“If you are not professional, we will take action on that one,” Mr. Siphan said, adding that he planned to host a meeting with local news outlets to prevent the situation from escalating but declined to say what would be discussed.
“I don’t want the messenger to get killed, my friend,” he said with a laugh.
Government Backs Letter Denouncing Foreign Press
Cambodia Daily Weekend | 9 July 2016
Foreign-owned newspapers in Cambodia serve as opposition propaganda
machines and will face legal repercussions if they continue to disrupt
stability in Cambodia, according to an anonymous letter published by a
CPP-aligned media outlet and endorsed by a government spokesman.
The
letter, titled “Behavior Plunging Cambodians Into a Bonfire of War
Because of Foreigners,” was published on the Fresh News website on
Friday morning along with a doctored Nazi propaganda cartoon in which
the logos of The Cambodia Daily, The Phnom Penh Post and Global Witness
are superimposed over the faces of World War II Allied leaders on the
verge of decapitating a woman identified as “Peace.”
The
letter echoed claims made by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s children in
response to a new report released by the London-based anti-corruption
group and covered by the Daily, the Post, and dozens of local and
international news organizations on Thursday.
The report, “Hostile
Takeover,” links the first family to a vast business empire with a
combined capital of more than $200 million.
Global Witness had given media
outlets access to its findings in advance under the condition that they
remain under embargo until Thursday morning—a standard practice among
both government and non-government agencies.
Later on Thursday,
Hun Mana, the prime minister’s eldest daughter, decried the “destructive
efforts” of the Daily, the Post and Global Witness, accusing them in a
Facebook post of colluding to defame her father in the run-up to coming
elections.
In a post of his own, the prime minister’s middle son,
Hun Manith, said the report and subsequent articles were “as usual, full
of mistakes and false information” and written to “disparage and defame
the Hun family with false information.”
The anonymous letter to
the editor published online by Fresh News on Friday did not address the
Global Witness report directly, but reiterated the accusations against
the two newspapers—and took them a step farther.
“The Cambodia
Daily and The Phnom Penh Post are foreign newspapers that often try to
find all venomous means and tricks to destroy the peace of Samdech Hun
Sen,” the letter says.
“These white-skinned foreigners never
experienced the Killing Fields and the Khmer Rouge and they also do not
know that our Cambodia suffered badly in the bonfire of war until we
survived and enjoyed the development that exists today,” it says. “Those
newspapers are rude and write in favor of the opposition party without
researching the accuracy of sources before publishing stories.”
“The
two newspapers should reform themselves by working with a high code of
ethics and be clearly responsible and beneficial to Cambodia as a whole.
Otherwise, Cambodia will have no choice but to take legal action and
send all of you out of Cambodia,” the letter ends.
The
accompanying cartoon, versions of which first surfaced in comments on
Hun Mana’s post on Thursday, uses a piece of Nazi propaganda titled “In
the Name of Humanity.”
Reached on Friday, Fresh News founder and CEO Lim
Cheavutha said the letter was submitted by an ordinary reader and that
publishing anonymous letters was standard practice at the website.
“This
was not intended to attack anyone—it is just news,” Mr. Cheavutha said,
denying that Fresh News had any formal affiliation with the ruling
party.
Fresh News is regularly the first outlet to publish
official government documents, and often does so without comment. In
May, it posted an anonymous opinion piece suggesting that the U.S.
Embassy was using local NGOs to foment revolution.
On Friday,
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said he had “no idea” who
submitted the letter, but that the author’s logic was sound.
“You’re
the propaganda,” Mr. Siphan said, adding that The Daily and the Post
are “part of the opposition against the prime minister.”
Mr.
Siphan said the newspapers needed to more carefully check facts before
publishing, but declined to specify any inaccuracies in the articles
about the Global Witness report.
“If you are not professional, we
will take action on that one,” Mr. Siphan said, adding that he planned
to host a meeting with local news outlets to prevent the situation from
escalating but declined to say what would be discussed.
“I don’t want the messenger to get killed, my friend,” he said with a laugh.
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