NEWS FOR JULY 2002.
1.
PRESS RELEASE
VILLAGERS VOICE OUTRAGE OVER PLANS TO BUILD SESAN 3.
Over 80 Cambodian villagers expressed outrage last Friday when it was revealed
that yet another dam was being planned for construction on the
The 80 villagers represented 30 village communities in Stung Treng. The
workshop was organized by the Culture for Environment and Preservation
Association (CEPA) and supported by Non Timber Forest Products Project (NTFP)
and Partners For Development (PFD).
Also attending the workshop were representatives from the NGO Forum, local NGOs
and provincial government members.The focus of the workshop was the
presentation of a report detailing the negative impacts Yali Falls Dam had had
on the livelihoods and health of villagers living along the
H.E Pave Phom Panh, deputy Governor in Stung Treng province said he welcomes
and supports the NGOs that help assisting people along the
Kim Sangha, Sesan Project Coordinator and the workshop facilitator also feels
strongly about the new dam. "I would like to propose to the Cambodian
Government to negotiate with
The NGOs expressed similar concerns about the construction of Sesan 3. "CEPA
is strongly against Sesan 3 because the local people have experienced
enough suffering from Yali," Tep Bunnarith, Director of CEPA, agreed.
"The Cambodian Government cannot ignore this issue. I don't know why the
government has been quiet about this." Ea Sophy, Environmental Network
Coordinator for NGO Forum, was also troubled by the news of Sesan 3. "The
NGO Forum objects to the construction of Sesan III. The impact of Yali is
already enormous, so if another dam is built, the problem will be doubled. My
concern is that more people will become affected by the project." Ros
Savdee, representative from PFD, felt that "Sesan 3 should be stopped. I
would like to ask all the governments and companies from the countries who are
assisting
The conference was concluded by villagers agreeing to set up networks between
all the villages affected by
NB: According to the Viet Nam News Agency report, the construction of the Sesan
3 Dam started Saturday morning (June 15) and will cost $US 273 million.
For further information, please contact CEPA Tel. 023-369 179/720062, cepa@bigpond.com.kh
2. Story about Mekong Navigation
Channel Improvement Project.
The Nation, Published on Jul
9, 2002
Plans
to make the Mekong navigable to bigger boats by blasting rapids and shoals
threaten to end a way of life for thousands of villagers. The sky rumbles in
the distance and cold wind blasts 59-year-old Malee Luangvises as he looks up
at the thunderclouds above his village by the
Much larger explosions will soon take place to partially blow up the Kon Pi
Luang (Kaeng Kai Rapids) behind his
of the waterway-improvement project under the regional Commercial Navigation
Agreement signed on
Since the first joint investigation into the possibilities of waterway
transportation on the
However, the 331 kilometres of waterway from China-Burma Boundary Marker 243 to
Ban Khok Luang on the Thai-Laos border contains more than 100
shoals, rapids and reefs of which 11 major rapids and 10 scattered reefs
seriously threaten the safe navigation of vessels (see box). These include
Kon Pi Luang. "They are dangerous areas which need specific navigation
knowledge. Most vessels are from
About 50 accidents have been reported including 10 severe incidents in which
vessels were sunk and cargoes lost. Nine were caused by the vessels
striking reefs. Seventy per cent of these happened at the shoals or rapids to
be regulated under this project. In order to minimise accidents and prolong the
navigable period, the plan is to remove the rapids, shoals and scattered reefs.
This will enable vessels of at least 100 tonnes to navigate safely for at least
95 per cent of the year. "When the project is finished, we won't need the
specific navigation knowledge that only the Chinese skippers have," says
Preecha, adding that it would mean boats could travel up the river faster and
make it more viable as a trade route. "It will be more possible to
transport agricultural goods such as frozen chicken upstream. People eat
chicken the whole year, not just in the rainy season," he said.
"Regulations relating to trade will meet an international standard." Those
behind the project predict that cargo volume will reach 1.5 million tonnes and
the number of passengers travelling via the river will reach 400,000 by 2010. According
to Preecha, trade between
He said the project's Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) clearly indicates
that the benefits of the rapid development of the waterway will be the
stimulation of tourism, trade and technical and economic co-operation between
the four countries.However, the project excludes the other two riparian
countries that use the river:
Meanwhile, there is the issue of the Mekong River Committee (MRC). This is a
regional body whose job is to provide the basis for co-operation in all fields
of sustainable development, utilisation, management and conservation of the water
and related resources of the
Further,
Premruedee Daoruang, director of Towards Ecological Recovery and Regional Alliance."They
should have had an active role before the project was
developed. Otherwise, how can they claim to have a co-operative role for the
mutual benefit among the downstream countries." Preecha insists that
During the rainy season when the water level rises, from May to October, Malee
used to wander along the riverbanks in the early morning pitching 20 to 50
fishhooks of various sizes baited with earthworms on the banks. He could catch
two to three kilograms of pla kod lueang (yellow mystus), pla kang (kod kang,
Hemibagrus wickioides) and so on that could be sold for Bt100 to Bt150 kilo. He
also applies bedrao (trotlines) baited with small fish to lure pla mong (basa
catfish, Pangasiusbocourti), pla khae (Bagarius yarrelli), and pla khor
(Schistura sp). During the daytime, Malee would move to the Houai Tu
tributary near the village to catch pla bok (Sroikhao, Henicorhynchus
siamensis) and other fish the size of his palm. When the water level drops in
the dry season, from November to late April, the rapids become Malee's sole
source of food during the daytime. "Most of the fish such as pla khae, pla
kaeng [Cirrhinus chiensis] and pla kod swim in the strong current during the
day. Other fish like pla mong, pla buek [Mekong Giant Catfish, Pangasianodon
gigas], pla sapak [Barbodes gonionotus] feed on the blue-green algae growing on
the rocks," says Malee. This circle of life secures Malee and his family
can survive even though he earns little in cash.
Based on the local knowledge of fishermen surveyed by the Southeast Asia Rivers
Network (SEARIN), rapids comprise sub ecosystems ranging from don
(shoals), pha (cliff-like rapids), had (beaches), kok (whirlpools) and long
(pools left after the water level drops). A variety of plants and fish rely on
these systems in different seasons as their habitat, spawning grounds, feeding
grounds and so on. "Big fish lay eggs in the channel in the middle of the
shoals," Malee explains. "The water is [up to] just around the waist.
We often stretch mong [driftnets] over the channel's mouth to catch the fish. I
have seen pla pia [Kadam, Morulius chrysophykadian] and pla chado [Channa
micropeltes] breed their juveniles in the area."
Chainarong Sretthachau, director of SEARIN, says the EIA was poor in quality in
both social and environmental aspects. "It fails to address the significance
of shoals and rapids as part of the riverine ecosystem that sustains plants and
animals," explains Chainarong "There's very rough information on
likely impacts on fishery. Blasting rapids without thorough studies threatens
the ecosystem and fishing gear will be incompatible once fish behaviour is disturbed."
Chainarong says the project might change the river course and flow velocity,
which will affect the way of life of other villagers downstream who also rely
on the river such as farmers on the riverbanks, passenger-boat drivers and
others. "A self-reliant economy is the core of the community's
economy," says
Chainarong. "If we destroy the economy from the grass roots, the
macro-economy will be worth nothing because people can't survive. This
mainstream development should be diverted or slowed down. And the
decision-making process should pay respect to people who will be affected by
the development."
For Malee, this consultation has yet to happen and it is never likely to. Above
his village the sky still thunders, reminding him of the news of the blowing up
of the rapids brought to him recently by his
Piyaporn Wongruang, THE NATION
The cabinet screening committee yesterday called for a review of the four-nation plan to clear reefs in the Mekong river. Deputy Prime Minister Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, who chairs the panel, said the unsettled water boundary between Thailand and Laos could cause problems if the project went ahead as planned. ``If some reefs are to be removed, the Thai borderline (in the river) will be affected,'' said Gen Chavalit. The needs of all countries sharing the river, including downstream countries Cambodia and Vietnam, should be considered, he said. The river forms about 1,100 kilometres of the border between Thailand and Laos. The river boundary has not yet been defined.
In January cabinet backed a plan to blast rocks in the river, to clear the way for bigger ships weighing up to 500 tonnes to cruise the Mekong from southern China to northern Thailand and northern Laos.
Under the agreement, Thailand has to clear reefs between Chiang Khong and Chiang Saen districts in Chiang Rai province. Cabinet later asked the Defence Ministry to study the plan. The ministry would hold talks with the Transport and Communications Ministry, the main
agency responsible for the scheme, before sending proposed alternatives to cabinet. The project is supposed to boost trade and tourism between the four nations. Thai officials and traders say the dredging plan could boost Thai exports to China. The blasting plan is unpopular with environmentalists and fishermen in the northern province who say it will damage the ecological system. Chainarong Sretthachau, director of the Southeast Asia Rivers Networks, welcomed the committee's decision to take another look, saying the project would harm the river and affect villagers who relied on the Mekong for a living.
The Chiang Mai-based NGO, which has been campaigning against the reef blasting plan, said its protests would carry on. The group was seeking support from other environmental groups in Thailand to send a protest letter to the transport ministers of the four countries and their embassies in Bangkok within weeks. A Lao diplomat in Bangkok said Vientiane did not oppose dredging and blasting the reefs, but said the Thai government should tackle internal splits on the project. Laos had already agreed with Thailand, Burma and China to improve the river
channel, he said.