Crackdown in Siem Reap [-"There is no truth in [state-run] media"] 

Video by Licadho

Monday, 27 April 2009
Written by Vincent MacIsaac
Asia Sentinel (Hong Kong) 



The rule of law goes by the board for Cambodia's land sharks 


Victims of police shooting: A legacy of 30 years of CPP rule?


Video footage of an allegedly unprovoked attack by police on unarmed farmers in 
Siem Reap last month has sparked outrage in Cambodia because of what it showed 
and because the reaction from the national government sent another strong 
signal that state officials and those connected to them can violate laws with 
impunity, human rights groups say.

"Unless action is taken to defuse the tense land situation in the country, 
sadly there will likely be more shootings such as occurred in Chi Kreng 
[district, Siem Reap]," said Kek Galabru, president of to the Cambodian League 
for the Promotion of Human Rights (Licadho).

"Real action must be taken to address Cambodia's land crisis and to ensure that 
authorities do use violence against innocent villagers who are merely trying 
hold on their land," she said.

According to the monitoring department of the Cambodian Human Rights and 
Development Association (Adhoc) the number of forced evictions in Cambodia is 
rising and land disputes are becoming more violent despite the free fall in 
land prices that began in the middle of last year and more frequent and fiery 
warnings from Prime Minister Hun Sen that any state officials involved in 
illegal land deals, no matter how high their rank, will be severely punished.

Moreover, the border conflict with Thailand and the subsequent build up of 
troops on the Cambodian side has increased land grabbing by the military as 
well as illegal logging in protected forests along the border, 
environmentalists and human rights investigators warn.

The Siem Reap farmers are the victims of both land grabbing and 
state-sanctioned violence, human rights groups say. At the root of the incident 
is a five-year dispute that escalated last December when two community leaders 
and one journalist were arrested following a court complaint from two 
businessmen who the farmers allege illegally obtained and then resold titles to 
92 hectares of land they had been farming since, in some cases, 1982. In 
January farmers surrounded the provincial courthouse for 17 days to demand the 
release of the three.

It escalated further last month when a joint task force of about 100 police and 
military personnel opened fire on the farmers. The video of the crackdown 
almost never made it out of the rural pagoda where it was first shown, 
according to Buddhist monk Sovath Loun, who transmitted it to human rights 
groups in Phnom Penh via cell phone.

Sovath Loun, whose older brother and nephew were shot and wounded during the 
March 22 crackdown, said that at one point during his negotiations with 
district police over the incident, he was warned that if he didn't turn over 
his videos and photographs, the military might storm his pagoda in Chi Kreng 
district to seize them. The pagoda is located about 30 kilometers from Angkor 
Wat, the country's top tourist destination.

One video, which the monk obtained from a farmer who hid his video-equipped 
cellphone under his hat, suggests that the signal to begin shooting came from 
the deputy district police chief, and clearly identifies another officer who 
allegedly wounded two farmers after he opened fire with his AK47, according to 
the Cambodian League for the Promotion of Human Rights (Licadho). 
www.licadho-cambodia.org

The footage contradicts government claims that the police were acting in self 
defense, the league says, and it is calling for the prosecution of those who 
shot four farmers as well as the release of nine others subsequently jailed on 
charges of assault and attempted theft (of the rice they had planted).

"This was extremely serious violence against villagers committed by government 
armed forces, and it demands a strong response by the government. The police 
and other officials who committed this violence must be punished," Licadho said.

The province's governor, Mr. Sou Phirin, pledged to personally resolve the 
dispute following the protest at the provincial court, but his attempt at 
reconciliation aggravated it. He proposed that the businessmen be given the 
rice and farmers who had planted it be compensated by being paid for their 
seeds, according to the Adhoc report, which also said the governor's attempt at 
reconciling the two sides was marred by open hostility towards the farmers and 
their lawyer, whom he cursed at during the negotiations.

Sovath Loun's videos and scores of photographs include the aftermath as well as 
extremely graphic footage and photos from the hospital, including close ups of 
gaping wounds and doctors trying to treat them, as well as bleeding farmers 
beaten unconscious and tied together in rows. His videos and photos provide an 
extremely rare and detailed look into what many have been warning for years is, 
among other things, a grave threat to stability in Cambodia: the government's 
alleged complicity in allowing, and in some cases assisting, those in positions 
of power to steal land from the poor.

The 30-year-old monk first showed the videos to about 20 monks, nuns and 
laypersons at Vat Sleng Pagoda a week after the crackdown. The day after the 
first of several police officers paid a visit. The low-ranking officer had been 
instructed by the district chief of police to find out how many VCDs had been 
made and to take them, Sovath Loun said. "I asked the officer, 'what law did I 
break?"

He broke the silence that ensued by enquiring further, "Do you want to borrow 
it or do you want to take it?"

"If you want to borrow it you can, but if you want to take it you can't," he 
continued. If the officer was devout he would be aware it would be a severe 
transgression to lie to a monk, while if he was merely superstitious he could 
be frightened into believing that a lie to a venerable monk in pagoda might be 
an invitation to bad luck for him and his family, he said.

The officer opted to relay the choice to his superiors. Over the next few days 
more officers and district officials visited him at the pagoda and the hospital 
where he was tending his brother and nephew. They told him to stop taking 
photos, turn over his VCD and sign a letter pledging not to disseminate the 
images, Sovath Loun said. He replied by telling them they could have the VCD if 
they signed a letter promising to resolve the land dispute and bring those who 
shot the farmers to justice.

During a second visit by police to his pagoda an officer warned him that if he 
kept the VCD he might have to deal with the military. Sovath Loun quoted the 
officer as saying: "The military might attack the pagoda to seize it."

On the third visit the monk turned over his VCD, but by this time he had 
already distributed about 100 copies throughout surrounding villages and widely 
transmitted the video of the crackdown taken by the farmer via his cell phone. 
This video ended up at human rights organizations based in Phnom Penh and on 
the internet (http://hub.witness.org/en/upload/shooting-chi-kreng-siem-reap-v2).

On April 2, Sovath Loun left his pagoda for Phnom Penh. "My heart was too heavy 
to remain in Siem Reap. I came here to try to regain my peace of mind," he 
explained at Ounalum Pagoda. The pagoda, which was founded in 1443, is the 
headquarters of the Cambodian Buddhism and has been experiencing a steady 
rebirth following its desecration by the Khmer Rouge.

Sovath Loun said his attempt to regain his peace of mind at the pagoda became 
more difficult after an advisor to the Supreme Patriarch of Cambodia's 
Buddhists, a layman and official from the Ministry of Cults and Religion, 
arrived at the pagoda on April 10 in a silver Lexus and told him to order the 
about 100 farmers from his district who had sought refuge with him to return to 
Siem Reap on April 10.

He described the ultimatum as being inspired by politics rather than the 
teachings of Buddha. "The order came from the government," he said.

During their 30 minute conversation, he tried to explain to the advisor that 
his claim that the farmers were "disturbing the pagoda" was illusory. "I kept 
telling him that no monks had complained while the farmers stayed at the 
pagoda. Instead, we gave them food and blessings. We felt great sorrow for 
them."

The government advisor, whom the monk described as "aggressive", could not be 
swayed, and after he drove off in his silver Lexus Sovath Loun had to tell the 
panicked farmers to leave the pagoda and return to Siem Reap. By midafternoon 
all but four had left. Monks paid for those who could not afford tickets, he 
said.

The four who remain in Phnom Penh, identified by Siem Reap police as leaders of 
the group, are in hiding at a "safe house". They fear they will either be shot 
or arrested if they return to their villages, one said by telephone. Police are 
searching house to house in their villages for them, Chan Soveth, an 
investigator with Adhoc said. The disputed farmland is now under guard by armed 
police and soldiers, he added.

"There is no truth in [state-run] media," Sovath Loun said, explaining his 
motivation for compiling and disseminating the videos. "Soldiers and police 
have guns for protecting people not shooting them," he added before beginning 
his evening meditation on April 12.

Within a week, however, he had also left the pagoda, according to venerable 
monk Thaich Chhorn, who kept a written diary of the protests by the Siem Reap 
farmers in Phnom Penh . Thaich Chhorn said Sovath Loun, who is also a painter, 
left the pagoda to paint murals on the inner walls of another one in the 
countryside.
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to