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Reporters Without Borders
Cambodia 13 June 2007
Francophone organisation asked to help save French-language daily
facing sudden liquidation
Reporters Without Borders is outraged at yesterday's decision by the
owners of the French-language daily Cambodge Soir to close the
newspaper, just two days after unfairly dismissing its news editor for
publishing extracts from a long report on illegal logging that was
critical of the government.
The press freedom organisation voiced its solidarity with the
newspapers 30 employees - 14 of them journalists - who could all lose
their jobs, and called on Abdou Diouf, the secretary-general of the
International Organisation of Francophone Countries (OIF), to
intercede.
"The OIF has for years been supporting Cambodge Soir, which has become
a landmark of the French-language media in Asia and had produced many
talented French and Cambodian journalists," Reporters Without Borders
said. "Although your organisation had just released new funds to
support this newspaper, its management has decided to terminate this
12-year-old venture on the grounds of financial difficulties. We ask
you to help prevent the disappearance of this exemplary
French-language daily."
Cambodge Soir's owners, among them minority shareholder Philippe
Monin, yesterday told its staff that the liquidation of the newspaper
and the company that publishes it, Société des Editions du Mékong, had
already begun. The announcement came just one day after the
newspaper's journalists began a strike in protest against the summary
dismissal of news editor Soren Seelow for publishing a detailed story
based on a report by the environmental group Global Witness
implicating associates of Prime Minister Hun Sen in illegal logging.
The story did not please Monin and the newspaper's managing editor,
who summoned Seelow on 10 June and told him he was fired.
Monin, who is also employed by the French Development Agency (AFD) to
act as a adviser for the Cambodian agriculture ministry, told Seelow
that his article would upset the authorities and put him in a
difficult position.
The Cambodian government has banned publication of the report in full
or in part, while the prime minister's brother, Hun Neng, reportedly
said that if anyone from Global Witness came to Cambodia, he would
"beat them on the head until it broke." Cambodge Soir's striking
employees meanwhile issued a statement today condemning Seelow's
summary dismissal, the meddling in its editorial policies and the fact
that the newspaper seems to have no future.
Reporters Without Borders contacted Monin, who has been a shareholder
since the newspaper was launched in 1995, but he refused to make any
comment.
A Cambodia-based journalist who spoke to Reporters Without Borders on
condition of anonymity claimed that the new managing editor hired by
Cambodge Soir's board last September had been given the job of
"sabotaging" the newspaper.
With support from the French embassy, the staff recently launched
several new projects including a website (which is down today) and
special sections to cover the trial of Khmer Rouge members. But the
managing editor allegedly did several things to undermine these
initiatives, including abruptly suspending an advertising sales
contract in December.
Cambodge Soir had a reputation for editorial independence, compared
with its French-language counterparts in Laos and Vietnam. Despite its
limited circulation (about 2,000 copies) and recurring financial
difficulties, it had significant impact on the Cambodian media
landscape and its reports were often quoted in the Khmer-language
press.
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