Thursday, 02 August 2012
By May Titthara
Phnom Penh Post
Prime Minister Hun Sen publicly
declared yesterday that the government has no plans to shut down Beehive
Radio, despite the recent arrest of its director, Mam Sonando, and
added that the movement to gather thumbprints for his release would not
help his situation.
Speaking at the graduation ceremony for
students of the National Education Institute, the premier said that
taking action against Beehive Radio itself would be like getting “angry
with the oxen, then hitting the ox cart”.
“The radio [station]
made no mistake,” he said. “Don’t wonder so much – the radio is not
guilty, who would shut it down? The radio owner made a mistake, [that’s
why] they wanted to go against the owner.”
Am Sam Ath, a senior
investigator for the rights group Adhoc, welcomed the prime minister’s
announcement, saying the closure of an independent station like Beehive
“would affect freedom of expression and rights to advocacy.”
Chea
Bamrong, vice president of Sonando’s Association of Democrats, said
that he would accept the prime minister’s words for the time being, but
acknowledged that everything could change in an instant, citing the
rapid revocation of an early statement from a Council of Ministers
spokesman who initially said that Sonando would not be arrested.
Referring
to the movement to free Sonando, which recently delivered petitions
purportedly thumb-printed by more than 45,000 supporters to multiple
foreign embassies on Monday, Hun Sen stated that “the thumbprints don’t
have any pressure on the judicial system”.
Hun Sen also alluded
to the ever-fluctuating number of Sonando’s alleged co-conspirators
wanted by the government, alternately saying that four of the five
original suspects had come to confess and serve as witnesses, and that
six of the seven accused had confessed.
He added that alleged
ringleader Bun Ratha was still at large, and at one point accused an
unnamed NGO of funding yet another suspect’s flight to Thailand.
Longtime fugitives Sok Tong and Bun Chhorn, Ratha’s father, could not be reached for comment.
No comments:
Post a Comment