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WHILE CAMBODIA ENJOYS A SUBSTANTIALLY FREE
PRINT MEDIA, local journalism continues to suffer from bitter political
divisions and frequent clashes with government authorities.
Press freedom is guaranteed by the Constitution, and the Khmer-language
press is famous for taking dramatic liberties in print, often engaging
in name-calling and attacks on various political leaders. Speaking to
a local media seminar in January, Prime Minister Hun Sen claimed that
such invective was proof of Cambodia's vibrant democracy. Even so, the
government still tried to cow journalists into submission. A day after
the seminar in which Hun Sen proclaimed the sanctity of press freedom,
for example, his chief spokesman, Khieu Khanarith, resurrected the idea
that the government should have the power to license reporters. Cambodia
had too many journalists, Khanarith said.
In July, Information Minister Lu Lay Sreng summoned Cambodian newspaper
publishers for what he described as a "friendly talk." Journalists took
it as a warning to mute their criticism of the government. The meeting
followed a one-month suspension imposed on the Cambodia News Bulletin,
a weekly Khmer- language newspaper, for allegedly defaming the royal family
by reprinting an article on the sensitive issue of royal succession that
had originally appeared in the Hong Kong-based South China Morning
Post. It was the second such action against the Bulletin in
2000.
Earlier, twenty Cambodian publishers had sent an open letter to the government,
calling for the suspension to be lifted. Ou Souvan, the activist publisher
of the newspaper Samleng Youvachun Khmer ("The Voice of Khmer Youth"),
described the meeting with the information minister as "another kind of
pressure...on journalists."
Such incidents marked a structural conflict between a freewheeling press
with few professional constraints and a strong government with authoritarian
tendencies. Over time, fortunately, the press has been growing stronger
and the government somewhat more tolerant.
With political infighting diminished, the better Cambodian newspapers
have started tackling sensitive human rights issues and the controversial
question of land rights in rural areas. At year's end, it seemed that
years of training by non-governmental organizations and international
agencies might be starting to pay off. Few experienced journalists survived
the genocidal Pol Pot regime, which was followed by a 1979 Vietnamese
invasion and 12 years of civil war. Today, however, press organizations
are common, and a professional degree program in journalism is being established
at the Royal University of Phnom Penh.
The days when journalists were frequently beaten or killed in Cambodia
seem to be fading. With Hun Sen in firm control of a coalition government
that now contains his former enemy, Prince Norodom Ranariddh of the royalist
party FUNCINPEC, a pattern of relative restraint on the part of the government
and greater professionalism in the media is beginning to emerge. FUNCINPEC
and the government no longer trade barbs in dueling tabloids, and that
fact alone has eased tensions. It seems unlikely that the government's
threats to license journalists will be carried out, and King Norodom Sihanouk,
who judges cases of defamation against the royal family, frequently pardons
journalists accused of such crimes.
Freedom of expression, however, does not extend to radio and television.
The government has refused to grant broadcast licenses to opposition figures,
and maintains tight control over most broadcast news.
APRIL 4
Cambodia News Bulletin
CENSORED
The Ministry of Information imposed a temporary suspension on the Cambodia
News Bulletin (Pritbat Pordamean Kampuchea),
a bilingual fortnightly newspaper published in English and Khmer from
the capital city, Phnom Penh.
Officials charged that the Cambodia News Bulletin
had published articles that defamed "members of the Royal Government,"
and ordered it to suspend publication for 30 days, according to a statement
released by the paper's editorial board. The statement added that the
ministry's notice did not cite specific issues or articles to support
its allegations. The Information Ministry also notified local printing
presses that they were not allowed to print the Bulletin while
the suspension order remained in effect.
In an April 6 letter to Prime Minister Hun Sen, CPJ asked him to ensure
that the suspension order was lifted immediately. The paper resumed publishing
in May.
JULY 13
Cambodia News Bulletin
CENSORED
The Cambodia News Bulletin (Pritbat Pordamean Kampuchea),
a weekly published in English and Khmer from the capital, Phnom Penh,
was suspended for the second time in 2000.
On July 13, the Information Ministry wrote to the Bulletin's editor,
Khieu Phirum, imposing a 30-day suspension based on a July 10 article
on royal succession in Cambodia. The ministry also ordered the confiscation
of all copies of the publication and instructed its printers not to produce
further issues during the ban.
The ministry charged that the offending story, "The Search for One Who
Would Be King," violated the constitution, which states that "The King
shall be inviolable." The piece originally appeared on July 1 in the South
China Morning Post and was translated from English into Khmer by the
Bulletin.
The ministry also accused the Bulletin of violating Article 12
of Cambodia's Press Law, which forbids the publication of "any information
that may affect national security and political stability," and of ignoring
technical publication requirements outlined in Article 9 of the law.
CPJ protested the censorship of the Cambodia News Bulletin in a
July 18 letter to Prime Minister Hun Sen, noting that if a publication
was suspected of violating the law, redress should be sought through the
judicial system.
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