Licadho's head of monitoring, Am Sam Ath, speaks to the press after he was hit by security forces at a World Habitat Day march last year in Phnom Penh. Heng Chivoan |
Beaten activists are now suspects
Phnom Penh Post | 8 February 2017
A human rights monitor and a land rights activist who were beaten by Daun Penh security guards
during a protest last October will appear for questioning at Phnom Penh
Municipal Court this afternoon as suspects of “intentional violence”.
In documents dated January 20, deputy prosecutor Ngin Pich ordered
Licadho technical adviser Am Sam Ath and Chan Puthisak of the Boeung Kak lake community
to appear before the court, after two security guards – Teth Chanthu
and Sam Sotheara – complained they were injured by the pair in a brawl on World Habitat Day.
In a video widely disseminated after the event, the guards – who
became notorious for violent crackdowns in the wake of the 2013 election
– can be seen snatching a drum away from protesters, then beating
Puthisak’s head.
The footage also shows Sam Ath attempting to intervene before he,
too, is punched in the face by guards. An incredulous Sam Ath yesterday
said he and Puthisak had filed their own complaint to the Chey Chumneah
commune police station after receiving facial injuries in the attack.
“It is so ironic. I am speechless after having received the summons,”
Sam Ath said. “[It can be] seen clearly on social media pictures that I
was surrounded and beaten by five or six security guards, and I was
helped by the people – if not, I would had got serious injuries or lost
my life.”
He said the case was a “disgusting” attempt to defame him, and the
security guards should not be able to get away with violence without
recourse.
Puthisak described the case as a threat to freedom of expression.
“This is an injustice for me because the victim becomes the suspect,” he
said, adding he still had not heard any update about the complaint they
lodged.
Chey Chumneah commune police chief Chhorn Kaony yesterday told The Post
that authorities had received both complaints on the same day and had
duly forwarded them to the district level a few days later.
“The security guards filed a complaint [saying] that they had been
injured after the incident,” he said. Daun Penh Governor Sok Penvuth
declined to comment.
Court spokesman Ly Sophana said the prosecutor was assessing all
documents, evidence and witness testimony. He said both complaints were
being considered together, before hanging up.
Several international human rights groups yesterday lambasted the
move and urged Cambodian authorities to “immediately drop the
politically motivated criminal investigation” in a joint statement
yesterday.
Champa Patel, Southeast Asia and Pacific director at Amnesty
International, described the investigation as “a typically absurd and
undisguised case of judicial harassment”.
“As usual, unnecessary and excessive use of force by the para-police
goes unpunished, and those who work to promote and protect human rights
find themselves subject to criminal proceedings,” she said.
Kingsley Abbott, senior international legal adviser at the
International Commission of Jurists, said Sam Ath and Puthisak should be
commended by the government for their work promoting human rights, not
intimidated through the judiciary.
“The case should be immediately and formally closed and a genuine
investigation initiated into wrongful use of force by the para-police,”
he said.
A Justice Ministry spokesperson yesterday said such groups should not
interfere with Cambodia’s judicial process. “The court has
independence, so the international organisations should be checking our
laws and must understand about our legal system,” he said.
Opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua, who in the past has called for the
“illegal” security forces to be reined in, said this was yet “another
blatant case of reinforcing the use of violence and force committed by
these hired security guards” and urged the court to study all video
footage captured of the attack.
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ReplyDeleteI watched the violence clip, and confirmed Am Sam Ath did hit the security guards. He must not have hit those security guards. He was wrong.
ReplyDeleteEven if the security guards hit him, it's their jobs. He had no right to hit back. Look at his face, he is not exactly a nice guy.