March 19, 2013
The UN Dispatch
A prisoner of conscience in Cambodia is set free. But that does not mean the country is becoming any more welcoming of dissent.
Cambodian radio station owner and human rights activist Mam Sonando
has been released, in a surprising reversal of policy that has many
Cambodians and Cambodia-watchers genuinely shocked. Analysts are now
questioning whether the release constituted an official indication that
Cambodia’s top-brass are lightening up on freedom of speech — or if it
was instead a somewhat cynical attempt at displaying tolerance for
democracy to both local and international critics.The
drama began in October of 2012, when Sonando was arrested on charges
that he had attempted to foment a separatist revolution in the remote
province of Kratie, though in fact the 72-year-old, who holds French
citizenship, was not even the country at the time.
During the crackdown on these so-called secessionists (angered over
official land-grabbing, but with little aspiration of actual
separatism), security forces fatally shot and killed a 14-year-old girl in a violent land eviction, a murder which was officially deemed a “accident” and never fully investigated.
Sonando, who had only broadcast charges against Hun Sen in an
international court on his radio station, proved an easy scapegoat in
the incident: he bravely returned to Cambodia and was promptly sentenced
to a 20 year long prison sentence on sedition charges.
The world reacted with speed: Amnesty International deemed him a prisoner of conscience, US President Obama demanded Sonando be
released during his decidedly awkward pow-wow with Hun Sen during his
ASEAN visit in November. French President Francoise Hollande,US assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner, various NGOs, and others also condemned his arrest publicly and often.
When Sonando’s sentence came up for appeal on March 5th, streams of
supporters, many elderly and frail, came out to the court to advocate
for him. Surprisingly, no military police had appeared to scatter the
supporters or intimidate them with hard plastic riot shields, even as
the gathered hundreds partially blocked the busy street running by the
appeals court.
Shouting “Dakhing!” over and over (which translates into “walk
freely”), Sonando’s supporters threatened Cambodian curses on those who
would keep Sonando in custody, and demanded to be allowed to share the
burden of custody with him. One elderly man told me that he ridden his
bicycle all the way across town, in the profound heat of a Phnom Penh
March, to attend the proceedings.
By March 6th, it was revealed that the prosecutors had decided to
suggest dropping the two worst charges against Sonando and replace them
with a decidedly lesser charge of “destruction to the forest,” a
legislative bait and switch that’s been used in Cambodia before, in the
case against a prominent group of land grabbing activists.
When the ruling finally came on March 14th, the news was good:
Sonando was to be freed, his sentence reduced to five years with four
years and four months of that suspended. Two men convicted alongside
Sonando on similar charges, Kan Sovan/Chan Sovann, and Touch Siem/Touch
Rin also had their sentences reduced and were slated to walk.
He walked out of prison early on March 15th to a crowd of hundreds
exultant supporters, who trailed him across town from Pray Sar prison
back to his home outside of Phnom Penh. He was soon enough back in his
old Beehive Radio office: beaten, but unbowed.
Did
they imprison him in the first place out fear? That was the stance of
Association of Democrats Pannary Huon, who was visible releasing
symbolic flights of birds into the air as she and her supporters waited
for the ruling on March 5.
“I guess they [the government] is afraid of the elections, and also
afraid because a lot of people support Sonando,” she told me. “He never
did anything wrong, he followed the rules, that’s why it was a crime
they put him in prison.”
But it is more than likely that fear explains why he walked into
freedom on March 15th as well: fear by the government of international
condemnation, and fear that the people’s uncomfortable attention to the
case will prove troublesome for the Cambodian People’s Party in the
upcoming elections.
He is only one man, and, the ruling party likely hopes, is
sufficiently chastened to remain quiet for a while, as the July
elections approach.
Meanwhile, to avoid the illusion that Cambodia’s leaders are entirely
ceding to international requests, the government has lashed out against
Amnesty International and other NGOs and individual who condemned Mam
Sonando’s arrest, deeming them enemies of the Cambodian constitution —
although critique of Obama and other international leaders has remained
curiously absent.
The question remains: who will gather in droves as yet another
peasant protesting land grabbing is disenfranchised, or as yet more of
Cambodia’s dwindling natural resources are auctioned off to the highest
well-connected bidder, or when yet another journalist turns up dead
under mysterious circumstances? In my opinion, international observers
would be foolish in the extreme to assume that this ruling indicates
that Cambodia is becoming more free.
Photo credit: Faine Greenwood
1 comment:
Khmer Rouge motto : " Angkar ( KR leader ) is always right ;
when a person is arrested by Angkar's order , that person
is always guilty " . That was the reason that Mr Sonando
was charged for deforestation ( lighter than Pol Pot's charged his prisoners of KGB or CIA ) after the Kangoroo
Court dropped the " Secession " charge .
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