Military police round up residents of Broma village, May 16, 2012. |
Residents of Broma village hold homemade weapons in an undated photo. Credit: RFA |
20th August 2012
Radio Free Asia
A Cambodian activist sought by authorities for allegedly masterminding a plot by villagers to secede from Cambodia claims he is innocent and only acted on behalf of residents to save their land from encroachment by a foreign concession company.
Bun Ratha, director of the Cambodia-based NGO Democrat Association, denied government claims that he had led villagers from Kratie province’s Chhlong district in a clash with armed military personnel in May as part of an effort to establish a self-governing zone.
Speaking from an undisclosed location, the land activist said he was “framed” by the government and that he had only acted as a representative of the Broma villagers in Kompong Damrey commune who had rejected demands to vacate their farmland for several months.
“This is only Hun Sen’s excuse to blame me,” he said, referring to Cambodia’s prime minister, who had condemned the dispute in a nationally-televised speech two weeks ago.
“What I did was to demand land for the villagers.”
Cambodian authorities have said that
the government owns the land in Broma village, but activists contend
that it had already been awarded as a concession to Russian firm
Casotim, which plans to set up a rubber plantation.
Activists say the villagers have been farming the land for years.
In May, the land row sparked a
clash as some 400 military personnel carrying guns tried to disperse
around 200 villagers armed with axes and crossbows, leaving 15-year-old
Heng Chentha dead after she was struck by a bullet authorities say
ricocheted after it was fired as a warning shot.
Bun Ratha and fellow activists fled the scene before security forces could arrest them.
The land activist said that he
had defended the Broma villagers in their actions against Casotim, but
rejected suggestions that he had organized a movement for the more than
1,000 families whose land was allegedly targeted by the Russian firm.
He noted that authorities
arrested him in April after demonstrating villagers destroyed some of
Casotim’s property, but that he had later been released from the
provincial prison after the protesters blocked off a national highway.
“If I was a mastermind in establishing the self-governing zone, they would not have released me [in April],” he said.
Acted alone
Bun Ratha also dismissed
government claims that he had received assistance from Cambodian Human
Rights and Development Association (ADHOC) activist Chan Soveth or
Association of Democrats leader Mam Sonando, both of whom have faced
judicial action for their roles in the land dispute.
“I never used any help from
associations when I held meetings with the villagers,” he said, adding
that he had done so of his own free will.
He said that the villagers had
only connected with the Association of Democrats when he asked the group
to provide food and other assistance for those affected by forced
evictions at the site.
Bun Ratha challenged the
government to search documents from the two groups, which he said would
prove that he is not a member of either organization.
Last week, a municipal court in
Phnom Penh summoned Chan Soveth to answer charges that he illegally
aided Bun Ratha in Broma village in violation of Article 544 of the
Penal Code. If convicted, he faces one to three years imprisonment and a
fine of U.S. $500 to U.S. $1,500.
Mam Sonando was recently
arrested and accused of sparking the land revolt and the ensuing clashes
in Broma village. He faces 30 years imprisonment if convicted on all
charges.
According to Cambodia’s Ministry
of the Interior, the Broma villagers are a “group of anarchists” who
Bun Ratha “forced” into creating an autonomous “squatter zone.”
A consortium of more than 20
Cambodian human rights groups condemned the Cambodian judicial system
for pursuing “politically-motivated” charges against the activists
involved in the land dispute, referring to the decision as the “decade’s
most serious threat to human rights work in Cambodia.”
Reported by Sum Sok Ry for RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
2 comments:
RFA, known where u hiding,
Somehow, they kept secret locations for u.
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