Nearly
10
years after he was shot dead in Phnom Penh, many believe union leader Chea
Vichea's killer is still at large.
James Welsh - 06 May 2013
![]()  | 
| Few believe that the two men convicted for the 2004 killing, Sok Samoeun, left, and Born Samnang, are guilty [EPA] | 
‘It did not take me long to understand that the two suspects, Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, had nothing to do with the murder.’
-Heng Pov, former police chief
A new statue in the centre of Cambodia's capital
stands as a reminder of one of the country's most politically charged killings.
Unveiled last week across the street from where he was
gunned down nine years ago, the stone sculpture of slain union leader Chea
Vichea marks what many believe is a murder that has not been solved.
The killing of Chea has all the elements of a
Hollywood thriller: A murdered political figure, assassins on a motorcycle,
death threats, allegations of police corruption, witnesses claiming
intimidation, and two men serving 20-year prison sentences for a crime few
believe they committed.
Chea, whose death sparked an immediate outcry from
rights groups and foreign diplomats, was killed on January 22, 2004, while he
was reading The Cambodia Daily newspaper outside a news stand. Two men on a
motorcycle drove up, one of whom dismounted and fatally shot the politician three
times before driving off again.
‘The justice system, despite on the surface looking a bit better ... 20 years on, in many respects, it is not any better.’
-Rupert Abbott, Amnesty International researcher
Nearly 10 years later, Chea's death and the subsequent
investigation are still condemned by rights groups as examples of impunity and
corruption within the country's courts.
Through the 1970s Chea survived the regime of the
Khmer Rouge along with his brother, going on to help found what became
Cambodia's main opposition party.
His reputation grew as a charismatic leader who
travelled around the country, working tirelessly to convince garment workers to
join the Free Trade Union of the Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia (FTU).
In 1997, while taking part in a demonstration, he was
injured along with more than 100 others during a grenade attack that left 16
protesters dead in Phnom Penh.
And despite receiving threats against his life - one
of which was sent by text message six months before he was killed - he
continued the fight for workers' rights until the day he died.
Chea's funeral in Phnom Penh overwhelmed the city
streets with tens of thousands of mourners.
Swift justice was demanded and police responded by
parading two men - Born Samnang, 32, and Sok Sam Oeun, 45 - in front of the
press seven days after the killing.
Then-deputy Phnom Penh police chief Heng Pov, who is
currently serving lengthy prison sentences for a variety of serious crimes,
announced that they had caught the killers.
Justice
under scrutiny
Discrepancies in the investigation, along with a lack
of evidence in what is widely considered a political killing, led to condemnation
by rights groups.
At Born and Sok's first trial in March 2004,
Investigating Judge Hing Thirith threw the case out, citing a lack of evidence.
However, the Appeals Court overruled his decision to
release the pair and ordered a retrial. Hing was removed from his post at the
Phnom Penh Municipal Court five days later and transferred to a remote part of
the country.
On August 1, 2005, after being kept in pre-trial
detention for nearly 18 months, Born and Sok were brought to court again, but
they were not allowed to face their accusers. Born, who had signed a confession
after his arrest, told the court he had been abused and coerced by police into
doing so.
"Prosecution witnesses (with the exception of
several police officers who testified primarily to deny Born Samnang's
testimony of police mistreatment and bribery) did not appear in court,"
reported Licadho, a local rights NGO which monitored the proceedings.
"None of the prosecution witnesses whose
statements were read to the court placed either defendants at the scene of the
crime, or provided any first-hand information of their involvement in the
murder."
Despite this, the court ruled at the end of the
one-day trial that Born and Sok were guilty of murder.
"Police officers threatened and detained those
providing alibis for the two suspects, and intimidated other witnesses,"
Amnesty International said in a statement released on Wednesday.
"Born Samnang said that police beat and coerced
him into making a confession - the principal evidence on which the pair were
then convicted."
Evidence
of a framing?
Even Heng Pov, the former deputy police chief, claimed
in an August 2006 interview with French news magazine L'Express, that Born
Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun had been framed.
"It did not take me long to understand that the
two suspects, Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, had nothing to do with the
murder," L'Express reported him as saying, according to a translation of
the interview.
Officials in Cambodia brushed aside the accusations
made by the now-disgraced former official, saying that he was obviously not to
be trusted.
And then there was the testimony of Va Sothy, the key
witness and the owner of the newsstand where Chea Vichea was shot dead. 
In 2006, she sent a notorised statement to the court
saying that the two men were innocent.
"I understood that the fake murderers had been
created, because I could clearly remember the faces of the murderers and they
were not the same as the pictures publicised," she wrote, according to a
copy of the testimony on Licadho's website.
She did not testify in person because she had fled the
country, saying that being the sole witness to what could be considered the
most politically charged murder of the decade had put her in danger.
Her statement likewise accuses Pov of warning her
against coming forward after a day after Born and Sok were arrested.
But the Appeals Court rejected Va's testimony, saying
she needed to testify in person.
Hope for the pair was restored temporarily in December
2008, when the Supreme Court released Born and Sok on bail and ordered the
Appeals Court to reinvestigate the case.
However, four years later, in December 2012, the
Appeals Court upheld the original verdict. The pair were sent back to prison,
where they remain today.
Highlighting the case
One of the lawyers involved in the case, Sok Sam Oeun,
who is not related to the convicted man, said from Phnom Penh that the court's
decision reflected "a problem with the independence of the judiciary in
Cambodia".
Sok, the executive director of the Cambodian Defenders
Project, which has supplied the defence attorneys for the convicted men, said
that the court may have felt that it had no choice but to put the pair back in
jail.
If they were innocent, he said, then the police and
the courts would have a lot to answer for.
"This case can make the government lose
face," he said. "If the judge released them, it makes the police lose
face."
Rupert Abbott, Amnesty International's researcher on
Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, said that his organisation would continue to
highlight the case in the hope that international donors would take it into
consideration when handing out money for the country.
"The donors seem to have a very short memory in
Cambodia," he said from London.
"The justice system, despite on the surface
looking a bit better ... 20 years on, in many respects, it is not any
better."
The Cambodian government, as it has since the
beginning, denied that anything is awry.
"Right now everyone wants to put the blame on
politics," said Phay Siphan, a government spokesman, refuting claims of
government intervention in the case.
"We cannot say who is wrong or right, but we
respect the court's decision."
Source: Al Jazeera

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