(New York) – The Cambodian Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the trumped-up imprisonment of a land-rights activist should prompt Cambodia’s donors to demand her unconditional release, Human Rights Watch said today.
On March 27, 2013, the Cambodian Supreme Court denied bail to Yorm
Bopha, who was imprisoned in December 2012 after receiving a three-year
sentence on apparently politically motivated charges for protesting
government land grabs that have adversely affected 700,000 Cambodians.
On March 19, with Bopha’s appeal pending, Prime Minister Hun Sen gave a
speech in which he declared Bopha’s sentence a “simple case of her
beating someone up,” for which she had properly been criminally
convicted.
“The Supreme Court’s ruling against the activist Yorm Bopha was no
surprise following Hun Sen’s public endorsement of her trumped-up
conviction,” said Brad Adams,
Asia director. “Donors should not shrink from demanding that the
government drop the charges against Bopha and raise their concerns about
the Cambodian judiciary’s lack of independence.”
Bopha, 29, is one of the leaders of long-term protests against illegal
evictions of residents of the Boeung Kak area of Phnom Penh by a Chinese
company and a local firm closely linked to Prime Minister Hun Sen. In
May 2012, 13 women who were Boeung Kak residents and who had
demonstrated against the deal were arrested, summarily convicted of
illegally occupying land and rebellion, and sentenced to up to 30-month
prison terms. Bopha was a major voice in peaceful public protests
against the jailing of the 13. She helped put the issue on the agenda of
then-US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who forcefully raised it
with Hun Sen and other senior officials. The 13 were later released,
albeit with their convictions intact.
Before being returned from court to the prison after the Supreme Court
ruling on March 27, Bopha called on other land activists “not to
retreat,” declaring “no matter what label anyone applies to us, there
will be justice for us.”
The government has pursued a large-scale program of providing title to
land since May 2012. This has resulted in many land disputes that have
been the subject of protests by people alleging that they have been
unlawfully displaced, including at Boeung Kak. On September 4, 2012,
Phnom Penh authorities, in an apparent attempt to deter protests,
arrested Bopha for alleged involvement in a conspiracy to assault a man
for stealing side mirrors from her car. She was charged along with her
husband, Lous Sakhon, and her two brothers.
The four were tried by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on December 26
and 27, 2012. Despite insufficient evidence to establish guilt, Bopha
was convicted and sentenced to three years in prison, while her husband
received a suspended prison sentence. Her two brothers were convicted in
absentia. Bopha appealed her conviction to the Appeal Court, which has
yet to set a date for hearings. The Appeal Court denied her application
for bail and she appealed for bail to the Supreme Court.
On March 13, a group of land activists, including Sakhon, staged a
protest at the Justice Ministry, calling for her to be given an appeal
date and be released. They then marched to Hun Sen’s residence in Phnom
Penh. They were assaulted by a mixed force of police, gendarmes, and
security guards, who severely beat several protesters, including Sakhon.
The Supreme Court ruling against Bopha is further evidence of Hun Sen’s
brazen interference in the work of the Cambodian judiciary. The chief
justice of the Supreme Court, Dith Munthy, is a member of the ruling
Cambodian People Party’s politburo and a close confidante of the prime
minister.
“A politically controlled judiciary has targeted a brave woman who has
had the audacity to challenge powerful interests and people, including
Hun Sen,” Adams said. “Donors successfully took up the case of the
‘Boeung Kak 13’ and ensured their release from prison, but they have
more to do. The release of Yorm Bopha and an end to attacks on land
activists should remain at the top of the donor agenda.”
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