A Cambodian
court has sentenced a journalist and activist to 20 years in prison. Mam
Sonando had been accused of instigating an anti-government rebellion. But
critics say authorities are trying to silence a vocal critic.
A court in
Phnom Penh on Monday sentenced journalist Mam Sonando to 20 years in prison.
Sonando, 71, was accused of inciting an anti-government movement. However,
critics say authorities had little basis for the accusations.
Following
Monday's verdict, Rupert Abbott with London-based Amnesty International called
the sentence "outrageous."
"We
believe the motivation behind his conviction is because he's been a prominent
government critic," Abbott said. "He's seen, I think, as a threat to
the government; someone who's prepared to speak out."
Sonando ran
the popular independent radio station Beehive Radio and was president of
Cambodia's Democrat Association. In Cambodia, the media scene is dominated by
outlets that are generally sympathetic to the ruling party. But Sonando's
station often aired stories that were critical of the governing Cambodian
People's Party.
Expropriation
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| Supporters protest the court ruling against Sonando in Phnom Penh |
The charges
against Sonando stemmed from a confrontation in May between authorities and
villagers in eastern Cambodia. The villagers had been protesting against the
expropriation of land. Security forces fired on the protesters, resulting in
the death of a 14-year-old girl.
Shortly
after, authorities accused villagers of plotting an armed revolt against the
government - a claim the villagers denied. Sonando was later accused of
inciting the alleged rebellion, which he also denied.
Rights
groups say that Sonando's September trial ran relatively smoothly, compared to
other recent convictions of protesters and government critics. But they also
say the prosecution failed to present convincing evidence linking Sonando to
any insurrection.
"I
think what we can see is perhaps the authorities here are learning that if you
can make the trial look a bit better on the face of things then perhaps you can
deflect some criticism," Abbott said. "The problem is, though, the
evidence was so weak, we can only come to the conclusion that the decision to
give Mam Sonando a 20-year sentence was based on something other than the
evidence."
On Monday,
the court also convicted several other villagers in relation to the alleged
insurrection; they received sentences ranging from several months to 30 years.
Growing
unease over land disputes
Critics say
Monday's convictions are a symptom of a growing unease in Cambodia over land
disputes. Over the last two decades, the government has awarded huge swathes of
land to private firms as part of economic concessions aimed at triggering
development. But it has also fueled confrontations between authorities, the
companies and villagers who say they are being evicted from their homes.
In January,
for example, authorities demolished roughly 300 homes in Phnom Penh's Borei
Keila neighborhood - the culmination of a long-standing dispute.
In another
high-profile confrontation in May, 13 women from the capital's Boeung Kak
community were arrested and sentenced to more than two years in prison. The
charges were later reduced to time already served on appeal.
But to
government watchdogs, the message is that increasingly, authorities in Cambodia
are continuing to crack down on its most vocal critics. Last week in Geneva,
United Nations' Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Cambodia Surya Subedi
told the UN Human Rights Council that land disputes and forced evictions were
continuing unabated.
"There
are well-documented serious and widespread human rights violations associated
with land concessions that need to be addressed and remedied," Subedi
wrote in a report. "Criminalization of land activists and human rights
defenders is particularly worrying, as freedom of expression and assembly is
crucial to a well-functioning democratic society."
'Unfair'
findings
The
government, however, disagreed with Subedi's assessment. Phay Siphan, a
government spokesman, said the special rapporteur's findings were
"unfair."
"It
was kind of out of date," Siphan said, noting that Cambodian Prime
Minister Hun Sen earlier this year announced a moratorium on granting new land
concessions. "[Subedi] obtained second-hand information. It's not updated
to what's going on in Cambodia."
Siphan also
disagreed with critics of the Cambodian court system, maintaining that the
judiciary and government operate independently.
Still, Monday's
convictions and lengthy sentences came as a surprise to some observers.
"It's
pretty sad," said Ou Virak, president of the Cambodian Center for Human
Rights. "It's pretty sad this court hasn't improved in the past two
decades. With all of the money, with all of the push, with everybody trying to
come up with all kinds of indicators and all kinds of strategic meetings, here
we are with a court that is basically a political tool."
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