NGOs Raise Concern Over Freedom of Expression to UN

Seven NGOs have raised their concerns that the government is using the law, media and Internet to further stifle freedom of expression, ahead of Cambodia submitting its first Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of human rights to the U.N. The UPR is the process through which Geneva’s 47-member Human Rights Council assesses the human rights record of every U.N. member state. NGOs were given until the end of June to give their input and after filing its first progress report in October—which will update the council on 91 human rights recommendations Cambodia ac­cepted in 2009—an official delegation will travel there early next year to have the report reviewed. Although it is dated June 24, the 12-page submission by the Cam­bodian Center for Human Rights, PEN Interna­tional and Cambodian PEN, International Publishers Association, ARTICLE 19, the Cambodian Center for Independent Media, the Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia and the Southeast Asian Press Alliance was made public late Thursday. … When it accepted the 91 recommendations, the group said Cambodia committed to ensuring freedom of expression and the press, but that “neither are a reality in Cambodia.” The mainstream television and radio channels are dominated by broadcasters owned by the ruling party or powerful people connected with it, skewing reporting in favor of the CPP. They also noted several at­tempts to censor certain websites deemed to be critical of the government, and said they are concerned a proposed cyber law will be restrictive. With regard to the climate of freedom for NGOs, the submission makes note of the six-month suspension of land rights NGO Sahmakum Teang Tnaut on an allegedly trumped-up incitement accusation, the charging of Ad­hoc rights worker Chan Soveth for aiding a man involved in a land dispute and the murder of environmental activist Chut Wutty, all of which took place in 2012. Mak Sambath, vice president of the government’s Cambodian Hu­man Rights Committee (CHRC), said in May that about 80 percent of the recommendations have been implemented. On Friday, he de­fended the government’s human rights record.

Lauren Crothers and Kuch Naren
http://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/ngos-raise-concern-over-freedom-of-expression-to-un-40748/