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Tep Vanny poses for a photograph on Boeung Kak Lake, Oct. 19, 2012. (AFP) |
RFA
The
leader of a group of villagers protesting a forced eviction in the heart
of Cambodia’s capital is traveling to Europe and the U.S. as part of a
tour to promote a documentary film about a popular movement that
defended citizens in one of the country’s largest land disputes.
Tep Vanny, who represents the residents of the Boeung Kak Lake community,
boarded a plane Wednesday at Phnom Penh International Airport bound for
Poland, where she will join Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) opposition lawmaker
Mu Sochua before heading to the Movies That Matter festival in The Hague
in Netherlands.
At the festival, she will attend three screenings of the film “Even A Bird Needs a Nest”
from March 22-24—a 70-minute documentary directed by Christine Chansou
and Vincent Trintignant-Corneau, and produced by France-based Divali
Films, which highlights her group’s fight for compensation for land
grabbed from the villagers for a commercial development.
Protests over Boeung Kak Lake evictions have been ongoing since 2008,
when the Chinese-Cambodian Shukaku Inc. began draining the lake to make
way for a luxury residential development, drawing international
attention to the country’s land development policies.
Mu Sochua told RFA’s Khmer Service Wednesday that the film will draw
attention to the plight of the Boeung Kak evictees and other victims of
land grabs across Cambodia.
“The
documentary shows the realities of the struggles by the Boeung Kak and
Borei Keila communities, who suffer forced evictions due to land
concessions,” she said.
Residents of Borei Keila, also located in the capital, saw their homes
demolished in 2011 to make way for a commercial real estate project.
Mu Sochua said that the documentary represented an opportunity for
victims of land grabs to tell the world “the truth” about their
situations.
“I think that even though the government wants to prevent the victims
from expressing their views, the government can no longer do so,” she
said.
“We don’t want any secret [land] development—we want development that all people can participate in.”
After visiting The Hague, Tep Vanny will travel to France to participate
in an additional documentary screening and then head to Washington,
where she will receive the Vital Voices’ Leadership in Public Life Award
on April 2.
“She will be awarded for her bravery and struggle in demanding the return of land to her community,”
said Mu Sochua, who nominated Tep Vanny for the honor. The rights
activist was announced the winner of the award in November last year.
Vital Voices, which trains women leaders and social entrepreneurs around
the world, was formed in 1997 by then-First Lady Hillary Clinton. Tep
Vanny’s award is part of the organization’s annual Global Leadership
Awards, which honor women working to strengthen democracy, increase
economic opportunity, and protect human rights.
Bo Chorvy, another representative of the Boeung Kak community, welcomed the recognition of Tep Vanny’s work.
“The Boeung Kak community struggle is only one amongst many other struggles in Cambodia,” she said.
“We are very happy that Tep Vanny is receiving the award.”
Reported by Samean Yun for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
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