A man reads an issue of the Cambodia Daily in Phnom Penh. The government has come under sharp international criticism for threatening to close the paper over a purported $6.3 million tax bill. Hong Menea |
International groups slam NGO and media closures
Phnom Penh Post | 28 August 2017
International condemnation for the government’s continued
clampdown on NGOs and independent media organisations continued to flow
in over the weekend, with Human Rights Watch (HRW) calling it an
“escalating campaign of politically-motivated harassment, intimidation,
and legal action”.
In recent weeks, government agencies have initiated unilateral
investigations into the tax compliance of rights NGOs and independent
media outlets, including the English-language newspaper the Cambodia Daily – with the latter being asked to pay a purported $6.3 million in back taxes and penalties or cease operations.
The Daily met with tax officials on Friday, but General Manager Douglas Steele declined to comment on the meeting’s outcome.
On Friday, Voice of Democracy released a statement saying that in
addition to two stations that had stopped airing its programming last
week, three others in Siem Reap, Battambang and Banteay Meanchey
provinces had followed suit.
The media closures were panned by the United Nations, European Union,
HRW and Reporters Without Borders, with the latter classifying the
actions taken against independent media outlets as “disturbing”.
Liz Throssell, spokeswoman for the UN Office of the High Commissioner
for Human Rights, expressed concerns over the media closures, asking
the government to respect the country’s international obligations to
ensure freedom of association and expression.
The media crackdown coincided with the shuttering of the US-funded
pro-democracy NGO National Democratic Institute (NDI), which was ordered
to close down by the Foreign Ministry for not being properly
registered. It’s foreign staff were given a week to leave the country.
HRW’s Phil Robertson said that the attack on the Daily showed a shrinking tolerance for critical views.
“The list of news, human rights and democracy-promoting organizations
under attack by the Cambodian government seems to grow by the minute,”
Robertson said in a statement. “Hun Sen’s authoritarian rule is being
chiseled in stone.”
While the US State Department and US Embassy in Phnom Penh strongly
condemned the action, it was followed by more criticism from US
Representative Alan Lowenthal and veteran US Senator John McCain.
“By expelling the NDI staff, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen is only
demonstrating that he is afraid of open society and debate, and that he
is willing to use authoritarian tactics to suppress them,” McCain said.
Government spokesman Phay Siphan, Foreign Ministry spokesman Chum
Sounry and ruling Cambodian People’s Party spokesman Sok Eysan could not
be reached for comment yesterday.
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