Cambodia paper is latest victim of intensifying crackdown
Washington Post | 4 September 2017
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — When Cambodia’s main opposition leader was
arrested over the weekend in a surprise police raid, one of the
country’s last independent media outlets rushed reporters out in the
middle of night to cover the story, just as it has done for nearly a
quarter century.
But the English-language Cambodia’s Daily’s
reportage about the arrest of Kem Sokha, who stands accused by the
government of treason, was a tragic story in and of itself: it was to be
the paper’s last.
On Monday the venerable broadsheet, which has
helped pioneer press freedom and train generations of journalists since
it was founded in 1993, appeared in newsstands for the last time — the
latest victim of a determined push by the government of Prime Minister
Hun Sen to silence critics in the run-up to 2018 elections.
The
paper’s owners said they were forced to close because of “extra-legal
threats by the government,” a reference to a $6 million tax bill they
say authorities contrived with no audit and a single purpose — to shut
them down
“It’s terrible, it’s frustrating,” said Chhorn Chansy, who worked
for a decade at the paper as a reporter and news editor. “We normally
write about others. We can’t believe that this happened to us.”
During
its 24-year-run, the Cambodia Daily served as a model for budding
journalists, its stories offering a window into a growing nation that is
still emerging from decades of conflict and genocide. About half the
Daily’s 30 editorial staff were Cambodian; the other half were
foreigners drawn from around the world.
The paper, which included
a Khmer-language section, acquired a reputation for hard-hitting
investigations in a nation where such things were rare. It was also a
consistent thorn in Hun Sen’s side. Its final front-page headline,
“Descent into Outright Dictatorship,” ran above a story about Kem
Sokha’s arrest.
Below the piece was another announcing Monday’s edition would be its last.
Jodie
DeJonge, the paper’s American chief editor, called the closure a “blow
against press freedom, a blow against allowing dissenting voices to be
heard, a blow against democracy in Cambodia.”
“It’s hard to imagine that after working for so hard for so long, these journalists just have to walk away,” she said.
The
Daily’s fate is part of a much broader government crackdown on critics
that has intensified dramatically in recent weeks and left many
wondering where the nation is headed. It’s also part of a major shift
away from American influence, which has waned for years as Cambodia
edges closer to China.
Last month, authorities expelled the
Washington-based National Democratic Institute and ordered at least a
dozen radio stations shut down for allegedly violating broadcasting
agreements. Although Ouk Kimseng, an information ministry spokesman,
said the government was simply enforcing the law, the stations appear to
have been singled out because they gave air time to opposition
politicians and to the U.S. government-funded Voice of America and Radio
Free Asia, which have also been accused by authorities of failing to
pay taxes.
The stations were among only a few in the
country considered independent, and their closure will have a profound
impact on the ability of rural populations — which comprise a majority
of the country — to obtain contrarian views. “How will the Cambodian
people be able to evaluate or access real information?” asked Yi
Chhorvorn, managing director of Mohanokor Radio, which was among those
shuttered with little explanation.
Mu Sochua, a senior member of the opposition party, said the fate of
the free press and the arrest of Kem Sokha are part of a government
strategy aimed at clearing the stage for Hun Sen ahead of elections next
year.
“They think that any voice that is critical has to be
eliminated — the media, independent analysts, human rights groups, trade
unions, the opposition.”
But free speech, she said, is critical
for Cambodia to grow. “This is not about winning or not winning. It’s
about giving democracy a chance.”
Although Cambodia is nominally a
democratic state, its institutions remain fragile and the rule of law
weak. Hun Sen, one of the world’s longest-serving rulers, has been in
office since 1985 and has held tightly onto it since. Contentious
elections in recent years, however, have seen an emboldened opposition
slowly chip away at his party’s strength.
When the Daily was
founded in 24 years ago by Bernard Krishner, a veteran American
journalist now living in Tokyo, Cambodia’s government, emerging from the
chaos of years of war, was barely functioning.
DeJonge, who also worked for The Associated Press for more than 20
years, acknowledged the paper had not paid taxes for most of its
existence, but it operated openly for years under the patronage of the
late King Norodom Sihanouk, who stepped down from the throne in 2004. It
has also run at a loss since at least 2008, so there were never going
to be many taxes to pay.
It is unclear how the government’s tax
bill was calculated. Authorities never visited the paper to conduct an
audit and never allowed an appeal.
When Krishner’s daughter,
Deborah Krishner-Steele, registered the paper properly in April and
began paying taxes for the first time, it may have given the government
the opening it was looking for. On Monday, the tax department requested
immigration authorities prevent her husband, Douglas Steele, from
leaving without paying up.
DeJonge said the paper’s targeting
clearly indicated political motives; as many as 90 percent of Cambodian
businesses are not tax-compliant, she said.
“It’s crushing that
tomorrow we are not going to wake up and keep working,” DeJonge said as
dozens of reporters wearing blue-and-white T-shirts emblazoned with the
words “Save Press Freedom” worked into the night Sunday on the paper’s
final edition.
A few had tears in their eyes.
“Cambodia’s democracy is dying in the darkness. Who is going to shine a light on that now?” DeJonge said. “We just don’t know.”
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