|
On 3 May 2006, an order was given to the residents of a squatter
community in Cambodia that they would be sent to a new resettlement
area, 23 kilometres outside of Phnom Penh, known as Trapaing
Ang Chagn Village. The order was simple: "Gather up your
belongings and be ready to move, you cannot stay here anymore."
The property was slated to be developed into a shopping centre
by a private businessman.
 |
The slum area that had once been a congested mix of houses
made of rusted metal, bamboo and plastic sheeting was in the
midst of a transition, as residents took down their houses
and shelters they had lived in for over five years. Faced
with uncertainty, they waited in cramped temporary tents made
of plastic sheeting and bamboo poles for the chance to load
up their belongings onto the transport trucks that would take
them to the new resettlement community. As the rainy season
had already begun, they had to set up temporary shelters made
up of plastic tarps and metal sheets to keep them dry; slats
of bamboo were placed on the ground to protect their belongings
from getting wet. A young boy walked shirtless through the
mud carrying a bundle of wood he had salvaged from an area
already vacated.
 |
A bulldozer was at work levelling the ground as it moved
towards the people waiting to be evacuated. One truck was
being loaded up with tables and bundles of belongings. Some
people stood in disbelief. One man stopped next to me and
said, "They are wasting no time in getting the land ready
to build on. Look at this
they are doing this as we
are still getting ready to leave." Police and security
guards roamed through the crowds, making sure that no one
began to protest the move, their batons held at waist level
ready for any problems. For the most part, residents peacefully
accepted that they had no choice but to leave.
 |
As I moved through the crowd, my interpreter informed me
that people expressed their opinions in low voices: "We
all voted for this government and now they are forcing us
to leave. They got our votes and now we get kicked out."
Kim Seng, 45 years old, sat outside his simple tent, his belongings
taking most of the space inside, with his hat pulled over
his forehead to block off the afternoon sun. "I lived
here for four years. There are four of us in the family. We
used to sell vegetables in the community and it was enough
to live on for the family. After we move, I am not sure what
to expect. It is a new community, so we must learn to adjust
to it. Finding work will not be easy, but I am sure we will
be okay. I am worried though. There are so many of us being
moved-how can we all make any money to live on?"
Noun Khoun, 48, sat with his family under a large tarp stretched
across four poles. His wife, her arm covering her face, lay
on top of their belongings. His three children, aged from
6 to 11, sat next to their mother, staring ahead and watching
people move their belongings as they set up a spot to wait
for the trucks. Khoun, who worked as a day labourer in the
city, was not sure what he would do once they moved. "It
will take some time for us to adjust, but in a way it is good.
The land we get will belong to us after five years. This land
was not ours. This is why we need to move now. We stayed as
long as we could and now it is time to go. In Cambodia, we
are used to being moved-from war to being poor-we have learned
to survive. We may be poor people, but we have pride and dignity.
Even poor people have a right to live in peace."
Koam Phou (below) sat under the shade of a plastic tarp in
a hot afternoon, pulling rusty nails out of a pile of old
wood plank and throwing the boards into a pile next to her.
A young boy walking by stopped and helped her pull the nails
out. He picked up a pair of pliers, smiled at her and took
a block of wood, bent over a nail and pried it out, throwing
it into a pile to be reused later. "I am very sad to
be here", 48-year-old Koam Phou said. "I am alone
and have no way to make an income. As I look around me I see
emptiness. It is as if I am in a dream. I keep asking myself,
why me? Why must the poor people always suffer? We live poor
all our lives and all we try to do is survive one day at a
time. There is never a good time for the poor to leave their
homes like this. At least, where we were there was a way to
make money. Now it is unsure what we will do."
 |
Koam Phou had lived for over five years in a squatter community
near the Tonle Basac River, where more than 1,000 families
lived in simple houses made of just anything, such as plastic
tarps, metal sheeting and bamboo poles, that would withstand
the rain and heat. "My biggest concern is what will we
do here? I used to sell shellfish along the river front and
I made enough money to live on and help with my son's schooling."
She has been in the resettlement area for two days now. Her
oldest son had come to help set up a temporary shelter for
her before he returned to the city. "But here there is
nothing. How will we survive here? How can we make money?
There is no factory nearby where I can work. We were brought
here and told to stay", Koam Phou said. "I will
finish this shelter for me to stay in, then if I need to,
move back to the city to work. Many of us have no choice.
If they wanted us to move, there should have been better planning,
such as some sort of work or a way to get to a factory or
the city."
 |
Lor Sam (above), 57, asked me to come over to her shelter
as I was taking pictures of a family of seven who had just
arrived at the resettlement area the day before. She has cropped
hair and deep lines in her face, visibly showing the tough
times she had been through. She had built a simple shelter
with wood, plastic and bamboo stilts-there was little protection
from the rain and wind, especially in the late afternoon,
but for the moment this was all she could afford to build.
"I have six children, three will live here with me. The
other three are married and will stay in Phnom Penh- I'm not
sure if they can help us either as they are also poor",
she said. "All of the people who have come here are very
angry. They brought us here and gave us 20 kilos of rice,
some plastic sheeting and a water container. How are we supposed
to make a living here? What little money we brought with us
will soon be gone. At the moment there is no way we can earn
money here. If people get sick, how can we afford to pay for
treatment? There could be a very big problem soon if there
is no other assistance provided for us. I don't plan to stay
here so long. I will need to find some work in the city and
then try to arrange to get back here every few days,"
Lor Sam said.
 |
| Houses built
from remnants of salvaged wood, metal and bamboo |
As we walked through the new community, the criticism we
heard was much the same from the families we talked to. Their
houses would be almost the same as in the squatter community,
built from remnants of salvaged wood, metal and bamboo. The
main road was several kilometres away, but few families had
any sort of transportation, and since there were no plans
for any public transportation they felt out of touch in any
way to make a living. The numerous widows I met spoke of being
in a very lonely place, away from family members who stayed
behind in the city. They had no choice but to move and were
uncertain of what to expect in the weeks and months ahead.
|