Former Free Trade Union president Chea Mony (centre) addresses a gathering to mark the 13th anniversary of the murder of his brother, labour leader Chea Vichea, in Phnom Penh yesterday. Pha Lina |
Chea Vichea’s death marked
Phnom Penh Post | 23 January 2017
Unionists, workers and civil society organisations yesterday marked the 13th anniversary of the killing of prominent union leader Chea Vichea, with many observers finding it hard to ignore the stark parallels between the case and the murder of political commentator Kem Ley last year.
The memorial, the first since Ley’s death in July, was attended by a
small crowd of less than 100 unionists and civil society members and
held at a statue of Vichea on Sihanouk Boulevard – not far from the Wat
Langka newsstand where he was shot dead on January 22, 2004.
The opposition-aligned Vichea, who formed the Free Trade Union with
opposition leader Sam Rainsy’s assistance, was gunned down in broad
daylight in what was widely considered a politically motivated killing.
Attendees, including a few opposition officials, prayed and placed
flowers at the statue, with Chea Mony, Vichea’s brother and a former
head of the FTU, saying he had lost any hope the government would solve
his brother’s case.
“It has been 13 years already. Where is my brother’s justice? Where
are the suspects? There are no answers,” he said, standing in front of
his brother’s statue.
Two suspects – Born Samnang and Ouk Sam Ouen – were convicted for the
murder, despite having alibis. The two, who were widely considered
scapegoats, were ultimately released, but only after serving five years,
for lack of evidence.
Mony also decried the inaction by an inter-ministerial committee set
up in 2015 to re-investigate Vichea’s death, which had yet to release
any updates.
The committee was also expected to look into the killing of two FTU
factory presidents, Ros Sovannareth and Hy Vuthy, shot dead in May 2004
and February 2007, respectively.
Meanwhile, the similarities to the more recent murder of Kem Ley –
who was gunned down last July while having his morning coffee – were
unmistakable.
Police soon apprehended former soldier Oeut Ang,
who later confessed to the killing. However, police have since
discredited Ang’s suggestion that he killed Ley over a $3,000 debt,
without providing any alternative narratives.
Meanwhile, the Phnom Penh Municipal Court last month quietly notified
Ley’s wife that it had closed the investigation into the killing, but
without addressing any of the findings.
Linking the two cases, Ley’s brother Kem Rithiseth said it was hard
to distinguish between the two. “The murder of the two of them is of the
same manner, they both come from the same group – people who fight for
justice – and the authorities delaying the cases,” he said, adding both
cases would likely be solved only with a new administration and reformed
court system.
Licadho’s Am Sam Ath said authorities had erred by convicting Samnang
and Sam Ouen, and looked set to make another error with Ley’s alleged
killer Ang – who initially maintained that his name was Choub Samlab,
which means “Meet to Kill”. Though Ang is thought to be the triggerman,
his motives have been questioned, and even authorities have acknowledged
he may not have acted alone – albeit without identifying possible
co-conspirators.
“Although authorities arrested Choub Samlab, they could not really
identify the killer or other involved people behind this killing.
Therefore there must be powerful people behind this – it is very good
show [of action], similar to Chea Vichea’s murder,” he said.
Given that Vichea and Ley were vocal opponents of Prime Minister Hun
Sen, it was not a stretch to assume the government was behind the
killings, said Human Rights Watch’s Phil Robertson. “The investigations
into the killings of both Chea Vichea and Kem Ley have been total
farces, created to give an impression of professional policing when
there was never any intent to find the real killers,” he said.
However, Justice Ministry spokesman Chin Malin quickly dismissed any
criticism of the handling of Vichea’s case and said civil society was
only jumping to conclusions. “They are just outsiders and they do not
know what happens behind case,” he said. “The investigation takes time
because our techniques are limited and it is a huge, complicated crime.”
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