Home Equality & Justice Cambodia begins evicting floating homes amid protests

Cambodia begins evicting floating homes amid protests

The government said the communities amount to floating slums that are eyesores and health hazards

Cambodia’s capital of Phnom Penh began overseeing the dismantling of “floating home” communities on the banks of the Tonle Sap River.

For generations, the floating wooden houseboats of Phnom Penh have been both livelihood and way of life for mostly ethnic Vietnamese families, home to fish farming and interconnected by warrens of hand-built bridges interspersed with sunken poles and small boats.

“Our ancestors have always been here,” said Kith Dong, 54, as he and relatives dismantled his home consisting of a grayling timber platform with a sloped tin roof off the shore of Phnom Penh’s Prek Pnov district.

He said the city order did not give his family enough time to relocate. “If they extended by a few more months, we would have time to build a home,” he said.

The Phnom Penh Municipality said the communities amount to floating slums that are eyesores and health hazards, with trash bags and raw sewage floating alongside the houseboats.

Si Vutha, head of Prek Pnov district’s land management office, oversaw the dismantling starting last week.

“There are 316 homes that we have to evict today. This really affects the beauty of the city, the environment. You sit on a boat, it smells very bad,” Si Vutha told Reuters.

- Newsletter -

Si Vutha said the evictions are intended to clean up the capital ahead of Phnom Penh’s hosting of the 2023 Southeast Asian Games, as the newly built stadium is only a few kilometers away.

“There are hundreds of viruses here, foreign tourists come and see our country like this?” he said.

Residents demolish their floating houses on the Tonle Sap river after they were ordered to leave within one week of being notified by local authorities in Prek Pnov district, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on June 12, 2021. (Reuters photo)

But residents said the crackdown came too soon and questioned why they needed to move with the games still more than a year away.

Si Vutha did not specify why the cleanup had to come now, and Phnom Penh city spokesperson Met Meas Pheakdey could not be reached for comment.

Dang Van Chou, 57, moved to Cambodia more than 20 years ago from neighboring Vietnam,

His family makes a living farming fish in enclosures off their dwelling, but this year’s fish are too small to sell to raise money for a move, he said.

“I don’t know where to go, I don’t have any land,” he said.

© Copyright LiCAS.news. All rights reserved. Republication of this article without express permission from LiCAS.news is strictly prohibited. For republication rights, please contact us at: [email protected]

Support Our Mission

We work tirelessly each day to tell the stories of those living on the fringe of society in Asia and how the Church in all its forms - be it lay, religious or priests - carries out its mission to support those in need, the neglected and the voiceless.
We need your help to continue our work each day. Make a difference and donate today.

Latest