Among them is Beehive Radio owner Mam Sonando, who remains in prison awaiting trial.
04 August 2012
By Sok Khemara,
VOA Khmer
WASHINGTON DC - Prime Minister Hun Sen has said he wants more suspects questioned in an alleged secessionist plot against the government, sparking concern among rights workers they will be stopped from doing their jobs.
A
number of suspects have been rounded up for allegedly leading a plot in
Kratie province, a government charge widely considered exaggerated.
Among them is Beehive Radio owner Mam Sonando, who remains in prison
awaiting trial.
Amnesty
International said this week they considered him a “prisoner of
conscience” and urged his release. But the premier’s continued pursuit
of the so-called secessionist plot will create a chilling effect on
rights workers, said Ou Virak, head of the Cambodian Center for Human
Rights.
“There will be self-censorship,” he said. “When there is self-censorship, that means this fear will affect the effectiveness of NGO work.”
Mam
Sonando’s arrest and the subsequent secessionist crackdown are bad
precedents, he said, which could lead to less and less oversight of the
government by civil society, whose advocates fear being charged in
similar plots.
Mam
Sonando is charged with leading the Kratie plot through the Association
of Democrats, following a violent government crackdown on villagers
there.
Amnesty
said in a statement, however, the real reason behind his arrest seemed
to be the popularity of his association and his radio broadcasts,
including news of an US-based group that has filed a complaint with the
International Criminal Court over the government’s displacement of
thousands of families in land disputes.
Four
out of five men who were arrested in connection with the alleged
secessionist plot have put the blame on Mam Sonando, according to
Cambodian justice officials. Another man accused of leading the Kratie
plot is Bun Rotha, believed to be hiding in Thailand.
Hun Sen said Wednesday he wanted an NGO official brought to court to answer for Bun Rotha’s escape from the country.
In interviews with VOA Khmer,
Bun Rotha has denied there was a secessionist plot in Kratie, where
villagers violently opposed a land grab, and said Mam Sonando had
nothing to do with the demonstrations there.
Independent
political analyst Lao Monghay said this week Hun Sen should leave the
issue to law enforcement experts, rather than calling for more court
action. His involvement makes the issue political, not legal, he said.
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