July 17, 2012
(New York) – The Cambodian government should release and drop all charges against Mam Sonando, the owner of Cambodia’s main politically independent radio station and prominent critic of Prime Minister Hun Sen.
The authorities arrested Mom Sanando at his home on the morning of July
15, 2012, and charged him under six sections of the penal code, which
could result in a prison sentence of up to 30 years.
Hun Sen
publicly called for Sonando’s arrest on June 26, when Sonando was out
of the country and the Cambodian government was preparing to host the
Regional Forum of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN),
which was held last week in Phnom Penh and included the participation
of non-ASEAN members – the United States, Japan, Australia, and China.
The forum also serves as a precursor for the larger East Asia Summit,
which takes place in November. Sonando returned to Cambodia during the
ASEAN meeting, but the authorities did not arrest him until the ASEAN
meeting was finished and most international media had departed.
Sonando’s arrest came two days after US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton’s departure from the country.
“Sonando’s arrest on
the heels of Clinton’s visit is a brazen signal that Hun Sen thinks
that the US wants his cooperation on other matters so much that he
isn’t afraid to lower the boom on his critics,” said Brad Adams,
Asia director. “He may have gotten that impression after the US and
other delegations neglected to publicly comment on the country’s
rapidly deteriorating human rights situation. The US now needs to take
strong and public steps to pick up the pieces.”
During Clinton’s visit,
the US and other ASEAN nations focused on regional security and
economic issues, largely ignoring rights issues. Sonando’s arrest
suggests that Hun Sen concluded that increasing international
engagement with Cambodia and its accelerating integration into the
regional and world economies means that human rights issues will
continue to be relegated to a minor place in the context of Cambodia’s
international relations.
Sonando is a veteran critic of Hun
Sen and his rule who has been arrested twice before for non-violent
political activities. He owns Beehive Radio, the most outspoken and
politically independent radio station in Cambodia. Electronic media in
Cambodia are almost entirely controlled by the government, such as
Apsara TV and Bayon TV, the latter being under the control of Hun Sen’s
daughter. Sonando is also the president of the Association of
Democrats, a small nongovernmental organization that promotes human
rights and democracy education.
Hun Sen’s original public statement alleged that as president of the
Association of Democrats, Sonando was linked to a supposed secessionist
movement based in Prama village in Kratie province, where people have
protested against what they allege is land-grabbing by a rubber
company. From May 15 to May 17, Prama village was the target of a
military-style siege and attack, during which a 14-year-old girl, Heng
Chantha, was shot to death by security forces. No one has been arrested for the girl’s killing, and it appears that no investigation is taking place.
However, Hun Sen has directly involved himself in legal proceedings
against five villagers accused of being the local leaders of the
movement to create a state-within-a-state, said by Hun Sen to be backed
by Sonando. The Association of Democrats and the five accused deny
involvement in any plot to conduct an uprising to establish a miniscule
“autonomous zone” in Kratie.
“Instead of holding the soldier
and his superiors responsible for killing a 14-year-old girl, Hun Sen
has instead come up with a bizarre claim that a poor, rural village was
attempting to secede from Cambodia and the country’s most important
media critic was somehow part of this conspiracy,” Adams said. “The
narrative would be laughable if the consequences weren’t so tragic.”
Wild assertions against critics have been the stock-in-trade of Hun
Sen’s intelligence and propaganda agencies for decades. They have been
repeatedly used to justify acts of violent repression and the wrongful imprisonment of protesters, critics, and opposition politicians.
Responding to these most recent accusations, the 72-year-old head of
the Kratie branch of the Association of Democrats, Vich Kimchoan, said
the group worked only to “educate the people about human rights,
freedom and democracy.”
Sonando’s arrest is also an attack
on Beehive Radio, which is a key platform for promotion of human rights
and democracy in Cambodia. The station provides air time for all points
of view, including Cambodian civil society, the fight against HIV/AIDS,
maternal mortality and human trafficking, campaigns for women’s rights
and gender equality, political and economic transparency, equitable and
sustainable development, labor rights, environmental protection, the
rule of law, and electoral education and election monitoring.
The arrest was carried out amidst reports that the government-dominated
National Election Committee may soon attempt to prevent opposition party leader Sam Rainsy, earlier forced into exile after being sentenced in absentia to 12 years’ imprisonment on trumped-up charges,
from campaigning from abroad on behalf of his Sam Rainsy Party in the
2013 national elections. This has prompted fears that the government
may be about to take legal action against Kem Sokha, the leader of an
opposition party that has been negotiating a merger with the Sam Rainsy
Party, and to prosecute the activist Buddhist monk Luon Sovat, who was
briefly and arbitrarily detained on May 24 after being secretly charged
on frivolous grounds.
Human Rights Watch criticized ASEAN and East Asia Summit members for their silence during the recent meetings in Phnom Penh.
“In the past three months a prominent environmentalist has been killed,
a young girl was killed in a military siege, an activist Buddhist monk
was threatened with arrest, the political opposition leader kept in
forced exile, and a crucial media figure was accused of a preposterous
crime,” Adams said. “Yet Clinton and regional leaders swept in and out
of Cambodia without even addressing the situation. It is time to wake
up and stop pretending that more economic and military engagement will
magically turn things around.”
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