People participate in a Black Monday protest last year during which then-STT Director Ee Sarom was briefly detained. The group was accused yesterday of conspiring to foment ‘colour revolution’. Pha Lina |
NGO accused of plotting revolution
Phnom Penh Post | 20 October 2017
A senior Ministry of Defence official yesterday claimed that housing
rights group Sahmakum Teang Tnaut (STT) had received close to half a
million dollars a year from the United States to foment “colour
revolution” among the land dispute groups it worked with – a claim
quickly rejected by the NGO.
Defence Ministry Secretary of State Neang Phat was speaking at an
event with soldiers in Phnom Penh when he said that former STT head E
Sarom, who was temporarily detained last year at a civil society
protest, confessed to getting the large sum to foment movements that
would serve a purported US strategy.
“At some places, the NGOs formed protesting groups. So, if we look at
them, we see that they were under the umbrella of some NGOs with the
plan to do a colour revolution,” he said.
“He [Sarom] confessed that they had received funds from $400,000 to
$500,000 every year to form all these movements to serve the strategy of
the Americans.”
Last May, Sarom, Licadho Deputy Director Thav Kimsan and Borei Keila land activist Sar Sorn were arrested near Prey Sar prison as they led the first so-called Black Monday protest seeking the release of the imprisoned “Adhoc 5”.
Phat claimed that those on the receiving end of the purported
incitement included outspoken Boeung Kak activist Tep Vanny, the Borei
Keila community and land disputants from Thma Kol, also known as the
“SOS” community.
He also complained about the existence of nearly 3,000 grassroots communities, all of who, he said, were anti-government.
“These communities are against the government, none of them is supporting the government,” he said.
He added that he had no further details to support his allegations
and was basing it on a police report handed to him by Deputy National
Police Chief Chhay Sinarith, who could not be reached yesterday.
Interior Ministry Secretary of State Pol Lim said he was not aware of
Phat’s claims, and nor was Prak Sam Oeun, director for the ministry’s
Administration Department.
The Defence Ministry official’s remarks come as the government mounts
a concerted clampdown on the opposition, NGOs and independent media
outlets, with a particular emphasis on the US allegedly backing such groups to foment a “colour revolution” – a reference to non-violent protest movements in the Middle East and Eastern Europe.
E Sarom, who at the time was the NGO’s executive director, could not
be reached yesterday, but Soeung Saran, who now heads STT, rejected the
claims that it had been funded by the US government.
“STT has never received USAID or US State Department funding and does
not serve any strategy of the USA or other foreign governments,” he
said.
He said the group only focused on providing pro-poor technical
assistance for urban housing and infrastructure issues, as well as
helping housing rights abuse victims understand the laws relevant to
them.
“STT tries to work with the Government of Cambodia and its
institutions to develop urban poor areas for the betterment of all
Cambodians,” he added.
In a short statement, the US Embassy in Phnom Penh said, “We support
the peaceful resolution of land disputes, but are not familiar with the
NGO Sahmakum Teang Tnaut”.
Thma Kol land activist Chray Nim questioned the repeated attempts to
attack NGOs that aided her community with technical resources – a
responsibility, she said, the government had absolved itself of.
“Actually it is the government’s role and the [involved] company’s
responsibility to find a solution, but then they turn to scapegoat NGOs
that helped us, such as Teang Tnaut,” she said.
The anti-US conspiracy theories yesterday claimed another casualty –
the European Union – when an anonymous letter to the editor, published
on government mouthpiece Fresh News, claimed the superpower and economic
bloc had stepped over a “red line”.
“Both ambassadors are trying to express their influence . . . and
seek to pressure the Cambodian government to release the treasonous
mastermind, [opposition leader] Kem Sokha, immediately and
unconditionally,” the letter reads, referring to US Ambassador William
Heidt and EU delegation head George Edgar.
The outlet’s articles and anonymous letters have proved eerily
prescient in recent months, foreshadowing, among other things, the
government’s expulsion of the NGO National Democratic Institute
and its accusations that the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party –
particularly Sokha, who is currently in prison on “treason” charges –
had colluded with the US to topple the government. The CNRP is currently facing possible dissolution by the Supreme Court following a complaint from the Ministry of Interior.
In response, Ambassador Edgar said member states had expressed their
serious concern over the arrest of Sokha and the potential dissolution
and redistribution of the CNRP’s seats in parliament and at the local
level, but insisted that the EU remained nonpartisan.
“It is up to the Cambodian people to choose whom they wish to represent them at commune and national level,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment