HRW
MARCH 14, 2016
Cambodia: Quash Case Against 11 Opposition Activists
No Legal Basis for Trumped-Up Charges, Convictions, and Long Sentences
(New York) – Cambodian authorities should exonerate the 11 opposition activists wrongfully convicted of “insurrection” for their role in a July 2014 demonstration in Phnom Penh, Human Rights Watch said today. The Cambodian Court of Appeal has scheduled hearings for the 11 imprisoned members and supporters of the Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP) on March 17, 2016.

Police officers stand guard at Democracy Plaza during the demonstration in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on July 15, 2014.
© 2014 Reuters
“Eleven opposition activists received long sentences for a
supposed insurrection that the court judgement shows never happened,” said Brad
Adams, Asia director. “This case is a crucial test of judicial independence in
Cambodia. So long as the men remain imprisoned, it’s because Prime Minister Hun
Sen remains in control of Cambodia’s courts.”
The July 15, 2014 demonstration called for the reopening of
Phnom Penh’s Democracy Plaza, known as Freedom Park, one in a series by the
CNRP to protest government manipulation of the July 2013 elections and
restrictions on peaceful assembly. The non-violent gathering deteriorated into
a melee when para-police forcibly attempted to move the protesters, some of
whom responded violently. CNRP activists, including several of the 11, tried to
stop the violence. There were reported injuries to 41 para-police and 6
protesters, including 3 who were hurt when they attempted to protect security
force members from attack.
Human Rights Watch closely reviewed the events of July 15,
2014 and the subsequent trial. The Phnom Penh Court’s July 21, 2015 judgment
against the 11, discussed in detail below, shows that charges of “insurrection”
were trumped up to obtain politically motivated convictions against opposition
supporters. Several times Prime Minister Hun Sen threatened to file charges
against CNRP National Assembly members who were initially arrested after the
demonstration. The authorities did not prosecute any security force personnel
implicated in violence and injuries inflicted on protesters.
The 11 men who were convicted and sentenced to 7 to 20 years
in prison are Meach Sovannara, Oeu Narit, Khin Roeun, Neang Sokhun, San
Kimheng, Sum Putthy, Ke Khim, Tep Narin, An Patham, San Seiha, and Uk
Pechsamnang.
At the trial, no evidence proving the elements of the crime
of insurrection was offered and no criminal intent was demonstrated by those
convicted either of “leading” or “participating” in the alleged uprising. Under
Cambodia’s Penal Code, those tried cannot have been found guilty on the basis
of violence by others that may have resulted from supposed recklessness,
carelessness, or negligence on the part of the convicted.
The trial court ignored audio and video evidence from the
scene that supports allegations that the para-police initiated the violence,
including use of batons and truncheons. The police break-up action was followed
by several waves of crowd violence, despite calls by several defendants to
remain peaceful, that resulted in injuries, some serious, to the para-police.
In the court’s judgment, none of the injured para-police identified any of the
11 defendants as perpetrators of the violence.
“Embassies and United Nations agencies should call for a
fair appeal process based on evidence, and send observers to the hearings,”
Adams said. “They should not shy away from publicly condemning an unjust
outcome.”
Analysis of the July 21, 2015 Judgement
The Phnom Penh Municipal Court began hearings in the case of
the 11 Cambodia National Rescue Party Members on December 24, 2014. On July 20,
the three trial judges suddenly announced they were going to expedite the
proceedings and scheduled hearings for the next day, even though defense
lawyers were unable to attend.
On July 21, with only one defense lawyer present, leaving
many of the accused without legal representation, the trial judges allowed
accusatory witness statements to be read into evidence without calling the
people who had made them. They then directed that closing arguments be made
immediately, overruling requests from the accused for a delay so all their
lawyers would have time to prepare such statements.
The judges then retired to consider the case, as security
forces massed in and around the courthouse. After 15 minutes, the judges
returned to the courtroom and announced the guilty verdicts and sentences. All
11 defendants were found guilty and sentenced to from 7 to 20 years in prison
for “insurrection.”
In its judgment of July 21, 2015 the court concluded there
was an “insurrection” at Democracy Plaza on July 15, 2014. Three of those on
trial (Meach Sovannara, Oeu Narit, and Khin Roeun) were found guilty of
“leading” the insurrection, while the remaining eight (Neang Sokhun, San
Kimheng, Sum Putthy, Ke Khim, Tep Narin, An Patham, San Seiha, and Uk
Pechsamnang) were found guilty of participating in it.
In the judgment, the trial judges highlighted the connections
of the 11 to the opposition CNRP, of which all but one were members, some
holding elected local office, others having posts in the party’s national
structure or leaders of the party’s youth organization in Phnom Penh.
Cambodian authorities had closed Democracy Plaza, a site
designated by law as a venue for holding public protests, on January 4, 2014,
as part of a violent security force crackdown on political party and trade
union gatherings protesting electoral fraud and demanding higher wages. The
crackdown was ordered by Prime Minister Hun Sen. Security forces firing on the
outskirts of Phnom Penh in the previous days shot and killed five workers.
In the ensuing months, a number of elected members of
parliament from the CNRP, which was then boycotting the National Assembly, led
a series of small nonviolent demonstrations outside the security-force
barricaded perimeter of Democracy Plaza, calling on the government to “free” it
so protests there could resume. “Public order” para-police operating outside
the barricades as the frontline contingent of the security forces repeatedly
broke up these demonstrations, sometimes inflicting severe beatings on
protesters and journalists covering events. After several CNRP members-elect of
parliament announced a demonstration for July 15, 2014, a government
spokesperson warned that if they went ahead security forces would “beat” them
if they gathered. Despite this, hundreds of CNRP parliamentarians, grassroots
organizers, supporters, and ordinary people assembled on the morning of July
15, where para-police once again conducted a break-up operation, which provoked
crowd violence.
The Trial
In finding all 11 defendants guilty of insurrection that
day, the trial court judgement ignored security force violence while concluding
that violence against security force members constituted “collective violence.”
It stressed that 41 members of the “public order” para-police and “people’s
defense” forces were injured. These 41 participated in the case as victims,
providing statements on which the trial judges relied in part for reaching
their judgment. Nine of the 41 appeared as victims to answer questions in trial
hearings. The statements of the remainder were read into the record in open
court, but these para-police officers were not present to face defense
questioning.
The judgment cited statements by a few members of the
para-police injured at the scene that the demonstrators’ actions disrupted some
traffic in the area of the demonstration and, much more importantly, that the
accused leaders and participants intended to violently seize and occupy
Democracy Plaza in defiance of the January 4, 2014 Ministry of Interior
proclamation closing it to public use, reiterated in a Phnom Penh Capital
letter of July 14, 2014.
The judgment ignored consistent statements by the accused
and audio/video from the scene that the purpose of the demonstration was to
gather to peacefully call on the government to reopen the park, according to
the slogan “free (dah-leng) Democracy Plaza.” This was the slogan emblazoned on
prepared banners that demonstrators brought to the scene and proclaimed in
speeches and chanting by CNRP National Assembly members and demonstrators. No
evidence was produced to show there was an effort by protesters to enter the
barricaded area.
The judgment does not refute any of this, but appears to
construe the slogan “Free Democracy Plaza” as revealing a hidden CNRP intention
to violently storm and forcibly seize the plaza – thus evidence of a crime that
was not successfully carried out as intended. In so doing, the judgment relied
on statements by a few injured para-police that some unspecified demonstrators
spoke about “liberating” (rumdah) the plaza, using a Khmer word that could be
understood as a call for direct demonstrator action to free it from security
force occupation. It also relied heavily on a single statement in a video clip
in which a CNRP National Assembly member, Long Botta, spoke of the “necessity
to liberate and take back Democracy Plaza.” This appears to be the main
evidence for the judgment’s conclusion that an insurrection occurred under the
“properly organized” leadership of the CNRP.
The trial court judgment repeatedly cites the presence at
the demonstration of several CNRP members of parliament, including Mu Sochua,
Hou Van, Riel Khemarin, and Keo Phirum. They are among seven CNRP
parliamentarians (not including Long Botta) originally also detained and
charged with insurrection in the same case. Following the earlier severing of
the two cases, the seven are currently on temporary release, but a judicial
investigation remains active to assess whether there is sufficient evidence to
indict them, too, for trial. At times of political tension with the CNRP, Hun
Sen has threatened on multiple occasions to charge these members of parliament.
The judgment does not cite evidence that any of the seven
used the term “liberation,” but rather that Mu Sochua, in particular, had given
instructions the day before that the demonstration should be conducted
non-violently to call for the plaza to be freed, and that she and Riel Khemarin
were instrumental in demonstrators’ placement of a banner on the barricades
calling for the freeing of the plaza. It also appears to use the fact that Mu
Sochua, Riel Khemarin, Ho Van, and Meach Sovannara made speeches at the scene
calling for the plaza to be freed as evidence of leadership of an insurrection,
even though these same speeches called on demonstrators to adhere strictly to
non-violence. Seeming to attempt to support the proposition of a CNRP hidden
agenda, the judgment maintains that at least some demonstrator violence was
perpetrated more or less simultaneously with the speech-making. However, the
audio/video evidence shows that CNRP calls for non-violence were made in an attempt
to keep crowd members calm and to resist violent acts.
The judgment presented no specific evidence of Meach
Sovannara’s leadership role beyond the fact that he spoke in favor of freeing
of the plaza. It argued that Oeu Narit was a leader of the “insurrection”
because, by his own admission, he was an “assistant” to CNRP National Assembly
member Mu Sochua, and he personally wrote the banner with the slogan “Free
Democracy Plaza.” The judgment referred to Oeu Narit’s advance writing of the
banner in also concluding that he, Mu Sochua, and Meach Sovannara “truly
intended to formulate a clear plan” to carry out an insurrection.
The judgment appears to contend that the demonstrators who
were carrying plastic and wooden poles, to which flags and banners were attached,
were in possession of “weapons.” Although no evidence is presented that
demonstrators brought these poles to the park with intent to use them against
the para-police, statements to the court by the latter and audio/video from the
scene does show that once violence broke out, some demonstrators and perhaps
bystanders assaulted para-police with poles, as well as with rocks, fists, and
feet.
Without any evidence offered at trial, the judgment
concluded that violence began as a result of the suspects’ premeditated plot to
“liberate” the plaza. However, the statements of the para-police before and
during the hearings were consistent in saying they were ordered to the
perimeter of the plaza under the command of district and commune authorities to
“break-up” any gathering and, after their arrival, to remove any banners the
demonstrators had placed or might place on the barricades. By the para-police
accounts, they first attempted to “break-up” the gathering and have the banners
removed by instructing the demonstrators to disperse and take the banners down,
but these instructions were generally ignored. The para-police said they then
broke up the gathering while trying to remove any and all banners. They assert
they were then attacked.
In this regard, one of the accused, San Kimheng, admitted
during court hearings that he struck a para-policeman with his hand, and
another, Ke Khim, stated before and during hearings that he had picked up a
rock, but denied ever having thrown it. However, both maintained they were
acting in self-defense or in preparation for doing so, and other accused
similarly maintained that the initial crowd violence was a reaction to attacks
by the para-police, after which the situation escalated into a brawl.
Legal Errors in the Trial Court Judgement
The Phnom Penh Court’s July 21, 2015 judgment declared that
the guilt of Meach Sovannara, Oeu Narit, and Khin Roeun was established because
they committed offenses that “have the elements” of leading an insurrection as
punishable by Cambodian Criminal Code articles 456 and 459. The offenses of the
eight other defendants “have the elements” of participation in the insurrection
itself as punishable under article 456. Meach Sovannara, Oeu Narit, and Khin
Roeun were also charged with participating in the insurrection they were
accused of leading.
Article 456 of the Criminal Code defines the elements of
“insurrection” as the commission of an act of collective violence that could
lead to endangering of the institutions of the Kingdom of Cambodia or an
adverse effect upon national territorial integrity.
The means of participation in insurrection are spelled out
in article 457 as including, alternatively:
1) the
construction of barricades across roads or defense works or the doing of any
task with the objective of obstructing the activities of public forces;
2) the occupation
of buildings or facilities by force or deceit;
3) the
destruction of buildings or facilities;
4) ensuring the
transport or provision of logistical support to insurrectionaries;
5) personally
instigating the concentration of insurrectionaries;
6) the possession
or bringing on the person of weapons, explosives, or ammunition of all kinds;
or
7) the setting up
of oneself in place of the legitimate authorities.
Article 459 criminalizes “leadership” of an insurrection.
The Penal Code makes leaders and participants guilty of
insurrection if that is the intended consequence of their conduct, even if the
actual insurrection does not – but only “could” – take place. Article 4 of the
Criminal Code provides generally that:
There shall be no offense in the absence of an intent to
commit it. However, where so provided by law, an offense may result from
recklessness, carelessness, negligence, or failure to fulfil a specific
obligation.
As article 457 does not provide for commission of
insurrection by means of recklessness, carelessness, negligence, or failure to
fulfil a specific obligation, an individual cannot be found guilty of leading
or participating in an insurrection simply by having committed acts that had
insurrection as consequence, such as by indirectly sparking a series of events
leading to an insurrection. (Articles 456, 457, and 459 of Cambodia’s Criminal
Code echo those of the Criminal Code of France, from which they are directly
derived; see article 412-3, article 412-4, and article 412-6, respectively.)
To be guilty of insurrection, the court would have to find
that, in addition to “collective violence,” the conduct of the accused
fulfilled at least one of the two alternative additional elements of the crime
of insurrection, either
1) endangering the institutions of the Kingdom of Cambodia
or
2) adversely affecting the national territorial integrity of
the Kingdom of Cambodia.
With regard to the first element, this would require more
than simply endangering the physical safety of certain individual officials,
employees, or agents of state institutions. Otherwise, any attacks on such
people could be considered insurrection.
There was no evidence presented of danger to Cambodia’s
institutions. The second element would require an attempt to divide Cambodia’s
national territory. There was no evidence of such an attempt.
The judgment includes no evidence that those convicted used
any of the means of conducting an insurrection, including the construction of
barricades across roads or defense works; any effort to obstruct the activities
of public forces; the occupation of buildings or facilities by force or deceit;
or the destruction of buildings or facilities.
In sum, there is no factual or legal basis for charges of
insurrection against the defendants.
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