A group of protesters hold incense sticks during an impromptu cursing ceremony yesterday outside the Appeal Court, which upheld a 30-month sentence for land rights activist Tep Vanny’s alleged involvement in a 2013 protest that turned violent in Phnom Penh. Ananth Baliga |
Rights groups condemn decision to keep land activist Tep Vanny in prison
Phnom Penh Post | 9 August 2017
In a decision roundly criticised by rights observers, the Appeal Court yesterday upheld a two-and-a-half-year sentence
for Boeung Kak activist Tep Vanny for her alleged involvement in a 2013
protest outside Prime Minister Hun Sen’s residence in Phnom Penh that
turned violent.
Presiding Judge Pol Sam Oeun said the court found no fault with the
Phnom Penh Municipal Court’s decision to sentence the prominent activist
to 30 months in prison.
“The council sees that there was violence that happened and complied
with the charge of ‘violence with aggravating circumstances’, and that
decision of the municipal court was correct,” he said, referring to the
three-judge panel.
Vanny was convicted last September for allegedly ordering an attack
on around 200 Daun Penh security guards, police and Military Police
personnel, as she and fellow activists attempted to deliver a petition
to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s home near the Independence Monument.
The lake resident – one of the most prominent faces of the
acrimonious and long-running land dispute between Boeung Kak residents,
developers and City Hall – was sentenced to 30 months, fined 5 million
riel ($1,240), and ordered to pay 4 million and 5 million riel in
compensation, respectively, to plaintiffs Hao Hoeurn and Ouk Ratana,
both of whom are Daun Penh security guards.
Vanny has denied instigating any violence, insisting the protesters
were the victims. About 10 activists were injured as the security forces
violently dispersed the crowd.
Three Boeung Kak residents – Ngeth Khun, Kong Chantha and Bo Chhorvy –
were in court as witnesses, and erupted upon hearing the verdict, with
Vanny herself yelling at court officials in between tears.
“Unjust! Unjust! Put me in jail if you think this would bring benefit
to the nation. You arrest female land [rights] victims in jail. Today, I
am in jail; the next day, you would be in jail,” she yelled, as she was
forcefully put into a prison van.
Upon receiving word of the verdict, around 50 supporters outside the
court burst into tears and began chanting and yelling insults at the
court, with some of them starting an impromptu “cursing ceremony”
involving incense sticks and lotus stems. Lake resident Khun could be
seen smashing coconuts and lotus flowers as she yelled “Second Pol Pot!
Second Pol Pot!”
Vanny has been in jail since last August, when she was convicted and
sentenced to six days in prison for “public insult” while conducting a
cursing ceremony as part of the civil society-initiated “Black Monday”
protests. On top of the case addressed in yesterday’s hearing, two
others have been resurrected – one of which has not yet gone to trial,
and another in which Vanny and three others have been sentenced to six
months in prison for a similar protest outside City Hall.
Read more: Boeung Kak: A Disastrous Decade
Both plaintiffs skipped court throughout the trial, denying the defence the opportunity to cross-examine them.
Prosecutor Sar Yos Thavrak, however, insisted Vanny was in the wrong
for having gone to the premier’s home in the first place. “You stormed
into his house. This is your mistake,” he said during the first hearing.
Following yesterday’s verdict, Human Rights Watch (HRW) released a
statement asking for the quashing of charges against Vanny and her
immediate release, and highlighted a lack of evidence and witnesses in
the prosecution’s case.
“The case against Tep Vanny is a blatant misuse of prosecutorial
power to punish her for her peaceful activism,” said Phil Robertson,
deputy Asia director at HRW. “This prosecution is intended to silence
Tep Vanny and intimidate other Cambodian activists.”
Rhona Smith, the UN special rapporteur on human rights to Cambodia –
who is on a 10-day visit to the country – said the ruling was not
“especially surprising” and that the judicial process needed to be
strengthened to ensure rulings are based on evidence.
“I think with the court process as a whole, there are many issues in
which clarity on evidentiary requirements could be helpful across a
range of cases, and not just that one,” she said.
Standing outside the court, Licadho’s Am Sam Ath also questioned the
evidence used to paint Vanny as the instigator, saying that if she had
in fact given orders, then the people who followed them should be
prosecuted as well.
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