Human Rights
Defenders Alert - Phnom Penh, 2 November 2012
NGO workers and
villagers face interference and intimidation from authorities
During a mission to the provinces to collect
information regarding land conflicts, the Land Reform Project Team of the
Cambodian Center for Human Rights (“CCHR”), was faced with interference and
disruption to its work in Thlao Village, Banteay Chhmar Commune, Thma Pouk
District, Banteay Mean Chey Province on 29, 30 and 31 October 2012.
Through surveying the area and conducting interviews
with the local people, CCHR's team, led by Project Coordinator, Mr. Vann
Sophath, gathered information on the impact of a land conflict, in which the
involved private company is the recipient of an illegal economic land concession.
The team faced intimidation on the second day of its mission from local police,
military, and a student volunteer employed by a government land-measuring
program. A villager closely affiliated with local officials and the private
company, reported CCHR's presence in the area to the authorities. This resulted
in an attempt by the authorities to intimidate the project team, and the
villagers being interviewed, by circling them on their motorbikes and keeping a
close watch on their activities. CCHR staff were also interrogated by a soldier
and the government-affiliated volunteer.
On the same day, a community representative was questioned
by a military commander regarding a rumour that three Radio Free Asia reporters
were interviewing villagers. The representative stated that he knew nothing of
this but had just hosted CCHR's meeting with the village residents.
One villager implied that the community
representative, by calling CCHR to interview residents, was risking
imprisonment. Furthermore, the villager stated that the land conflict had
already been solved due to the fact that the student group was currently
demarcating the land: It was therefore unnecessary to provide interviews on the
situation. Those that had given interviews were at risk of having their hard land
titles confiscated or not receiving a land title in the first place, the
villager said.
The intimidation had little impact on CCHR's work as
most of the interviews had been conducted the previous day and some villagers
who had yet to provide interviews were willing to follow through regardless. However,
the disruption of the work of NGOs is a growing trend and amounts to the
violation of freedoms of expression, information, assembly and association, all
of which are upheld under the United Nations International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights, ratified by Cambodia in 1992, and also protected under the
Constitution of the Kingdom of Cambodia.
Please see Khmer and English versions attached.
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