
Mr. Seihak Dechak also said that earlier reports naming Adhoc’s Pursat
provincial coordinator Phuong Sothea as the suspect in the case were
incorrect.
“The commune chief filed against Chan Soveth and his accomplices. It is
not the name Phuong Sothea,” the prosecutor said. “We will continue to
investigate more details about this, and we will summon both parties for
questioning.”
Mr. Soveth, who had the charges of “aiding a perpetrator” in the Kratie
province case dropped against him by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court in
February, said on Friday that he had not yet received formal notice that
he is being investigated again.
“I don’t incite people against the government. I just explain about [peoples’] rights and the law,” he said.
“If I just help people as a human rights workers, is it wrong? If so,
then all NGOs that help protect peoples’ rights are wrong too,” he said.
Prom Ngon, commune chief of Thma Da commune in Veal Veng district, and
complainant against Mr. Soveth, could not be reached for comment.
The complaint is believed to stem from a land dispute between families
in Tham Da commune and a company owned by well-known businessman Try
Pheap.
Adhoc staff held workshops with the villagers to inform them of their
rights under the land law. About 20 of the families subsequently
traveled to Phnom Penh to submit a petition to Mr. Hun Sen’s Cabinet
seeking help in their dispute with Mr. Pheap.
Um Savin, a representative of MDS Import Export company, which is owned
by Mr. Pheap, said his company was not involved in any way with the
lawsuit filed by Mr. Ngon, the commune chief, against Mr. Soveth and
“his accomplices.”
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