Showing posts with label CCHR public forum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CCHR public forum. Show all posts

Monday, July 30, 2012

Cambodia: Continued Disruption Of Community Empowerment

Monday, 30 July 2012
Press Release: Asian Human Rights Commission

A Joint Statement from the Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association and the Cambodian Center for Human Rights forwarded by the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC)

Phnom Penh, 27 July 2012 -- The Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association (ADHOC) and the Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) condemn the disruption of a training session on land rights jointly organized in Rattanakiri province this morning. ADHOC and CCHR call on all public authorities to put an end to intimidation of human rights workers and to comply with Cambodia’s obligations by upholding citizens’ rights to free expression and assembly.

At 8:30am on 27 July, as villagers gathered in a house in Patang village, Patang commune, Lumphat district, three commune police officers, one provincial police officer, the Village Chief, the Commune Chief and the Deputy Commune Chief knocked on the door and demanded that the meeting be discontinued. They argued that they received orders from provincial authorities and that the meeting organizers failed to satisfy notification requirements.

Mr. Pen Bonnar, ADHOC’s Provincial Coordinator, ignored the orders and proceeded with the meeting. Fifteen minutes later, two additional police officers were sent by the district authorities. One of them carried an M-16 assault rifle. Considering this threat and in view of the attendees’ physical safety, ADHOC and CCHR decided to stop the meeting. Upon their departure, Patang Commune Chief accused ADHOC of engaging in incitement activities. Pen Bonnar now intends to file a complaint for defamation against Patang Village Chief. CCHR staff were told by police that if they did not leave the area, their security would not be guaranteed.

Friday, September 09, 2011

Armed police break up forum

Sandan district police prevent the CCHR workshop from taking place in Kampong Thom province yesterday. Photo by: John Anthony

Thursday, 08 September 2011 15:02
John Anthony and May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

Kampong Thom province - Police armed with AK-47s joined local authorities in breaking up a human rights training event in Kampong Thom’s Sandan district yesterday.

The event, organised by the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights and the Natural Resource Protection Group in Meanrith commune, had barely commenced when local officials arrived with about 30 armed police and military police.

This is my land, my area and my commune, and you need my approval to come here,” said Chheum Khon, chief of Meanrith commune.

Chhim Savuth, project co-ordinator at CCHR, said authorities threatened organisers and participants with arrest.

The reason they don’t want villagers to meet with us is because they cut a lot of trees in this district, so they don’t want the news to get out,” he said.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

CCHR Press Invitation for public forum in Kratie Province on 21 July, 2011

Phnom Penh 19 July 2011

Press Invitation
Public Forum on Human Rights and Development

Date : 21 July 2011
Location : Prek Chamlak villager, Kanh Chor commune, Chhlong district, Kratie province
Time : 8:00 AM – 11:30 AM

Guest Speaker :
  • Provincial governor of Kratie Province
  • H.E. Sao Rany, parliamentarian from Norodom Rannarith Party
  • H.E. Kuch Moly, parliamentarian from Funcinpec Party
  • H.E. Yem Ponharith, parliamentarian from Human Rights Party
  • H.E. Long Ry, parliamentarian from Sam Raingsy Party
  • Mr. Hang Chandi, Chhlong district deputy governor 
  • Representative of Ministry of Environment
  • Representative of Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fishery :
  • Mr. Chhut Wutty, Executive Director of Natural Resource Protection Group
Hundreds of residents in Kratie province whose rights has been violated will attend a public forum on “Human Rights and Development” organized by the Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR).

The CCHR has organized the public forum in order to provide an opportunity for residents living in remote areas whose rights have been violated so that they can express their opinions, raise their concerns, make requests and ask questions to their parliamentarians, local authorities, and other stakeholders in the hope of reaching a
peaceful resolution to violations affecting them.

For further information please contact:
Mr. Chhim Savuth, Project Coordinator, +855 12 89 98 58 or savuth@cchrcambodia.org
Mr. Suon Bunthoeun, Project Officer, +855 12 48 35 46 or bunthoeun@cchrcambodia.org


Tuesday, June 28, 2011

CCHR Press invitation​-Public Forum in Siem Reap Province

Press Invitation

Public Forum on Human Rights and Development – Siem Reap

Forum Date: 30 June 2011

Forum Location: Banteay Srei village, Khnar Sanday commune, Banteay Srei district, Siem Reap province

Time: 8.00 am – 11.30 am

Speakers:

H.E Nou Phalla, Deputy Governor of Siam Reap province
H.E Sao Rany, Norodom Ranarith Party, H.E Yem Punharith, Human Rights Party
H.E Nhek Bunchhay, FUNCINPEC Party, H.E Ke Sovannaroth, Sam Rainsy Party
Mr. That Bunchoeun, Head of Office of Agriculture, Siam Reap
Mr. Meong Vuthy, Governor of Banteay Srei district
Mr. Chut Vuthy, President of Natural Resource Conservation Group
Mr. Lun Kanal, Head of Office of Environment, Siam Reap

Hundreds of residents from Siem Reap province whose rights has been violated will attend a public forum organized by the Cambodian Center for Human Right (CCHR). The CCHR has organized the forum for residents living in remote areas whose rights have been violated so that they can express their opinions, raise their concerns, make requests and ask questions to their parliamentarians, local authorities, and other stakeholders in the hope of reaching a peaceful resolution to violations affecting them.

For further information, please contact:
Mr. Chhim Savuth, Project Coordinator, +855 12 899858 or savuth@cchrcambodia.org
Mr. Suon Bunthoeun, Project Officer, +855 12 483546 or bunthoeun@cchrcambodian.org.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

CCHR public forum in Preah Vihear Province



Phnom Penh, 26 May 2011

Dear Sir or Madam,

Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) is pleased to inform you that CCHR will organize a public forum on Human Rights and Development on 31 May 2011 from 8.00 am to 11.30 am in Bal Hal Village, Reak Reay Commune, Roveang District, Preah Vihear Province. The forum’s main themes are land concession, mine exploration, and Prey Lang deforestation.

Many hundreds of families from Roveang and Cheay Sen Districts, Preah Vihear Province, have been affected by land concession, mine exploration and Prey Lang deforestation. Villagers sought intervention from the Cambodian Center for Human Rights and other civil society organizations when the forest whose resources they enjoyed is being cleared.

A number of companies have been granted thousand hectares of economic land by the government for agro-industrial crops in Roveang and Chey Sen Districts, Preah Vihear Province. These companies have been implementing their plans since 2009 and the other since 2010, which affects the villagers’ land and forest.

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

CCHR's public forum on 'Elections and Democratic Space" on 11 Nov 2010 in Ratanakiri

Dear All,

The Cambodian Center for Human Rights will be conducting a public forum on 'Elections and Democratic Space" on Thursday 11 November 2010 in Ratanakiri Province as part of the United Nations Development Programme's Strengthening Democracy and Electoral Processes project.  For further information, please see the attached Media Alert.  


Kind regards.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

CCHR Public Forum on Human Rights and Development in Banteay Meanchey Province

Cambodian Center for Human Rights

MEDIA ALERT
For immediate release – Phnom Penh, on July 21 2010

Public Forum on Human Rights and Development in Banteay Meanchey Province

Government granted land concessions since 2006 totaling around 3000 hectares have directly affected more then 200 families from nine villages; including Snoul Tret, Yeang Dankum and Thnal Bat, 4 communes in Banteay Meanchey Province. Complaints have been filed against the High Sour Company owned by Ms. Sour Chanthou, and Sampan Narrith a private business owner. Villagers have farmed the contested land since 1995; land they were given ownership of by the Government through social concessions, and in one instance Royal Degree. A peaceful resolution to the conflict has yet to be reached.

The Cambodian Centre for Human Rights will be facilitating a Public Forum on Human Rights and Development in Ou Bei Chorn Commune, O’Chrov district, Banteay Meacney where villagers will have an opportunity to voice their concerns, ask questions and express their opinions to parliamentarians, local authorities, national and international organisations; as well other stakeholders who are concerned about the conflict and who desire a peaceful resolution. To date Mr. Kong Sam Onn, Program Director of Cambodian Center for Human Rights, H.E Mr. Nhek Bunchhay, Funcinpec Party, H. E Mr. Yon Tharo, Sam Rainsy Party, H.E Souv Rany, Nationalist Party, H.E Ou Chan Rith, Human Rights Party, a Representative from the Ministry of Agriculture, Mr. Tang Svan, Deputy Chief Governor, and Mr. Som ChanKear, Adhoc, have confirmed their attendance at the public forum.

The Public Forum will take place on July 22 2010, from 8.a.m. to 11.30 a.m. in Pagoda Samaki Wan Snoul Tret, Snoul Tret Village, Ou Bei Chorn Commune, O’ Chrov District, Banteay Meanchey Province

For further information, please contact :

Suon Bunthoeun
Project Officer, CCHR
Tel: +855( 12)48 35 46
Email: bunthoeun@cchrcambodia.org

Chhim Savuth
Project Coordinator, CCHR
Tel: +855 (12) 89 98 58
Email: savuth@cchrcambodia.org

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Public Forum of CCHR in Kampot Province on May 8, 2009 (Part 4)


CCHR's latest public forum (Chi Kreng) as well as other previous forums are available on Youtube. Please click this following link to watch them online:

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Public Forum on Human Rights and Development for villagers affected by public canal dispute with community leader

CAMBODIAN CENTER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS

MEDIA ALERT

For immediate release – Phnom Penh, 12 August 2009

Public Forum on Human Rights and Development for villagers affected by public canal dispute with community leader

Parliamentarians, local authorities, organizations, community members and other stakeholders will participate in a Public Forum on “Human Rights and Development” in Takeo Province. The Public Forum will consider the ongoing dispute between community leaders and villagers taking place in Kompong Omphil Village, Borey Chular Sa Commune, Borey Chular Sa District, Takeo Province, that is currently adversely affecting the lives of several community

The conflict originated with the selling of a public canal which was dammed by the alleged purchaser for fishing purposes. Prior to the damming of the canal, the community relied on a bridge over the canal that connected the two parts of their village. Since the sale of the canal the community has been prevented from using the bridge and the fishermen have not been permitted to fish the water. Recently, ten community members were charged with “destroying private property” after removing the makeshift dam.

The Public Forum on Human Rights and Development will provide community members with the opportunity to voice their concerns, ask questions and express their opinions to parliamentarians, local authorities, national and international organizations as well other stakeholders who are concerned about the ongoing conflict and who desire a peaceful resolution.

The Public Forum will take place on August 14, 2009, from 8.a.m. to 11.30 a.m. in Kompong Omphil Village, Borey Chular Sa Commune, Borey Chular Sa District,

For Further information, please contact:
Mr. Chhim Savuth, Project Coordinator
Email: savuth@cchrcambodia.org
CCHR Web Site: www.cchrcambodia.org

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Phnom Penh City Hall refuses to accept CCHR letter

CAMBODIAN CENTER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS

Dear Sir/Madam,

The Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) would like to inform you of the refusal of the Municipality of Phnom Penh to accept receipt of a letter from the CCHR informing them that CCHR President, Mr. Ou Virak, is currently outside Cambodia and is therefore unable to attend a meeting scheduled by the Municipality for the afternoon of Monday 8 June 2009. The meeting was arranged to discuss the CCHR’s intention to hold a public forum informing the 4,000 families facing eviction from their homes beside Boeung Kak Lake of their human rights as well as the compensation that is lawfully owed to them. Although the original invitation was limited to Mr. Ou Virak and was delivered to the CCHR on Friday 5 June 2009 after the close of business at 6.15pm, the CCHR has agreed to send a representative to the meeting in response to a request by the Municipality this morning to that effect.

The CCHR had intended to conduct a public forum on 12 June 2009 at the Lazy Fish Guesthouse which was this morning surrounded by police and closed on allegations that its business licence has expired. The CCHR has yet to establish the truth, or otherwise, of the grounds on which the guesthouse has been closed. In light of the persistent acts that have hitherto intervened to preclude the convening of the forum the CCHR is genuinely concerned that this peaceful and lawful forum will never be permitted to take place. Previous threats to the owner of the guesthouse and lakeside residents by the Village Chief of No. 6 Village, the village in which the CCHR intended to conduct the forum, are detailed in our press release of 2 June 2009 entitled “Authority’s Campaign of Intimidation to Prevent Peaceful Forum”. Notwithstanding preceding events the CCHR will today meet with the Municipality given our commitment to seeing that this public forum takes place.

For further information, please contact:

Mr. Chhim Savuth, Project Coordinator, 012 89 98 58
Mr. Suon Bunthoeun, Community Trainer, 012 48 35 46

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

CAMBODIA: Police suppressed freedom of assembly and expression in Rattanakiri Province

3 December 2007
CAMBODIA: Denial of freedom of expression & assembly

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information from the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights (CCHR), human rights organization in Cambodia that police force prevented the holding of a public forum which CCHR organised on 27 November 2007 in Rattanakiri province. The police set up a roadblock to prevent the organizers from entering the place so that the forum was not held. Even though the villagers were unable to enter the venue, they started speaking with the organisers about the land grabbing in their area that had affected their livelihoods.

CASE DETAILS:

On 18 November 2007, CCHR informed the commune, district and provincial authorities of its plan to organise a public forum on 27 November 2007 in Kong Yuk village, Patey commune, O Yadao District in the northeastern province of Rattanakiri. The commune chief, Sev Ngang, gave a positive reply welcoming the forum. The district authorities did not reply. The provincial governor replied with a "disagreement" with the forum on the grounds of "insecurity" in the area, which was not justified based on the real situation, according to the organisers.

CCHR invited relevant officials and Members of Parliaments (MPs), but none replied to their invitation, except the Patey commune chief. CCHR also proceeded to disseminate information on its forum in and around Kong Yuk village and invited villagers to participate in it. It then got a make-shift meeting hall built with cover and floor mats for participants and invited guests.

All was set for the forum to be open, and in the morning of November 27 some 300 villagers arrived at the venue ready for debates and discussions. However, before the opening of the forum, the local police, without issuing any ban notice to the CCHR organisers, dispatched a force of nine officers, some of whom were armed with assault rifles to the access road some 3 kilometers away from the venue. This group set up a roadblock with their car and two motorcycles to bar CCHR organizers from making their way and bringing their audio equipment to the forum.

The O Yadao district police chief, Ma Vicheth, said that the police action is well warranted when "the organizers had not informed the local authorities." However, the Patey commune chief contradicted Ma Vicheth's allegation, saying that "the organizers had informed the district authorities and these authorities gave them authorisation."

CCHR Director Ou Virak tried to talk with the police on the spot and then called Police Inspector Ma Vicheth to get the police to remove the roadblock so that the organizers could proceed to the forum with all the equipment and the forum could begin. During the negotiations some 100 villagers were walking from the venue to join the organizers at the police roadblock to request the police to remove the roadblock and allow the organisers to proceed to the forum. Those villagers offered to carry all the equipment if the police did not allow the organizers' vehicle in.

Upon learning about the arrival of those villagers, Ma Vicheth charged that Ou Virak had incited the villagers to stage a demonstration without authorization and threatened to arrest him for such incitement. Unable to persuade the police to remove the road block Ou Virak gave up and cancelled the forum. But at that road block those villagers were nevertheless voicing in front of the CCHR organisers their grievances against land grabbing in their area that had affected their livelihood. The organizers simply recorded those grievances to air on their radio programme.

When asked about the police action, a representative of the villagers said it was a violation the rights and freedoms of the people meant to cover up corruption among local officials who colluded to sell the community land of the indigenous people. He said: "they shut the forum and they deny the rights of the people."

BACKGROUND INFORMATION:

The Cambodian Centre for Human Rights (CCHR) is a non-governmental human rights organisation. It has been organising public forums in different localities around the country to enable people in and around those localities to debate and address local, regional and national issues together with relevant local, district, provincial and government officials, and also their Members of Parliaments (MPs), all whom it invite for the occasion.

During each forum, it sets strict rules of order for speakers to "take the floor" in turn in the pre-set time allocated to each speaker, on the first-come, first-served basis, to ensure fairness and allow everyone to have a voice if they so wish. The full length of each forum will then be broadcast on a number of radio stations whose airtime CCHR has bought.

Rattanakiri province where the forum was due to take place is a remote northeastern province bordering Laos and Vietnam. It is sparsely populated, and its population is mainly composed of different groups of indigenous people. All these people have a tradition of communal land ownership which the Cambodian Land Law recognizes and protects.

Over the past ten years or so there has been a continuous acquisition of land in that province "for development purposes", especially by the rich and the powerful after the opening of roads to that province. This acquisition has affected the communal ownership of those people and reduced their "living space" where many of them still practice slash and burn cultivation. Because of an ineffective enforcement of the Land Law, abuse of power and corruption of local officials, an increasing number of large areas of land in that province have been acquired as private property by powerful and rich people. Communal land has increasingly been and those indigenous people's livelihood is being threatened.

In that particular area where the public forum was to be held, those indigenous people have been affected by a case of alleged land grabbing by a lady dignitary named Keat Kolney who is the wife of Chann Saphann, a Secretary of State for Land Management Urban Planning and Construction and the sister of Finance Minister Keat Chhon. The affected villagers have been protesting against this landgrabbing for some time. They wanted to participate in the planned forum to voice their side of the story and appeal to the government to protect their communal land.

Cambodia has a history of grave violations of human rights, and to prevent the repetition of this history it has undertaken, as its international human rights obligations, to ensure respect for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms. It has adhered to all international human rights norms and standards and incorporated them into its constitution.

The AHRC has learned that back in September the same local authorities and police had banned a seminar forum a radio NGO called Voice of Democracy had organized in the same locality. The Cambodian authorities have practically banned all public demonstrations since 2003, and have also banned or disrupted many of public forums organized by CCHR and Voice of Democracy.

The AHRC deplores the action taken by the authorities of Rattanakiri province and by the police of O Yadao district in particular for their suppression of freedom of assembly and expression which is a constitutional right Cambodian citizens. Action should be taken against the police of O Yadao district and effective measures should also be taken to prevent any repetition of such suppression.

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please send your letters to the authorities listed below to call for action to stop all action to suppress freedom of assembly and expression in Cambodia. The AHRC is writing separate letters to the UN Special Representatives of the Secretary-General for human rights in Cambodia and UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression calling for their intervention into this case.

To support this appeal, please click here:

Suggested letter

Dear_________

CAMBODIA: Police suppressed freedom of assembly and expression in Rattanakiri Province

I am writing to you to express my deep concern about the suppression of the constitutional rights to freedom of assembly and expression of the villagers of Kong Yuk village, Patey commune, O Yadao District in the northeastern province of Rattanakiri on 27 November 2007 by the Cambodian authorities and the police of the locality.

I have learned that those villagers, altogether some 300 of them, are indigenous people. They went to participate in a public forum organized by an NGO called the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights (CCHR) with a view to expressing their views and positions on a pending landgrabbing case which was badly affecting their livelihood.

Those villagers had already been at the forum when a police force composed of nine officers, some of whom were armed with assault rifles, was dispatched to set up a roadblock with their car and two motorcycles some 3 kilometers away from the forum to stop CCHR officials, the organizers, and bar them from traveling with all their equipment to that forum. Some 100 villagers walked down from the forum to request the police to remove the roadblock. They even offered to carry that equipment if the organizers were not allowed to drive their vehicle with the equipment to the forum.

It is shocking to learn that, not only the police inspector named Ma Vicheth rejected the request from both the organizers and the villagers, but he took their gathering at that place as a demonstration and threatened to arrest CCHR Director Ou Virak for inciting those villagers to stage it without authorisation. After exhausting all means to persuade the police to remove the road block, the organizers had to cancel the forum.

The police action was tantamount not only to stopping that forum but to suppressing the rights of those villagers to freedom of assembly and expression as guaranteed by the Constitution of Cambodia and by the international human rights instruments to which Cambodia is a party.

I strongly urge you to take action against the police inspector of O Yadao district for the suppression of these constitutional rights of Cambodian citizens and also effective measures to prevent such suppression in future.

I trust you will take this proposed action and measures.

Yours sincerely,

---------------------

PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

1. Mr. Samdech Hun Sen
Prime Minister
Cabinet of the Prime Minister
No. 38, Russian Federation Street
Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Tel: +855 2321 9898
Fax: +855 23 36 0666
E-mail: cabinet1b@camnet.com.kh

2. Mr. Sar Kheng
Deputy-Prime Minister
Minister of Interior
No.275 Norodom Blvd., Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Fax/phone: +855 23 721 905 / 23 726 052 / 23 721 190
E-Mail: info@interior.gov.kh or moi@interior.gov.kh

3. Mr. Tea banh
Deputy Prime Minister
Minister of National Defence
Russian Federation Street
Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Tel: +855-23 883184 / 428171
Fax: +855-23 883184
E-mail: info@mond.gov.kh

4. Mr. Ang Vong Vathna
Minster of Justice
No 240, Sothearos Blvd.
Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Fax: +855 23 36 4119 / 21 6622
E-mail: moj@cambodia.gov.kh

5. Mr. Henro Raken
Prosecutor-General
Court of Appeal
No 240, Sothearos Blvd.
Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Tel: +855 11 86 27 70
Fax: +855 23 21 66 22

6. General Hok Lundy
National Police Commissioner
General-Commisariat of National Police
Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Tel: +855 23 21 65 85
Fax: +855 23 22 09 52

7. General Sao Sokha
Commander
Military Police
Mao Tse Tung Blvd
Khan Tuol Kok
Phnom Penh
Cambodia
Tel: +855 12 36 3636

8. Mr. Christophe Peschoux
Director
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights - Cambodia
N 10, Street 302
Sangkat Boeng Keng Kang I
Khan Chamcar Mon
Phnom Penh
Cambodia
Tel: +855 23 987 671 / 987 672, 993 590 / 993 591 or +855 23 216 342
Fax: +855 23 212 579 / 213 587

Thank you.