Environmental activist Chut Wutty reportedly shot dead at
police checkpoint after refusing to hand over evidence of illegal logging
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 26 April 2012 16.20 BST
A prominent Cambodian anti-logging activist, who helped
expose a secretive state sell-off of national parks, has been shot dead by
police in a remote south-western province while guiding journalists to the
scene of illegal logging.
A Cambodian human rights organisation, Licadho, said the
confrontation occurred on Wednesday when Chut Wutty, director of the Phnom
Penh-based environmental watchdog Natural Resource Protection Group, refused to
hand over a memory card with photos taken in the nearby forest by him and two
journalists from the Cambodia Daily newspaper.
Licadho said he had taken the journalists to see large-scale
forest destruction and illegal rosewood smuggling near a Chinese-built
hydroelectric dam in Koh Kong, and on the way out of the forest came to a
checkpoint where military police demanded the memory card.
However, Colonel Kheng Tito, a military police spokesman,
said a policeman was also killed and claimed that Chut Wutty had been armed.
"We are investigating the incident so we don't have much detailed
information," he said. "All we know is that our military policeman
was doing his duty and encountered this person and there was gunfire."
He said: "Both sides were injured and later died in
hospital."
Military police detained the two journalists, according to
Kevin Doyle, the Cambodia Daily's editor-in-chief. He called for the safe
return of Cambodian reporter Phorn Bopha, and Olesia Plokhii, a Canadian. The
two were now "in the company of the army or military police in the
forest", said Doyle.
Chut Wutty, who was in his forties and leaves a wife and two
children, had a reputation for speaking out against logging and corruption by
government and big business. He campaigned against the government's granting of
so-called economic land concessions to scores of companies allowing them to
develop land in national parks and wildlife sanctuaries.
He was particularly critical of Cambodia's military police,
who are often deployed to protect private business interests.
Kheng Tito said his officer had encountered Chut Wutty while
patrolling against "forest crimes".
He said: "Chut Wutty was also an activist against
forest crimes; we don't know how it became like this."
The destruction of Cambodia's forests and the forced
eviction of rural families by armed men connected to influential businessmen
was "so sad", Chut Wutty told Reuters in February during an
investigation in Koh Kong, near where he was shot.
Chut Wutty's death was a "tragedy," said Neang
Boratino, a co-ordinator in Koh Kong province for the respected Cambodian Human
Rights and Development Association (ADHOC). "This is a threat to all
forestry activists who work for the preservation of the nature," he said.
Chut Wutty is the most prominent activist to meet a violent
death in Cambodia since Chea Vichea, a union leader who fought for better pay
and conditions for clothing workers until his 2004 assassination.
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