Phnom Penh Post | 31 May 2016
The government’s Cambodian Human
Rights Committee was the subject of ridicule yesterday after a propaganda video
tried to pass off snapshots of the Singapore skyline as those of pre-civil war
Libya.
The
slick video compiles a series of before-and-after photos of Syria and Libya,
backed by dramatic strings, and warns “the excessive use if [sic] rights will
bring about destruction”.
The
two civil-war stricken states are a favourite metaphor of government officials
urging Cambodians not to “misuse” their rights, yet the video uses an image of
Singapore in place of Libya, as highlighted by Channel News Asia.
But
the gaffes do not stop there. An image of Qatar’s capital of Doha also features
in the video, while another video – which compares Cambodia after the Khmer
Rouge era to the modern day – uses images of traffic jams in Vietnam to
illustrate that there are now “too many people” in Phnom Penh.
The
head of the human rights committee, Keo Remy [the Serial Defector: formerly SRP, then HRP, now CeePeePee], said the Singapore error was an
“unintentional mistake” that his technical team had now fixed.
“It’s
not embarrassing . . . the young people on the technical team
have never been to visit Singapore or Libya,” Remy said. “They searched Google
for ‘Libya at night time’ . . . it’s not a big deal.”
Twitter
user Jess Lim, based in Siem Reap, said the mistake was ironic. “Coming from
Singapore, I could smell a propaganda video a mile away,” she said yesterday,
after tweeting a link to the story with the words: “Zero points for subtlety.
Also, funny that Libya looked a whole lot like Singapore once.”
Satirical
twitter account Hun Sen’s Eye tweeted: “Watch your rights-exercising! You know
what the problem in Syria is? They love human rights TOO MUCH! #Cambodia”.
Independent
human rights consultant Billy Tai said it was problematic for the Cambodian
government to compare itself to leaders like Gaddafi and Assad – vicious
dictators whose people revolted against them.
“They’re
trying to say the people are the ones that are abusing the rights we’ve
graciously given,” Tai said.
He
said such a claim was analogous to “the perverse logic of an abusive
relationship”, where the victim is blamed for inciting anger and beatings.
Cambodian
Centre for Human Rights executive director Chak Sopheap said the video’s true
mistake was that it advocated restricting freedoms, rather than promoting and protecting
human rights.
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