Global Witness condemns sweeping attack on independent voices in Cambodia
Global Witness | 29 August 2017
The
Cambodian government must end its crackdown on independent media outlets and
rights groups, says Global Witness.
At least 33 radio frequencies have been taken off-air amid claims
by the Ministry of Information that broadcasters broke contracts with the
government. Several stations have axed the independent Voice of Democracy show from their
programming, and the US-backed paper The
Cambodia Daily was handed a US$ 6.3 million tax bill it says is politically motivated.
Global
Witness campaigner Emma Burnett said: “The
ruling party is either closing down organisations that it considers a threat to
its re-election, or slapping them with crippling tax bills that may choke them
out of existence. Without these outlets the Cambodian people will be
disproportionately exposed to media that is little more than government
propaganda.”
NGOs too are in
the line of fire. Cambodia’s branch of the US-funded National Democratic
Institute was folded
last week due to alleged tax and registration
violations, and its foreign staff given one week to leave the country. This comes
after the election-monitoring
consortium known as
the Situation Room was told it may be banned
from future vote monitoring.
Meanwhile
the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) is keeping a low profile for fear of closure as
the situation continues to escalate ahead of general elections next year.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen is one of the world’s
longest serving prime ministers, in power for 30 years. His regime has seen
political opposition systematically quashed and critics tortured, arbitrarily
detained and murdered. Hun Sen and his Cambodia People’s Party were again accused of intimidating
voters in the lead-up to local elections in June.
Emma said: “This latest wave of threats, closures and
expulsions are clearly intended to scare the prime ministers’ critics into
silence. We mustn’t underestimate the chilling effect that this will have on
freedom of speech across the country. Donor governments and countries that
trade with or invest in Cambodia should use their influence to try to halt Hun
Sen’s crackdown before it escalates further.”
Global Witness’ office in Cambodia closed in 2005, in
response to serious threats to local employees and a ban on members of its
international staff entering the country. This followed the publication of a Global
Witness report, Taking a Cut, that
exposed the role of elite military figures in illegal logging and related
corruption, and which the government sought to ban.
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