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Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014
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Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities

Presented by Thuon Ratha

October 06, 2014

Page 2: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Background

World Bank Group

IFC

Dragon Capital

HAGL

• Between 2002-2006, IFC made a series of investments in Dragon Capital, a private equity fund in Vietnam.

• Dragon Capital is a major investor in the Vietnamese company Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAGL).

• In recent years, HAGL has acquired tens of thousand of hectares of land in Cambodia to develop rubber plantations.

Page 3: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.
Page 4: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Research Methods

No ToolsNumber (13 affected

vil.)

01 Key informant interview 13

02 Focus group discussion 13

03 Women focus group 13

04 Household interview 69

05 Community mapping 11

Page 5: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Pre-concession• No attempt to seek communities’ consent before operations• No consultation • No information about potential adverse impacts of the project

and environmental and social impact assessments• No documentation about HAGL’s concession or operations

Post-concession• The company held meetings in nine of the villages at some

point after workers began operations.• In most villages armed police or military police hired as

security guards to protect the concession, preventing villagers from entering into areas now under company control.

Free Prior and Informed Consent

Page 6: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Vi. No Grazing

landCom. forest

Access to state forest

Water source

Resin trees

Spirit forest

Burial ground

Reserved land/forest

Chrob ChrabOther com.

resources

01      

02      

03      

04    

05    

06    

07      

08      

09        

10        

11        

12      

13      Total 8 2 13 11 9 7 6 10 10 8 9

Losses: Communal Losses

Page 7: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Losses: Communal Losses

Rattan

Vine

Wild vegetables

Wild fruit

Wild animals

Honey

Traditional medicines

Firewood

Resin

Other

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Change of NTFP collection by households (percentage)

Post-concessionPre-concession

Page 8: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Losses: Household Losses

Chamka/plantation

Rice field

Residential plot

Animals

Crops

Houses/other structures

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

9

6

3

9

11

8

Type of household losses (no. of villages)

Page 9: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

164 HHs in 13 affected villages lost farmland and/or residential plots

Losses: Household Losses (individual plots)

31%

27%

12%

27%

4%

Size of lost rice field

0-1 (ha)

1.1-2 (ha)

2.1-3 (ha)

3.1-4 (ha)

> 4 (ha)

13%

42%

37%

8%

Size of lost Chamka

0-1 (ha)

1.1-2 (ha)

2.1-3 (ha)

> 3 (ha)

Page 10: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

• Communal losses: no compensation • Household losses: compensated for loss of individual plots, 

“Purchase Offer” and “Replacement land”

Compensation

Replacement land

Cash compensation

No compensation

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

27

101

36

Compensation for loss of land (no. of households)

Page 11: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

• Approx. 50% of HHs interviewed received compensation but >90% of them was unhappy with the compensation

Compensation

Reasons for selling & accepting replacement land:

o Land would be taken regardless. o Land was surrounded by rubber plantation. o They would be fined for destruction of rubber trees. o Land was the state land granted to the company.o They were afraid of getting nothing if they refused

compensation.o The company was little by little encroach onto their land.

Page 12: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Impacts: Right to food

Fishing

Wild vegetables

Wild fruit

Wild animals

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

98

93

93

94

59

43

31

31

Loss of access to food for household consumption (percentage)

Post-concessionPre-concession

Page 13: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

91%

7%

2%

Household change in income

Worse Better The same

Impacts: Livelihoods

Page 14: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Impacts: Livelihoods

Farming

Fishing

NTFP collection

Resin collection

Timber logging

Company worker

Livestock

Other

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

93

43

54

35

29

3

62

12

93

16

13

1

12

22

49

19

Household change in income source

Post-concession Pre-concession

Page 15: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Impacts: Women’s livelihoods

Page 16: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Impacts: Right to practice cultural and spiritual traditions

• Sacred sites (spirit forest, burial ground & other sacred sites)

Burial ground in Chay Thom village Cleared spirit forest in Inn village

Page 17: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Village Spirit forestBurial

ground ChrabOther

sacred place

Inn    

Kak    

Kam    

Kanat Thom    

Kresh    

Malik    

Mass    

Muy    

Peng    

Srae Angkrong 3    

Impacts: Right to practice cultural and spiritual traditions

• Loss/ destruction of sacred sites

Page 18: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Impacts: Right to practice cultural and spiritual traditions

• Traditional activities and livelihood practices

Traditional house (Kreung ethnic group)

Strew for drinking wine jar

Materials for making Kapha

Chamka (shifting cultivation plot)

Page 19: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Hoang Anh Ou Yadav

CASE: Talao Village

Page 20: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

“To get our land back, we made countless complaints with

thumbprints to local authorities. The complaint to commune office

was rejected. Then, we submitted complaint to district office, but the

district authority said they did not have ability to resolve the

problem. When our complaint reached provincial level, we were told

that land was granted to the company and shown some legal

document.”

Villager, Srey Angkong 3 village.

Access to remedy

Page 21: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

“I complained [verbally] to the village and commune [chiefs]

… They responded that they could not resolve the

problem… [For complaint to the court] I do not know how to

do it. We are afraid if we skip [some steps], they would

bring us to prison…”

-- Villager, Srae Ankrong 1 Village

Access to remedy

Page 22: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

• In February 2014, 15 villages submitted a complaint to the CAO with the support of a number of NGOs, including Equitable Cambodia and Inclusive Development International.

• The complaint highlighted IFC’s financing of HAGL through a financial intermediary, Dragon Capital.

• Most community representatives said their communities want their land return.

“The most important thing that I want back is land. It is for feeding our next generations in the future. If we sell land to the company,

how can our next generations survive.”

-- Villager, Peng Village.

Complaint to International Finance Corporation's

Compliance Advisory Ombudsman (CAO)

Page 23: Impact Assessment of HAGL Project on Indigenous Communities Presented by Thuon Ratha October 06, 2014.

Thanks for your time