Culture of  Compromise Seen Hurting Courts 
It is  also hurting the people! 
It will take  decades, if it happens at all, that Cambodia will see an 
independent  court system which dares to make judgments against Cambodian  
rulers and powerful leaders. It is in the Cambodian culture, where  powerful 
figures are "untouchable". Khmer Rouge's hybrid court, for  example, is being 
used to try only those who are powerless or less  powerful. Some rulers are 
left out. 
Opposition  parties must be smart enough not to do things that can be 
backfired.  Supporters (of the oppositions),  on the other hand, should not be 
overly excited for events that are  intentionally created for political 
agendas. People have been killed and  injured for bad moves created by 
politicians 
for such purposes.  Politicians almost always find their safe haven though 
political bargains,  defection and political asylum, while living supporters 
continue to live  in fears.  
===========
  
 
Culture of  Compromise Seen Hurting Courts 
By Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer  
Original report from Washington
18 August 2009
Legal action, compromise and asking for pardon to end  disputes have become 
an integral part of Cambodian politics, effectively and  commonly used in 
past several years. 
Since 2005, the nation’s courts have seen 17 cases that  monitors label 
political in nature, stemming from border issues, corruption,  defamation, 
disinformation and incitement. The cases have ranged from local  politicians 
and 
rights activists to the prime minister and senior-level  opposition 
leaders.  
The new trend has met with mixed reaction. There are those  who say such 
cases are an improvement over the use of weapons to solve disputes.  But there 
are others who would prefer the courts are not involved in politics,  or 
legal issues used as a pretext to intimidate critics of the government.  
Kem Sokha, president of the Human Rights Party, an  opposition party with 
three seats in the National Assembly, was once imprisoned  briefly as the 
head of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights; he was charged  with defamation 
of the government for hanging up a banner for 2005’s Human  Rights Day. 
“My release at the time was the result of political  compromise, with 
intervention from Cambodians inside and outside the country, as  well as 
international intervention,” Kem Sokha told VOA Khmer by phone last  week. “I 
see 
this as not a practice that we want. We want to use a legal system  where 
everybody is under the law, as a democratic principle with no one above  it.” 
Rong Chhun, president of the Cambodian Independent Teachers  Association, 
who was once involved in a court case similar to Kem Sokha’s, said  the court’
s lack of independence and its service to the ruling Cambodian  People’s 
Party force compromises the other side usually doesn’t want. 
“The culture of begging for pardon, and after the pardoning  one turning to 
support or follow a powerful individual is not a good practice,”  he said. “
But it is understandable, based on dependency and injustice in our  legal 
system.” 
The practice has filtered all the way to Cambodia’s remote  areas. In 
Ratanakkiri province, Pen Bona, an investigator for the rights group  Adhoc, 
was 
removed from his position, via pressure from the court. 
“The culture of compromise and begging for pardon is not  right,” he said 
from Phnom Penh, where he now works in the group’s home office.  “It is 
unlawful, and we absolutely don’t want this. Those who are wrong must be  
punished. However, we can only do that in a system where there is real  
justice.” 
The prevailing system has also affected the highest reaches  of politics, 
when, for example, Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker Mu Sochua was fined  for 
defamation of Prime Minister Hun Sen last month. 
Mu Sochua, who is also the party’s deputy secretary-general,  was fined 
more than $4,000 by Phnom Penh Municipal Court, in court fines and in  
compensation to Hun Sen. She has vowed to appeal but does not rule out the  
option 
of a compromise. 
“Compromising is an option if it gives dignity to both  sides,” she said. “
But if the compromise is to make one party, especially the  victim, lose 
its dignity, as in writing a letter to apologize, this is not a  compromise. 
Without a compromise that gives honor to both sides, the court is a  better 
option.” 
The case draws lots of condemnation both nationally and  internationally 
expressing concern that the country might plunge into  dictatorship. 
Hun Sen, meanwhile, has lashed out of critics of the case,  which he 
brought against Mu Sochua after she sued him for defamation, for  allegedly 
degrading remarks made in a speech in April. 
“Those of you who would like to issue a statement, both  Khmer and 
foreigners, I would call you stupid, dumb and ignorant of the law,”  Hun Sen 
said in 
a speech last week, lambasting critics. “You only recognize  rights of the 
opposition not lawful rights of those in power.”  
There are other cases. Twenty-two military officials are  suing another SRP 
lawmaker. One opposition journalist has been jailed for  defamation while 
another editor promised to shutter his paper to avoid the same  fate.  
“In a case where someone says sorry and admits his mistake,  it is enough,”
 Phay Siphan, spokesman for the Council of Ministers, told VOA  Khmer. “
Firstly, the government’s stance is to show what is right and wrong.  Secondly, 
those who pass judgment are not the executive or legislative bodies.  It is 
the judiciary body.” 
Phay Siphan denied government influence over the courts,  despite critics 
who note that the opposition rarely wins cases that appear  political to 
begin with.  
“I have never received [government] pressure in more than 10  years on the 
job,” Mong Monychakriya, a Supreme Court judge, said. “I solve a  case 
based on my own merit, as the law permits.” 
Some legal professionals, meanwhile, say politicians should  leave the 
judicial system alone, to ensure its independence.  
“We must follow the law and its procedure, once lawmakers  give power to 
the court and the court is independent of political influence,”  said Hong 
Kimsuon, an attorney for the Cambodian Defenders Project. “This is a  decision 
that would benefit the whole population. If it’s a penal case, and  [both 
sides] compromise and withdraw based on compromise and fear of influence,  
this is not a good practice.” 

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