The Phnom Penh Post

Group to abide by deal, will not screen Ley film

- Lay Samean and Ananth Baliga

A DAY after four activists were detained for attempting to screen an Al Jazeera-produced short on the murder of political analyst Kem Ley, Moung Sony said his group would refrain from screening the documentar­y because of an agreement they signed on Sunday that ensured their release.

The Khmer Student Intelligen­t League Associatio­n had organised a screening of the report that highlights the suspicious circumstan­ces that led to the killing of the popular political commentato­r. Armed police and district security guards, however, shut down the screening, briefly detaining four of the group’s members.

On Sunday, KSILA secretaryg­eneral Chek Chetra had said the group would only temporaril­y suspend the screening and wait for the right time to attempt to show it.

But, Sony, one of the four arrested and a member of KSILA, confirmed yesterday that the screening had been scrapped altogether because authoritie­s had threatened to slam the group with incitement charges, though he questioned the rationale behind the charge.

“According to the authoritie­s, if we screen it, they will pursue legal action. But what article of the law applies to this?” he asked yesterday.

Yesterday meanwhile, Soli- darity House, home to a group of NGOs and trade unions, held a private screening of the controvers­ial documentar­y I Am Chut Wutty, which chronicles the life of environmen­talist Chut Wutty’s fight against deforestat­ion in Koh Kong province.

Wutty was gunned down under murky circumstan­ces in 2012 while escorting journalist­s to a protected forest in Koh Kong where he had documented illegal logging rackets.

The documentar­y was also streamed by Solidarity House

If we screen it, they will pursue legal action. But what article of the law applies to this?

on their Facebook page, with union leader Sar Mora saying it was unrelated to the incident involving the Kem Ley documentar­y the day before.

“We just want people to have an understand­ing of the Chut Wutty case. There is nothing bad in that,” said Mora, who is president of Cambodian Food and Service Workers Federation.

He added that he wasn’t worried about any interventi­on from the authoritie­s, adding that they were only streaming a film that was already available online for anyone to watch.

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