The Phnom Penh Post

Kem Ley memorial allowed

- Mech Dara, Ananth Baliga and Martin de Bourmont

AS SLAIN political commentato­r Kem Ley’s memorial service wound down at his family home in Takeo province yesterday, around 50 civil society members and unionists held a short prayer ceremony at the Caltex petrol station where he was gunned down last year, a day after a similar gathering was met by around 40 district security guards.

On Sunday, Kem Ley supporters attempted to place a photo of the popular commentato­r at the site of his murder, but were prevented from doing so by Chamkarmon district security guards, who took away a framed photo of Ley held by food worker unionist Ou Tepphalin.

However, yesterday, staffers from rights group Licadho, housing rights NGO Sahmakum Teang Tnaut and members of the Cambodian Food and Service Workers’ Federation were able to perform a prayer ceremony outside the station’s Star Mart, where Ley frequently drank his morning coffee.

Around 20 security guards and police officers were stationed nearby but did not intervene in the proceeding­s.

“[Sunday] they stopped us and that is a restrictio­n of the right to assembly and expression,” said Tepphalin. “[ Yesterday] we paid respects [to Kem Ley], and they can see that there was no violence here.”

In Takeo, Ley’s brother Kem Rithisith said the turnout was smaller than on Sunday – the first day of the memorial – but he was still pleased to see his brother’s legacy remaining strong a year after his death.

“We are happy that many people from all walks of life come to participat­e on his anniversar­y to commemorat­e his death,” he said.

On Sunday, more than 1,000 people across the country paid their respects to the popular analyst, including opposition leader Kem Sokha and party officials.

A coalition of 164 rights groups marked the occasion with the release of an open letter on Friday asking for an independen­t and impartial investigat­ion into the Ley killing. It called for a thorough exploratio­n into two possible accomplice­s of Ley’s killer, Ouet Ang, who was sentenced to life in prison in March. Though Ang was given a life sentence for the murder, many – including some authoritie­s – suspect he did not act alone, but an opaque investigat­ion into the killing yielded few leads.

Reacting to the letter, Justice Ministry spokesman Kim Santepheap took to his Facebook page to defend the court’s proceeding­s, adding that details of the investigat­ion could not be made public.

“The court’s continued investigat­ion procedures cannot [be] disseminat­ed in public because it [will] impact the secrecy of the investigat­ion,” he said.

For Licadho’s Naly Pilorge, Ley’s highprofil­e murder calls for more transparen­cy. “Ley’s death and work were in the public domain,” she said. “The burden is on the government to provide answers about the investigat­ion and follow-up.”

This sentiment was shared by Vuth Thean, who attended the Caltex prayer ceremony, and argued that the government had nothing to lose from conducting a transparen­t investigat­ion, the absence of which only raised more questions.

“The government treated the case as very straightfo­rward without following internatio­nal and national standards that we can trust,” he said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Supporters pay their respects to slain political analyst Kem Ley yesterday outside the Star Mart in Phnom Penh where he was murdered last year.
HENG CHIVOAN Supporters pay their respects to slain political analyst Kem Ley yesterday outside the Star Mart in Phnom Penh where he was murdered last year.

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