Monday, April 02, 2012
Push for censorship to shut down ACSC/APF workshops
Protesters at Boeung Kak lake make their case to civil society groups on Saturday. Photo by Meng Kimlong |
Thais will sit out NGO meet
Monday, 02 April 2012
Shane Worrell and Khouth Sophak Chakrya
The Phnom Penh Post
Civil society groups from Thailand
will boycott a meeting between NGOs and regional government
representatives at this week’s ASEAN summit because their country’s
delegate “does not represent Thai civil society”, a spokeswoman said
yesterday.
Premrudee Daoroung, a
representative of Thai civil society groups, said her country’s
government had shown “complete disregard for meaningful engagement” by
selecting a representative who had played no part in the independent
Civil Society Conference/ASEAN Peoples’ Forum, which ran from Thursday
to Saturday at the capital’s Lucky Star Hotel.
“In past years ... civil society
groups have faced similar problems of having our own government appoint
their own people to meet with the leaders of the countries. The same
thing has happened again – the government has appointed its own people
to [meet] with the [ASEAN] leaders,” she said.
“We condemn this undemocratic
process, and we demand that the government of Thailand stop such
interfering.”
A Thai government representative
did not respond to questions before deadline.
Push for censorship
Meanwhile, civil society and
human rights groups yesterday condemned a Friday decision to shut down workshops on
topics including land eviction
and Myanmar at the
independent people’s forum.
ACSC/APF steering committee
member Thida Khus said the government had asked her committee to censor
information before the forum, which attracted more than 1,000 people.
“During this preparation, they
were asking us to remove the four workshops,” she said, adding that
hotel management and police had pressured organisers to stop the
workshops.
The hotel’s owner could not be
reached yesterday.
"Deeply concerning"
Cambodian Center for Human
Rights president Ou Virak said the incident was “deeply concerning”.
“Civil society organisations have come to
Phnom Penh in good faith to discuss issues affecting people across ASEAN
and have now been prevented from speaking,” he said.
“The Cambodian government is clearly more
concerned with what its neighbours think than looking after its own
people. The irony is that Friday’s events are a major embarrassment to Cambodia,
when it could have set an example to the people.”
Representatives from various
ASEAN nations’ civil society visited Borei Keila and Boeung Kak lake
over the weekend.
Rena Herdiani, a delegate from
Indonesia, said the representatives encouraged both sites’ residents to
demonstrate without using violence.
“We will suggest our government
push the Cambodian government – the chair of ASEAN – to provide a prompt
solution for all of you,” Rena Herdiani said.
Pressing authority
Tep Vanny, a representative of the Boeung Kak
community, gave the ASEAN representatives a letter urging them to press
the authority to mark out the 12.44 hectares of land set aside for
residents in August.
Municipality police chief Touch
Naroth, meanwhile, said his officers had not told the Lucky Star Hotel
to shut down any of the workshops.
“It is the right of the hotel to
stop these meetings if they want,” he said.
Government spokesmen could not
be reached yesterday.
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