Expression/Assembly
Statement | Unlawful abuse and deportation of land protesters in Phnom Penh
17 October 2007
LICADHO strongly condemns last night's violent abduction and deportation by authorities in Phnom Penh of land protesters who had come to the capital from Svay Rieng province. This action was unacceptable and a blatant violation of Cambodians' Constitutional rights to freedom of expression and assembly.
Shortly before 7pm, approximately 80 police and military police - some armed with pistols - surrounded the group of about 200 Svay Rieng villagers camped in the park outside Wat Botum near the National Assembly. The villagers, who had only arrived at the park a few hours earlier, were forced into vehicles including two buses and sent back to Svay Rieng. According to witnesses, some of the villagers were beaten during the raid on the park, and two persons were later taken to hospital unconscious. NGO workers were blocked by authorities from entering the area, but heard cries coming from the villagers.
Article | Riot Police Clash with Cambodian River Rich Garment Factory Workers on Strike in Phnom Penh
22 May 2007
On the morning of May 21, 2007 approximately 1000 workers from the River Rich Textile Factory based in Kandal Province's Sa'ang district gathered to stage an ongoing peaceful strike and encountered more than 150 riot police ready to disperse the crowd. The workers had staged the strikes to protest the dismissal of 10 fellow workers who had planned to form a union within the factory. Those 10 workers had been dismissed in November 2006 due to their involvement in a local union and continued to be refused entry back into the factory.
At around 8:30 AM, riot police fully equipped with tear gas, guns, electric batons and shields were dispatched to the factory after its owner made a complaint against the workers for instigating a strike and not coming to work. The workers had previously staged strikes the week before with each strike garnering more numbers however there was no sign of riot police or violence.
Statement | Civil society calls for respect for freedom of expression in Cambodia in support to OSJI
29 March 2007
The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), the Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (COMFREL), the Cambodian Committee of Women (CAMBOW), the Alliance for Freedom of Expression in Cambodia (AFEC) and the Neutral and Impartial Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (NICFEC) are deeply concerned about the threat made by the Royal Government of Cambodia (RGC) to expel the Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI), an international organization, from the country or to revoke staff visas.
Expulsion of OSJI would be inconsistent with Article 12 (2) of the Agreement between the United Nations and RGC which ensures that "representatives... of national and international non- governmental organizations will at all time have access to the proceedings before the Extraordinary Chambers." By making this threat the government risks giving the impression to an international audience that it will not allow the activities of ECCC to be properly scrutinized and monitored.
Statement | Crack down on peaceful Khmer Kampuchea Krom monks protest
27 February 2007
LICADHO, ADHOC & CCHR are shocked and condemn the deployment of mixed forces used to crack down on a peaceful demonstration by monks on the morning of February 27, 2006 in Phnom Penh near the Vietnamese embassy.
52 Khmer Kampuchea Krom monks had planned to gather in front of the Vietnamese embassy in Phnom Penh to demand the reversal of a decision made last Saturday by Vietnamese authorities to defrock three monks who allegedly took part in a Khmer Krom demonstration in Southern Vietnam. Today's initiative was part of a bigger campaign taking place in several countries throughout the world to protest the defrocking.
Statement | Murder of Unionist President Hy Vuthy
26 February 2007
LICADHO, ADHOC & CCHR condemn the assassination of Hy Vuthy, President of the Free Trade Union of Workers in the Kingdom of Cambodia (FTUWKC) at the Suntex garment factory, and demand a proper investigation by the authorities to bring his killers to justice.
Hy Vuthy, aged 34, was shot dead at 5.15am on February 24 while riding his motorbike home after finishing his nightshift at the Suntex factory in Phnom Penh's Dangkao district. The murder, which took place a kilometer from the factory, was reportedly committed by two men on a motorbike.
Hy Vuthy had been President of FTUWKC members at the factory for less than a year. He had previously been a member of the Cambodian Union Federation (CUF), a rival union widely considered to be close to the government. According to preliminary investigations by LICADHO, ADHOC and CCHR, Vuthy had received telephone death threats approximately three months ago.
Briefing | Restrictions on the Freedom of Assembly in Cambodia 2006
12 January 2007
In 2006, Cambodian authorities continued to restrict freedom of assembly. The ongoing clampdown is being conducted by arbitrarily objecting to demonstrations, violently dispersing many peaceful protests and arresting participants in legitimate assemblies. In denying the basic human right of freedom of assembly - enshrined in international treaties and Cambodian law - the State is trying to silence voices of protest and stop people organizing themselves to stand up for their rights.
This briefing paper is the third in a series of reports, published in 2004 and 2005, on restrictions of the right to freedom of assembly in Cambodia. It records some of the instances between 1 December, 2005, and 30 September, 2006, when peaceful assemblies were subjected to intimidation or violence by state forces or state authorities, as well as occasions where the Phnom Penh municipality objected to peaceful gatherings that were being planned.
Statement | Call for Investigation into the accident of RFA reporter
28 December 2006
The Alliance for Freedom of Expression in Cambodia (AFEC) calls on the Cambodian Government to investigate into the suspicious accident that left a journalist of Radio Free Asia, Mr. Sok Serei, in a very critical health condition. On December 14th, 2006, at around 4:45 pm, Mr. Sok Serei was involved in an accident after picking up his daughter from school. The accident knocked Mr. Serei unconscious when his head hit the road hard.
Police has indicated that they now know the identity of the owner of the vehicle but no formal investigation is underway at this moment. AFEC is deeply concerned that this incident might be a premeditated hit and run crime instead of an accident. It might be due to the work on corruption that Mr. Serei had been exposing in the last months or his works revealing illegal forest concession in Koh Kong. One recent case reported by Serei involves high ranking official in the Ministry of Rural Development. Serei was also reporting on many activities of the civil society that are critical of the government.
Article | International Human Rights Day in Cambodia goes on undisturbed by the authorities
12 December 2006
A sea of blue kramas filled the Olympic Stadium on December 10 as more than 10,000 people gathered to celebrate the 58th International Human Rights Day. All the participants on the day wore the blue kramas as a symbol representing the day's theme "We are all Human Rights Defenders".
The gathering was supported by more than 90 organizations that aimed to recognize and promote the crucial roles that Cambodians from all vocations or occupations in life play in protecting human rights and to commemorate the struggles for the fulfillment of human rights in Cambodia. Participants included community activists, trade unionists, students, garment workers, people living with disabilities, NGO workers and members of the international community including diplomats.
Article | Riot police trample kite flying event outside the Cambodian National Assembly
28 November 2006
On Monday, November 27, 2006 at 9:30am, more than 100 members of the Alliance for Freedom of Expression in Cambodia (AFEC) gathered in the park in front of Wat Botum, nearby the National Assembly. The AFEC members were attempting to fly 100 kites as part of a campaign to demand freedom of expression and assembly in Cambodia, and the abolition of disinformation as a criminal offence. The motto of the event was "Without wind a kite cannot fly. Without Freedom of Expression society cannot progress."
Article | Violent Measures Used to End Bright Sky Garment Workers Strike in Cambodia
26 November 2006
On the night of October 16, 2006, police forces resorted to violent and brutal measures as they attempted to disperse 2,000 garment workers during a peaceful strike at the Singaporean-owned Bright Sky Garment Factory in Dangkor district, Phnom Penh. In the clash of riot police and shocked garment workers, police fired several shots over the heads of workers and beat them with their electric batons. The police were sent in to disperse the workers who had gathered in the factory's main compound in order to settle an ongoing dispute over working conditions.
The 2,000 night shift workers had gathered in the compound at around 6pm on Monday, October 16, 2006. During the previous week the workers had been on strike calling for the abolition of six month contracts and the adoption of clear probation periods and permanent contracts.
Statement | Staff of FM Radio Ta Prohm threatened and replaced after criticizing Prime Minister
23 October 2006
The Alliance for Freedom of Expression in Cambodia (AFEC) is deeply concerned about forceful removal of the General Manager Noranarith Anandayath and other staff of the radio station Ta Prohm FM 90.5 on October 19, 2006.
Noranarith Anandayath was formerly the Cabinet chief of Prince Norodom Ranariddh who had been ousted as Funcinpec President at an extraordinary party congress on Wednesday, October 18, which was staged by Funcinpec's Secretary-General Nhiek Bun Chay in a coup-like manner. Already on Tuesday at 2:30pm, four armed body guards of Nhiek Bun Chay had taken control of the office of the radio station in Phnom Penh.
Statement | Stop Violent Crackdown on Workers' Strike at Bright Sky Garment Factory
17 October 2006
The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition of 23 NGO members, strongly condemns the armed forces for cracking down on a peaceful strike made by garment factory workers while they were asserting their rights for better working conditions at Bright Sky Garment Factory, located along Veng Sreng Street, Dangkor District, Phnom Penh on October 16, 2006 at around 8.30pm.
At the scene, the armed forces violently cracked down on the strike, during which serious abdominal firearm injuries were sustained by a female employee from the factory named Muth Ravy, 24, while she was walking into Rainbow Factory, close to Bright Sky factory. Due to further action by the armed forces, two other workers named Neang Sovannaroth, 21 and his wife Nget Bora, 20, were physically beaten and arrested and brought to the Police station at Dangkor District Office.
Statement | Demand for abolishment of Article 62 UNTAC law on criminal disinformation
12 October 2006
The Alliance for Freedom of Expression in Cambodia (AFEC) demands for abolishing Article 62 of the UNTAC law on criminal disinformation. The network of 28 Cambodian civil society organizations holds that this legal provision contradicts the Cambodian Constitution and the international human rights law by imposing unjustifiable restrictions to the human right to Freedom of Expression. In the view of AFEC, there are other and much more adequate legal ways how to protect public peace than a law against disinformation. The AFEC is convinced that the mere publication of false statement of facts should not be criminalized at all.
In an open society there are many mechanisms that finally lead to the revelation of truth. The recent cases where high-ranking government officials brought criminal disinformation complaints against two journalists, a dismissed university teacher and three people who distributed a leaflet are demonstrating how Article 62 can be abused for silencing criticism. The fact that some of these persons are still arrested is a gross violation of Freedom of Expression.
Article | Land grabbing in Cambodia leaves communities camping out on the government's footsteps waiting for justice
4 October 2006
In addition to the noticeable impact of Phnom Penh's evictions, land disputes have also become disturbingly problematic in the provinces. What Phnom Penh has been witnessing is the new phenomenon of increasing numbers of communities traveling into the city from their home provinces - some as far as Banteay Meanchey province 350km from Phnom Penh. The villagers, camped under the shade of a tree nearby the National Assembly, make the journey to Phnom Penh to lobby the government in the hope that they will address the land disputes in their home villages.
Briefing | NGO Laws & Crackdowns on Human Rights Defenders: International Lessons for Cambodia
14 September 2006
In the Cambodian context, any NGO law - regardless of its particular content - poses a threat to the work of human rights defenders and other NGOs. While human rights defenders are most at risk because of their role in criticizing government actions, the objectives of all NGOs and development agents - both foreign and domestic - can be compromised.
This paper highlights the experience of six Asian countries with laws similar to the proposed Cambodian NGO law is outlined below.
Statement | Activists release balloons, demand release of arrested Sambok Chap villagers
5 September 2006
Two of the villagers, Mr. Chhen Sovan, and Mr. Chan Ra, were arrested during the eviction of the residents of Sambok Chab, Sangkat Tonle Bassac, on June 6, by hundreds of armed policemen. The third person, Mr. Hem Chhun, who worked as a reporter for the newspaper Samrek Yuthetor, was arrested on July 7 close to the site in Dangkao District of Phnom Penh where the villagers were relocated. The three persons have been accused by the Phnom Penh authorities of having incited a riot at Sambok Chab Village on May 30 that lead to the destruction of private and public property. The authorities have accused the journalist of being the "mastermind" behind this violent event.
The AFEC rejects violence as a means of expressing opinions. However, the alliance points out that the riot was a spontaneous act by about 100 desperate villagers facing eviction and the destruction of their homes. The event took place after the dismantling of some of their houses had started and a girl had been wounded by falling debris. There is little indication of any kind of an organized plan or premeditation on the part of the villagers who participated in the riot.
Presentation | Human Rights in Cambodia Presentation 2006
11 August 2006
A slideshow presentation on Human Rights situation in Cambodia 2006.
Statement | Call for charges to be dropped against 3 garment factory workers detained in Kandal court's prison
4 August 2006
The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition of 21 NGO members, regrets
the decision made by Kandal Provincial Court to charge and detain three garment factory workers; Lach Sambo, Sal Kimsan and Yin Khun who have been working for Genuine garment factory since 4 July 2006.
From 23 to 29 June 2006, 1000 workers at the Genuine garment factory, located in Kantok commune,
Angsnuol district, Kandal province, held a strike to demand for the factory boss to withdraw complaints
and allow to return union leader Lach Sambo and other two workers; Sal Kimsan and Yin Khun. All three
were terminated by the boss in relation to a non-existent criminal case.
Statement | Concerns over use of Disinformation Article under UNTAC law to silence journalists
11 July 2006
The Alliance for Freedom of Expression in Cambodia (AFEC) is very worried about the fact that persons from within or close to the Cambodian government are using Article 62 of the UNTAC law on "disinformation" against journalists who criticized them. The recent complaint against two Cambodian journalists have been filed only a few weeks after that the National Assembly has taken the prison terms out of Article 63 of the UNTAC law on criminal defamation recently. The AFEC is afraid that there was no change of attitude behind this minor legal reform.
Article | Cambodian workers overcome repression to celebrate May Day
1 May 2006
Around two thousand factory workers gathered at the Independence Monument and later in front of the National Assembly to celebrate May Day, despite the efforts by hundreds of police to stop workers entering Phnom Penh. Organisers of the rally were officially refused permission to hold the event, with the Ministry of Interior claiming the site was already being used by the pro-Government Cambodian Confederation of Trade Unions (CCTU). Yet, media reported that the CCTU held an event - attended by Prime Minister Hun Sen and aired on Apsara television station - on the night of Sunday April 30. Workers present at the rally reported that the CCTU's planned rally failed to happen.
On the basis of this disingenuous excuse, police undertook a coordinated effort to prevent workers entering Phnom Penh. LICADHO strongly condemns this restriction to people's freedom of movement.