The Phnom Penh Post

Fear of arrest drove Adhoc chief abroad

- Ananth Baliga and Touch Sokha

THUN Saray, president of the rights group Adhoc, told the Post late Tuesday that he had no option but to leave Cambodia in May following “direct threats” from the AntiCorrup­tion Unit in April to arrest him if he continued to oppose the criminal charges against five current and former human rights officials.

Saray, who did not appear before the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Monday to testify in an ongoing bribery case against four Adhoc staffers and one Adhoc staffertur­ned-election official, said he moved to Canada fearing a risk to his safety following threats to arrest him.

“I was threatened with arrest and an ‘expansion of the investigat­ion to more persons if I tried to react strongly more against this detention’,” he said, via email.

Following the arrest of Adhoc staffers Lem Mony, Ny Sokha, Yi Soksan and Nay Vanda, and National Election Committee deputy secretaryg­eneral Ny Chakrya, Saray met with ACU head Om Yentieng, who said he was attempting to “limit and keep this case small”.

“I will send only the first batch of evidence to the court, but if you try to fight back, then we will send the second and we also have a third,” Yentieng told Saray in front of reporters at the time.

The ACU chief could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Saray maintained that the five jailed officials were innocent but that he chose to remain silent and leave Cambodia in order to prevent an escalation of the situation.

“This was extensivel­y discussed by Adhoc and partners – including diplomatic missions – and we came to the conclusion that it was not

I was threatened with arrest and an ‘expansion of the investigat­ion . . .’

safe for me to stay in Cambodia,” he said.

This decision to remain silent was extended to t he organisati­on, he said, resulting i n reduced press interactio­ns and media releases in the months follow ing the April arrests.

Am Sam Ath, monitoring manager for Licadho, said Saray’s concern for his safety was understand­able given the persecutio­n of Adhoc and other human rights officials.

“Human rights defenders work in accordance with the law, but if they are being arrested because of their work, it is a threat,” he added.

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