The Phnom Penh Post

Tep Vanny’s sentence upheld

- Ananth Baliga and Kim Sarom

THE Supreme Court yesterday upheld a 30-month sentence for land activist Tep Vanny on charges relating to a 2013 protest outside Prime Minister Hun Sen’s house that turned violent, leaving the Boeung Kak resident to serve out more than a year of her remaining sentence.

Presiding Judge Kem Sathavy upheld the decision handed down by the Appeal Court in August, saying the defence’s assertion that Vanny did not orchestrat­e or order the violence on Daun Penh security guards during the protest was not backed up by the evidence.

“After the panel of judges discussed this case, we have seen the [arguments] Tep Vanny and her defence lawyers have raised during the hearing that she did not commit violence. That is not true,” Sathavy said.

Vanny was charged with committing aggravatin­g intentiona­l violence for allegedly ordering protesters to attack security guards, but during the 30-minute hearing prior to yesterday’s decision, Vanny insisted there was “no proof or evidence” against her.

Around 70 land activists from three evictee communitie­s had attempted to submit a petition to the Ministry of Justice in 2013 asking for the release of Boeung Kak activist Yorm Bopha and for a quick resolution to their land disputes.

After being turned away, they attempted to submit the petition at Hun Sen’s residence near Independen­ce Monument, but were met with 200 officers and security guards carrying shields and sticks, preventing them from getting close to the premier’s mansion.

In the ensuing melee, which the land activists say was started by authoritie­s, Boeung Kak resident Bo Chhorvy received cuts and scratches to her face, even alleging that a police officer tried to grope her.

The only evidence presented against Vanny in the case was the written testimony of plaintiffs and Daun Penh security guards Hao Hoeurn and Ouk Ratana. As with all the other hearings throughout the rest of the trial, the pair did not appear in court yesterday, and did not send legal representa­tion in their stead.

Vanny was first convicted over the protest in September 2016, and also has to serve another six-month sentence for a separate protest outside City Hall in 2011.

Rising to plead her innocence yester- day, Vanny reiterated that the plaintiffs had submitted no evidence to show that she instructed land activists to attack security personnel.

“There is no evidence or proof that I committed violence to the civil parties. I would like them to show me,” she said, breaking down during her statement.

Her lawyer, Sam Sokunthea, said the evidence did not meet the requiremen­ts of Article 24 of the Criminal Code, which relates to the “principle of individual criminal responsibi­lity”.

“All the testimony so far from the plaintiffs is baseless,” she said. “They have no pictures to show. No audio or any witness to prove [their accusation­s].”

Hoping to present three witnesses, Sokunthea was informed by Judge Sathavy that yesterday’s hearing was based on the legalities of the case and did not require additional testimony.

Sokunthea ended her comments by reminding the court that Vanny wanted to return to her two children and ailing mother, and that all but one member of her group had resolved their land dispute with the city, leaving the Boeung Kak activist with no reason to continue her protests.

Following the judgment, around 30 despondent Boeung Kak residents outside the court briefly protested the verdict, holding up posters of Vanny and yelling at the court.

Vanny’s daughter, Kong Panha, who was able to briefly meet her mother as the judges deliberate­d the case, said she just wanted her mother to return home. Vanny said in court her daughter was ill and needed care.

“I really want my mother to come back home because I do miss her. We are separated for one or two years already,” she told reporters.

Amnesty Internatio­nal yesterday called the criminal proceeding­s against Vanny “deeply flawed”, with the group’s director for Asia and the Pacific, James Gomez, saying authoritie­s seemed determined to keep her in prison.

A statement released by 34 civil society organisati­ons yesterday said they were dismayed by the verdict and that it represente­d the continued harassment of human rights defenders in the country.

“[C]ambodian human rights defenders such as Tep Vanny are regularly restricted from conducting their work through various forms of judicial harassment, including suspended sentences and arbitrary resurrecti­ons of dormant charges,” the statement reads.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? Tep Vanny’s daughter, Kong Panha, joins protesters yesterday outside the Supreme Court, where her mother’s 30-month sentence related to a 2013 protest was upheld.
PHA LINA Tep Vanny’s daughter, Kong Panha, joins protesters yesterday outside the Supreme Court, where her mother’s 30-month sentence related to a 2013 protest was upheld.

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