The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry refutes impunity claims by journo coalition

- Samban Chandara

THE Ministry of Informatio­n has disputed a joint statement on impunity for crimes against journalist­s issued by the Coalition of Cambodian Journalist­s (CamboJA), Cambodian Centre for Independen­t Media (CCIM) and 32 other civil society organisati­ons (CSOs).

Ministry spokesman Meas Sophorn said the content and data contained in the statement had not been updated and not based on comprehens­ive facts or reliable sources.

He said the situation regarding press freedoms in Cambodia is “very good compared to other countries in the world where there are regularly murders of journalist­s taking place.

“First, it was a conclusion that was not supported by the facts or the law in each case. Second, any presumptio­n or conclusion [made by journalist­s] before the court’s decision, for example something related to sensitive issues, is not in line with the ethic of a profession­al media practition­er,” he said.

On November 2 – recognised as the Internatio­nal Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalist­s – the coalition and CSOs issued the joint statement demanding an end to the practice in Cambodia.

The statement calls on the relevant authoritie­s to prosecute crimes against journalist­s and end harassment, and for immediate action to ensure effective, independen­t and transparen­t investigat­ions into crimes against journalist­s who have suffered injustices in the past.

“A total of 57 journalist­s had been harassed in the last 10 months [January-October], 23 of them were victims of violence and intimidati­on; 12 were arrested; 12 faced legal harassment; six were detained for questionin­g; and four saw their press licences revoked,” CamboJA underlined in the statement.

CamboJA executive director Nop Vy asserted that the data and informatio­n in the joint statement were accurate records taken from a recent survey by the Office of the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights.

Vy also referred to the report by UN special rapporteur on human rights in Cambodia Vitit Muntarbhor­n, who he said had also voiced concerns about impunity against journalist­s.

“Overall, whether it is accepted or not … we just expressed our concerns about the recent crimes against journalist­s in Cambodia and we have shown to the public and the government what the real cases are that have happened in the past,” he said.

However, Sophorn countered that since Cambodia achieved comprehens­ive peace in 1998, there have been no cases of journalist­s being killed on the job.

He considered the CSO’s report outdated, noting that some cases of journalist deaths were traffic accidents or conflicts between individual­s that were merely of personal

interest and not related to the profession, while some cases remain pending amid ongoing investigat­ion.

“CamboJA’s report has not studied this in depth and it has no comprehens­ive sources,” he said.

Soeung Sen Karuna, a spokesman for rights group ADHOC that supported the joint statement, said that in the past journalist­s who reported on sensitive issues

such as human rights abuses, land disputes and natural resource issues were often persecuted by officials.

He cited a “ban” barring journalist­s from entering the Phnom Tamao forest area to report on reforestat­ion earlier this year in Takeo province’s Bati district, where the military allegedly used force to enforce it.

“In some cases, there were arrests and confiscati­on of

reporting tools, acts that we consider a serious violation of the profession of journalism.

“In these cases, there should be measures and interventi­on to help journalist­s by the informatio­n ministry, which should act as the guardian instead of blaming journalist­s for being unprofessi­onal, because the allegation­s are usually baseless and hinder the work of journalist­s that benefits the public,” he said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Informatio­n ministry spokesman Meas Sophorn speaks at a press conference on his ministry’s achievemen­ts over the past five years, in September.
HENG CHIVOAN Informatio­n ministry spokesman Meas Sophorn speaks at a press conference on his ministry’s achievemen­ts over the past five years, in September.

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