Born Samnang, left, and Sok Sam Oeun, right, are led away yesterday
after being resentenced by the Court of Appeal to 20 years in prison for
the 2004 murder of Free Trade Union leader Chea Vichea. International
and national human rights groups have long said the two are scapegoats
in the brazen killing of Chea Vichea, who was the country’s most
prominent labor leader at the time of his assassination. (Siv Channa)
By Khy Sovuthy
December 28, 2012 The Cambodia Daily
The Court of Appeal yesterday resentenced two men, widely believed to
be scapegoats framed for the murder of Free Trade Union (FTU) leader
Chea Vichea, to 20 years in prison—a verdict that even the victim’s
brother said was wholly unjust.
The decision, which flew in the face of international outcry over
their original sentencing and a 2008 Supreme Court ruling that called
for the case against the pair to be dismissed and reinvestigated for
lack of evidence, was the culmination of an Appeal Court retrial hearing
on November 7 in which no new evidence was presented.
Born Samnang, 31, and Sok Sam Oeun, 44, cried and wailed as they were
led away from the courtroom where presiding Judge Chuon Sunleng meted
out the sentences and ordered the men’s rearrest for the fatal shooting
of Chea Vichea as he read a newspaper outside Wat Lanka in Phnom Penh’s
Chamkar Mon district on January 22, 2004.
“The court sentences Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun to 20 years each
in prison, and orders them to pay 40 million riel [about $10,000] to
Chea Mony,” Judge Sunleng said, referring to the dead union leader’s
brother.
“The court orders the detention of Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun for premeditated murder.”
The men clasped their hands together as they were shuffled out of the
court and into a waiting vehicle before being whisked away to Prey Sar
prison.
“It is very unjust, and I ask the King to please help me,” Mr.
Samnang yelled through his tears. “I am not a murderer, but they
arrested me again.”
Mr. Sam Oeun, whose sobbing wife walked behind him clutching their 2-year-old daughter, also begged for justice.
“It is very unjust because I know nothing about this case,” Mr. Sam Oeun cried.
But unlike scenes outside the Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday,
where a Boeng Kak activist was sentenced to three years in prison, all
was relatively quiet on the grounds of the Appeal Court. Among the few
people milling around was Am Sam Ath, technical supervisor for rights
group Licadho, who said the verdict was unacceptable.
“I think the real murderers will not be found, because the fake murderers are now convicted men,” he said.
On March 19, 2004, municipal court investigating Judge Hing Thirith
dismissed the case against Mr. Samnang and Mr. Sam Oeun, citing a lack
of evidence. But Judge Thirith was removed from his post five days later
and transferred to the Stung Treng Provincial Court.
On June 1, 2004, Appeal Court Judge Thou Mony overturned Judge
Thirith’s decision and ordered that the murder charges against Mr.
Samnang and Mr. Sam Oeun be reinstated.
Mr. Samnang and Mr. Sam Oeun were convicted of Chea Vichea’s murder
by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court in August 2005 and each sentenced to
20-year jail terms in a flawed case built largely upon the police
investigation of then-Phnom Penh Police Chief Heng Pov. Later, Heng Pov
would be promoted to security adviser to Prime Minister Hun Sen and also
made an undersecretary of state at the Interior Ministry.
Heng Pov, however, suffered a spectacular fall from grace inside the
country’s power-political circles, and is now serving more than 100
years in jail on a host of criminal charges, including the assassination
of a municipal court judge.
In August 2006, the French weekly L’Express magazine published an
interview with Heng Pov while he was a fugitive in Singapore, in which
he claimed that then-National Police Commissioner Hok Lundy orchestrated
the arrests of Mr. Samnang and Mr. Sam Oeun as scapegoats for the
killing of the outspoken union leader Chea Vichea.
“It did not take long for me to understand that the two suspects,
Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, had nothing to do with the murder,” Heng
Pov was quoted as saying by L’Express.
At Mr. Samnang’s and Mr. Sam Oeun’s retrial on November 7, Heng Pov
declined to give testimony, claiming that his recent embrace of
Christianity while imprisoned at Prey Sar prison prevented him from
doing so.
During that hearing, the Appeal Court prosecutor presented
practically no new evidence against the two men and said the second
investigation into the killing drew the same conclusion as the first:
that the two men were behind the crime, even though both have firm
alibis that put them elsewhere at the time.
Chea Mony, who was voted into the role as FTU leader following his
older brother’s murder, decried the culmination of yesterday’s retrial
as a farce.
“I will regret this for my whole life, because I have not gotten justice yet” for my brother, Mr. Mony said.
“The Appeal Court sentenced Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, but they are the false murderers.
“There is a lot of evidence that cleared them as the real murderers;
Va Rithy, the newspaper stall owner at the scene where Chea Vichea was
shot…Heng Pov said they were not the murderers and the King Father
[Norodom Sihanouk] said when he was still alive that they were not
murderers,” Mr. Mony added.
An eyewitness to the murder of Chea Vichea, Ms. Rithy fled the
country with U.N. help after she was visited and warned to keep her
mouth shut by the actual killer of Chea Vichea weeks after the arrest of
Mr. Samnang and Mr. Sam Oeun.
A FTU letter sent to Phnom Penh governor Kep Chuktema on Wednesday
said 150 garment workers would march to the spot of Chea Vichea’s
assassination on the 9th anniversary of his death on January 22.
A statement issued yesterday by a coalition of 19 NGOs condemned the
upholding of the “grossly unfair” verdict, and said a mountain of
evidence, which should have been sufficient enough to exonerate the two,
was duly ignored by the court.
“This verdict adds to the many tragedies which occurred in 2012,
making it the wors[t] year in over a decade when it comes to human
rights and rule of law,” Licadho director Naly Pilorge said in the
statement. “We urge the Supreme Court to quickly reverse today’s
decision and put an end to this gross farce by finding the pair not
guilty of a crime they simply didn’t commit.”
Moeun Tola, head of the Cambodian Legal Education Center’s Labor Program, said the verdict had left him “speechless.”
“The Appeal Court decision defies any sense of justice and rule of law,” he added.
Sar Mora, president of the Cambodian Food and Service Worker
Federation, said delivering such a verdict during the mourning period
for late King Father Norodom Sihanouk—who believed the pair to be
innocent, and publicly said so—was “disgraceful.”
According to Mr. Samnang and Mr. Sam Ouen’s lawyers, an appeal was
immediately filed yesterday with the Supreme Court —the institution that
once found the men to have been unfairly convicted. That filing is the
last chance the convicted men have of being exonerated before all
avenues are exhausted.
“We appeal to the Supreme Court to find justice,” Mr. Samnang’s lawyer Chum Sovannaly said.
Holding her daughter after her husband was driven away to prison, Mr.
Sam Oeun’s wife Neang Khen, 30, said the future would be filled with
despair.
“I will live alone without my husband, so I will not have anyone to help me,” she said.
© 2012, The Cambodia Daily. All rights reserved. No
part of this article may be reproduced in print, electronically,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without written permission.
2 comments:
The only purpose of the khmer army for are to protect the interest of Hun Sen's family and its cronies. They are, at anytime ok to destroy their own people and their whole country. The only other thing of their expert is searching for beautiful girls and brought them to their big boss for their reward.
To All Khmer: Do not expect America do something
to this government, America are 100% support this
government because of their interest and that is the
"Oil Deal/Chevron" So for all khmer, if you don't do something for your country by yourselves rather kill yourselves are better then living and called yourselves "Khmer"
Reclaim Angkor Wat back from a Vietnamese is the highest priority for Khmer people.
A big chunk of Cambodia's economy is presently controlled by Vietnam.
Vietnam needs to keep Khmer people very poor so that they are preoccupied with their "stomach's problems" only.
While most of the Khmer people are fighting for survival - finding foods to eat - Vietnam keeps executing smoothly its strategic plan by pushing its citizens into Cambodia – making the Vietnamese as the majority in Cambodia in the foreseeable future.
One way to fight this neocolonialist Vietnam and its puppet Hun Sen is to claim Angkor Wat back from a Vietnamese first. This is the most obvious element of Vietnam’s dominance in Cambodia.
- Angkor Wat should provide a massive motive for Khmer people to stand up against this evil Vietnam and Hun Sen.
- The vast majority of Khmer people will unwaveringly support our claim of Angkor.
- Angkor Wat belongs to Cambodia and Khmer people.
- Who has the right to give away or lease Angkor Wat to a Vietnamese? It is unimaginable to see a traitorous person – Hun Sen – to put the Khmer soul Angkor Wat under a Vietnamese’s control.
- I know everybody wants to live, but should we live with dignity? Our passive should have limit.
- We should not allow this puppet government compounding its mistakes, which have destroyed most of Khmer natural resource and Cambodia territorial integrity.
- By staying quite when a Khmer traitor – Hun Sen - has allowed a Vietnamese to control Angkor Wat, just imagine how the Vietnamese people feel toward Khmer people? Are we smart or stupid?
When we do something, we got to draw specific steps that we should take successively to reach our goal, not trying one step and then quit.
Claiming Angkor Wat back is the most right cause, we must keep pounding on it until we get it back.
Whoever resists our claim of Angkor Wat will spontaneously and automatically become Khmer traitor. No doubt about it.
Rescuing Cambodia by accomplishing this task of saving Angkor Wat first, and the momentum of liberating Cambodia from the evil Vietnam will build solidly from there…
Bun Thoeun
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