Written by Albany Tribune
December 27, 2012
Two
criminal cases decided in Phnom Penh on December 27, 2012, demonstrate
the Cambodian government’s flagrant misuse of the justice system to
undermine rights, Human Rights Watch said today.
Cambodia’s Court
of Appeals upheld 20-year-sentences against Born Samnang and Sok Sam
Oeun, convicted after a grossly unfair trial, for the 2004 murder of
prominent labor leader Chea Vichea. In the second case, a trial court
sentenced land rights activist, Yorm Bopha, 29, to three years in
prison, along with members of her family on politically motivated
charges for her efforts organizing peaceful protests against land
evictions.
The government should facilitate a dismissal of the
charges against the three defendants and promptly release them, Human
Rights Watch said.
“The Cambodian government has no shame in using
the courts as an arm of oppression,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at
Human Rights Watch. “Instead of protecting rights, Cambodia’s judiciary
is being used to suppress dissent and undermine justice.”
After
the ruling, Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, who had been released from
prison in 2009 after an international outcry, were taken into custody to
serve the remainder of their sentences at Prey Sar Prison’s
Correctional Center 1 in Phnom Penh.
The January 22, 2004 killing
of Chea Vichea, the leader of the Free Trade Union of Workers of the
Kingdom of Cambodia, came amid a violent crackdown by the government to
suppress the labor movement in Cambodia. The ruling Cambodian People’s
Party (CPP) was also seeking to address political weaknesses after the
2003 national elections, in which the CPP won less than a majority of
the popular vote, Human Rights Watch said.
Police arrested Born
Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun for the killing, but in subsequent hearings it
became clearthat both were being used as scapegoats. The absence of
credible evidence was apparent to the case’s original investigating
judge, Hing Thirith, who on March 19, 2004, ordered the release of the
two suspects despite allegedly having been instructed by a senior
government official to forward the case to trial. However, three days
later, the Supreme Council of Magistracy, the body ostensibly tasked
with ensuring judicial independence, removed Hing Thirith from his
position.
In August 2005, a court convicted Born Samnang and Sok
Sam Oeun, and sentenced each to 20 years in prison after a trial that
international observers regarded as unfair. In April 2007, the Court of
Appeals upheld their convictions despite testimony from numerous
witnesses supporting their alibis and the acknowledgement by the
prosecutor that there was insufficient evidence. The ruling was strongly
condemned internationally and by Cambodian civil society groups.
The
Supreme Court returned the case to the Court of Appeals for retrial in
2008, and the two men were released on bail on January 1, 2009. On
November 7, 2012, the Appeals Court held a three-hour hearing to retry
their case. The court appeared to give no substantive consideration to
evidence of culpability of government officials, but instead appeared to
credit the coerced “confession” of Samnang on which the original
judgment was in part based, and which Samnang has consistently
repudiated in open testimony.
Chea Vichea’s brother Chea Mony in
November said, “Myself, 99 percent I did not believe in the Cambodian
court system. So I do not expect that the Court of Appeals will find the
truth and justice for my elder brother in this case.”
In the Yorm
Bopha case, the authorities on September 4, 2012, arrested Bohpa, a
leader of the movement protesting mass evictions from Phnom Penh’s Boeng
Kak area, and her husband after a street dispute that occurred after a
man had stolen her car’s side mirrors. Bopha, her husband, and her
brothers were accused of assaulting the man. In a quick trial,
containing weak and contradictory witness statements, the four were
convicted – the two brothers in absentia. Bopha was sentenced to three
years in prison. The husband’s sentence was suspended and arrest
warrants were issued for her brothers, who left the country. After the
verdict, Bopha was returned to Prey Sar Prison Correctional Center 2 for
women prisoners to serve her sentence. Another land rights activist,
Tim Sakmony, was found guilty a day earlier of making a false
declaration on problematic evidence and given a suspended prison
sentence.
Cambodia has been ruled by Prime Minister Hun Sen and the CPP for over 27 years. Most Cambodian judges and prosecutors are CPP members, some serving as high-level party officials. Dith Munthy, the chief judge of the Cambodian Supreme Court, is a member of the CPP’s Permanent Committee of the Central Committee and the party’s six-person Standing Committee.
Cambodia has been ruled by Prime Minister Hun Sen and the CPP for over 27 years. Most Cambodian judges and prosecutors are CPP members, some serving as high-level party officials. Dith Munthy, the chief judge of the Cambodian Supreme Court, is a member of the CPP’s Permanent Committee of the Central Committee and the party’s six-person Standing Committee.
“It is difficult at this point for anyone to
have any faith in Cambodia’s justice system,” Adams said. “Cambodia’s
courts today are little more than an extension of Hun Sen and his ruling
party.”
In a November report, Human Rights Watch included the
case of Chea Vichea among multiple cases in which the government charged
innocent people in high-profile cases to avoid investigating official
involvement. The report demonstrated a pattern of impunity for more than
300 politically motivated killings in the past 20 years. The
government’s poor record continued in 2012 with suspect investigations
into the April 2012 killing of environmental activist Chut Wutty and a
February 2012 shooting of three protesting workers, in which a senior
government official, Chhouk Bandit, was implicated.
Human Rights
Watch reiterated its recent callfor the Cambodian government to appoint
an independent commission to monitor the functioning of the police,
prosecutors, and judges to assess their compliance with international
human rights standards – both in cases involving government-linked
perpetrators and those involving possibly politically motivated
prosecutions of civil society activists, journalists, and others. Such a
commission could investigate the killing of Chea Vichea and its alleged
cover up by government personnel and other important human rights
cases.
To promote the creation of a Cambodian monitoring
commission, foreign donors and United Nations bodies should coordinate
their efforts and establish their own monitoring mechanism, Human Rights
Watch said. Disbursement of donor funding and pledges to the government
should be based on the findings and recommendations of the Cambodian
commission.
Several of Cambodia’s donors are parties to the 1991
Paris Peace Agreements, which obligate them to work to promote human
rights in Cambodia, Human Rights Watch said. The agreement’s signatories
include the United States, Canada, China, France, India, Indonesia,
Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and the United
Kingdom.
“International pressure needs to be brought on Cambodia
to reform,” Adams said. “Parties to the 1991 Paris Accords should not
abdicate their commitment to take active and concrete action to address
Cambodia’s dire human rights situation.”
About Albany Tribune
The Albany Tribune is a free and independent online news magazine aimed at providing a bigger picture of the world, for a smaller market. Who says a local news organization has to be just focused on local news? We certainly don’t.
View all posts by Albany Tribune →
The Albany Tribune is a free and independent online news magazine aimed at providing a bigger picture of the world, for a smaller market. Who says a local news organization has to be just focused on local news? We certainly don’t.
View all posts by Albany Tribune →
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