RSF worried by Hun Sen regime's repeated attacks on media freedom
Publisher | Reporters Without Borders |
Publication Date | 19 July 2016 |
Cite as | Reporters Without Borders, RSF worried by Hun Sen regime's repeated attacks on media freedom, 19 July 2016, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/578e38584.html [accessed 2 November 2019] |
Disclaimer | This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States. |
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) is alarmed by a surge in threats to journalists and in media self-censorship in Cambodia, exacerbated by political commentator and anti-corruption activist Kem Ley's murder a week ago, and urges the government to stop intimidating the media and flouting freedom of information.
The authorities announced a "vigorous" investigation after Kem
Ley was gunned down in Phnom Penh on 10 July, but freedom of
information seems more endangered than ever and journalists continue
to be the targets of threats and violent reprisals in connection with
their activities.
Kem Ley's murder came just days after he spoke on Radio Free
Asia about a report published by British human rights NGO Global
Witness on 7 July describing how Prime Minister Hun Sen's family
have gained control of many of Cambodia's most important companies.
On the day of his murder, the interior ministry issued a statement
warning both Cambodians and the international community against "delivering unconfirmed information which could potentially
mislead the public."
The day the report was issued, one of the people named in it, Hun
Mana, the prime minister's eldest daughter, condemned the
"destructive efforts" of Global Witness, the Phnom Pen Post
and Cambodia Daily, and accused them of colluding to
"disparage and defame the Hun family with false information"
ahead of elections scheduled for 2017 and 2018.
Both newspapers, which are among Cambodia's leading
English-language media outlets, had run stories about the report. Hun
Mana is herself one of Cambodia's four biggest media owners. One of
the prime minister's sons also accused the Global Witness report
and the media coverage of being "full of mistakes and false
information" designed to defame the family.
The sensitivity of the Global Witness report, entitled "Hostile Takeover," was also apparent from the anonymous threatening letter
that was sent to the two newspapers and was posted on the
pro-government website Fresh Newspro-government website Fresh News under the title "Behaviour
plunging Cambodians into a bonfire of war because of foreigners."
It was accompanied by a Nazi propaganda cartoon to which the names of
the NGO and the two newspapers had been added.
"The Cambodia Daily and the Phnom Penh Post are
foreign newspapers that often try to find all venomous means and
tricks to destroy the peace of Samdech Hun Sen," the letter said.
"(...) The two newspapers should reform themselves by working with
a high code of ethics and be clearly responsible and beneficial to
Cambodia as a whole. Otherwise, Cambodia will have no choice but to
take legal action and send all of you out of Cambodia."
When a journalist asked him about the letter, cabinet spokesman Phay
Siphan seemed to give it at least partial approval. He said he would
summon the media to ensure that the situation did not escalate and
added, with a laugh: "I don't want the messenger to get killed, my
friend."
"The reactions of all these officials and members of the prime
minister's family are outrageous even if not entirely surprising,"
said Benjamin Ismaïl, the head of RSF's Asia-Pacific desk.
"We should rightly have expected a measured response addressing the
substance of the allegations but instead we have seen intemperate
comments and even threats against the media, which have just been
serving the public interest. We caution Hun Sen's government
against any judicial reprisals against media outlets. Gagging the
press would just make things worse for him."
Much of the data used in the Global Witness report was taken from the
Cambodian commerce ministry's own publicly available database.
Significantly, this data has been removed from the ministry's
website since the report's publication but it is still available on the Global Witness website.
Cambodia is ranked 128th out of 180 countries in RSF's 2016 World Press Freedom Index.