Wednesday, May 13, 2009  Silence only helps the
oppressors<http://cambodianbrightfuture.blogspot.com/2009/05/silence-only-helps-oppressors.html>

Lest anyone forgets, in this era of technological progress, what Premier Sen
said in his nationally broadcast public speech of April 4 was
video-recorded. No court of law anywhere in the civilized world would find
it simple to dismiss Sochua's case against the premier.

 What's dangerous for the rule of law is what can be read online in a
comment on the May 6 Post: "In Cambodia, when you want to sue a powerful man
like PM Hun Sen, not only may you lose the case, but your lawyer will
probably be disbarred and explicitly intimidated."


PACIFIC DAILY 
NEWS<http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_jVCbxaOxjhA/SgqHmj1Hn8I/AAAAAAAAAQ8/D7GTEaZQYC8/s1600-h/Gaffar+Peang-Meth+A.+02.jpg>

May 13, 2009

  A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D.

Our comfort and complacency about our civil rights at a time when vigilance,
rather than polished political rhetoric, is needed to protect those values
can result in those rights being diminished.

Hear what 18th century Irish statesman Edmund Burke once said, "All that is
needed for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."

 President Abraham Lincoln said, "To sin by silence when they should protest
makes cowards of men."

 And a Holocaust survivor said, "Because of indifference, one dies before
one actually dies."

 They, among many others, knew what they were talking about.

 In my column of May 6, I wrote about a Khmer woman, Mu Sochua, 55, a mother
of three and member of the Cambodian parliament, who filed a lawsuit against
Premier Hun Sen for "defamation" because of Sen's scurrilous references to
her in a nationally broadcast speech on April
4.<http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_jVCbxaOxjhA/SgqHd3yVZrI/AAAAAAAAAQ0/nkozZsGL5Z8/s1600-h/Mu+Sochua+v+Hun+Sen.jpg>

 Sochua claimed that Sen's comments were directed at her. Although she was
not named, the circumstances and references he made in his speech were so
specific that they could refer only to her.

 On April 23, flanked by her lawyer, Kong Sam Onn, Sochua announced she was
suing the premier for 13 cents and a public retraction of his comments.

 I wondered in my column whether Sochua was "foolhardy" to confront a
strongman who controls all branches of government in a country where
"disappearances" and "accidents" are routine, and I reported Sen's
countersuit against Sochua for $2,500 for her alleged "defamation" of him.

 In a speech at a graduation ceremony, Sen, who has an honorary doctorate
from the University of Hanoi, announced he was not only suing Sochua, but
both, "a lady and her lawyer," for $ 2,500 each for "defamation" when Sochua
and her lawyer announced the lawsuit.

 As if to confirm how words flow through Sen's mouth with no restraint, it
was reported by multiple sources that, "The premier also referred to the
'lady' in question as 'stupid' and called on the National Assembly to lift
her parliamentary immunity."

 "To strip her immunity, 'it is as easy as ABC,' the prime minister said,"
according to reporters. They added that Sen said "it was highly unlikely
that (Sen's) own immunity would also be taken away. ... I do not believe
that (Cambodian People's Party) lawmakers will suspend my immunity." A Phnom
Penh daily newspaper reported that Sen said neither his countersuit nor his
April 4 speech was "an affront to women."

The political leader said because he never mentioned Sochua by name, the
latter's lawsuit is a defamation, hence, his countersuit against Sochua and
her lawyer for defaming him.

"I shall walk to prison, if that is what justice is about in Cambodia," the
newspaper reported Sochua as having said.

 Meanwhile, the May 6 Phnom Penh Post reported that Sen's lawyer, Ky Tech,
said he "filed a complaint with the Bar Association. ... If the Bar's
disciplinary council finds (Sochua's lawyer, Kong Sam Onn) was at fault, he
will be stripped of his license to practice, and Mu Sochua will need to find
another lawyer to take on her case."

 The Post reported, "Ky Tech said Kong Sam Onn was at fault because of
statements he made when outlining his client's case at an April 23 press
conference called by Mu Sochua."

 Whoa, a lawyer is at fault for "outlining" the case made by a client? You
bet.

 Bar President Chiv Songhak said Ky Tech's complaint was now before the
disciplinary council, and Kong Sam Onn could receive a warning, have his
license suspended or be disbarred.

 Guess what? Ky Tech was the Bar Association's former president, and Hun Sen
is a lifetime member of the association. The May 8 Daily quoted the
premier's lawyer as having told the deputy prosecutor at the Phnom Penh
Municipal Court: "I asked the prosecutor to punish (Sochua and her lawyer)
according to the law."

 The Daily summarized the two lawsuits: "Mr. Hun Sen's case was filed in
response to Ms. Mu Sochua's, essentially claiming that she had defamed him
by claiming that he had defamed her."

 Lest anyone forgets, in this era of technological progress, what Premier
Sen said in his nationally broadcast public speech of April 4 was
video-recorded. No court of law anywhere in the civilized world would find
it simple to dismiss Sochua's case against the premier.

 What's dangerous for the rule of law is what can be read online in a
comment on the May 6 Post: "In Cambodia, when you want to sue a powerful man
like PM Hun Sen, not only may you lose the case, but your lawyer will
probably be disbarred and explicitly intimidated."

 The late U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy said, "It is from
numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped.
Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of
others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of
hope."

 And the winner of Nobel Peace Prize and Gandhi Peace Prize, African
spiritual leader Bishop Desmond Tutu's famous words: "If you are neutral in
situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor."

 Justice begs for rights-loving people's action.

* *

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, where
he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at [email protected].
Visit the original post
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-- 
Cambodian Brighter Future depends on enduring conscience and tireless
strivings of Cambodian Younger Generation!
http://cambodianbrightfuture.blogspot.com

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