Chea Vichea |
By Andrew Buncombe
The Foreign Desk
The Independent (UK)
“As you may know, Freedom Park is now the designated location where all demonstrations must be held. The Cambodian government would like the international community to believe this shows their growing commitment to freedom of expression. ... In reality, it does just the opposite, isolating demonstrations in a remote area of the city and limiting them to 200 people (even though the park can hold more than a thousand.) As the union leaders entered Freedom Park, they were met by fifty to a hundred police carrying batons and shields who prohibited them from screening the movie. So much for freedom of speech.” - Bradley CoxEarlier this year, police in Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, prevented the screening of a documentary about the murder of trade union leader Chea Vichea. The charismatic Vichea, (left) who campaigned for better wages and conditions for Cambodia’s 300,000 garment workers, was assassinated in 2004 next to a newspaper kiosk. Amid an international outcry, two men, widely believed to have played no role in his death, were charged with his killing. They have since been freed on bail.
American journalist Bradley Cox, who was living in Phnom Penh at the time and who had previously met the union leader, rushed to the scene of the murder. He launched his own investigation into the killing and came to the conclusion that it could not have been carried out without the knowledge of the “highest levels” of the political establishment. It was perhaps no surprise then, that the government of Hun Sen did not want ordinary Cambodian citizens watching Mr Cox’s film, Who Killed Chea Vichea?
Ironically enough, at about the same time that the Cambodian authorities were banning Mr Cox’s film, they were also establishing a Freedom Park in the centre of the capital and making it the designated place for political protests. The move was widely seen as being carried out to counter critics of its authoritarian policies.
Anyway, I got word over the weekend that members of the Free Trade Union and the Teachers Union of Cambodia again tried to screen the documentary, this time in Freedom Park, only to be again bundled away by police. Mr Cox said in an email: “As you may know, Freedom Park is now the designated location where all demonstrations must be held. The Cambodian government would like the international community to believe this shows their growing commitment to freedom of expression.”
He added: “In reality, it does just the opposite, isolating demonstrations in a remote area of the city and limiting them to 200 people (even though the park can hold more than a thousand.) As the union leaders entered Freedom Park, they were met by fifty to a hundred police carrying batons and shields who prohibited them from screening the movie. So much for freedom of speech.”
The people of Cambodia are working hard to rebuild their country after decades of war and violence. Several million foreign visitors travel to see sites such as the remarkable Angkor Wat. Yet for the veneer of openness (and despite the stalwart efforts of publications such as the Phnom Penh Post which wrote about the latest crack-down on Mr Cox’s film), the government seeks to keep tight control on those who seek to question its actions and behaviour. This is just another example.
9 comments:
we viet nam believe Hun Sen- CPP and the last is the KING Sihanomi did a good job and a good leaders. they are working hand in hand. They are a good leaders and good followers to our instructions.
Also thanks to all our vietnamese brothers and sisters who sacrify their family to work in all level of officials in cambodia to keep it part of viet nam.
we also want to thank His Excellency Dr. Phay Siphan, SOK Siphana and SARIN DENORA for their lips services and manipulation of international communities to support us..
Long live Viet Nam
Hun Sen killed Chea Vichea.
Hun Sen killed Ho Sok?
Hun Sen killed innocent Khmer people.
Hun Sen must be brought to the international court of justice for genocide.
"Hun Sen must be brought to the international court of justice for genocide". According to 5:36PM,
Also we have to change government structure and policies for independent, forever lasting and well being of Khmer compatriots and Khmer citizen in the near future.
we viet nam believe Hun Sen......this good for Khmer. khmer need to do something. Cleaned it up people.
You will be able to clean shit only.
we viet nam believe dog eating is good nutrients. Especially the dirty dark one good khmer dogs Hun Sen and it pack.
clean shit from your mama hairy pussy u LOL
Honolulu Academy of Arts
http://www.honoluluacademy.org/cmshaa/academy/index.aspx?id=2402
HAWAII PREMIERE
Who Killed Chea Vichea?
Director: Bradley Cox
US/Cambodia, 2009, 56 min.
In Khmer and English with English subtitles
• December 1-2 at 1 and 7:30 p.m.
Bradley Coxs documentary, filmed as events unfolded, is an unsettling investigation into the murder of Chea Vichea, the popular leader of a Cambodian workers rights union. When Vichea was shot in broad daylight in 2004, the police, under pressure from human rights groups and foreign aid donors, quickly arrested two local men who were sentenced to 20 years in prison. Are they guilty, or is their conviction part of a larger plan? Banned in Cambodia, the film has played at film festivals around the world, and won the Directorial prize at the 2009 Rhode Island Film Festival.
KI Media, please post this on KI Media for our Cambodian peoples and others who is living in Hawai'i to see Who Killed Chea Vichea?.
Hun Xen and Bunrany are Khmer innocent killers must bring to court and throw in jail for two billion years.And burn both of them alive.
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