Opposition Official’s Arrest Raises Eyebrows
Cambodia Daily | 2 January 2016
The Siem Reap Provincial Court has charged and jailed an opposition
commune chief for signing off on documents allowing local villagers to
mortgage land claimed by the government’s Apsara Authority, officials
said on Friday.
Heang Sary, the chief of Siem Reap City’s Ampil commune and a member of the legacy Sam Rainsy Party, was arrested at the court on Thursday morning and summarily charged with issuing illegal documents and illegally interfering in the fulfillment of civil service, according to Sok Kimseng, deputy executive director of the CNRP in the province.
Contacted on Friday, Investigating Judge Chhun Chanseiha hung up on a
reporter. However, he was quoted by local news website Voice of
Democracy confirming the charges and saying that Mr. Sary faced up to
five years in prison if found guilty.
About 200 villagers protested outside the provincial court on
Thursday afternoon, demanding the commune chief’s release and arguing
that the charges were politically motivated.
They noted that a CPP village chief who also signed off on the
documents was not indicted, nor was Mr. Sary’s predecessor, a CPP
commune chief who signed similar papers in the past.
The papers are used by villagers to confirm their land ownership in order to obtain mortgages from local banks.
“If we look at the administrative practice, the arrest and detention was politically motivated,” said Mr. Kimseng of the CNRP.
“He was detained because he signed off on land documents, but why was
the village chief from the CPP party who also signed off in those
documents not arrested and placed in prison?”
Moeung Leng, who took part in Thursday’s protest, said the villagers
would continue to demonstrate until the commune chief was released.
“The charges are completely unfair because the commune chief just
endorsed the paperwork after it was first signed by the village chief,”
she said.
“We are the landlords and we have never been offered any money by
the Apsara Authority to leave our land, so it’s not right to detain
the commune chief who just endorsed our land documents.”
“The court should not have put him in prison because the commune
chief did nothing wrong,” echoed Hang Koy, a villager from Ampil
commune’s Prey Koy village.
Mr. Koy said that in 2014, Mr. Sary endorsed a land document for him, allowing him to mortgage his property and open a store.
“The commune chief has done everything for poor people, so the
imprisonment is really unjust for him,” the 52-year-old villager said.
Residents of one village in Ampil commune say that more than 100
families have been living on the land since the 1980s, while others
arrived in the early 2000s, and that it could not possibly belong to the
Apsara Authority, a government body tasked with managing the sprawling
Angkor Archaeological Park.
Im Sokrithy, a communications officer for the Apsara Authority,
declined to comment when asked about the case and referred questions to
authority spokesman Long Kosal, who could not be reached on Friday.
Suos Narin, provincial monitor for rights group Adhoc, said the
complaint that led to the charges against Mr. Sary was filed by the
Apsara Authority, which claims ownership of much of the land in the
area.
“It’s been three generations of commune chiefs who have signed off on
land documents for villagers, but the court just charged the latest
elected commune chief from the Sam Rainsy Party,” he said.
“If [the charges are legitimate], why don’t the court and the Apsara
Authority take action against the two previous commune chiefs from the
CPP party?”
“We think it’s a threat to prevent commune chiefs from the opposition to act in favor of local villagers.”
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