Story by Reuters • Published 14th June 2021
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Cambodia s capital of Phnom Penh has started evicting its famous floating villages on the banks of the Tonle Sap River, despite the objections of longtime residents who say they have nowhere else to go.
For generations, the floating wooden houseboats of Phnom Penh have been both livelihood and way of life for mostly ethnic Vietnamese families, home to fish farming and interconnected by warrens of hand-built bridges interspersed with sunken poles and small boats. Our ancestors have always been here, said Kith Dong, 54, as he and relatives dismantled his home, consisting of a timber platform with a sloped tin roof off the shore of Phnom Penh s Prek Pnov district.
PHNOM Penh has begun overseeing the dismantling of “floating home” communities on the banks of the Tonle Sap River over the objections of long-time residents who say they have nowhere else to go.
Cambodia’s capital of Phnom Penh on Saturday (June 12) began overseeing the dismantling of “floating home” communities on the banks of the Tonle Sap River over the objections of longtime residents who say they have nowhere else to go. For generations, the floating wooden houseboats of Phnom Penh have been both livelihood and way of life for mostly ethnic Vietnamese.
PHNOM PENH: Officials in Cambodia’s capital on Saturday began overseeing the dismantling of “floating home” communities on the banks of the Tonle Sap River over the objections of longtime residents who say they have nowhere else to go.