In Cold blood: Did Hok Lundy order the murder of journalist Khim
Sambo?<http://khmerization.blogspot.com/2008/10/in-cold-blood-did-ho-lundy-order-murder.html>
<http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_8up7h6T0Kzc/SPBGWSZOmnI/AAAAAAAAHH0/YanpSqi5qKw/s1600-h/Hok+Lundy+%28AFP%29.jpg>Hok
Lundy, National Police Chief, prior to his departure for a visit to the US
(Photo: AFP)

<http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_8up7h6T0Kzc/SPBE7j-DGTI/AAAAAAAAHHs/ljvAYkwtDWU/s1600-h/Khim+Sambo+funeral+-+South+China+Morning+Post+-+0ctober+3,+2008.jpg>A
woman prays in front of a portrait of journalist Khim Sambo, who was
murdered along with his son in a Phnom Penh street on July 11. Police, who
are being aided by the FBI, say they have no suspects in the case. Photo:
AFP

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2008
SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST (Hong Kong)

The circumstances surrounding journalist Khim Sambo's murder point to
official involvement, writes Vincent MacIsaac

"They had no fear of being arrested. They weren't wearing helmets and made
no attempt to disguise their identity" - Chan Soveth, of the Cambodian Human
Rights and Development Association, describing the actions of the murderers
who shot dead journalist Khim Sambo.


Two weeks before he and his 21-year-old son were shot dead, Cambodian
journalist Khim Sambo reported on a not uncommon topic in
opposition-affiliated newspapers. When gamblers from the upper echelons of
the ruling Cambodia People's Party (CPP), accompanied by armed bodyguards or
police, have prolonged losing streaks, it sometimes erupts in anger and even
violence.

"When they lose, and cannot borrow more from the casino, they arrest the
casino owners," he wrote under one of his numerous pseudonyms, Srey Ka, in
the June 28-29 weekend edition of the daily Khmer Conscience, which is
affiliated with the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP).

However, Khim Sambo – whose own anger needed to be "toned down", according
to a former colleague – went further than most, mocking the behaviour of a
senior police officer described by many as "one of the most dangerous men in
Cambodia".

He reported on an incident that allegedly occurred – SRP newspapers are
often accused of fabrication or exaggeration – on June 25 at a casino
complex at a border crossing with Vietnam in the town of Bavet in Svay Rieng
province.

After losing his shirt at Le Macau Casino and Hotel, the officer borrowed
from the casino, lost that, borrowed more – and lost again. When the casino
manager refused to lend any more, he had him arrested by the junior officers
accompanying him, Khim Sambo reported.

He went further, describing how the officer stacked the deck: "When he loses
US$100,000, the casino returns US$50,000. But he plays until losing the
returned money, and demands to borrow more. If any casino owner dares to say
'no', he threatens to arrest him."

Khim Sambo did not identify the officer by name but dropped enough hints so
that when he concluded his report by stating "there is no need to name [the
CPP gamblers] because everyone in Cambodia knows who they are", he assumed
readers would be able to identify the officer, a source said.

"He did not think he had put himself in danger because he did not identify
the officer by name," the source said on condition of anonymity. Several
others – all of whom requested anonymity, citing concern for personal
security – said that Khim Sambo was writing about Cambodian National Police
Commissioner Hok Lundy.

The former governor of Svay Rieng province has been at the top of Cambodia's
police force since 1994. "There is hardly anyone in Cambodia who has shown
more contempt for the rule of law than Hok Lundy," Human Rights Watch has
said. He "represents the absolute worst Cambodia has to offer", it said.

"We believe the killing is related to that article," Son Chhay, the whip of
the opposition Sam Rainsy Party claimed, though he declined to identify the
subject of the article.

The editor of *Khmer Conscience*, Dam Sith, who had been jailed on
defamation charges in June, said he knew nothing about the article when
interviewed by phone last Thursday.

That day, he was interviewed by one of the two agents from America's FBI,
said to be "supporting" their Cambodian counterparts in the investigation.

"I told them I don't know anything about who is behind the killing, and that
I hope they find who it is," he said.

Chan Soveth, a programme officer at the Cambodian Human Rights and
Development Association, warned that "if the FBI cannot work independently
[their assistance] is just a political game".

He arrived at the scene of the double homicide about 30 minutes after it
occurred at about 6.30pm on July 11 and has been investigating ever since.
He fears the police are protecting the perpetrators rather than trying to
solve the crime.

Khim Sambo, 47, bled to death on the side of a busy street in central Phnom
Penh, minutes after being shot twice in the back while riding a motorcycle
driven by his son Khat Sarinpheata. The young man died the next day in a
Phnom Penh hospital, after being shot twice while cradling his dying father,
said Chan Soveth.

The killers, two men on a motorbike who approached Khim Sambo and his son
from behind, were probably hired assassins, he said, pointing out that they
used a K-49 pistol with a silencer.

"They had no fear of being arrested. They weren't wearing helmets and made
no attempt to disguise their identity. They acted like they were under
protection," Chan Soveth said.

When he arrived at the scene, he was able to gather information from
bystanders but, when he returned the following morning, no one would speak
to him, he said. Silence permeates human rights groups in Cambodia. When
asked who he thought was behind the killing, Chan Soveth declined to answer.
"I want to continue living in Cambodia," he said.

He believes the murders were intended to create an atmosphere of fear ahead
of the July general election, which the CPP won by a landslide. This view
was widely promoted by Cambodian and international human rights groups who
expressed outrage following the killing.

But SRP whip Son Chhay disputes that there was any link between the killings
and the election. "It was not a political killing," he said. "There was no
order from the top of the CPP," he said. "[Prime Minister] Hun Sen does not
know who is behind the killings. If Hun Sen knew who was behind the
killings, the FBI would not have been allowed to join the investigation."

He added: "The FBI has been allowed in because the CPP believes they will be
unable to find evidence of government involvement," though he in no way
suggests that the CPP has turned benevolent.

"Their behaviour, their totalitarian thinking is very much like the Khmer
Rouge. Either you support the CPP or you are an enemy of the state. Killing
opposition members is acceptable," he said.

Son Chhay and Chan Soveth said they feared that the FBI was likely to be
used by the Cambodian police to provide a veneer of legitimacy to what the
latter described as a "sham investigation".

Son Chhay noted: "They have this great ability to manipulate the
international community and they will manipulate the FBI to make sure
nothing happens [with the investigation]."

This is already happening, he said, pointing to a police statement published
in the Cambodia Daily this month quoting Phnom Penh's police commissioner as
saying that an "FBI official had agreed that the killings were motivated by
someoneseeking revenge against the journalist's son".

Senior police officers have suggested that the target of the killers was not
Khim Sambo but his son.

In his initial report into the crime, Chan Soveth found no evidence
thateither the father or the son were involved in a personal dispute that
could have led to their murders.

US embassy spokesman John Johnson said he was aware that some human rights
investigators had accused the local police of a cover-up. Because the
investigation was ongoing, he said, he could not comment on the details of
the case.

The FBI agents were playing a "purely supportive" role in the investigation
at the invitation of the interior ministry, he said. Besides two
investigators, who arrived on September 14, a forensic artist had arrived
last week to assist localpolice with a sketch of the assailants, he added.

One day after meeting the FBI agents, Phnom Penh deputy police chief Hy
Prou, who is in charge of the investigation, said there were no leads on a
suspect and that the complexities of the case made investigating it
difficult.

However, the fact that editor Dam Sith was interviewed for the first time
after the FBI agents arrived could signal that the bureau is nudging the
Cambodian police in a new direction – towards the articles Khim Sambo wrote
before he was killed.

In an interview at his home last Saturday, Dam Sith said that one of the
questions asked by the FBI agent, who was accompanied by a translator from
the US embassy and two Cambodian officers, concerned the kind of articles
Khim Sambo had written for him. He said he replied: "A lot of articles about
different things."

Dam Sith is a father with three young children. Since Khim Sambo's killing
he does not leave his home unless he has to. He looked like he had not slept
in weeks and was in a highly nervous state.

In 2006, Hok Lundy was denied a US visa due to allegations that he was
involved in drug and human trafficking. The following month, however, the
FBI awarded him a medal for his efforts in fighting terrorism. In April last
year, he was finally granted a US visa, to attend a counter-terrorism
workshop.
----------------------
1. Read related article: Did Hok Lundy order the murder of journalist Khim
Sambo?<http://khmerization.blogspot.com/2008/10/did-hok-lundy-order-murder-of.html>
2. Read this article in pdf. format
here<http://www.cambodiapolitic.org/South%20China%20Morning%20Post%20-%200ctober%203,%202008.pdf>
.



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