Cedaw C 85 D 146 2019 35588 e
Cedaw C 85 D 146 2019 35588 e
Cedaw C 85 D 146 2019 35588 e
Original: English
2.1 The author resides in La Peang village, in the Ta Ches commune of Kampong
Chhnang Province. For a decade, she and her community have been involved in a land
dispute with KDC International, a development company owned by the wife of the then
Minister of Mines and Energy. The author has been at the forefront of the community’s
efforts to stop the acquisition of her land by KDC International and claims to have suffered
harsh consequences as a result.
2.2 According to the author, tensions with KDC International began in 1996, when, due
to the company’s plans to buy land in the commune, residents of La Peang were first
pressured to sell their land. The author moved to La Peang in 2004 to join her husband.
They held an official land title. In 2006, KDC International representatives, accompanied
GE.
CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019 Advance unedited version
by police officers but without any proof of ownership, visited the area and dug a ditch
around the disputed land, thus preventing the residents from farming their land. The land
was mostly agricultural, but also included 14 houses. In 2007, KDC International filed a
complaint against the inhabitants of the houses for illegally occupying the land it owned.
On 9 January 2008, KDC International workers destroyed the houses and the surrounding
farmland, without any prior notification. The house and some of the farmland belonging
to the author and her husband, where they had grown rice and various kinds of fruits, were
destroyed. Her family’s land title documents were lost in the process.
2.3 Following the death of the community representative, the author became her
successor. In this role, the author has led protests against the “land grab”, approached non-
governmental organisations, and sought financial and legal support in the dispute,
including from the authorities. In a petition dated 20 May 2009, the author and
representatives of 64 families requested the Member of Parliament of Kampong Chhnang
to intervene. However, they never received a response. In September 2009, residents of La
Peang including the author requested the Ministry of Justice in writing to intervene in the
dispute. The Ministry rejected the letter because it lacked the necessary documentation.
2.4 KDC International filed a complaint against the author because of her attempts at
obtaining a remedy. On 20 August 2008, the author was interrogated at the provincial court
concerning “groundless” accusations of incitement to violence during protests. On 8 June
2009, she petitioned the Ministry of Justice for its intervention and for the charges to be
dropped. However, the prosecutor transferred the case to an investigative judge. The
author was therefore questioned at the Kampong Chhnang Provincial Court. Her request
for a postponement of the second hearing because she lacked legal representation was
denied, in breach of her fair trial rights. Fearing arrest, she did not attend the second
hearing. Her case was then transferred to the Phnom Penh Court of First Instance. This
Court invited her to a hearing on 20 October 2009 concerning accusations of incitement.
2.5 In December 2009, the author and her family fled to Thailand, fearing arrest and
death, given the atmosphere of fear in the State party concerning rural women defending
human rights in land disputes. However, they were forcibly returned to the State party on
8 December 2011.
2.6 Following her return, the author initially kept a low profile but continued
conducting meetings with residents. In a complaint submitted to the Phnom Penh Court of
First Instance on 27 September 2012, she claimed back her land, requested that KDC
International be ordered to prove its ownership of the land and pay compensation.
However, she never received a response.
2.7 On 6 October 2013, an anonymous letter was posted on the wall of the house of the
author and her husband. Picturing a gun, it stated that if she continued protesting, sh e
would end up dead and “go the same way as her sister”. Her sister-in-law had died in a
traffic accident in suspicious circumstances. The same day, the author complained about
this and another letter to the Kampong Chhnang Provincial Court. However, she n ever
received a reply.
2.8 On 3 March 2014, the Ministry of Interior established a Multi-Provincial Land
Dispute Commission in the commune, mandated to verify land-related documents,
organise discussions between the families and KDC International and draft a report aiming
to resolve the conflict. However, the Commission has been criticised as many of its
members were aligned with KDC International. In April 2014, families met with KDC
International, which forced them to accept what they felt was a far too low compensation.
The families later filed a complaint to a court claiming that they had not given their prior
informed consent, but the court never responded. On 30 April 2014, the report of the Multi-
Provincial Land Dispute Commission concluded that none of the 52 families had
documents proving their land ownership, that KDC International possessed title for 512
hectares, that all but 16 families had accepted compensation and that the community
members had “made the work difficult and like to cause trouble for the government in
order to claim some political benefit for their group”. Community representatives,
including the author, thereupon complained to the National Assembly, asking it to dismiss
the report.
2
Advance unedited version CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019
2.9 The dispute has resulted in several episodes of violence, particularly after KDC
International workers started constructing a concrete wall around the disputed land in April
2014, fencing off 1.5 hectares of the author’s land. Clashes occurred several times in July
2014, including when community members prevented police officers from arresting the
author based on an arrest warrant charging her with incitement. A press conference held
that month in her house resulted in KDC International workers throwing stones at the
house. Both sides attacked each other, resulting in multiple injuries. The next month,
several residents, including the author, marched to the Provincial Court to demand the
release of two men arrested for damaging property. The author led residents on a march to
Phnom Penh to take their case to the national level, but police officers blocked and
violently dispersed the group. Several participants, including the author’s husband, were
arrested and beaten. On 22 August 2014, several UN experts sent a letter of allegation to
the State party drawing attention to the “land appropriation, denial of justice, judicial
harassment, intimidation and frequent attacks on residents of Lor Peang and Boeung Kak
villages in Ta Ches commune”. 1
2.10 On 25 August 2014, the author and other community representatives complained to
the Ministry of Justice and the President of the National Assembly, requesting that they
pressure the government to release the land activists, resolve the land dispute and terminate
all accusations against them. The detainees were released four days later. On 26 October
2014, the author and other residents attempted to file a petition with the Kampong
Chhnang Provincial Governor, which led to additional violent scuffles. On 12 November
2014, they petitioned the President of the First Commission of the National Assembly to
accelerate the negotiations to resolve the land dispute. However, despite assurances from
the Human Rights Commission of the National Assembly, no decision was rendered. 2
2.11 On 28 January 2016, a meeting took place between the National Assembly and 16
families who had not accepted compensation. According to the author, the representatives
of the National Assembly spoke on behalf of KDC International and informed the families
of its compensation policy. On 8 August 2016, in the absence of an agreement, the First
Commission of the National Assembly transferred the case to the Ministry of Land
Management, Urban Planning and Construction, which declined to intervene as land titles
had already been issued and stated that the courts were competent to deal with the matter.
There has since not been any progress in the authorities’ work to solve the dispute.
2.12 On 7 April 2017, the author was summoned to court in a defamation case, ignorant
of the factual basis for the charges. Unable to attend the trial in the absence of her lawyer,
the author received another summon to appear in court. Her request for a postponement
has remained unanswered. She notes that defamation is a criminal offence in the Kingdom
of Cambodia punishable by 100,000 to 10 million rieland is often used to silence dissents.
The land walled off by KDC International remains empty and underdeveloped. The dispute
has affected the author’s economic life, particularly her ability to earn a sustainable livin g,
as she had to leave her teaching job when she fled to Thailand and, unable to return to that
job, is now working as a construction worker. Living conditions in the village have
worsened: farmers have lost their livelihoods; some are forced to collect and sell frogs and
snails; and water is lacking in quality and quantity. The author has stopped protesting, as
an ultimatum presented to her “due to the court pressure” forced her to choose between
ceasing her protests or having the charges of incitement and defamation resumed. She is
currently raising chickens on a small plot in Kampong Chhnang Province, too fearful to
take the streets to demand her land back.
2.13 The author submits that even though the events described started before the
Optional Protocol entered into force for the State party, the violations of her rights have
continued thereafter. The communication focuses on breaches that occurred after the
1 Report of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Cambodia, Rhona Smith
(A/HRC/30/58), 20 August 2015, para. 8.
2 The author notes that the Human Rights Commission has claimed that the residents obtained their
titles in 1997 and that KDC International bought the land in 2007, purchasing 105 plots of 5 hectares
each. According to the author, this contradicts the community members’ claims that the land was
allocated to each family in differently sized plots in 1979 and seized by KDC International in 2006.
3
CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019 Advance unedited version
author returned to the Kingdom of Cambodia in 2011, after the Optional Protocol entered
into force for the State party. She submits that article 4(2)(e) of the Optional Protocol
therefore does not preclude the Committee from examining the communication.
2.14 The author submits that she has exhausted all available domestic remedies. She
argues that her repeated efforts to obtain a remedy have demonstrated the futility of
undertaking any further legal action, given the inaction of the State party’s judiciary. As
the authorities have not processed any of her claims, the domestic remedies must be
considered to be unreasonably prolonged. The remedies are also ineffective, as the
implementation of the dispute resolution system in the Kingdom of Cambodia is unreliable
and inconsistently applied. The Cambodian judicial system lacks independence, and
women human rights defenders are particularly vulnerable to judicial harassment and
judicial injustice.
Complaint
3.1 The author submits that she is a rural woman within the meaning of article 14 of the
Convention and a human rights defender. However, rather than protecting her, the State party
has failed to remedy the discrimination she faced as a rural woman human rights defender
and the land-related human rights breaches. Moreover, the State party’s judiciary took active
steps to impair her work as a human rights defender. The author also submits that the
discriminatory impact of the land conflict and the State party’s failure to address it constitute
discrimination in the meaning of article 1 of the Convention.
3.2 Under article 2(e) of the Convention, the author submits that the local, provincial, and
national authorities of the State party failed to ensure that KDC International did not
discriminate against her. 3 They ignored the Committee’s recommendations to ensure that
land acquisitions follow due process, and that adequate compensation is provided following
sufficient consultative processes.4 The State party’s failure to prevent the violent seizure of
her land resulted in forcible evictions. Due to endemic gender inequality, land right violations
by corporate actors have a disproportionate effect on women in the Kingdom of Cambodia,
particularly on women representing affected communities.5 The State party’s failure to
address the actions of KDC International therefore constitutes indirect discrimination against
the author as a woman. She argues that forced evictions are not a gender-neutral
phenomenon.6 As a mother, a rural woman and a human rights defender, the author was
adversely impacted by the State party’s inaction, given that she lost her property and the
home for her children, and she was unable to continue working. Further, her relocation led
her to live in a place lacking basic infrastructure and access to essential services, including
sanitation and basic healthcare. The author also argues that the State party breached her rights
under article 14(2)(a) of the Convention, as it failed to take all appropriate measures to ensure
her participation in the elaboration and implementation of KDC International’s project.
Moreover, the State party breached her rights under articles 14(2)(a), (g) and (h) by failing
to take appropriate measures to ensure that she could participate in development, be treated
equally in land resettlement schemes, and enjoy adequate living standards.
3.3 The author argues that the State party failed to provide effective and timely access
to remedies for the breaches to which she was subjected. All her petitions and legal actions
were ignored, even though she was significantly more adversely affected by the land rights
breaches. Through this failure, the State party’s administrative procedures and institutions
indirectly denied the author’s equal enjoyment of her economic rights and denied her
3 The author refers to General Comment No. 24 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights on state obligations under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights in the context of business activities (E/C.12/GC/24), 10 August 2017, para. 9.
4 Concluding observations on the combined fourth and fifth periodic reports of Cambodia
(CEDAW/C/GC/34) paras. 24 and 25(e); Concluding observations on the combined fourth and fifth
periodic reports of Cambodia, para. 43(c); United Nations General Assembly, Report of the Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders (A/70/217*), 30 July 2015, paras. 61-62, 64.
6 Concluding observations on the combined fourth and fifth periodic reports of Cambodia, para.
43(b).
4
Advance unedited version CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019
access to justice and compensation. 7 The author submits that these facts amount to
breaches of her rights under articles 2(c), (d) and (e) of the Convention. She also submits
that the State party’s failure to take measures to eliminate the indirect discrimination that
unresolved land disputes created for women amounted to violations of its obligations under
articles 2(e) and 3 of the Convention.
3.4 The author submits that the State party failed to take all appropriate steps to ensure
rural women’s enjoyment of adequate living conditions, including regarding housing, in
breach of article 14(2)(h) of the Convention. She submits that the State party failed to
ensure her equality before the law, and instead discriminated against her because of her
status as a rural woman human rights defender, in violation of article 15(1) of the
Convention.
3.5 The author argues that the State party’s judiciary targeted, harassed, intimidated,
and discriminated against her because of her position as a rural woman human rights
defender, to prevent her from exercising her rights and from advocating for respect of the
rights of her community. According to the author, she had criminal charges filed against
her because she is a rural woman human rights defender. She argues that the State party’s
authorities often specifically target rural women and women human rights defenders due
to their gender. Women are often more significantly impacted than men, given the
generally held view that women are “weaker” than men and more easily and “effectively”
intimidated. By targeting women, the State party also prevents other women from
advocating for their rights. The author submits that these acts constitute violations of
article 2(c) and (d) of the Convention. She also affirms a violation of article 15 of the
Convention, as her complaints were disregarded, and she was herself the object of judicial
complaints.
3.6 The author submits that the State party breached articles 2(c), (d) and (e) of the
Convention by failing to act on the threatening letters addressed to her, which she argues
was addressed to her because she is a woman, and because of her actions as a human rights
defender.8 She also argues that this failure constitutes a breach of article 15(1) of the
Convention, as she was prevented from having equal access to the judicial system and
equal treatment before the law due to her status as a rural woman human rights defender.
Consideration of admissibility
5.1 In accordance with rule 64 of its rules of procedure, the Committee is to decide
whether the communication is admissible under the Optional Protocol. In accordance with
rule 72 (4) it must do so before considering the merits of the communication.
5.2 In accordance with article 4 (2) (a) of the Optional Protocol, the Committee is
satisfied that the same matter has not been and is not being examined under another
procedure of international investigation or settlement.
5.3 In accordance with article 4 (1) of the Optional Protocol, the Committee shall not
consider a communication unless it has ascertained that all available domestic remedies
7The author refers to General recommendation No. 28 on the core obligations of States parties under
article 2 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
(CEDAW/C/GC/28), para. 9; and to General recommendation No. 34 (2016) on the rights of rural
women, para. 25(c).
8 The author refers to General recommendation No. 34 (2016) on the rights of rural women
5
CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019 Advance unedited version
have been exhausted, unless the application of such remedies is unreasonably prolonged
or unlikely to bring effective relief. The Committee notes that the author has been
attempting to obtain a remedy since 2009 and has since brought multiple petitions and
complaints to the State party’s judicial and legislative organs. The Committee notes that
most of these claims have remained without any response, and none have resulted in the
initiation of an investigation or judicial proceedings. Therefore, and in the absence of any
submissions from the State party, the Committee finds that domestic remedies must be
deemed unreasonably prolonged and concludes that it is not precluded from considering
the author’s claims under article 4(1) of the Optional Protocol.
5.4 The Committee notes that the facts presented by the author started before the
Optional Protocol entered into force for the State party. The Committee notes, however,
that the facts presented and the effects thereof on the author continued after the Optional
Protocol entered into force for the State party. Therefore, the Committee considers that
article 4(2)(e) of the Optional Protocol does not preclude it from examining the
communication insofar as the facts presented have continued after the entry into force of
the Optional Protocol for the State party.
5.5 The Committee considers that the author has sufficiently substantiated her
communication, for purposes of admissibility. The Committee therefore declares the
communication admissible, as raising issues under articles 2(c), (d), and (e), 3, 14(1) and
(2)(a), (g) and (h), and 15(1) of the Convention, and proceeds with its consideration on
the merits.
9 Concluding observations on the combined fourth and fifth periodic reports of Cambodia
(CEDAW/C/KHM/CO-4-5), para. 43 (b).
6
Advance unedited version CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019
equally in land resettlement schemes, and enjoy adequate living standards. The
Committee recalls that sale and leasing of land to local, national and foreign investors,
often accompanied by expropriations, have put rural women at risk of forced eviction
and increased poverty and have further diminished their access to and control over land,
territories and natural resources. Involuntary displacement negatively affects rural
women in multiple ways, and they often suffer gender-based violence in that context.10
The Committee further recalls that rural women human rights defenders are often at risk
of violence when working, for example, to protect victims, transform local customs or
secure natural resource rights.11 The Committee recalls its recommendation to the State
party to improve women’s access to land and tenure security, and to ensure that
acquisitions of land for economic and other concessions follow due process, and that
adequate compensation is provided following sufficient consultative processes.12 In this
light, the Committee notes that, according to the information on file, the State party’s
authorities failed to take any measures to ensure the author’s adequate living standards,
compelled her to relocate to a place lacking basic infrastructure and access to essential
services, and her participation in the elaboration and implementation and the planning of
KDC International’s project. The Committee further notes that the author’s livelihood
was disrupted in light of the authorities’ inaction in relation to KDC International’s
activities in La Peang. The Committee further notes the author’s argument that she never
received a reply from the Phnom Penh Court of First Instance concerning her requests
that KDC International be ordered to prove its ownership of the land, that the
community’s land be returned and that KDC International pay proper compensation to
the affected communities. The Committee therefore finds that the State party breached
the author’s rights under article 14(1) and (2)(a), (g) and (h) of the Convention.
6.4 The Committee notes the author’s claim that the judiciary institutions of the State
party harassed and discriminated against her because of her position as a rural woman
human rights defender. The Committee notes that the author was charged with the crime
of incitement to violence, and subsequently for the crime of defamation. The Committee
notes the author’s uncontested argument that these charges were groundless and
exemplify that the State party’s authorities target rural women and human rights
defenders due to their gender. The Committee notes, moreover, the uncontested
allegation of the author that she was forced to stop protesting following an ultimatum
presented to her “due to the court pressure”, and that other women are thus also prevented
from advocating for their rights. The Committee finds that the criminal proceedings
against the author constituted reprisals against her for her activism, thus preventing her
from continuing to defend the interests of her community in the land dispute in a context
of intimidation and harassment of female human rights defenders who advocate for
women’s land rights.13 The Committee therefore finds that the State party’s authorities
breached the author’s rights under articles 2(c) and (d) and 15(1) of the Convention.
6.5 The Committee notes the author’s claim that she was not provided with equality
before the law or an effective remedy for the breaches of her human rights. In this regard,
the Committee notes that none of the author’s petitions concerning the land dispute were
answered, except for the decision of the Ministry of Justice refusing to intervene. These
included a complaint requesting the return of her land to the Phnom Penh Court of First
Instance and a complaint against the threatening letters to the Kampong Chhnang Court of
First Instance, as well as petitions submitted by community representatives including the
author, including a complaint to the National Assembly requesting the withdrawal of trust
in the Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Construction, a request to the
President of the National Assembly to advocate with the Government for the release of
land activists, for a resolution of the land dispute and for a stop to the accusations against
10 General recommendation No. 34 (2016) on the rights of rural women (CEDAW/C/GC/34), para.
61.
11 Ibid., para. 24.
12 Concluding observations on the combined fourth and fifth periodic reports of Cambodia
7
CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019 Advance unedited version
14 General recommendation No. 28 on the core obligations of States parties under article 2 of the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
(CEDAW/C/GC/28), para. 36.
15 General recommendation No. 33 on women’s access to justice (CEDAW/C/GC/33), para. 6.
8
Advance unedited version CEDAW/C/85/D/146/2019