Prime Minister Hun Sen on Friday urged officials to continue to carry out his orders to demolish manmade irrigation reservoirs around the Tonle Sap lake as part of the government’s ongoing effort to protect the floodplains and flooded forest on the lake’s periphery.
Official said yesterday that they had completed dismantling an additional five reservoirs around the Tonle Sap last week and were making rapid progress on demarcating a protection zone for the lake’s flooded forests.
The Council of Ministers said in a statement that during its weekly meeting Mr Hun Sen told officials that the Ministry of Agriculture, the Tonle Sap Authority and provincial authorities needed to cooperate and carry in with the removal of the dozens of irrigation reservoirs that have been built in recent years. Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said yesterday that the prime minister had “encouraged the authorities, especially local authorities in the six provinces, to keep checking if the reservoirs are being destroyed.”
“These reservoirs are not proper he added. It damages the fish and water flow regime.”
Tonle Sap Authority Secretary-General Chan Youttha said another five reservoirs had been demolished and four more had been downsized.
Mr Youttha said 29 reservoirs had been destroyed since April. He added that the reservoirs, whish are used to irrigate large-scale commercial rice farms in the dry season, covered 1 sqkm on average.
He said officials expected to complete the zoning and marking of 640,000 hectares of the government designated this area to be protected, as the forests are important wet season habitats the lake’s rich fisheries.
Battambang province deputy governor Sieng Sothang said only one reservoir remained to be destroyed in his province, while his officials had finished demarcating 220,00 hectares for protection last week.
“We are carrying out Samdech [Hun Sen]’s order very seriously, We need to protect the flooded forest,” he said.
Cheat Syvutha, director of the Kompong Thom provincial water resources department, said he expected officials to finish demarcating 128,000 hectares of protected forest in his province on Tuesday.
Las week the Tonle Sap Authority announced that research using aerial photography had found that about 160,000 hectares of flooded forest had been destroyed since 2005, when the forest covered around 700,000 hectares.
(Additional reporting by Paul Vrieze)





















