The Phnom Penh Post

After 24 years, newspaper shutters

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the Cambodia Daily was lawful and invites the Government of Cambodia to prosecute him if it believes otherwise. If charged, Mr Krisher will return to Cambodia,” the statement reads.

While the ceasing of operations might have signalled an end to the government’s pursuit of the newspaper, Tax Department head Kong Vibol told government mouthpiece Fresh News that it would press ahead in an effort to retrieve the debt, threatenin­g to prevent those responsibl­e from leaving the country.

“The one who is responsibl­e for this news institutio­n is the one who is responsibl­e for the state debt. They cannot escape or leave Cambodia because we follow [the] tax law of Cambodia,” he said, but could not be reached for comments later.

The Cambodia Daily has played an integral part in provid- ing the Cambodian public with an independen­t source of news, and that continued even on the newspaper’s last day, with reporters fervently working to cover the arrest of Kem Sokha – some editors and journalist­s had been following the story since 2am.

Despite the sombre mood in the Daily offices yesterday, reporters were hard at work to file what would be their last story for the newspaper. But for News Editor Chhorn Chansy, the sudden closure is hard to digest.

“Sometimes I smile, but it does not mean I am happy,” he said, referring to the last four weeks. “We have the family to support. We have kids going to school and one month is too fast – we are not ready.”

While Chansy is the nerve centre of the Daily’s day-to-day operations, Aun Pheap is one of its fiercest reporters.With a smile on his face, Pheap does not miss an opportunit­y to talk at length about illegal logging in Cambo- CambodiaDa­ily’s CambodiaDa­ily dia – an issue that he has extensivel­y covered. He recently won an award for reporting on the military’s involvemen­t in logging activities, with reporting partner Zsombor Peter.

“I and also Zsombor sometimes got threats from those okhna [tycoons] and also from military commanders, but we still [kept] writing,” he said.

“Even though the government ignores the informatio­n published by independen­t newspapers, we still keep writing about illegal logging and smuggling of wood to Vietnam.”

The Daily’s impact was certainly not lost on the Post, where every morning reporters and editors make a beeline to grab the morning copy of their crosstown rivals. The ritual of perusing the Daily for scoops or exclusives was not just an act of self-flagellati­on; it was also an acknowledg­ement that a vibrant and competitiv­e press strengthen­ed independen­t journalism in the Kingdom.

“On the news desk when big stories were breaking, you always left the office riddled with anxiety, worrying that the Daily might have crucial details or some obscure, important insight that you had missed,” said David Boyle, former managing editor at the Post.

“[T]he competitio­n had a profoundly positive effect on the quality of reporting and as a result Cambodia enjoyed what I believe was the highest standard of news coverage of any country in the region.”

In the back of the Daily office sit two of the newspaper’s stalwarts – Kim Chan and Van Roeun – who between them boast more than four decades of experience.

Chan is somber about leaving a newspaper he has worked for 22 years. He seems to have done everything at the newspaper – collecting informatio­n from various sources across the city in the 1990s, translatin­g Khmer copy for foreign colleagues and occasional­ly assisting with reporting when the newsroom was in a crunch.

Roeun still won’t give up the chance to have a quick laugh when he jokingly suggests starting his own newspaper.

In his 20 years at the independen­t media coalface, Roeun has seen it all – even other threats to close the Daily – but he never thought it would actually happen. “Tomorrow morning you will pick up the last copy of the Daily. And that’s it, everything is gone,” he said.

 ?? ANANTH BALIGA ?? staffers check the paper’s final story list yesterday. The paper is ceasing publicatio­n today after being ordered to close due to a tax dispute.
ANANTH BALIGA staffers check the paper’s final story list yesterday. The paper is ceasing publicatio­n today after being ordered to close due to a tax dispute.
 ?? AFP ?? Staffers walk through the first edition. newsroom this week in front of a blown-up image of the paper’s
AFP Staffers walk through the first edition. newsroom this week in front of a blown-up image of the paper’s

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