![Ten Cambodian environmental activists receive prison sentences of 6-8 years each](https://th-i.thgim.com/public/incoming/p65xeg/article68360771.ece/alternates/LANDSCAPE_1200/Cambodia_Environmental_Activists_52410.jpg)
Ten Cambodian environmental activists receive prison sentences of 6-8 years each
The Hindu
Cambodian environmental activists sentenced to six years in prison for conspiring against the state.
Ten members of a Cambodian environmental activist group that campaigned against destructive infrastructure projects and alleged corruption were each sentenced on Tuesday to six years in prison on charges of conspiring against the state.
Three of the members of the group Mother Nature Cambodia were also convicted of insulting Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni, for which they were sentenced to an additional two years in prison, giving them a total of eight years behind bars.
Only five of the defendants attended the trial and the others were convicted in absentia. They included four Cambodians whose whereabouts are unknown and Alejandro Gonzalez-Davidson, a Spanish national who co-founded the group and was deported in 2015 and barred from ever returning to Cambodia.
The five who attended the trial were arrested outside the court after the verdict and sentences were issued. They had marched to the Phnom Penh Municipal Court with supporters, dressed in traditional white clothing worn at funerals, which they said represented the death of justice in Cambodia.
Phun Keoraksmey, a 22-year-old member of the group whose mother was by her side, said she was prepared to go to prison.
“But I never want to go back to jail because I never did anything wrong. But I will never run from what I am responsible for. I chose this way, I chose this path,” she said.
The Cambodian human rights group Licadho called the verdict “very disappointing.” “Today, the court has ruled that youth activists fighting for environmental protections and democratic principles are in effect acting against the state,” it said. “It is astounding that Cambodian authorities are convicting youth activists who are advocating for clean water in Phnom Penh, protecting mangrove forests in Koh Kong and warning against the privatisation of land in protected areas and presenting it as an attack against the state.” The group last year was the co-winner of the Right Livelihood Award, sometimes characterised as the “Alternative Nobel,” issued by a Stockholm-based foundation to organisations and individuals working to “safeguard the dignity and livelihoods of communities around the world.” Three members of the group who were in jail at that time were denied permission by Cambodian court authorities to travel to Sweden to accept the award.