Cambodian journalist who reported on illegal logging dies from gunshot wound

Veteran reporter Chhoeung Chheng was shot last week as he traveled by motorbike to a wildlife sanctuary.

A Cambodian reporter who was shot last week while investigating a forest-clearing operation in a wildlife sanctuary has died from his wounds, his wife told Radio Free Asia.

Chhoeung Chheng, 63, was shot on Dec. 4 as he rode on a motorbike toward the Boeung Per Wildlife Sanctuary in Siem Reap province.

He was taken to Siem Reap Provincial Hospital, where doctors removed a bullet from his abdomen, according to his wife, Chiev Chap. However, doctors were unable to stop the bleeding and he died early Saturday, she told Radio Free Asia.

Chhoeung Chheung, who worked as a journalist for online news outlet Kampuchea Aphivath, had previously reported on the destruction of natural resources in a community forest in the sanctuary.

He was shot by unknown persons believed to have been hiding along the road, Chiev Chap told RFA last week, citing a conversation with her husband.

Police have arrested a suspect on attempted murder charges and have said they believe the shooting stemmed from a personal dispute.

Siem Reap provincial court spokesperson Yin Srang told RFA on Saturday that the suspect has been placed under pre-trial detention.

Journalists killed in Cambodia

It’s been several years since a journalist has been shot in Cambodia, Nop Vy, executive director for the Cambodian Journalists Alliance Association, or Camboja, told RFA Khmer last week.

Since 1994, at least 15 journalists have been killed in the country, the Cambodian Center for Human Rights said in a statement in October. Twelve of them were working on stories that could have posed a direct threat to powerful Cambodians, the center said.

In 2014, journalist Traing Try was fatally shot in northeastern Kratie province as he was traveling with other reporters to investigate illegal logging in the region.

“This murder is appalling and demands a strong response,” said Cédric Alviani, the Asia-Pacific bureau director of Paris-based Reporters Without Borders.

“We call on Cambodian authorities to ensure that all parties responsible for the attack are severely punished,” he said in a statement. “We also urge the Cambodian government to take concrete actions to end violence against journalists.”

Chhoeung Chheng was a person with sound character who always maintained good relations with his neighbors, Chiev Chap said. She urged authorities to sentence the offender to the fullest extent.

“How can I accept this murder case? I saw him walking daily in front of me,” she said. “It is really unfair. I don’t know what else to do except to depend on competent authorities.”

Translated by Sovannarith Keo. Edited by Matt Reed and Malcolm Foster.