Showing posts with label CHRAC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHRAC. Show all posts

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Media alert. Press Conference on August 15, 2011 at 8:30AM at ADHOC on “The Costs of Subject-ma​tter of Civil Action and Poverty of Villagers Living in Lor Peang Village, Taches Commune, Kampong Tralach District, Kampong Chhnang Province

Kingdom of Cambodia
Nation Religion King
---------------

Press Release
Phnom Penh, 14 August 2011

We, the representatives of 51 family villagers living in Lor Peang village, Taches commune, Kampong Tralach district, Kampong Chhnang province, who are affected by a long-lasting land dispute with KDC International Company which is owned by H.E. Mrs. Chea Kheng, would like to inform and invite the members of the local and international media on “The Costs of Subject-matter of Civil Action and Poverty of Villagers Living in Lor Peang Village, Taches Commune, Kampong Tralach District, Kampong Chhnang Province”.

Date: Monday 15 August 2011 at 8:30 am

Place: ADHOC Central Office, Phnom Penh
Address: #1, Street 158, Sangkat Boeung Raing, Khan Daun Penh, Phnom Penh

The Press Conference is organized with the objective to inform and make a request to Kampong Thom Provincial Court to strongly consider the current status of poverty of the villagers who cannot afford to pay the costs of subject-matter of civil action. Through this conference, the villagers are expected to be given humanitarian assistance and financial support from various generous people so that they can claim back their lands from the long-lasting dispute with a private KDC International company.

Pleased be informed on this important issue. Your presence in this conference is very important for us and our lives.

More information, please contact:

Mr. Reach Seima Tel: 078 310 336
Mr. Pheng Rom Tel: 097 463 599 6
__________________________
Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC)
Address: # 9E0, St. 330, Sangkat Boeung Keng Kong III,
Khan. Chamcar Morn, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Tel/Fax: (855) 23 218 759, Tel: (855) 23 301 415, 305 609
E-mail: chrac@forum.org.kh or chracsecretariat@yahoo.com
Web: http://www.chrac.org



Monday, May 30, 2011

Preliminar​y Announceme​nt of Presentati​on Workshop on Attitudes about KRT, 8 June 2011

Dear Leaders of NGOs partners and colleagues,

On behalf of the orgnizers, CHRAC and Human Rights Center- University of California at Berkeley, I would like to inform that on 08 June 2011 from 7.30 am to 12. noon, we will organize a presentation workshop of a population-based survey on "Cambodians' Attitudes about the Khmer Rouge Tribunal" at Sunway Hotel, Phnom Penh.

You are invited to have lunch at the place after the closing of the workshop.

The invitation and agenda will be soon sent to you. Please find attached our preliminary announcement of the workshop.

Sincerely yours,

Oeung Jeudy
Program Officer

Click on each page of the announcements to zoom in

Friday, May 20, 2011

Rights Groups Push Tribunal for More Public Information

Reporters, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh & Washington Thursday, 19 May 2011
“So neither the public nor the victims know the developments of each office, or what lawyers are doing to prepare strategies, or ideas, for finding them justice.”
A consortium of rights and development organizations on Thursday urged the Khmer Rouge tribunal to release more information on two controversial cases opposed by the government, amid increased concerns the court will not complete its work.

Twenty-four groups, including Adhoc, Licadho and the Cambodian Defenders Project, said in a statement they want a “full” release of information related to cases 003 and 004 in “the interest of the victims.”

The court has come under increased pressure in recent weeks to move forward on the two cases, which contain five more suspects for Khmer Rouge atrocity trials. The facts of the cases have been kept confidential, along with the names of suspects, making it difficult for civil parties to file specific grievances against them.

Monday, May 09, 2011

Press Release for workshop on 10-11 May, 2011 on "the Current Situation of Land Issues and Resolution Mechanisms in Cambodia" at Cambodiana Hotel


http://www.box.net/shared/8fdjg66seu


http://www.box.net/shared/hs74z0tpma

Press Release

Workshop on “the Current Situation of Land Issues and
Resolution Mechanisms in Cambodia”

Phnom Penh, 09 May 2011

On the 10th- 11th May 2011, The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), the Cambodian Human Rights Committee (CHRC) and the NGOs Forum on Cambodia with support from the EU Delegation to Cambodia, are organising a workshop on the "Current Situation of Land Issues and Resolution Mechanisms in Cambodia".

The workshop aims at providing some 150 civil society, government, provincial authority/court, and donor agencies representatives with an open forum for discussion and exchange of views on land issues in Cambodia.

The 2 days' event will explore and debate themes such as the principles regulating the grant of economic land concession, their benefits and impact, the principles for granting social land concessions and their practical implementation, the root causes of land disputes and resettlement as well as the mechanisms for resolution currently in place, the land dispute-motivated arrests and access to justice. Group discussions will follow with a view of identifying the major problems at stake and target recommendations.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Open letter to United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon from the Cambodian Center for Human Rights (repost)

Dear Secretary-General

CHRAC/AHRC (26.10.2010) - HRWF (27.10.2010) - http://www.hrwf.net - The Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) would like to welcome you and your traveling party to Cambodia. We encourage you to use your visit to publicly address pressing human rights issues in Cambodia. In particular, we would like to draw your attention to the following human rights concerns:

Fundamental Freedoms

The fundamental freedoms of Cambodian people -- recognized in both national and international law -- continue to be eroded and undermined. Freedom of expression has been stifled through what a recent resolution of the European Parliament termed "the strategy of Cambodia's ruling party... to use a politically subservient judiciary to crack down on all government critics." The new Penal Code which is due to come into force in November maintains the crimes of disinformation and defamation, and extends the latter to comments which undermine the reputation of institutions. These charges are regularly used to intimidate and imprison those opposing land evictions, holding labour strikes, or criticizing government actions. Recent union-led strikes by garment-sector workers seeking an increase in the minimum wage led to dismissals of union representatives from factories, and threats of legal action against union leaders.


Rule of Law

The Cambodian judiciary's lack of independence continues to be one of the most important factors preventing Cambodia from developing a fair, just and inclusive society, based on the rule of law. The recent report by the Special Rapporteur for human rights in Cambodia, Surya Subedi found that "corruption seems to be widespread at all levels in the judiciary." Political and economic control of the judiciary fuels continuing impunity for major crimes and prevents Cambodians from fair access to land and housing rights, and recognition and protection of their civil and political rights. The ECCC has also been plagued by allegations of corruption and political interference since its inception. These allegations have not only discouraged donors from committing funds to facilitate the important work of the Tribunal, but have also undermined the fairness and credibility of the Tribunal's work.

Participatory Democracy

Recent and historical actions by the RGC, including the use of politically motivated lawsuits, have marginalized the parliamentary opposition, and prevented elected representatives from opposition parties from playing any meaningful role in representing their constituents. Comments by Government officials have indicated an intention to restrict the activities of NGOs in a forthcoming NGO law. Minorities such as lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people suffer from discrimination and abuse, including violence, workplace discrimination, and social and familial exclusion.

In your discussions with the Cambodian government we urge you to:
  • Promote the decriminalization of defamation and disinformation as recommended by the UN Special Rapporteur;
  • Press for a commitment from the government to accept and implement the recommendations of the UN Special Rapporteur, particularly in regard to judicial independence, and discuss a clear timetable for their implementation as well as any required UN technical support;
  • Publicly call for an end to political interference at the ECCC to ensure it meets international fair trial standards. Urge greater government cooperation with the ECCC in future cases, including with the investigation of the five additional suspects and with the appearance of current government officials as witnesses;
  • Suggest that as participants in a liberal democracy, public figures should be prepared to tolerate more criticism and avoid using the courts to silence critics. Untruth is better fought by truth, rather than intimidation through court action;
  • Seek assurances that the forthcoming NGO law will not be drafted or applied in such a manner as to restrict the freedom of expression of civil society;
  • Promote a shift in political culture to allow for a more inclusive and less divisive approach to governing, including greater and more meaningful efforts at consultation with stakeholders, and a greater commitment to multi-partisan respect and cooperation;
  • Promote recognition of the unique challenges faced by ethnic minorities, LGBT people, and other marginalized groups in Cambodia.

Yours sincerely,

Ou Virak
President of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Groups Want Prosecutions in Timber Crackdown

A truck carries logs on a rural road is seen in Preah Vihear province some 245 kilometers (152 miles) north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Rights groups on Friday praised the government for a recent crackdown on illegal logging.

Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Friday, 09 April 2010

I urge the Cambodian government to crack down on illegal logging at its roots.
Rights groups on Friday praised the government for a recent crackdown on illegal logging but said they want those arrested in the ongoing operation to be prosecuted without political bias.

Arrests are continuing in a sweep of border provinces where illegal logging still takes place, and Prime Minister Hun Sen sacked the head of the government’s forestry administration earlier this week.

But members of the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee told reporters Friday Cambodia still lacks the proper law enforcement and management to conserve what is left of the country’s forests.

In Nam, a representative for a forest community in Kampong Thom province, told reporters Friday he had watched the environment around him deteriorate. When he was a boy, the forest had elephants and tigers, he said. “Now all are lost.”

“I urge the Cambodian government to crack down on illegal logging at its roots,” he said.

Monday, March 01, 2010

Sam Rainsy charges draw criticism

Monday, 01 March 2010
Meas Sokchea and Sebastian Strangio
The Phnom Penh Post


A COALITION of civil society groups has criticised the filing of new criminal charges against opposition leader Sam Rainsy, calling for a “political solution” to the current row with the government.

On Friday, government lawyers filed two more charges against the embattled Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) president, accusing him of falsifying public documents in order to prove Vietnamese encroachment into Svay Rieng province.

“In Phnom Penh we have charged him with two offences. The first is involved with falsifying public documents, and the other is for spreading disinformation,” Ky Tech, a government lawyer, said on Sunday. If found guilty on both counts, he said, Sam Rainsy could face up to 18 years in prison.

On Friday, the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition of 23 local NGOs, said the new lawsuits had shined a light on the shrinking of the country’s democratic space, calling for all parties to come together in a spirit of “national reconciliation”.

“CHRAC … urges our political leaders to mutually respect each other and negotiate with political maturity in order to address national issues,” the statement read.

The new charges come after Svay Rieng provincial court sentenced Sam Rainsy to two years in prison in absentia on January 27 in relation to an October incident in which he joined villagers in uprooting six temporary border markers in Chantrea district. Villagers alleged that Vietnamese authorities planted the posts in their rice fields.

In January, the SRP released what it described as “unprecedented evidence” that four Vietnamese border markers in Svay Rieng sit well inside Cambodia’s legal territory as defined by French and American maps.

CHRAC’s chairman, Hang Chhaya, said that using the court for an endless procession of lawsuits was useless and added that a political resolution would allow people to “live in peace”. “This is intimidation – it affects the democratic process,” he said.

“We must guarantee safety for people so that they can live in peace. Resorting to the courts for lawsuits like this is useless.”

When contacted on Sunday, SRP spokesman Kimsour Phirith said that, despite what he described as intimidation on the part of the ruling party, the opposition was not scared and would continue voicing concerns about the Vietnamese border.

“Their aim is to remove Sam Rainsy from the country so that he does not disturb their affairs which were done already. This is a political issue, not a criminal issue as they are saying,” he said.

Some observers said the new lawsuits were aimed at preventing the SRP leader from participating in the 2013 elections. “I think it’s a kind of threat, to give an example for other people who dare to do the same thing,” said Son Soubert, a member of the Constitution Council and an independent political analyst, comparing the attacks on Sam Rainsy to the treatment of Myanmar democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi.

“The government, for the interests of all Cambodian people, should seriously dialogue with the opposition. Instead of listening to that foreign country, they should listen to their own compatriots.” He added: “There should be a serious investigation of all the maps by a neutral party.”

The Vietnamese border issue last prompted a government crackdown in 2005, when critics came out in opposition to the government’s border-demarcation treaty with Vietnam – the basis, along with a 1985 treaty, for the current demarcation efforts.

Ou Virak, president of the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights, said the government’s offensive against Sam Rainsy was an indication that the situation on the eastern border was still a sore issue for Prime Minister Hun Sen even after the 2005-06 crackdown.

He also said it had distracted attention from Hun Sen’s own border stand-off with Thailand observing that the filing of the charges was bookended by two visits by Hun Sen to address soldiers at the Thai border and rally support for the military. “I’m sure the government is not happy that the issue is back again,” Ou Virak said.

CHRAC Calls for a Political Solution to Sam Rainsy Case

CAMBODIAN HUMAN RIGHTS ACTION COMMITTEE

STATEMENT ON
CHRAC Calls for a Political Solution to Sam Rainsy Case
Phnom Penh, 26 February 2010

The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition of 23 NGO members, regrets to learn about a recent complaint made by the Royal Government of Cambodia against Mr. Sam Rainsy, President of the Opposition Party, in addition to his former charges which was previously tried by Svay Rieng Provincial Court.

According to the announcement made by a lawyer who is representing the Government, it is believed that the new complaint against the opposition leader with new charges had been already recently lodged to the prosecution office of Phnom Penh Municipal Court. This news makes national and international public opinions another concerns about the recent political issue in Cambodia, particularly in relation to the democracy space and the roles of the parliamentarians; namely the roles of opposition parliamentarians which are often affected by the complaints filing to the court from time to time, while other national important issues strongly need of contributions from all politicians of different political tendencies.

With regard to this matter, CHRAC is in the opinion that all Cambodian political leaders from various different political tendencies should pay more attention on national interests and bound together through a significant national reconciliation in order to solve these problems peacefully. CHRAC, therefore, urges our political leaders to mutually respect each other and negotiate with their political maturity in order to address the national issues, and for the people of Cambodia to live in a peaceful and democratic society, of which the Government has often affirmed and committed to.

For more information, please contact:
Mr. Hang Chhaya, CHRAC Chairman/KID Executive Director, Tel: 012 865 910
Mr. Sok Sam Oeun, Executive Director of CDP, Tel: 012 901 199
Ms. Sun Chansen, President of KYA, Tel: 017 788 955
Ms. Say Saravathany, Executive Director of CWCC, Tel: 092 993 358
Mr. Ny Chakrya, Coordinator of ADHOC, Tel: 011 274 959

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Villagers involved in uprooting border stakes now have a defense lawyer


Thursday, January 14, 2009
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

On Wednesday, a human rights organization declared that two villagers, who were charged by the Svay Rieng court of uprooting stakes along the Cambodian-Viet border, have found a lawyer to defend them. According to a communiqué issued by the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC) on Wednesday, Sam Sokong, a CHRAC lawyer will defend the cases of Mrs. Meas Srey and Mr. Prum Chea who are currently being jailed in Svay Rieng, as well as three other villagers who have fled. Sam Sokong told The Phnom Penh Post on Wednesday that he will show up in court as planned on 26 January to defend all the 5 villagers above. Hang Chhaya, a facilitator for CHRAC said that there will be no fee for the lawyer provided to defend the villagers because these villagers are very poor.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Sacrava's Political Cartoon: Protest Poem

Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at htttp://sacrava.blogspot.com)
based on an original photo by CHRAC

Losing Ground - A report published by the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC)



Poem posted by the protesters:
We, the villagers, sit in despair because we lost our lands and waters.
The Ly Yong Phat Company is the cursed thief, it robbed all our lands and waters.

With a good leadership, the people are rich and plentiful.
When the leadership is greedy, the people are destroyed and ruined.

[KI-Media note: CPP Tycoon-Senator Ly Yong Phat is a crony of Hun Xen]
Police fire teargas during the forced eviction of Dey Krahom in January 2009
Injured farmers were tied to poles after being shot and beaten on March 22, 2009 in a violent crackdown in Chi Kraeng commune, Siem Reap province

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

30 questioned in land dispute, groups say

Wednesday, 03 June 2009
Written by Chrann Chamroeun
The Phnom Penh Post

KAMPONG Chhnang officials questioned 30 residents from Kampong Tralach district's Lor Peang village over a long-running land dispute that has pitted villagers against local authorities, rights groups said Tuesday.

Lor Peang residents claim the village chief and commune councilors forced them to thumbprint documents in February that signalled their agreement to hand 145 hectares of land to KDC, a local developer.

Tot Kim Sroy, provincial coordinator for the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), which filed complaints on behalf of the villagers in March, said Tuesday that Kampong Tralach district Deputy Governor Pich Khorn questioned over 30 villagers about their complaints.

"I think it is very good that the authorities have conducted an investigation into their complaints," Tot Kim Sroy said. "I observed that there was really a threat [against the villagers]."

Tot Kim Sroy added that Pich Khorn let the villagers return home and will now report back to provincial Governor Touch Marim.

KDC first laid claim to the land in 2006, prompting villagers to file their initial complaint in the provincial court, which rejected it.

Villagers and rights groups involved in the case say KDC bought part of a 512-hectare plot of land in 2006. KDC claims to have purchased the entire plot, including the disputed 145 hectares, and produced legal titles for it in August 2007.

"At the present time, the 64 families that have handed over farmland are now in a dispute with the company," said resident representative Om Sophy, who added that 14 houses have been destroyed by bulldozers since September 2008.

Sam Chankea, provincial coordinator for the rights group Adhoc, said he "welcomed" the investigations into the dispute, but said the process should have been completed long ago.

"The authorities should have conducted the investigation on this long-simmering dispute from the beginning, so as not to extend it until now," he said.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Khmer Rouge Tribunal: coalition of local NGOs concerned over limiting of victims' rights

23-03-2009
By Stéphanie Gée
Ka-set


A week before the opening of the trial of former torturer Duch, it is not with arms wide open that the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition of 21 local NGOs, welcomed some of the last revisions of the Khmer Rouge Court’s Internal Rules , enforced at the beginning of March during the 5th Plenary Session of ECCC Judicial Officers. They convey “the failure of the [hybrid jurisdiction] to fully uphold the right of victims to participate in the trial process”, according to these NGOs, who, in a press release made public on March 23rd, urge the ECCC (Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia) to correct the situation.

However, the coalition of important organisations working for the respect of Human rights, democracy and the Rule of Law in Cambodia welcomed the efforts made by ECCC judicial staff to make the proceedings of the court “as fair and as efficient as possible”. They are particularly “glad to see that the ECCC has clarified the rules, at Internal Rule 23 (4), to make it explicit that Victims whose civil party applications are refused by the Trial Chamber can appeal this decision to the Supreme Court Chamber.

Click to Read More...

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Trial Chamber gears up for Duch proceedings; Court watchers call for more suspects

14 Jan. 2009
Posted by Elena in ECCC, Duch
ThePost.blogs
The Phnom Penh Post


A two-day logistical meeting that will lay the foundation for the court's first trial begins Thursday. Although it will be closed to the public, court officials will announce a general time frame for the trial of "Comrade Duch" after the meeting's conclusion. Duch himself is planning to appear at the meeting. Co-Prosecutors submitted their witness list to the court on Monday and, judging from the number of people who will testify against the torture chief, the trial should last three or four months, said Co-Prosecutor Robert Petit.

While the court appears to be making progress in this area, prosecutors remain at an impasse over whether to pursue additional suspects.

Civil society leaders issued a statement today claiming that failure to pursue additional suspects would "undermine the impact and legacy of the court. Victims of the Khmer Rouge regime have already had to accept the limited mandate of the ECCC due to the realities of transitional justice; they will not however accept a failure of the court to properly exercise its existing powers and responsibilities."

Rebutting claims made by national Co-Prosecutor Chea Leang, the statement argued that investigating additional suspects would not jeopardize the country's stability: "Contrary to previous concerns, the arrest and action against the current 5 suspects has not led to instability and there is simply no credible evidence that the prosecution of a similar number of further suspects would risk Cambodia's stability, or national reconciliation."

The civil society leaders also shot down Leang's claim that, given the court's limited time and budget, it should focus on suspects already in detention.

"The successful and full completion of the court's mandate should take precedence over short term considerations of budget and time," they wrote. "If at the end of the life of the ECCC, and despite the huge expense of establishing and running the court, it has failed to prosecute all surviving senior leaders and those with greatest responsibility then this investment will be seen to have been largely wasted."

Civil Society Calls for Investigation of Further Suspects by the ECCC

STATEMENT

Civil Society Calls for Investigation of Further Suspects by the ECCC

Phnom Penh, 14 January 2009

In response to statements from the Co-Prosecutors issued 8th December 2008, and 5th January 2009 we, the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition of 21 NGOs, call on the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) to act independently and exercise its mandate by investigating further individuals who have main responsibility for the crimes of the Khmer Rouge regime. We believe a failure to do so will undermine the impact and legacy of the court. Victims of the Khmer Rouge regime have already had to accept the limited mandate of the ECCC due to the realties of transitional justice; they will not however accept a failure of the court to properly exercise its existing powers and responsibilities.

According to the Co-Prosecutors statement of 5th January 2009 the National Co-Prosecutor considers further judicial investigations should not take place against additional suspects due to considerations of 1) the need for stability and national reconciliation, 2) the spirit of the Agreement between the UN and Royal Government of Cambodia (“Agreement”) and subsequent ECCC law, and 3) the limited time and budget available to the court. We do not consider these factors to in anyway bar judicial investigation of further suspects.

The ECCC was established in order to deliver justice and promote national reconciliation by prosecuting senior leaders and those most responsible for the crimes of the Democratic Kampuchea regime. The Agreement and ECCC Law are specifically designed to ensure that the need for justice is balanced with the need to promote transitional stability and national reconciliation. Contrary to previous concerns the arrest and action against the current 5 suspects has not led to instability and there is simply no credible evidence that the prosecution of a similar number of further suspects would risk Cambodia’s stability, or national reconciliation. The Agreement and ECCC Law are the guardians of the needs of stability and national reconciliation and not individual officers of the ECCC. We are aware that the needs of justice must be balanced with those of stability and in order to counter any residual concerns within Cambodia relating to further action against former Khmer Rouge we call for the court to make a final and comprehensive move against all remaining suspects. This will ensure that former Khmer Rouge not subject to the proceedings at the ECCC know that they have nothing to fear and ensure that their cooperation is secured.

We believe that the ECCC should not limit itself beyond the restrictions on its powers of prosecution in the Agreement and ECCC Law. The Agreement and ECCC Law are clear that the ECCC should bring to trial senior leaders of Democratic Kampuchea and those who were most responsible for the crimes of the regime. Given that the Co-Prosecutors have identified further individuals suspected as being most responsible we consider it proper that the ECCC proceed with judicial investigations of those suspects.

We do not believe that the ECCC should arbitrarily limit itself to 5 prosecutions. If there are credible suspicions that there are individuals guilty of crimes falling within the tribunal’s mandate then they should be judicially investigated without delay. It is this course of action best reflects the spirit of the of the Agreement and ECCC law.

Furthermore we consider that the successful and full completion of the court’s mandate should take precedence over short term considerations of budget and time. If at the end of life of the ECCC, and despite the huge expense of establishing and running the court, it has failed to prosecute all surviving senior leaders and those with greatest responsibility then this investment will be seen to have been largely wasted. We believe the ECCC has the ability to undertake investigations and trials of further suspects and believe that donors will be willing to support these actions if further resources are necessary for the ECCC to succeed in achieving its goals.

We consider it in the interests of justice, national reconciliation and thus future stability that senior leaders and those most responsible for the crimes of the Khmer Rouge regime are brought to account at the ECCC. Without further prosecutions the ECCC will fail to deliver justice to the people of Cambodia and damage efforts to create genuine reconciliation. We fear that the efforts and achievement of the Cambodian government and people, and the international community in creating the ECCC will be squandered if the court is seen to only partially fulfill its mission.

We urge all stakeholders in the ECCC process, including the Royal Cambodian Government and the international community, to ensure that the court is able to act independently and free of political interference or consideration, and give it full support as it acts to fulfill its mission.

For further information or comment please contact:
Mr. SOK Sam Oeun, Chairman of CHRAC, Executive Director of CDP; Tel: 012 901 199
Mr. THUN Saray, President of ADHOC; Tel: 016 880 509
Ms. SENG Theary, Executive Director of CSD; Tel: 012 222 552
Mr. HANG Chhaya, Executive Director of KID; Tel: 012 865 910

End.
___________
Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC)
Address: # 9E0, St. 330, Sangkat Boeung Keng Kong III,
Khan. Chamcar Morn, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Tel/Fax: (855) 23 35 14 15, Tel: (855) 23 35 56 09
E-mail: chrac@forum.org.kh or chracsecretariat@yahoo.com
Web: http://www.chrac.org

Monday, August 11, 2008

Joint statement urges quick resolution of territorial disputes

Monday, 11 August 2008
Touch Yuthea
The Mekong Times


Cambodian human rights and development organizations, as well as trade unions and intellectuals, have united to call for a peaceful but speedy resolution of the territorial disputes between Cambodia and Thailand. The statement reiterates Cambodia’s claims over the disputed areas, asking that the international community be ready to intervene should bilateral negotiations fail.

The appeal came after a joint statement from Thai politicians, academics, human rights committees, students, soldiers and nationalists claiming that the ancient temples of Prasat Preah Vihear temple, Ta Moan Toich and Ta Moan Thom belong to Thailand.

All three sites are claimed by Cambodia, with documentary evidence – including the unequivocal June 15, 1962 the International Court of Justice decision in favor of Cambodia – tending to undermine Thailand’s repeated claims.

Cambodian civil society is deeply concerned about troop deployments that have resulted in a tense standoff between substantial contingents of black-clad Thai troops and the rag-tag Cambodian military.

The Cambodian statement notes the negative consequences of a clash, said Sok Sam Oeurn, director of the Cambodian Defenders Project (CDP) and director of Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC).

“If the military confrontation over the border dispute near Preah Vihear temple continues, the two countries will lose economic advantages including revenues from tourism,” he warned.

But, though he advocated a peaceful solution, Sok Sam Oeurn urged Cambodia to stick to the agreement between Thailand and France in 1904 that was signed by Thai King Chulalongkorn the Great (Rama V).

Ath Thun, director of the Coalition of Cambodia Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union, said Cambodia should file a lawsuit with the UN if Thailand drags its feet over withdrawing troops from the Preah Vihear area. He stressed that Thailand is violating Cambodian territory.

A Cambodian Women’s Crisis Center (CWCC) spokesman also urged legal arbitration citing the International Court of Justice’s 1962 ruling that awarded Cambodia control of Preah Vihear temple and its surroundings.

The Cambodian statement came as Xinhua – the official Chinese English language school news service – reported yesterday that Thailand welcomed Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen’s reported stance regarding the Preah Vihear dispute. Hun Sen apparently supports peaceful solutions through bilateral mechanisms, a Thai Foreign Ministry statement said Friday.

The Thai Foreign Ministry welcomed the Cambodian Prime Minister’s stance, “which is in line with Thailand’s own.”

“Thailand wishes to find a solution to the issue of the Temple of Preah Vihear in a peaceful and amicable manner, making full use of the existing bilateral mechanisms, including meetings between the two Foreign Ministers, the Thai-Cambodian Joint Boundary Commission (JBC) and the General Border Committee (GBC),” said the statement, Xinhua reported

Citing the shared 798-km-long Thai-Cambodian land border, the statement claimed that “differences of views on boundary issues between two neighboring countries are not unusual,” and that “this issue is just one small part of the overall relations between Thailand and Cambodia.”

Thailand reiterated a second meeting between newly appointed Thai Foreign Minister Tej Bunnag and his Cambodian counterpart Hor Namhong, slated for the third week of August in the Thai central coastal province of Hua Hin, should make good progress and pave the way for a solution.

The first ministerial meeting took place July 28 in Siem Reap. Both sides agreed to adjust their military deployment but no troops have yet been withdrawn.

The joint Cambodian statement requested that Thai government officials, academics, intellectuals, nationalists and citizens study the International Court’s judgment, but asked the international community, especially Asean and the UN, to be ready to step in should bilateral negotiations fail.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Condemnations on the shooting of journalist Khim Sambo

The bodies of Khim Sambo and his son are on display in Wat Svay Dangkum pagoda on 12 Jule 2008. (Photo: Sophorn, RFA)

12 July 2008
By Sok Serey Radio Free Asia
Translation from Khmer by Socheata Click here to read the original article in Khmer


On Saturday 12 July, the SRP demanded that the government authority conducts an immediate investigation in order to arrest the culprits who shot and killed Khim Sambo, a journalist for the Moneaksekar Khmer newspaper, in the evening of Friday. High-ranking SRP officials accused the murder as a political threat on the SRP supporters ahead of the upcoming election.

SRP MP Son Chhay said at a press conference held at the SRP headquarters in Phnom Penh: “This is a savage and cheap action. This hurts us a lot, it is imperative that the murderers and those backing them be arrested. There are concerns among those who conduct important jobs for us, and there are concerns within the party as well.”

Regarding this issue, General Khieu Sopheak, spokesman of the Ministry of Interior, said that there is no immediate determination as to whether the murder was political or not. Khieu Sopheak said: “The accusation is normal, whether it is political or not, we cannot say until the culprits are found, if they (SRP) said this, it’s up to them.”

Khim Sambo is the 47-year-old journalist for the Moneaksekar Khmer newspaper which supports the SRP, he was shot and killed on the spot by two unknown assailants, near the Olympic stadium in Phnom Penh, in the evening of Friday. The assailants shot him 5 times, and his son, 21-year-old Khat Sarin Theara, was shot on the chest and he died at the hospital. Father and son were traveling home after exercising themselves.

The body of Khim Sambo and his son are on display at the Wat Svay Dangkum pagoda, in Phnom Penh city.

On Saturday, the Ministry of Information issued an immediate statement pushing the police to take measures to arrest the criminals and bring them to justice. The ministry also condemned the murder as being a coward act.

The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC) which regroups 21 organizations and associations, also issued a statement on Saturday, expressing its concerns for the security for journalists who are currently being severely threatened on their freedom of expression which is protected by the Constitution.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Cambodian activists plea for more K.Rouge trial funding

June 20, 2008
AFP

PHNOM PENH - CAMBODIAN activists on Friday warned international donors that without vital funding for the cash-strapped Khmer Rouge tribunal, justice for two million genocide victims would be put at risk.

The court's officials were meeting with potential donors in New York on Friday, seeking tens of millions of dollars to enable the tribunal to continue its operations.

The Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition of local civil society groups, said inadequate funding would 'weaken judicial independence and lessen the chances of achieving justice in Cambodia.'

'The ongoing participation of the international donors is necessary to ensure that the tribunal meets international standards of justice,' CHRAC said in a statement.

International backers have appeared hesitant to pledge more money to the court amid allegations of mismanagement and political interference.

Japan agreed this week to donate nearly three million dollars and France pledged another million dollars in April, but court officials were seeking much more on Friday.

The tribunal, which opened in 2006 after nearly a decade of wrangling between the United Nations and Cambodia, was originally budgeted at 56.3 million dollars (S$1.37 million) over three years.

Once in operation, the tribunal significantly raised its cost estimates to more than 100 million dollars.

Court officials expect the trial of former Khmer Rouge jailer Duch, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, will start by October.

The United Nations this year announced that an audit showed no financial mismanagement.

But last year, the New York-based Open Society Justice Initiative alleged that Cambodian tribunal staff, including judges, had bought their jobs.

Up to two million people died of starvation and overwork, or were executed as the communist Khmer Rouge dismantled modern Cambodian society in a bid to forge an agrarian utopia during its 1975-1979 rule.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Candidates Assail Government at Land Forum

By Chiep Mony, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
13 June 2008



Members of four political parties on Friday blamed the government and the ruling Cambodian People's Party for failure to address the growing problem of land disputes, and one official wept as he described landless poor forced to become beggars.

The Cambodian People's Party was not represented at the forum, which included members of the Funcinpec, Sam Rainsy, Norodom Ranariddh and Hang Dara Democratic Movement parties and was held by the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee.

Funcinpec member Kim Vean blamed the National Authority for Land Dispute Resolution for failing to resolve land disputes for people; Norodom Ranariddh Party spokesman Muth Chantha blamed Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Duong Chan Soriya, of the Hang Dara Democratic Movement Party, said government leaders ignored land disputes in cases of the poor, who became landless beggars.

"In this regime, Cambodian people are facing the most difficulties," he said, as he began to weep, passing his floor time to Muth Chantha.

Land dispute authority spokesman Chun Bunrong said Friday the authority worked hard to resolve disputes. Without the authority, there would be confrontation and instability throughout the county, he said.

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

NGOs fear political violence ahead of election

Tuesday, 03 June 2008
Ly Menghour
The Mekong Times


A group of some 40 civil society organizations yesterday expressed deep concern over the increase in violence against political party members in Cambodia in the first part of this year. The organizations say this political violence is threatening Cambodian citizens’ and politicians’ freedom to take part in politics, a right they say is enshrined in the constitution.

The civil society group – including the Neutral and Impartial Committee for Free Elections in Cambodia (NICFEC), Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (COMFREL), and coalition the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC) – said the court system and some government institutions are used as political tools to propagate political violence and threats.

The group said that the rights of the individual are often not respected, with party defectors often filing complaints against their former parties over violence and threats. They warned such a situation could cause a political crisis for the Jul 27 national election.

Cases of murder, threat, intimidation and political persecution are occurring, especially in far flung areas, while Cambodia is preparing for the upcoming national election,” Thun Saray, president of local rights group Adhoc, said at a press conference yesterday.

According to the observations of the NGO group, detailed in a report covering January to April of this year, there have been five assassinations of political party members, 21 cases of persecution and intimidation of party members and 15 cases of removing political party banners.

“Civil society organizations believe that the political situation in Cambodia is very bleak if political violence is still occurring in the period leading up to the national elections. This will affect the result of the national election which should be free, just and fair in compliance with the demands of the Cambodian people,” Thun Saray added.

Civil society organizations also noted that most perpetrators have yet to be arrested, let alone prosecuted. No robust legal measures have been instituted to prevent such abuses, they claimed.

“The Cambodian legal system is like a spider’s web which functions to ensnare the vulnerable and victims of crime, and which frightens voters,” Center for Social Development President Theary Seng said about the Kingdom’s court system.

Koul Panha, director of COMFREL, said the murder and intimidation chiefly happens to members of opposition parties, such as the Sam Rainsy Party, Norodom Ranariddh Party and Human Rights Party.

“As well as [what is occurring now], murder, violence and intimidation took place against party members before the 2003 national elections. These cases still remain under investigation and have not been solved,” he said.

According to the group, the five months running up to the 2003 elections saw eight assassinations of political party members and 43 cases of violence and intimidation. However, in the first five-month period of this year, there have already been five party member assassinations and 21 cases of violence and intimidation. The group claimed these figures show the situation this year is worse than in 2003.

Hang Puthea, NICFEC director, noted that, although the campaign period defined by the National Election Committee (NEC) – 26 June 26- July 25 July – has not commenced yet, political parties have already commenced campaigning.

Tep Nytha, secretary general of the NEC, rejected the civil societies group’s appraisal, claiming that the situation before this year’s national election is better than that of any of the previous elections.

“[Murder] is something that happens in simple societies,” he said. “The research has not been clearly conducted, but some political parties and civil society groups have been drawn into [making these conclusions] on political issues. Also, civil society groups don’t believe the research and conclusion of the experts. On the contrary, civil society organizations make conclusions by linking the [murders and violence] to political issues, which ruins the political environment.”

Tep Nytha claimed political violence, threats and murders have declined in 2008 compared to the 1993 and 2003 general elections and the 2007 commune elections. He said the NEC has been working with the government since 2007 to ensure security during the election.

However, Eng Chhay Eang, secretary general of Sam Rainsy Party (SRP), agreed with the civil society group’s statement. “If the intimidation and murders of political party members continue, the election will not proceed freely and justly,” he warned. “During the period before the election, the SRP has suffered from intimidation and the ‘buying of hearts’ [by other parties]. This concerns the SRP for the election.”