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Not all villagers happy to resettle for Laos' big dam

NAKAI PLATEAU, LAOS -- As the rainy season begins, low-land Lao farmers must rush to bring in rice from the fields for their own consumption. But people on Laos' Nakai Plateau, where a big hydropower project is being built, are still waiting for rain and unconcerned about food supplies for the moment.



 Not all villagers happy to resettle for Laos' big dam

Lao villagers are greeting vistors who enter their new village in Nakai Plateau

See construction progress

"We don't need to do much more than wait for the Nam Theun Company to give us jobs and cash," said Thongsay, a 50-year-old villager at Ban Sop On.

Thongsay joined more than 6,500 people from 1,250 households in 17 villages on the Nakai Plateau who left their old homes on the banks of the Nam Theun River. Their villages will be underwater when the Nam Theun II Dam is completed in two years time.

The Lao government and the Nam Theun Power Company have promised the villagers that the dam will provide benefits.

"Of course, my life has changed a lot and it is better since we moved from our old home over a year ago," said another villager, Khamsy Sysaad.

Under the resettlement proŽgramme, each family got a new house on 0.66 hectares of land and three hectares for farming. The company provides them with food in the transition periŽod before the dam is fully operational.

"I don't know how long the free food will last, but we are preparing to stand on our own feet when the dam becomes operational in the next two years or so," Khamsy said.

The 1070 MW hydropower project will export 995 MW to Thailand, generating annual revenue of more than $200 million. Direct revenue to the Lao government over the 30year concession will reach $2 billion, which the communist governŽment will spend on poverty reduction, said Bosaikham Vongdara, the minister for energy and mines.

However, not all villagers share the same dream. At least 14 households in Ban Sop Hia on the banks of the Nam Theun River have refused to move to the resettlement site, saying they have no idea how life will be there. These people are Vietic animists who insist on being resettled within their "spiritual territory".

They want their own Vietic village and do not want to mix with other people.

The company has failed sevŽeral times to convince them to move, despite giving them information about the flooding of their land, a company official said.

"We explained the effect of the dam, but they still have no idea that their homes will be inundated forever," said Hoy Phomvisouk, deputy manager of the Resettlement Management Unit.

"The company took them to see other dams in Laos to show them that their homes will be beneath the reservoir, but the efforts still failed," he said.

However, conservationist group International Rivers Network (IRN) said the vilŽlagers were not that naive, as the resettlement area for them was very dry and they would have to learn how to do new things like operate water pumps.

The soil was also poorer than at their current site, according to an IRN report. "Their relaŽtives (who have moved to the new site) can't find enough food and have to rely on rice provided by the company," the report said.

Independent consultants managed to move them above the reservoir level, a few kiloŽmetres away from the old village of Sop Hia, before the heavy rain, expected this month.

"By the time the reservoir is created in July next year, all 1,250 families will be relocated to new villages on the plateau to begin new lives," Hoy said.

by Supalak G Khundee

The Nation



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