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Chinese-backed hydroelectric dam robs Cambodian villagers of homes and livelihoods

Holdouts of Cambodia’s Lower Sesan II Dam hoping for an eleventh-hour lifeline to maintain ties with their Phnong ethnic roots

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A classroom at the Kbal Romeas village school, in Cambodia’s Stung Treng province, after the floodgates of the Lower Sesan 2 Dam were closed in October to create a reservoir. Pictures: Thomas Cristofoletti

Neang’s family has been torn apart by the controversial Lower Sesan 2 Dam, a massive hydroelectric project on the Sesan River, a major tributary of the Mekong, in northeastern Cambodia. Following years of encouragement, pressure and outright intimidation by authorities, her aunties and uncles – even her husband – all belonging to the Phnong indigenous ethnic group, accepted compensation and moved from their village to a government-designated resettlement site some 20km away.

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As the US$816 million project neared completion, the school and pagoda at Kbal Romeas village, in Stung Treng province, were closed and the road providing access was no longer maintained. Thirty-five-year-old Neang refused to budge, however, and she, three of her four children (one child having moved away with her estranged spouse) and her mother remained.

More than 200 members of 58 other Phnong families did the same.

That was true at least until last October, when the floodgates of the dam – the largest in Cambodia, and which will have a capacity of 400 megawatts when fully operational later this year – were closed to create a 30,000-hectare reservoir, and their homes were swallowed up by the rising waters.

“Even though it’s a bit difficult, we want to stay here,” says Neang, who, though forced to move to higher ground, remains as close as possible to the now-flooded land – a couple of kilometres away – that her family had lived on for genera­tions. “I don’t want to lose my ancestral identity, which was left behind for me by the soul of my grandmother and my grandfather.”

A joint venture between Cambodia’s The Royal Group, Chinese state-owned Hydrolancang International Energy and Vietnam-based EVN International, the dam – originally proposed in 1999 – has long attracted criticism, with environ­mentalists and rights groups raising concerns about the impact on fish stocks and sediment flow in the Mekong, and on the livelihoods of communities downstream.

Life in the new village is hard because we don’t have access to clean water. I just can’t leave my culture behind. I can’t leave the dead bodies of my father and the other ancestors
Broch Rithy

A 2009 report, released by the NGO Rivers Coalition in Cambodia (three years before the project was formally app­roved by the Cambodian government), stated that more than 38,000 inhabitants of 86 villages “would lose access to the vast majority of their fisheries resources” were the dam to be built, while 78,000 people would lose some access to fish.

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