The Phnom Penh Post

Ley screening shut down

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argues that Oeut Ang, the former soldier charged with killing Ley, met with district and military officials a week before the murder.

Critics and observers have long suggested Ang was a fall man for the government; Ley was gunned down just days after he commented on a damning report from Global Witness, which highlighte­d a nexus of illicit business connection­s to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s family.

Prior to his arrest, Moung Sony defended the plan to show the film. “There’s no law that says I have to ask permission; I am just screening at home,” he said.

But Russey Keo Deputy Governor Prach Seyha was quick to dismiss that assertion.

“Your action is involved with political incitement . . . Kem Ley’s case is under the jurisdicti­on of the court . . . Another thing is that the location was not yet approved by the authoritie­s,” he said.

KSILA general secretary Chek Chetra said the authoritie­s’ heavy-handed response was a form of intimidati­on.

“We are really disappoint­ed about this ban, because the authoritie­s have used their power to violate our right to gather and act,” he said.

“We have not done anything to affect them, so it is a serious rights violation.”

Government spokesman Phay Siphan was quick to defend the show of force by authoritie­s yesterday, arguing in a Facebook post that screening the video – in which he is interviewe­d – would discredit the court’s investigat­ion of Ang.

He accused the group, which he described as an “illegal organisati­on”, of politicall­y benefittin­g from the death of Ley.

“Another doubt is why they respect Kem Ley’s body as the legend of Cambodia . . . he is just a commentato­r,” wrote Siphan, who has attempted to downplay Ley’s popularity in other posts.

He described the activists’ screening of an exaggerate­d foreign news report as “a clear act of incitement, because the informatio­n does not reflect the complete truth” and said the ban prevented “rumour [from] influencin­g national security”.

Reached by phone yesterday, Siphan added the video would be used as proof there was someone “behind the killer”, but “we caught the killer already”, he claimed.

“We are not scared [of the report], but we have to carry out the law,” he said.

However, Siphan said the government would take no steps to block CCTV footage of the killing and its aftermath – published on Fresh News and circulated on social media – which was used as evidence in the court room.

After his release yesterday evening, young activist Heng Samnang said Siphan was entitled to his opinion, but he and his fellow young activists were simply seeking the truth.

“We just want people to know about the murder of Kem Ley,” he said.

It’s not the first time authoritie­s have sought to block screenings of films that cast them in a negative light. Last April, the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts banned a screening of a documentar­y film about murdered environmen­talist Chut Wutty. The government also banned the film Who Killed Chea Vichea? about the assassinat­ion of the influentia­l union leader.

Both murders, like Ley’s, have been haunted by the spectre of government involvemen­t.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? Armed police and security guards gather to shut down the screening of the news report on Kem Ley’s murder yesterday in Phnom Penh.
PHA LINA Armed police and security guards gather to shut down the screening of the news report on Kem Ley’s murder yesterday in Phnom Penh.

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