Twenty
large cement pipes face a dusty road in the capital’s Srah Chak commune, their
gaping openings revealing channels purpose-built for waste or water.
But more than half of them carry very
different contents — a family that has called the pipes home for the past two
years.
Nol Linch, 64, is the matriarch.
She and her 67-year-old husband, their four
children and spouses, moved to Phnom Penh in 2010 from Prey Veng province in
the hope of a better life.
“I decided to move to the city to work, and I
expected that I could earn more money to support the family and live in a good
condition like other people, but my dream did not come true,” Nol Linch said, her
eyes beginning to fill with tears.
Initially, her family had lived in a
warehouse, but they were evicted by its owners. In the abandoned pipes nearby,
Nol Linch saw a solution to her family’s housing woes.
Her grandchildren—seven in all, under the age
of 12—tumbled in and out of the pipes in a game of hide-and-seek as Nol Linch’s
daughter, Nol Sarin, 36, nursed the newest addition to the family — a year-old
infant and the first grandchild to be born in the pipes.
Another of Nol Linch’s daughters is expecting.
Nol Sarin, who picks and sells morning glory,
and her husband sleep on the grass outside the pipes so her baby and three
other children can sleep inside.
“It is very difficult in the rainy season. We
cannot have a full night’s sleep because the water pours into our sleeping
place,” Nol Sarin said, showing the Post reporter the hole-covered tent that
has been stretched over the end of the pipe to form a makeshift wall.
She and her family use an abandoned plot of
land about 30 metres away as a toilet, and her children and husband often
suffer from bouts of coughing or diarrhoea.
But what troubled her more than physical
discomforts, she said, were conflicts with the people of the area.
Residents had looked down on the family when
they moved in, Nol Sarin said.
“I argued with the people around here because
they said bad words to me — that we lived in the pipe like animals and the pipe
was not the place for human beings to live in,” she said.
Although local authorities and police officers
have apparently given up on attempts to ask the family to leave, the
possibility of eviction continues to weigh heavily on Nol Sarin’s mind.
“We don’t know where we are going to live, or
maybe we stay on the street,” she said.
But for Nol Sarin’s younger brother, Kosal,
22, the only one of Nol Linch’s children who is unmarried, his address gives
rise to another kind of fear.
“I don’t care what they (residents) say to me,
because they won’t give me a house if I leave here. But I don’t dare to love or
ask the woman to marry me because she will reject me when she knows I live in
the pipe,” he said.
“I will ask someone to marry me when I have a
suitable place or house to stay, but if I live in the pipe until I am old, I am
happy to live alone.”
Mom Kunthear
The Phnom Penh Post
Business & Investment Opportunities
YourVietnamExpert is a division of Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd, Incorporated in Singapore since 1994. As Your Business Companion, we propose a range of services in Consulting, Investment and Management, focusing three main economic sectors: International PR; Healthcare & Wellness;and Tourism & Hospitality. We also propose Higher Education, as a bridge between educational structures and industries, by supporting international programs. Sign up with twitter to get news updates with @SaigonBusinessC. Thanks.

No comments:
Post a Comment