Clamor for Activists’ Freedom
![]() |
Yorm Bopha participates in a land protest in an undated photo. (RFA) |
Two
Cambodian land activists have been detained for more than a month.
2012-10-08
Radio Free Asia
Two
women who have been championing lands rights in Cambodia have been
languishing in jail for more than a month on charges which human rights
groups say are part of a broader government
effort to silence and punish community organizers in the country.
Yorm
Bopha and Tim Sakmony, prominent housing rights
activists, were arrested in early September after taking part in
protests against forced evictions at the Boeung Kak Lake and Borei Keila
development sites in Phnom Penh.
But they face charges unrelated to the protests, such as beating up a
thief and making a false declaration, which rights groups say do not
require pretrial detention at all.
Almost daily protests are held by local rights groups in Phnom Penh to
highlight what they call a violation of the duo’s fundamental and
constitutional rights.
International nongovernmental groups meanwhile have taken the plight of
Yorm Bopha and Tim Sakmony to Cambodia’s foreign donors, asking they
that demand Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government drop all charges against
the two and release them immediately.
“We are concerned that the legal actions being carried out against Bopha
and Sakmony are in fact motivated by their involvement in land-related
advocacy campaigns on behalf of the Boeung Kak and Borei Keila
communities,” eight international NGOs said in a recent open letter to
donor nations pouring millions of dollars into Cambodia’s development.
The letter said that Yorm Bopha and Tim Sakmony had been arrested on
“questionable allegations” and that their pretrial detention is contrary
to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which
Cambodia is a party.
It added that such detentions could be made only under “specific
circumstances not applicable here.”
“It is indicative of a broader government practice of using the law and
judiciary to silence and punish human rights defenders, social activists
and community organizers in Cambodia,” the letter said.
Local rights group Licadho said the use of pretrial detention in the two
cases “is particularly shocking.”
The law states that such detention may be ordered only where it is
necessary to stop an offense from occurring, to prevent witness or
victim harassment, to prevent collusion among accomplices, to preserve
evidence, to protect public order, or to guarantee the presence and
security of the accused, Licadho said.
“None of those circumstances are present in either Bopha or Sakmony’s
cases.”
Licadho noted an “increasing use of criminalization and pretrial
detention to silence the decent voices of victimized communities, their
representatives and human rights defenders.”
‘Intentional violence’
Yorm Bopha, a Beung Kak Lake resident, was arrested Sept. 4 by the Phnom
Penh Municipal Police on the orders of the city’s Municipal Court
judge. She was arrested along with her husband, Lous Sakhorn, who was
later released.
After she was questioned at the court, the judge accused Yorm Bopha of
“intentional violence with aggravating circumstances” under the Penal
Code in connection with the alleged beating of a suspected thief who had
stolen mirrors from her car. She was ordered detained at Prey Sar
Prison.
Witnesses have told civil society investigators that the individual
beaten had been suspected of stealing car mirrors on multiple occasions,
according to local rights group Licadho, and that Bopha had complained
to local police several times, but they took no action.
On Aug. 7, local residents allegedly beat the suspect as he stood nearby
her parked car, the rights group said. Bopha was not present and was
never questioned by authorities about the incident until she was
summoned to court.
Lous Sakhorn told RFA’s Khmer service that his wife had not been
involved in any acts of violence and that she had only been assisting
her neighbors in resolving the land dispute at Boeung Kak.
Boeung Kak Lake activists have been protesting evictions since 2008,
when a private developer given a land concession by the government began
draining the lake to make way for a luxury residential development.
Yorm Bopha had also led daily protests against the municipal government
to secure the release of the “Boeung Kak 13”—a group of women who were
detained in May and sentenced to between one year and two and a half
years on charges of encroaching on private land and obstructing
authority.
They were released in June after serving more than a month in prison.
‘Disinformation’ charge
Tim Sakmony, a Borei Keila resident, was summoned before the municipal
court and was arrested on Sept. 5 on charges of “disseminating
disinformation” under the Penal Code and thrown in Prey Sar Prison. The
complaint against Tim Sakmony was filed by Suy Sophan, owner of Phanimex
Co., which is developing the Borei Keila site.
Authorities claim that she made a “false declaration” in an attempt to
secure an apartment for her 49-year-old disabled son, who is a resident
of Borei Keila. Her son is a widower and former soldier who is suffering
from partial paralysis and cannot speak.
Members of the Borei Keila community have opposed the demolition of
their homes to make way for a commercial real estate project,
culminating in a standoff in January, when riot police were called in to
evict hundreds of residents.
Phanimex was awarded the Borei Keila community’s land in exchange for a
promise to build 10 apartment buildings for the current residents. The
company decided to build only eight buildings, however, which led to the
ongoing land dispute.
Before her arrest, Tim Sakmony led her fellow residents against the
eviction at Borei Keila, refusing to leave the site until Phanimex
agreed to construct an additional two buildings for residents. When the
company refused, she led a campaign demanding “proper” compensation and
additional housing for evictees.
Regular protests
Villagers from both Boeung Kak Lake and Borei Keila have been holding
regular protests and prayer vigils for the two women, in addition to
demanding that the government intervene on their behalf and allow them
to remain in homes on the sites, which they have occupied for years.
Since their arrests, the villagers have petitioned in front of the Phnom
Penh Municipal Court, the Ministry of Justice, the Royal Palace,
several foreign embassies, and the Council for the Development of
Cambodia—where international donors met last month to discuss aid plans
for the country.
But authorities have refused to explain why the women have been held for
so long without going to trial.
Boeung Kak Lake representative Heng Mom, who led one of the protests,
said villagers had called for the Ministry of Justice to intervene to
release the two land activists.
He said the villagers had also marched to the Royal Palace where they
sought Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni’s intervention on behalf of the
two women, but no palace officials would meet with them.
The Borei Keila and Boeung Kak Lake residents are among many petitioning
the government over disputes with companies they say have been granted
concessions that include land they have lived on for years.
According to Licadho, the government has given away nearly 4 million
hectares (15,000 square miles), or 22 percent of the country’s land
area, in mining or economic land concessions, in some cases pitting
residents against developers and sparking protests.
About 400,000 people have been affected by the concessions, Licadho
says.
Reported by RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in
English by Joshua Lipes.
No comments:
Post a Comment