation for the impacted people,” Mr Sidenine claimed on Wednesday.
A representative of the Japanese International Cooperation Agency said the Japanese Embassy would issue a statement yesterday clarifying its role in the resettlement but later stated the office would delay releasing the statement until today, after conferring with the Ministry of Transportation and Public Works.
Kobayshi Yukihar, senior representative of JICA, also indicated on Wednesday that the Japanese government is not dealing with resettlement. “We are not involved in the resettlement mater,” Mr. Yukiharu said after a signing ceremony on Wednesday. “We are not in a position to [be] involved in that.”
The resettlement will occur in mid-July, according to a senior official of the Finance Ministry’s resettlement committee who declined to be named. He added that an initial study showed that more than 100 families would be impacted by the Neak Loeung Bridge and the resettlement committee has already contacted affected villagers. “We have to closely evaluate the villagers’ properties before providing fair compensation,” he said.
Additional Reading...
This site runs on the Thesis WordPress Theme
If you’re someone who doesn’t understand a lot of PHP, HTML, or CSS, Thesis will give you a ton of functionality without having to alter any code. For the advanced, Thesis has incredible customization possibilities via extensive hooks and filters. And with so many design options, you can use the template over and over and never have it look like the same site.


{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
Yes I think it is very valuable information to be known by the people affected by the project especially about the impacted properties exactly based on the market price. I would like to request more issues of the related information so that those people can reveal the current situation of construction. Unlikely, the resettlement of the people affected by the national road 1 was cheated by the working group of the project on the fair market price. Therefore, they earned a lot of money from the project by giving less compensation money to the people than those as approved in the project.
Therefore, I would like to request the relevant stakeholders, partners, donors and society share mutual information related to the project.
Best Regards
Ravin