![]() ![]() ![]() Now, with more than 40 Borei Keila families still in negotiations with City Hall over compensation, a new complex – built from the unfinished shell of Building 9 – is being rented out at market rates.Īccording to the documents, in April 2010 Phanimex requested ownership of the land. She appears to have sold the land later to another powerful businesswoman. In 2004, the residents were told they would receive flats in 10 buildings to be constructed by the developer Phanimex, but hundreds of families were left in limbo when buildings 9 and 10 never materialised – except they did, albeit not in the way residents were promised.ĭocuments obtained by The Post show that Phanimex owner Suy Sophan obtained private titles for the land originally slated for resettled residents. Publication date 08 January 2018 | 06:59 ICTĪs Phnom Penh officials look to close the books on the long-running Borei Keila land dispute, evicted residents are balking for much the same reasons they have for the past 10 years: The compensation on offer is not what they were promised. Khouth Sophak Chakrya and Leonie Kijewski | The Phnom Penh Post ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
January 2023
Categories |