Cambodia Daily's Deputy publisher Deborah Krisher-Steele speaks on Tuesday at the Foreign Correspondents Club in Japan. Photo supplied |
Daily’s deputy disavows apology
Phnom Penh Post | 14 September 2017
The Cambodia Daily’s deputy publisher, Deborah
Krisher-Steele, has disavowed a “grovelling” apology letter she signed
“under duress”, saying she feared her husband was within hours of arrest
if she did not.
At a Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan event on Tuesday, Krisher-Steele revealed the motivations behind the conciliatory tone of the September 9 letter,
which expressed regret that observers had suggested her newspaper’s
closure on September 4 was linked to political suppression of press
freedom and asked Prime Minister Hun Sen to find a “win-win” solution.
“On the day the Cambodian government seized our bank accounts … I get
this frantic message from my assistant saying [my husband] Doug is
going to be arrested and you have to sign this letter in two hours, and
it was all in Khmer,” she said.
“I have no idea what it says, and I’m really scared that my husband’s
going to be arrested. And apparently it’s this grovelling letter
apologising for everything I said. So I signed it. I will just have to
disavow it . . . Under duress, I signed it.”
In an email yesterday, she said her assistant had received the
warning call from Soy Sopheap, the publisher of Deum Ampil newspaper and
a frequent government interlocutor. Krisher-Steele claimed the letter
was drafted by Sopheap.
“In retrospect, I shouldn’t have signed it without knowing exactly
what it said. It was a very bad decision I made out of fear,” she said.
However, Sopheap – who admitted to meeting with Daily
management before its closure and suggesting they “soften” their tone in
a bid to keep the presses rolling – yesterday denied he penned the
letter. “I did not know about that,” he said.
The Cambodia Daily printed its last newspaper on September 4 after it was slapped with a disputed $6.3 million tax bill, the details of which were leaked by government mouthpiece Fresh News.
Since the closure, the Tax Department filed a legal complaint accusing its founder and two directors of obstructing the tax process and tax evasion, which could see them face up to six years in prison.
It also issued a travel ban for Daily General Manager Douglas Steele, and his personal bank account was frozen, along with the bank accounts connected to the Daily’s NGO, World Assistance for Cambodia.
Tax Department chief Kong Vibol was unavailable for comment
yesterday, while his deputy Vann Puthipol claimed he “was not in charge
of this issue”, despite heading the legal complaint, according to court
documents.
Krisher-Steele stressed the NGO had no tax dispute and that the lack
of access to funds jeopardised jobs for 120 Khmer staff, English and
computer classes for 3,000 students, scholarships and mentorships for
600 rural schoolgirls, and food for 40 foster children, whose parents
had died due to AIDS.
“I have a husband who has been taken hostage. I have a newspaper that
shut down, but now my concern also is: how am I going to feed the 40
foster children?” Krisher-Steele said.
“People told me not to speak, because it may hurt me to speak . . .
keep it all quiet, the way you’re being harassed by the Tax Department …
But I can’t really do that, because it’s sort of like being abused and
not talking about it.”
“I had no warning – it just came out of the blue . . . I thought I was reading Kafka’s novel.”
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