Three villagers have each been given five-year prison sentences
for chopping down what they claim was just a handful of trees on land
the Forestry Administration says belongs to the state but which they
claim as their own.
Suon Seyha, 31, Soun Hou, 39, and Hong Ly, 42, who are all community
activists in Svay Rieng province’s Romeas Hek district, were handed the
sentences at the provincial court on Monday.
Judge Hom Meng sentenced the men to the minimum five-year prison term
for illegally destroying forest, under Article 97 of the Forestry Law,
the men’s lawyer, Som Sokunthea, said.
The trio, first charged three years ago, was not immediately taken into custody.
Seyha told the Post yesterday that he and other villagers had
chopped down approximately three small acacia trees in 2012 in order to
extend their farmland.
“It is unfair to us,” he said. “The villagers destroy a few small
trees and we are sentenced to five years, but how about the powerful
people who destroy big and large trees? Now we will prepare a document
to present to the court.”
Seyha added that, in his view, the harsh prison sentence was linked to his history of activism.
“I am the leader who leads the villagers to protest and used to go to
protest in Phnom Penh many times,” he said. “They sentenced me to jail
to threaten me.”
According to Seyha, the disputed land and forest had belonged to 86
local families since 1979, but then in 2008, the Forestry
Administration, which manages forests and forest resources, had
encroached on the area, planting trees on 71 hectares.
Fellow defendant Ly, 42, who was also sentenced to five years, said the sentence was devastating.
“I have a family to support and we are a poor,” he said. “We did not destroy the state’s trees to make me a rich man.”
He added that he and his family were afraid the court would issue an arrest warrant in the coming days.
Nuth Bopinrot, provincial coordinator for human rights group Licadho,
said the penalty handed to the three men was inappropriate because the
villagers had only destroyed a few trees.
“Five years is so serious for the villagers and community leaders who
are also poor people and have families to support,” he said.
Suon Bunsak, chief of secretariat at the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), also condemned the sentences.
“The authorities should not take judicial action against community
activists and human rights defenders in this way,” he said. “The
punishment clearly does not fit the crime.
“The government is cracking down on people who take a leadership role
and help communities protect the land they have lived on for many
years. Slowly, local activists are chipping away at the government’s
popularity, and they are afraid of the cumulative effect all these small
actions might have.”
However, Bunsak was optimistic about the future.
“Increasingly, people will use their legal rights to protect
themselves against the kind of unfair treatment by the government that
seems to have happened in this case,” he said. “We have a lot of civil
society organisations in this country who are brave enough to defend
people’s rights. So I am optimistic that in the longer term, people’s
rights will be upheld.”
Net Kok, chief of the Forestry Administration in Romeas Hek district, could not be reach for comment.