KPP to build border homes
ppp Thu, 19 November 2015
Alice Cuddy
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Supporters greet Khmer People Power leader Sourn Serey Ratha upon his arrival at the Phnom Penh International Airport last month after returning to the Kingdom from self-imposed exile. Vireak Mai |
The
newly legal Khmer Power Party is delaying the construction of its
headquarters, instead using the money to build houses near the
Vietnamese border, its leader said yesterday.
Sourn
Serey Ratha, who returned from self-imposed exile last month after
being pardoned of widely decried convictions related to his political
activities, said he decided to postpone the construction of the party’s
headquarters because the “priority for now is to build houses for the
poor Khmer people who struggle to live at [the] border line.”
Serey
Ratha said that the nationalist KPP was aiming to build 100 houses in
border areas he claims are currently populated by “illegal Vietnamese”
migrants.
He
added that the project would begin in Kandal province’s Pak Nam
village, where he said very few Cambodian families currently live, and
insisted that it was not only targeting KPP supporters but all people
living in border areas.
Over
the past year, border tensions between Cambodia and Vietnam have been
inflamed, with both sides claiming ownership of long-disputed land.
Serey
Ratha said houses will only be constructed on Cambodian land, but added
that the KPP would make the disputes central to its policy.
“So
far, there are only politicians and political parties that make a
business on the border issue but . . . disregard the livelihood of the
Khmer people” living there, he said.
Koul
Panha, executive director of the Committee for Free & Fair
Elections in Cambodia, said the planned construction of the $2,000
houses, which will all bear the KPP’s logo, was nothing unusual in
Cambodian politics.
“They [politicians] do this a lot. The ruling party always builds schools and housing.”
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