Published on Wednesday 17 October 2012
Reporters Without Borders and Cambodian Center for Independent Media
(CCIM) accuse the Cambodian government of trying to intimidate
independent reporters when it invited journalists from US-funded Radio Free Asia (RFA) and Voice of America (VOA) to a closed-door meeting with cabinet officials about their "professionalism."
The purpose of the meeting on 10 October was "to
strengthen the quality of professionalism" of their reporting,
government spokesman Phay Siphan said, but- among many discussed
points- it focussed on two issues on which the government has been
widely criticized, the death of environmental activist and fixer Chut Wutty and the long jail term passed on radio journalist Mam Sonando.
"The professionalism of these journalists was criticized only because they covered the almost unanimous criticism of Mam Sonando’s sentence
and the outrage voiced by many civil society representatives about the
decision to abandon the investigation into Chut Wutty’s death,"
Reporters Without Borders and CCIM said.
"We condemn all the threats against RFA and VOA
and attempts to meddle in their activities since the start of the year.
We also reiterate our outrage about Mam Sonando’s conviction and the
decisions taken in the investigation into Chut Wutty’s death, two cases
that are likely to have a major impact on media freedom."
Reporters Without Borders and CCIM added: "We urge the
government to radically change its attitude to the media, which has
already impaired freedom of information in Cambodia."
The meeting with government officials to which RFA and VOA journalists were summoned was closed to the public. US embassy representatives were the only other people who attended.
VOA Khmer service chief Chris Decherd said after the meeting: ‘‘VOA Khmer
will continue broadcasting and reporting in the same objective and
professional manner we have done for more than five decades (...) It is
those citizens who are our audience. They deserve quality news that
they can trust."
The judge in charge of the investigation into Chut
Wutty’s murder announced on 4 October that the enquiries would not be
pursued any further and the main suspect, Ran Boroth, who was in the
same forest as the victim on the day he was killed in April, would be
released.
A Phnom Penh court sentenced Mam Sonando, the 71-year-old owner of
independent radio Beehive,
to 20 years in prison on 1 October on charges of "insurrection" and
"inciting the use of arms against the state" in connection with a
supposed uprising n the southeastern province of Kratie in mid-May.
RFA and VOA have been the targets of various violations of freedom of information since the start of the year. In September 2011, VOA was threatened with contempt of court proceedings for allegedly revealing confidential information.
Cambodia is ranked 117th out of 179 countries in the 2011-2012 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.
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