His passion still stands tall
Raising their voices in unison, friends, relatives and former
colleagues of slain environmental activist Chut Wutty chanted his name
as they approached the place along the road where his life ended two
years ago to the day.
On April 26, 2012, Wutty, the director of the National Resource
Protection Group and tireless advocate for Cambodia’s forests, was
gunned down in bizarre circumstances during an investigation into
illegal logging in Koh Kong province’s Mondul Seima district.
The shooting, by a military police officer, was the most high-profile
killing of an activist since unionist Chea Vichea was shot dead outside
a newsstand in Phnom Penh in 2004, and it sent shockwaves throughout
the country’s activist community.
“He told us that losing our forest is like losing our life force,”
said 58-year-old Tun Lam, an activist from Stung Treng province who met
Wutty in 2008. “Even though we were afraid after he was killed, we can’t
stop our activities, or it will all be for nothing.”
The event on Saturday, which occurred alongside a stretch of road in
Mondul Seima district called Veal Bei point, attracted about 100 people
who travelled in vans and the same truck that Wutty was driving when he
was shot. The group gathered around an effigy of the activist fashioned
out of tree branches, as the Venerable Luon Savath, an activist monk,
led a Buddhist ceremony to commemorate Wutty’s spirit.
His son Chheuy Oddom Rasmey, 21, remembered the last time he heard
his father’s voice, in a phone conversation about an hour before he was
killed.
“He wanted me to become a lawyer, but I don’t want this job, because
the court system in Cambodia is neither independent nor just,” he said,
adding that he was committed to ending illegal logging on a grassroots
level.
Three monitors sporting the powder blue vests of the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) placed a
wreath alongside Wutty’s shrine, paid for by staff members of the OHCHR
Cambodia office.
The crime scene is typically guarded by at least two men, according
to Neang Boratino, provincial coordinator for Adhoc, which worked
closely with Wutty.
“They made an exception for this day, because they know how large we are in number,” he said.
Provincial Forestry Administration director Oum Makary said
yesterday, however, that the site was near a public road, and access was
never blocked.
“No one is allowed to log that area, because [environmental NGO]
Wildlife Alliance and military police officers patrol the area on foot
and with a helicopter,” Makary said.
Rights monitors say the circumstances leading to Wutty’s death
haven’t been properly investigated. What’s known is a standoff turned
ugly, ending with Wutty and a military police officer both dead.
Rattana had allegedly tried to confiscate the memory card of a camera
Wutty, who was in the company of two journalists, had been using to
document stockpiles of yellow vine.
As the official narrative goes, after arguing, Rattana shot and
killed Wutty before being shot dead by Ran Borath, a security guard for a
logging firm. The two journalists were unharmed in the incident.
When the case finally came to trial, the provincial court focused on
the unintentional murder of Rattana, the man supposedly responsible for
Wutty’s death. Key witnesses were never called to testify, and Borath,
the security guard who was accused of the “accidental killing” of
Rattana, only served six months of his two-year sentence.
“Two years on, Chut Wutty’s family and friends are still demanding
justice for Cambodia’s premier defender of the forest. But those pleas
are falling on deaf ears in the government,” Phil Robertson, deputy
director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia division, said on Sunday.
In a press release issued on Saturday, the Cambodian Center for Human
Rights characterised the official version of what happened as
“ludicrous”.
But violence and intimidation of environmental activists will
continue, along with the depletion of Cambodian forests, if Wutty’s work
is abandoned, said Chhim Savuth, the current executive director of the
National Resource Protection Group.
Sitting in a small clearing during the ceremony as a means of
escaping the crowd, Savuth said logging had only accelerated since
July’s national elections.
“The only way for this to change is if the government stops issuing
licences to export timber abroad and reinforces the forest law,” Savuth
said, adding that as each year passed, the forest’s supply of rosewood
was coming dangerously close to the brink of extinction.
As the burning incense began to wane and the light dimmed, the crowd
slowly returned to nearby vans, ending an event that was sombre but far
from hopeless.
Wutty’s effigy was left leaning along a shrine constructed in his honour, surrounded by sticks of incense.
“In Cambodia, justice is like salt in the water or a pin at the
bottom of the ocean that is nearly impossible to find,” said monk Luon
Sovath to the kneeling participants. “But if you kill one Chut Wutty -
10,000 more Chut Wutty’s will stand up and continue his work.”
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