Dear Lok S. Sophan,
Thanks you kindly for sharing.

Sincerely,

K2



From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
S. Sophan
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2011 3:26 AM
To: Cambodian Community of Canada
Subject: Interesting story about Ven. Luon Sovath back to his worldwide 
well-known as a human right defender of the yellow robe

Saturday, October 8, 2011
We Are All Human Rights 
Defenders<http://luonsovath.blogspot.com/2011/10/we-are-all-human-rights-defenders.html#more>
The next morning, Sovath woke at 4 a.m. He snuck quietly out of his pagoda, 
undetected by police, and slipped into the village. He went door-to-door, 
waking each family, until he had assembled a group of over 50 citizens - the 
elderly, the young, even pregnant women and children. They set out across the 
rice fields in the direction of the main road.
Sometimes the most effective defense of human rights begins with the simplest 
of questions.

Published on May 9, 2010
"Why can't I be here?"

"What law did I break?"

And sometimes, just: "Why?"

The latter was a question that the Venerable Luon Sovath began asking early in 
life. The 32-year-old grew up in Cambodia's Siem Reap province and came of age 
in the midst of Cambodia's vicious civil war. He witnessed horrific violence as 
the Khmer Rouge attempted to regain control of the country.

Growing up, there was rarely a clear answer to the question "why?" The violence 
was usually senseless; the injustice seemed systematic. Only two things were 
certain: First, the war was tearing his family apart; each of his 11 siblings 
had become entangled in the conflict. And second, he did not want to join them.

So at age 15, Sovath took a different path: He became a monk. His choice 
allowed him to escape harm during Cambodia's decades-long war, and instilled 
the virtues of karma, reflection, and justice.

Today, Cambodia's guns are mostly silent, but another battle rages: The fight 
over land rights. Since 2004, over 250,000 Cambodians have been victims of 
illegal government land seizures to make way for commercial development, 
plantations, dams, and mining concessions.


The government provides its citizens no due process in these evictions, and the 
use of military police to enforce them is common. The people benefiting from 
land seizures are uniformly well-connected businessmen with the means to call 
on virtually every state mechanism for support: high-ranking government 
officials, courts, district and provincial officials, police and soldiers.
The ideology behind Cambodia's current battle never sat well with Sovath's 
Buddhist ideals. And ironically, the same vows that sheltered him from one 
conflict would ultimately plunge him into another.

The Chi Kreng Land Grab
On March 22, 2009, Sovath got a panicked phone call. There was trouble in his 
home village in Siem Reap's Chi Kreng district. The government had recently 
awarded all village farmland to a politically-connected company and they wanted 
to bulldoze the site. Nearly 100 military and police forces were moving in to 
enforce the order, accompanied by the Siem Reap prosecutor, the deputy 
provincial governor, and other high-ranking officials.

Some 80 unarmed villagers emerged to protest. Although they did not have titles 
to the land, they had lived there since the 1980s, which under Cambodia law 
entitled them to the right of ownership.

But the authorities weren't there to listen. Instead, they opened fire.

Three villagers were wounded, including Sovath's brother and nephew. 
Forty-three others were detained by police for questioning and forced to 
thumbprint documents forfeiting their land. Later that evening, 34 out of the 
43 villagers were released, but nine villagers were detained and charged with 
robbery and physical assault. Two more were arrested at a later date. The 
charges stemmed from a complaint by two businessmen who claimed ownership of 
the land. The pair alleged that the land belonged to them now, and that the 
villagers had illegally harvested rice from the land - rice that the villagers 
had grown with their own hands.

The village's farmland was subsequently confiscated. The shooting 
investigation, meanwhile, was a whitewash. The government claimed that the 
shooters acted in self-defense.

Sovath arrived in time to film the aftermath, and to collect video from other 
villagers who had captured the shooting itself. But there was little else he 
could do. Or so it seemed.

Multimedia monk
A police officer came to question Sovath the next day. He was direct with his 
request: The police wanted his videos.

Sovath did not flinch. If one feature defines his activism, it is the almost 
childlike frankness with which he confronts authorities. The Asia Sentinel1 
reported the following exchange:

"What law did I break?" He asked the officer.

The officer fell silent.

"If you want to borrow it you can," Sovath continued. "But if you want to take 
it you can't."

The officer left empty-handed, but more police visits followed. A second 
officer suggested that the military might storm his pagoda and seize the 
videos. On the third visit, after more threats, Sovath finally agreed to turn 
over the videos. But by then he had already distributed it to all of the major 
human-rights nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in Cambodia. The contents 
caused a sensation: The video clearly contradicted the government's claim that 
the police acted in self-defense2.

On April 2, 2009, facing increasing pressure from authorities, Sovath left his 
pagoda for Onaloum Pagoda in Phnom Penh. He brought 100 villagers with him. "My 
heart was too heavy to remain in Siem Reap. I came here to try to regain my 
peace of mind," he told Human Rights Watch last year3.
The authorities took swift notice. A week after moving the villagers to Phnom 
Penh, an official from the Ministry of Cults and Religion arrived at his 
pagoda. The government demanded that the villagers return to Siem Reap.

The trial
With their livelihoods shattered, the villagers were forced into survival mode. 
Authorities had arrested strategically, targeting breadwinners and activists. 
The goal was to break the villagers' will. Without no land to farm and no men 
to work, the families were destitute.

It was a potentially explosive situation: People stripped of all they own, with 
nothing to lose. Sovath wanted to channel their energy in another direction.

On October 20, 2009, the trial date for nine defendants, Sovath went with the 
villagers for a peaceful vigil outside the courtroom in Siem Reap. Security was 
heavy, with approximately 150 military police armed with guns, shields and 
electric batons. Their plan was to observe the trial, but the public and 
families of detainees were barred from entering court.

As the morning progressed, police began harassing the villagers, accusing them 
of disturbing the hearing. There were repeated demands to disburse. Sovath 
filmed the scene as it developed.

Finally, authorities decided to target the ring-leader. Siem Reap governor Sou 
Phearin called in the province's senior monk; he arrived at the courthouse at 
11 a.m. He confronted Sovath and forced him into a waiting car with a 
government license plate. Sovath was taken to a nearby pagoda, where he was 
interrogated by a group of his superiors, who accused him of inciting the 
villagers to demonstrate. The monks threatened to disrobe Sovath, and demanded 
that he sign a letter promising to cease further incitement. Sovath refused.

"What law did I break?"

An hour later, he was released.

The verdict
Commune police continued to monitor the activities of NGO staff and villagers 
following the trial. Sovath and the villagers, meanwhile, were making plans for 
further action: They wanted to be at court on October 27, 2009, to hear the 
verdict.

By now, his interest in the case was drawing even greater scrutiny from the 
authorities. The evening before the verdict, over 50 armed police surrounded 
the village and Sovath's adjacent pagoda. The made a show of loading their 
weapons. The message was clear: The villagers could not go to Siem Reap. They 
stayed overnight to enforce the order, three of them inside Sovath's house 
within the pagoda.

Then came more bad news: The trucks Sovath had hired for transported called to 
say they were threatened by police. They couldn't come. Sovath called a meeting 
with villagers and asked what should be done. They unanimously decided they 
would wake early and walk. It was almost 90 kilometers, a practically 
impossible task.

The next morning, Sovath woke at 4 a.m. He snuck quietly out of his pagoda, 
undetected by police, and slipped into the village. He went door-to-door, 
waking each family, until he had assembled a group of over 50 citizens - the 
elderly, the young, even pregnant women and children. They set out across the 
rice fields in the direction of the main road.

Two hours later, the police finally realized they had been duped. They set out 
on motorbike to locate Sovath. They found him 10 kilometers away, just short of 
the main road. A half dozen of them erected a makeshift roadblock with their 
bikes. They were about 50 meters ahead of the group.

Sovath responded by turning his video camera on them. The group kept marching.

"You are not allowed to go!" one officer yelled.

The group was now 20 meters from the police.

"Why?" Sovath said. "I have a right to go where I want."

Sovath now stood face to face with the angry officer. He reached out to 
confiscate Sovath's camera.

"Don't record us," the officer said.

"Recording is also my right," Sovath replied. "I am recording the road. If you 
don't want to be recorded, move away from the road."

As Sovath argued with police, the group managed to pass. One roadblock was 
cleared, but there would be many more obstacles.

>From the roadside, Sovath called every taxi in Chi Kreng. They all refused to 
>come. They too had been threatened by police.

The group kept walking. The police followed, setting up roadblocks every 100 to 
200 meters. Hitchhiking wasn't working - all of the drivers had been warned. 
But finally a taxi stopped to pick up a portion of the group. It took all of 
100 meters before the police flagged it down. The driver was detained and his 
keys confiscated. Sovath had to intervene in order to convince police that it 
was his fault, not the driver's. Ultimately, the entire taxi was forced to turn 
back in the other direction - back to where it came from.

The group kept walking, but its ranks began to thin. Sovath hailed several more 
taxis and trucks, but it was not until they had walked 20 kilometers that they 
began to have any luck. The villagers broke into smaller groups and took 
several trucks; some made it, some were turned back.

Sovath himself was finally picked up by NGO workers at about 10 a.m., after 
walking some 30 kilometers. He did not arrive at the courthouse until almost 11 
a.m. By then the verdict was three hours old: Two villagers had been convicted 
on charges of assault and robbery, and sentenced to one year imprisonment and a 
US$750 fine.

Seven were acquitted, but they would remain in prison pending fresh charges and 
an appeal from the prosecutor. Such is the nature of the Cambodian justice 
system.

Sovath, meanwhile, received a call from a superior: He was ordered back to 
Phnom Penh immediately. Sovath said the request was impossible. He was too busy.

"You're going to be jailed," replied the senior monk.

"Why?"

The aftermath and current threat
The Chi Kreng land grab wasn't unique - over a quarter-million Cambodians have 
been similarly affected in the past five years. The difference was Sovath's 
courageous and creative response, as well as his standing as a monk.

At a time when Cambodia desperately needs a voice of justice and moral 
authority, the country's clergy have been conspicuously silent, often 
complicit. Sovath has acted at great risk to his personal safety. Critics of 
the Cambodian government's policy are regularly intimidated, arrested, 
imprisoned and sometimes killed.

The threat to Sovath is no different, despite his robes. In fact, he may face 
an even greater threat, given his willingness to speak out, appear in the 
media, and openly document abuses perpetrated by the authorities. Yet he feels 
a personal responsibility toward the victims of the current land crisis.

"When a monk intervenes," he says, "it carries weight."

Today, Sovath remains in Phnom Penh. He travels to Chi Kreng regularly - and at 
great risk to his personal safety - to continue his work there among the 
villagers and others. He has expanded his work to include visits with the local 
NGO LICADHO to other victims of land-grabbing. His free time is dedicated to 
producing videos documenting the human rights abuses he witnesses.

Sovath also makes regular visits to Cambodia's prisons with LICADHO, where he 
preaches to inmates the Buddhist virtues of patience, self-control, compassion, 
and of course, justice. Many of the people he speaks to are themselves victims 
of unlawful land-grabbing. His work is instrumental in furthering LICADHO's 
mission of reaching out to victims of human rights abuses.

He told Human Rights Watch that he laments the difficulties faced by landless 
villages throughout Cambodia: "Now when farmers raise their voices about loss 
of their land, they are threatened, jailed, or brought to court and sued."

"The rich have collaborated with the powerful to take the land."

Original source of this statement for your reference: 
http://www.licadho-cambodia.org/articles/20100509/111/index.html
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