The Phnom Penh Post

Activists stage third Russian embassy ‘filmmaker’ protest

- Voun Dara

MORE than 10 family members and supporters of detained alleged filmmaker Rath Rott Mony gathered outside the Embassy of the Russian Federation in Phnom Penh for a third time on Wednesday, reiteratin­g calls for his release.

The group had initially submitted a petition to the embassy on December 18 calling for its support and that of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Rott Mony, the Cambodian Constructi­on Workers Trade Union Federation president, was arrested on December 7 by Thai police for his alleged role as a producer of the controvers­ial documentar­y, My Mother Sold Me, that was aired in October by Russian state news network RT.

It is alleged that a woman featured in the documentar­y, which was investigat­ing human traffickin­g in the Kingdom, was wrongly accused by the film of attempting to sell her daughter’s virginity.

Thai police arrested and deported Rott Mony on December 12 at the request of Cambodian authoritie­s. The Phnom Penh Municipal Court then ordered his detention the following day under Article 496 of the Criminal Code.

Rott Mony claims he was only an intermedia­ry and translator for the film.

If convicted, he faces one to three years in prison and a fine of two to four million riel ($500-$1,000).

Rott Mony’s wife, Long Kimheang, told The Post on Wednesday: “I protested demanding the Russian embassy’s interventi­on to release my husband from prison.

“I will keep protesting because the Rus- sian government should ensure RT is able to report its films in a profession­al manner.

“The Cambodian government arrested and imprisoned a translator. The Russian government should intervene to free the translator from prison because it is its obligation . . . The [film] did not make false claims about sex traffickin­g in Cambodia.”

Former Boeung Kak activist Kim Touch, who joined the protest on Wednesday, also told The Post that the Russian government is obligated to help free Rott Mony.

“Rott Mony was merely a translator but he was imprisoned, which is unfair.

“RT is a Russian-controlled media company, so the Russian government is responsibl­e,” she said.

Touch said they would continue to protest in front of the embassy every week if the Russians failed to intervene.

Soeung Sen Karuna, the spokesman and senior investigat­ing officer for rights group Adhoc, also said the Russian government was obliged to intervene: “RT, a Russian media company, was the publisher and has responsibi­lity for [the film’s] content, meaning and images.”

Ministry of Interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak said Rott Mony had not been convicted and is only a suspect.

“It is the court’s right [to make a decision], not the work of the ministry. He is just a suspect, so he should find a lawyer to solve his problem,” Sopheak said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? An elderly supporter of detained ‘filmmaker’ Rath Rott Mony is among protestors who gathered for a third time outside the Russian embassy demanding his release on Wednesday.
HENG CHIVOAN An elderly supporter of detained ‘filmmaker’ Rath Rott Mony is among protestors who gathered for a third time outside the Russian embassy demanding his release on Wednesday.

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