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| Police officers block Boeung Kak Lake residents during a protest appealing for the release of Yorm Bopha, along a street in Phnom Penh on June 17, 2013. |
Human Rights Watch: Land Rights Activist Deserves Release in Case Showing
Political Interference
June 18, 2013
“Yorm Bopha is behind bars because she opposed a crony deal to evict thousands of people from prime land in Phnom Penh. Reducing the sentences of people wrongly convicted is simply a ploy to take the heat off the government and make its conduct appear reasonable.”
Brad Adams, Asia director
(New York) – A Cambodian court’s ruling upholding the
conviction of a land rights activist on trumped-up charges shows the political
use of the country’s legal system to persecute critics of the government, Human
Rights Watch said today.
On June 14, 2013, the Court of Appeals in Phnom Penh
affirmed a guilty verdict on charges of aggravated assault against Yorm Bopha,
while reducing her three-year sentence by one year. Bopha was prosecuted for
exercising her right to free expression and called for her immediate and
unconditional release.
“Yorm Bopha is behind bars because she opposed a crony
deal to evict thousands of people from prime land in Phnom Penh,” said Brad
Adams, Asia director. “Reducing the sentences of people wrongly convicted is
simply a ploy to take the heat off the government and make its conduct appear
reasonable.”
Yorm Bopha, 29, is one of the leaders of long-term
protests against illegal evictions of residents of the Boeng Kak area of Phnom
Penh by a Chinese company and a local firm closely linked to Cambodian prime
minister Hun Sen. This and other similar protests are a popular response to
land concessions granted by the government to well-connected domestic and
foreign companies, adversely affecting an estimated 700,000 Cambodians.
Possession of land is frequently achieved through forced evictions and
evictions without just compensation, carried out with the help of government
security forces and the courts.
Yorm Bopha was originally convicted by the Phnom Penh
Municipal Court in December 2012, for allegedly masterminding a conspiracy
involving her husband and two brothers to assault two young men accused of
stealing wing mirrors from her car. The absence of credible evidence against
her showed that the charges were a politically motivated attempt to retaliate
against her for her activism. She was convicted and sentenced to three years in
prison, while her husband received a suspended jail term. The brothers were
convicted in absentia and sentenced to prison.
On March 19, 2013, with Bopha’s appeal pending, Hun Sen
gave a speech in which he declared her sentence a “simple case of her beating
someone up.” Eight days later, the Supreme Court denied her application for
temporary release while her appeal before the Court of Appeals was under
consideration.
The Court of Appeals convened hearings in her case on
June 5 and 14, with her two purported victims providing the main evidence.
Questions put to the two men by one of the judges, such as regarding their
identification of Bopha’s brothers, elicited testimony that demonstrated their
lack of credibility. The court nonetheless upheld her conviction, reducing her
sentence by one year on the grounds that nothing implicated Bopha in directly
attacking anyone.
The Yorm Bopha case reflects a pattern of prosecutions
since 2012, in which appeal court hearings reveal a lack of evidence that civil
society activists and human rights defenders have committed any cognizable
criminal offense, but the judges fail to exonerate them. In some cases,
domestic and international pressure appears to precipitate instructions from
authorities to the court to release defendants from prison with their criminal
convictions intact, but in Bopha’s instance, her prison sentence remains.
“Political interference with the courts is pervasive in
Cambodia, but it is particularly prevalent in land dispute cases,” Adams said.
Cultivators attempting to contest allegedly illegal
state-linked corporate land seizures in Sihanoukville and Koh Kong province
recently told Human Rights Watch that leading local officials had explicitly
warned them not to expect justice from the courts, explaining that court
decisions are based on political and economic influence, not evidence and law.
Human Rights Watch called on Cambodia’s donors to press
for Bopha’s release and for the criminal charges to be dropped.
“Donors need to speak out on behalf of activists fighting
for human rights in Cambodia,” Adams said. “If they do, Cambodia’s poor may
have a chance for justice.”

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