Cambodia's Dirty Dozen

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Cambodia's Dirty Dozen HUMAN RIGHTS CAMBODIA’S DIRTY DOZEN A Long History of Rights Abuses by Hun Sen’s Generals WATCH Cambodia’s Dirty Dozen A Long History of Rights Abuses by Hun Sen’s Generals Copyright © 2018 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 978-1-6231-36222 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch defends the rights of people worldwide. We scrupulously investigate abuses, expose the facts widely, and pressure those with power to respect rights and secure justice. Human Rights Watch is an independent, international organization that works as part of a vibrant movement to uphold human dignity and advance the cause of human rights for all. Human Rights Watch is an international organization with staff in more than 40 countries, and offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Berlin, Brussels, Chicago, Geneva, Goma, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Moscow, Nairobi, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Sydney, Tokyo, Toronto, Tunis, Washington DC, and Zurich. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.hrw.org JUNE 2018 ISBN: 978-1-6231-36222 Cambodia’s Dirty Dozen A Long History of Rights Abuses by Hun Sen’s Generals Map of Cambodia ............................................................................................................... 7 Summary ........................................................................................................................... 1 Khmer Rouge-era Abuses .......................................................................................................... 5 PRK-era and SOC Period Abuses ................................................................................................ 5 UNTAC-era Abuses ................................................................................................................... 6 Abuses since UNTAC (1993-Present) .......................................................................................... 7 The Impossibility of Democratic Reform with Politicized Security Forces ................................... 8 Methodology ..................................................................................................................... 11 Background ...................................................................................................................... 12 Cambodian Armed Forces 1978 to Present ............................................................................... 12 Anti-Pol Pot Insurgencies before January 1979 .................................................................. 12 Foundation of the Revolutionary Peoples Armed Forces of Kampuchea (RPAFK) ................. 15 The RPAFK after Pen Sovan ............................................................................................... 17 The RPAFK under Hun Sen ................................................................................................ 18 Cambodian People’s Armed Forces, State of Cambodia, and the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia ...................................................................................................... 19 Cambodian People’s Armed Forces under Co-Prime Ministers ........................................... 22 Royal Cambodian Armed Forces (1993-present) ................................................................ 23 RCAF Today ...................................................................................................................... 27 Further Control by the CPP Over the Armed Forces ............................................................ 28 Royal Khmer Gendarmerie, 1980s to Present ..................................................................... 39 Cambodian Police, 1979 to Present ......................................................................................... 44 PRK Ministry of Interior and Police .................................................................................... 44 UNTAC, the Ministry of Interior, and the Police .................................................................. 47 1993: RGC Ministry of Interior and Police ......................................................................... 49 The RGC Ministry of Interior and Police Now ...................................................................... 53 I. Gen. Pol Saroeun, RCAF Supreme Commander ............................................................... 56 In the Khmer Rouge, 1968-1978 .............................................................................................. 56 In the PRK, 1979-1991 ............................................................................................................. 57 Pol Saroeun and UNTAC, 1991-93 ............................................................................................ 59 Pol Saroeun in the Immediate Post-UNTAC Period, 1993-1996 ................................................ 60 At the Time of Hun Sen’s July 1997 coup ................................................................................. 62 Pol Saroeun as Chief of Staff after the Coup, 1997-2009 ......................................................... 64 Pol Saroeun as RCAF Supreme Commander Since 2009 ........................................................... 65 II. Gen. Kun Kim, RCAF Deputy Supreme Commander, Chief of RCAF Mixed General Staff ... 70 Kun Kim in the Khmer Rouge, 1970-78 ..................................................................................... 70 Kun Kim in the PRK and SOC, 1979-1991 .................................................................................. 70 Kun Kim and the Post-1993 Election Coalition Government ...................................................... 72 Kun Kim, the July 1997 Coup and the 1998 Elections ................................................................ 74 Kun Kim, 1999-2012 ................................................................................................................ 79 In the 2013 Elections and Since ............................................................................................. 80 III. Gen. Sao Sokha, Commander of National Gendarmerie; RCAF Deputy Supreme Commander ...................................................................................................................... 90 Sao Sokha in 1977-1978 ......................................................................................................... 90 Sao Sokha and the PRK/SOC, 1979-1991 ................................................................................ 90 Sao Sokha in the UNTAC and Post-UNTAC Period, 1991-1996 .................................................. 92 Sao Sokha and the Hun Sen Coup of 1997 ............................................................................... 93 Sao Sokha and the 1998 Elections .......................................................................................... 95 Sao Sokha, 1999-2008 .......................................................................................................... 96 Sao Sokha Further Promoted, 2009-2012 .............................................................................. 100 Sao Sokha, the 2013 Elections, Their Aftermath, and Since ................................................... 103 IV. Gen. Neth Savoeun, Supreme Commissioner of National Police ................................... 112 Neth Savoeun in the PRK and SOC, 1979-1991 ....................................................................... 112 Neth Savoeun and UNTAC, 1991-1993 ................................................................................... 114 Neth Savoeun in 1993-1997 .................................................................................................. 114 Neth Savoeun, Hun Sen’s 1997 Coup and the 1998 Elections .................................................. 115 Neth Savoeun, 1999-2008 .................................................................................................... 116 Neth Savoeun as National Police Supreme Commissioner, 2008-present ............................... 117 Neth Savoeun, the Elections of 2013, and Since .................................................................... 118 V. Lt. Gen. Chea Man, Deputy Army Commander, Commander of Military Region 4 ........... 125 Chea Man in the PRK, 1979-1991 ........................................................................................... 125 Chea Man and UNTAC, 1991-1993 .......................................................................................... 126 Chea Man from Coalition to Coup, 1993-1997 ........................................................................ 127 Chea Man after the Coup, 1998-2013 .................................................................................... 129 Chea Man, the 2013 Elections, and Their Aftermath ............................................................... 130 VI. Lt. Gen. Bun Seng, Deputy Army Commander, Commander of Military Region 5 .......... 132 Bun Seng in the People’s Republic of Kampuchea, 1979-1991 ................................................ 132 Bun Seng and UNTAC, 1991-1993 .......................................................................................... 132 Bun Seng, During and Since the 2013 Elections ..................................................................... 135 VII. Lt. Gen. Choeun Sovantha, Deputy Army Commander, Commander of Military Region 2 .....................................................................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • 41392-023: Decentralized Public Service and Financial Management
    Due Diligence Report on Social Safeguard July 2019 CAM: Decentralized Public Service and Financial Management Sector Development Project, Subprogram 2: Sub-National Investment Fund (SNIF) Prepared by SNIF Secretariat for Asian Development Bank (ADB). The Due Diligence Report on Social Safeguard is a document of the borrower. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of ADB's Board of Directors, Management, or staff, and may be preliminary in nature. In preparing any country program or strategy, financing any project, or by making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area in this document, the Asian Development Bank does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status. 1 Contents CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS .......................................................................................................... 3 ABBREVIATIONS ........................................................................................................................... 3 I. BACKGROUND OF PROJECT AND RATIONALE ..................................................................................... 4 II. SUBPROJECT DESCRIPTION AND SCOPE OF WORKS ........................................................................ 5 III. OBJECTIVES OF THE DUE DILIGENCE REPORT ................................................................................. 10 IV. METHODOLOGY ....................................................................................................................................... 10
    [Show full text]
  • Mekong Cultural Diversity Beyond Borders
    TABATA Yukitsugu, SATO Katsura (eds.) Mekong Cultural Diversity Beyond Borders Proceedings for the International Seminar & Symposium on Southeast Asian Cultural Heritage Studies Today March 2020 Institute for Cultural Heritage, Waseda University TABATA Yukitsugu, SATO Katsura (eds.) Mekong Cultural Diversity Beyond Borders Proceedings for the International Seminar & Symposium on Southeast Asian Cultural Heritage Studies Today March 2020 Institute for Cultural Heritage, Waseda University Notes The following are the proceedings of the International Seminar "Southeast Asian Cultural Heritage Studies Today" and Symposium "To Know and Share about Cultural Heritage" held on 23, 24 and 25 January, 2020, organized by the Institute for Cultural Heritage, Waseda University, as part of the project commissioned by the Agency for Cultural Affairs. Each paper of the Seminar was prepared by the presenter. The record of the Symposium was edited based on the presentation materials and audio recordings. 例 言 本報告書は、2020 年 1 月 23 日、24 日、25 日に文化庁委託事業として早稲田大学文化財総合調査研究所が開催した 国際研究会「東南アジア文化遺産研究の現在」及びシンポジウム「文化遺産を知り、そして伝える」の内容を収録した ものである。研究会の論考は各発表者により書き下ろされた。シンポジウムについては発表資料及び録音記録に基づい て編集した。 Mekong Cultural Diversity Beyond Borders Proceedings for the International Seminar & Symposium on Southeast Asian Cultural Heritage Studies Today March 2020 Published by Institute for Cultural Heritage, Waseda University Toyama 1-24-1, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162-8644, Japan TEL & FAX +81-(0)3-5286-3647 Edited by TABATA Yukitsugu, SATO Katsura © Agency for Cultural Affairs & Institute for Cultural Heritage, Waseda University All rights reserved. Table of Contents Part I Seminar on Southeast Asian Cultural Heritage Studies Today [Opening Remarks] What is the Creativity of the World Heritage Cities in Mekong Basin Countries ? ...... 1 NAKAGAWA Takeshi 1.
    [Show full text]
  • DC-Cam 2015 Annual Report
    mCÄmNÐlÉkßrkm<úCa DOCUMENTATION CENTER OF CAMBODIA Phnom Penh, Cambodia DC-Cam Annual Report: January 1, 2015-December 31, 2015 Prepared and Compiled by Dr. Kok-Thay ENG and Dara VANTHAN Deputy Directors Edited by Cindy Coleman SRI Board Meeting at Stanford University Second from left Professor Ron Slye, Professor John Ciorciari, Professor Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Professor Beth van Schaack, Youk Chhang, and Dr. Markus Zimmer Documentation Center of Cambodia Searching for the Truth: Memory & Justice EsVgrkKrBitedIm, IK rcg©MnigyutþiFm‘’ 66 Preah Sihanouk Blvd.P.O.Box 1110Phnom PenhCambodia t(855-23) 211-875f (855-23) 210-358 [email protected] www.dccam.org TABLE OF CONTENTS DOCUMENTATION CENTER OF CAMBODIA ............................................................................... 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS ........................................................................................................................ 2 ACRONYMS ................................................................................................................................ 3 Summary .................................................................................................................................... 4 AUGMENT AND MAINTAIN A PUBLICALLY ACCESSIBLE HISTORICAL RECORD OF THE KR PERIOD ...................... 4 SUPPORT THE KRT .......................................................................................................................... 5 INCREASE CAMBODIA’S PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE OF THE KR PERIOD .............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Published by the Cabinet of Samdech Hun Sen —————— MP of Kandal Prime Minister
    Published by the Cabinet of Samdech Hun Sen —————— MP of Kandal Prime Minister Issue 60 http://www.cnv.org.kh January, 2003 28 January 2003 17 January 2003 Addressing the Government –Donor Monitoring Meeting Addressing the Closing of Commerce’s Annual Meeting “… It is a great honor and has exerted its best in imple- pleasure to address the Annual menting the government's poli- Meeting of the Ministry of cies and reform agenda - espe- Commerce, and thus partici- cially that of open and free pate in the review of the Min- trade policy. Indeed, this has istry's 2002 performance as contributed to the reduction of well as set its objectives and poverty among the Cambodian workplan for 2003. people. In behalf of the Royal Govern- In 2002, the Cambodian econ- ment of Cambodia and my omy achieved economic own self as Prime Minister, I growth of 5% despite suffer- sincerely congratulate the ing serious flooding, droughts Ministry of Commerce for its and the negative impacts of commendable performance world insecurity and economic On January 23, 2003, Samdech Hun Sen is warmly welcomed by the and successes achieved in stagnation. elderly people during the inauguration of bridges 24 and 25 on the Na- 2002. tional Road 6A that are built with the Japanese financial assistance. Exchange rates have been sta- The Ministry of Commerce (Continued on page 3) “... Please allow me to warmly ment will also highlight the welcome all Your Excellen- strengths, weaknesses and 14 January 2003 [Unofficial Translation] cies, the representatives of challenges of the reform proc- Ad-lib Address on Roads and Bridges Construction in Khsach Cambodia’s development part- ess.
    [Show full text]
  • Urbanising Disaster Risk
    Ben Flower and Matt Fortnam URBANISING DISASTER RISK PEOPLE IN NEED IN PEOPLE VULNERABILITY OF THE URBAN POOR IN CAMBODIA TO FLOODING AND OTHER HAZARDS Copyright © People in Need 2015. Reproduction is permitted providing the source is visibly credited. This report has been published by People in Need mission in Cambodia and is part of “Building Disaster Ressilient Communities in Cambodia II“- project funded by Disaster Preparedness Program of Eureopan Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection (DIPECHO). The project is implemented by a consortium of five international organisations: ActionAid, DanChurchAid/ Christian Aid, Oxfam, People in Need and Save the Children. Disclaimer This document covers humanitarian aid activities implemented with the financial assistance of the European Union. The views expressed herein should not be taken, in any way, to reflect the official opinion of the European Union, and the European Commission is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains. Acknowledgment People in Need would like to thank all the organisations and individuals which provided Piotr Sasin support and input throughout the research of this report. In particular we want to Country Director thank: National Committee for Disaster Management, Municipality of Phnom Penh, People in Need Municipality of Kampong Cham, Japan International Coopeation Agency, Mekong River Cambodia Commission, Urban Poor Women Development, Community Development Fund and June 2015 Sahmakum Teang Tnaut. Our special thanks go to urban
    [Show full text]
  • Mam Sonando, Aged 71, Was Arrested at His Home in Cambodia’S Capital, Phnom Penh, on 15 July
    UA: 226/12 Index: ASA 23/013/2012 Cambodia Date: 1 August 2012 URGENT ACTION GOVERNMENT CRITIC DETAINED Government critic Mam Sonando, aged 71, was arrested at his home in Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh, on 15 July. He has been charged with offences against the state and if convicted faces a long prison sentence. He is a prisoner of conscience. The day after he was arrested, Mam Sonando was taken to Phnom Penh Municipal Court for questioning. After a few hours he was charged with six offences, including “insurrection” and “inciting people to take up arms against the authorities”. He is held in Phnom Penh’s CC1 Prey Sar Prison, awaiting trial. His lawyer’s request for bail was rejected, and he has lodged a second request. Mam Sonando owns one of Cambodia’s few independent radio stations, Beehive Radio. He is also the head of a popular non-governmental organization that promotes human rights and democracy, the Association of Democrats. The charges against Mam Sonando stem from a speech made by the prime minister on 26 June, in which he accused the radio station owner and members of the Association of Democrats of being behind what he claimed was a plot for a village in Kratie province to secede from Cambodia and become an independent state. The Cambodian authorities had used this as a pretext for the violent eviction in mid-May of around 1,000 families living in that village, during which the security forces shot dead a 14-year-old girl. The real reasons for Mam Sonando’s arrest seem to be the popularity of the Association of Democrats and his radio broadcasts.
    [Show full text]
  • Attacks and Threats Against Human Rights Defenders 2013-2014
    CAMBODIAN LEAGUE FOR THE PROMOTION AND DEFENSE OF HUMAN RIGHTS ATTACKS AND THREATS AGAINST HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS 2013-2014 A briefing paper issued in December 2015 CAMBODIAN LEAGUE FOR THE PROMOTION AND DEFENSE OF HUMAN RIGHTS (LICADHO) LICADHO is a national Cambodian human rights organization. Since its establishment in 1992, LICADHO has been at the forefront of efforts to protect civil, political, economic and social rights in Cambodia and to promote respect for them by the Cambodian government and institutions. Building on its past achievements, LICADHO continues to be an advocate for the Cambodian people and a monitor of the government through wide ranging human rights programs from its main office in Phnom Penh and 13 provincial offices. MONITORING & PROTECTION PROMOTION & ADVOCACY Monitoring of State Violations & Women’s and Supporting Unions & Grassroots Groups Children’s Rights: and Networks: Monitors investigate human rights violations Assistance to unions, grassroots groups and affected perpetrated by the State and violations made against women and communities to provide protection and legal services, and to enhance children. Victims are provided assistance through interventions with their capacity to campaign and advocate for human rights. local authorities and court officials. Medical Assistance & Social Work: Training & Information: A medical team provides assistance to prisoners and prison officials in 14 Advocates raise awareness to specific target groups, support prisons, victims of human rights violations and families in resettlement protection networks at the grassroots level and advocate for social and sites. Social workers conduct needs assessments of victims and their legal changes with women, youths and children. families and provide short-term material and food.
    [Show full text]
  • Kingdom of Cambodia the Temple of Preah Vihear Inscribed on the World Heritage List (Unesco) Since 2008
    KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA THE TEMPLE OF PREAH VIHEAR INSCRIBED ON THE WORLD HERITAGE LIST (UNESCO) SINCE 2008 Edited by the Office of the Council of Ministers PHNOM PENH MAY 2010 ON THE SUCCESSFUL INSCRIPTION OF THE TEMPLE OF PREAH VIHEAR ON THE WORLD HERITAGE LIST (07 July 2008, Quebec, Canada during the 32nd session of the World Heritage Committee) “This is a new sense of pride for the people of our Kingdom, as well as for all the people in the region and the world that the Temple of Preah Vihear was recognized by ICOMOS as an outstanding masterpiece of Khmer architecture with an outstanding universal value, and was inscribed on the World Heritage List.” “The inscription of the Temple of Preah Vihear requires the international community as a whole to protect and preserve this world heritage for the benefits of future gen- erations.” Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo HUN SEN Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia, 08 July 2008 “In fact, the Decision of the 31st session of the World Heritage Committee in Christchurch, New Zealand, July 2007 contains 3 conditions. First, it is essential that Cambodia strengthens the conservation of the Temple; second, Cambodia must develop an appropriate management plan and submit it to the World Heritage Centre by 01 February 2008, because the review process would take up many months until July, to see whether or not our management plan is appropriate; and third, Cambodia and Thailand should develop a close cooperation in support of the inscription. If Cambodia fulfills these three conditions, then in 2008 the inscription will be automatic.
    [Show full text]
  • Cambodia: Background and U.S
    Order Code RL32986 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Cambodia: Background and U.S. Relations July 8, 2005 Thomas Lum Asian Affairs Specialist Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress Cambodia: Background and U.S. Relations Summary Cambodia has made some notable progress, with foreign assistance, in developing its economy, nurturing a civil society, and holding elections that are at least procedurally democratic. A number of significant problems remain, however. Weak legal and financial institutions, corruption, political violence, and the authoritarian tendencies of the Cambodian Prime Minister, Hun Sen, have discouraged foreign investment and strained U.S.-Cambodian relations. U.S. interests in Cambodia include human rights, foreign assistance, trade, and counter terrorism. Several current measures by the United States government reflect human rights concerns in Cambodia. Since 1998, foreign operations appropriations legislation has barred assistance to the Central Government of Cambodia in response to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s seizure of power in 1997 and sporadic political violence against the opposition. The United States has also withheld assistance to the Khmer Rouge tribunal unless standards of judicial independence and fairness are met. Despite these restrictions, Cambodia remains the third largest recipient of United States assistance in Southeast Asia after Indonesia and the Philippines. S.Res. 65would call upon the Government of Cambodia to release Member of Parliament Cheam Channy from prison and to restore the immunity from prosecution of opposition parliamentarians. In 2005, the State Department placed Cambodia in Tier 3 as a country that had not made adequate efforts to eliminate trafficking in persons.
    [Show full text]
  • China, Cambodia, and the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence: Principles and Foreign Policy
    China, Cambodia, and the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence: Principles and Foreign Policy Sophie Diamant Richardson Old Chatham, New York Bachelor of Arts, Oberlin College, 1992 Master of Arts, University of Virginia, 2001 A Dissertation presented to the Graduate Faculty of the University of Virginia in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Politics University of Virginia May, 2005 !, 11 !K::;=::: .' P I / j ;/"'" G 2 © Copyright by Sophie Diamant Richardson All Rights Reserved May 2005 3 ABSTRACT Most international relations scholarship concentrates exclusively on cooperation or aggression and dismisses non-conforming behavior as anomalous. Consequently, Chinese foreign policy towards small states is deemed either irrelevant or deviant. Yet an inquiry into the full range of choices available to policymakers shows that a particular set of beliefs – the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence – determined options, thus demonstrating the validity of an alternative rationality that standard approaches cannot apprehend. In theoretical terms, a belief-based explanation suggests that international relations and individual states’ foreign policies are not necessarily determined by a uniformly offensive or defensive posture, and that states can pursue more peaceful security strategies than an “anarchic” system has previously allowed. “Security” is not the one-dimensional, militarized state of being most international relations theory implies. Rather, it is a highly subjective, experience-based construct, such that those with different experiences will pursue different means of trying to create their own security. By examining one detailed longitudinal case, which draws on extensive archival research in China, and three shorter cases, it is shown that Chinese foreign policy makers rarely pursued options outside the Five Principles.
    [Show full text]
  • Release Mam Sonando, Owner of Cambodia's Oldest Independent
    Joint Statement: Release Mam Sonando, Owner of Cambodia’s Oldest Independent Radio Station Phnom Penh (July 16, 2012) – The undersigned organizations are deeply disturbed by independent radio station director Mam Sonando‟s arrest on Sunday, July 15, 2012, and call for his immediate release. Mr. Sonando, who holds both Cambodian and French citizenship, is the owner of Beehive Radio, which is among the few independent radio stations in Cambodia. Sonando is also the founder and president of the Democrat Association. On June 25, 2012, Beehive broadcast a report on the International Criminal Court‟s (ICC) June 22 receipt of a lawsuit against the Cambodian government in relation to crimes against humanity. The broadcast included interviews and discussed the lawsuit, which was submitted by government critic Sourn Serey Ratha‟s Khmer People Power Movement. The Beehive report was done by Sonando, who had covered the event at the ICC as a journalist. Twenty-four hours after the Beehive report first aired, the Prime Minister publicly called for Sonando‟s arrest during a speech in Phnom Penh which was broadcast on national television. The Prime Minister accused Sonando of inciting a secessionist movement in Kratie province. By July 2, Kratie investigating judge Chok Nguon had issued an arrest warrant accusing Sonando of crimes related to participating in an “insurrectionary movement,” inciting people to take up arms against the state, and obstruction of public officials. Sonando was out of the country when the arrest warrant was issued. He returned to Phnom Penh on July 12 at about 10:15 pm, during the unfolding ASEAN summit.
    [Show full text]
  • Urgent Action
    Further information on UA 226/12 Index: ASA 23/002/2013 Cambodia Date: 21 February 2013 URGENT ACTION JOURNALIST SENTENCED TO 20 YEARS IN PRISON Government critic and prominent journalist Mam Sonando (71) was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment by the Municipal Court in Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh, on 1 October 2012. He was convicted of anti-state offences, including “instigating insurrection”. His appeal hearing is scheduled for 5 March. A representative of Amnesty International attended Mam Sonando’s trial that took place from 11 to 14 September 2012, and the verdict hearing on 1 October 2012. Although the trial appeared to be conducted quite fairly, the verdict reached was inexplicable, suggesting political interference in the proceedings. No evidence was presented that proved insurrection – a violent uprising against the government – occurred or Mam Sonando’s involvement. Thirteen other defendants including community activists and villagers were also tried, three of them in absentia. They received sentences between 10 months’ and 30 years’ imprisonment. Mam Sonando’s request for bail was rejected in December 2012, and the appeal hearing against his conviction has been scheduled for 5 March 2013. Mam Sonando is a prominent journalist and the owner of Beehive Radio, one of Cambodia’s few independent radio stations. He is also the head of the Association of Democrats, a non-governmental organization that promotes human rights and democracy. The prosecution of Mam Sonando appears to have been prompted by a speech made by Cambodia’s Prime Minister on 26 June 2012. In this speech, he accused Mam Sonando and members of the Association of Democrats of being behind what he claimed was a plot for Pro Ma village, in Kratie province to secede from Cambodia and become an independent state.
    [Show full text]