Logo of Phnom Penh Post newspaper Phnom Penh Post - Svay Rieng villagers called in over CNRM after delivering land dispute petitions

Svay Rieng villagers called in over CNRM after delivering land dispute petitions

Villagers from around the country gather at the Ministry of Land Management on Monday to deliver petitions seeking resolution to their longstanding land disputes.
Villagers from around the country gather at the Ministry of Land Management on Monday to deliver petitions seeking resolution to their longstanding land disputes. Hong Menea

Svay Rieng villagers called in over CNRM after delivering land dispute petitions

Local authorities in Svay Rieng province on Tuesday summoned four villagers for questioning over alleged connections to the Cambodia National Rescue Movement and a purported “colour revolution” plot a day after they delivered petitions in Phnom Penh over longstanding land disputes alongside hundreds of others.

Andong Trabek Commune Chief Kong Vet said villagers were interrogated because they had gone to Phnom Penh “without informing the authorities”, adding that authorities feared they were part of a revolutionary plot orchestrated by the CNRM – a nonviolent movement formed by exiled former opposition figures that the government has labelled a “terrorist” group.

“We just wanted to ask about the goal of the petition filing, because they went there without informing the authorities and they gathered around and acted illegally. We are afraid of the colour revolution or CNRM, because they do this without legal permission,” he said, referring to the gathering of nearly 300 villagers from four provinces at the Land Management Ministry and Council of Ministers on Monday.

The villagers, representing 37 communities, had petitioned the government to solve land disputes that had dragged for on as long as a decade.

The group that organised the delivery, the Coalition of Cambodia Farmer Community (CCFC), just last week had two events broken up by authorities. One of them, in Takeo, resulted in four CCFC members being interrogated over possible connections to the CNRM. Authorities also blocked some would-be participants in Monday’s petition delivery from travelling to Phnom Penh.

In October last year, in the furore surrounding purported colour revolutions that preceded the forced dissolution of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, the government’s Press and Quick Reaction Unit had released a video that claimed the CCFC was building a network of tens of thousands to start a “green revolution”.

Lounh Tha, a Svay Rieng community representative who was summoned along with Ken Khun, Suon Seanglek and Lorn Channy, said the four were accompanied by 20 other villagers when they went to be questioned. According to Tha, officials asked about the petitions before threatening the villagers.

“You must not go to Phnom Penh anymore to put the petition because when you gather together it can be accused of being the CNRM or colour revolution,” Tha said the commune chief told them.

Seng Lot, a spokesman for the Ministry of Land Management affirmed the right of the villagers to come to Phnom Penh to deliver petitions to the ministry as they had on Monday, but declined to comment on the actions of the Andong Trabek commune authorities.

Channy, one of the village representatives, said that authorities’ actions were depriving the people of their rights and freedoms.

“If they do not want the [people to] protest or demand [anything], why do they not solve the land dispute for the people?” he asked. “If they solve the case for us, it will end.”

Commune Police Chief Poeng Bunthoeun hung up on a reporter, and subsequent calls went ignored. Sam Sam Ol, Romeas Hek district police chief, said he was unaware of the case. Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak could not be reached.

The head of CCFC, Theng Savoeun, dismissed the allegations of colour revolution as “an excuse” for the failure of local authorities. Savoeun was himself unaware of the accusations of CCFC being part of a colour revolution prior to last week. “Our goal is to help the vulnerable people in land disputes and agricultural cultivation, and we do not connect ourselves to a colour revolution or the CNRM,” he said.

Political analyst Meas Nee said thanks to fears sparked by the large pro-opposition protests following the 2013 elections – a clear sign of dissatisfaction – the government is now failing to distinguish between those who wish to overthrow them and those simply fighting for social justice. As a result, he said, a whole host of activists are being lumped together under the “colour revolution” label.

“They [government] are building up enemies around themselves,” Nee cautioned, adding that “they generally perceive anyone who is speaking out, or involved in organising people, as [part of] the colour revolution movement, and this is wrong. The more the government does this, the more that the government shows they do not have a recourse for the people’s resentment”.

It is likely, Nee continued, that CCFC was initially “blacklisted” by authorities at a local level, and that perception made its way up to the higher levels of government.

Additional reporting by Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon

MOST VIEWED

  • Brawl marrs football final as Indonesian take gold in seven goal thriller

    The Indonesian men's U22 men national football team were crowned champions of the 32nd SEA Games in Cambodia, defeating Thailand 5-2 in extra time on May 16 at Olympic National Stadium in Phnom Penh. The match was marred by an ugly incident that occured in the 91

  • Jessa finds golden redemption

    Popular Cambodian ju-jitsu athlete Jessa Khan was reduced after her gold-medal winning performance in the no gi ne-waza class on Sunday May 7. The tears expressed her gratitude to all of the Cambodian fans who have supported her journey to the top of the podium. The

  • ‘Follow your dream’: Honda bids emotional goodbye after 5 years

    Keisuke Honda spoke emotionally of his five years as manager of the Cambodia men’s national football team after his young charges on May 10 heartbreakingly failed to qualify for the semi-finals of the 2023 Southeast Asian (SEA) Games. Honda – who described the fans as his “energy

  • Thong Khon calls for orderly SEA Games closing ceremony

    Thong Khon, Minister of Tourism and permanent vice-president of the Cambodia SEA Games Organising Committee (CAMSOC), calls on all people who have received tickets to the May 17 closing ceremony of the biennial multi-sports extravaganza at the Morodok Techo National Stadium to ensure that the event

  • Candlelight Party disqualified from July general election

    The National Election Committee (NEC) has disqualified the Candlelight Party (CP) from contesting the upcoming general election, citing a lack of valid documentation. NEC spokesman Khorn Keomono said the CP failed to fulfil one of the three main requirements: including original documentation proving their registration

  • 1.4 billion dollar Phnom Penh-Bavet expressway due in four years

    The Government, through the Ministry of Public Works and Transport, has officially signed a public-private partnership agreement with a private company for the construction of a Phnom Penh-Bavet Expressway project that will connect the capital to Svay Rieng province. The budget for the project is