Written by Brendan Brady and Mom Kunthear Tuesday, 31 March 2009
As more internet content pushes the boundaries of what is acceptable in Khmer culture, the government has moved to tighten its grip on what should be admissible online
When Khmer-American artist Koke Lor published images of naked Apsara dancers on his website reahu.net, he unwittingly kicked off a censorship storm that may shed light on the government's future attitudes towards the regulation of online content.
When Khmer-American artist Koke Lor published images of naked Apsara dancers on his website reahu.net, he unwittingly kicked off a censorship storm that may shed light on the government's future attitudes towards the regulation of online content.
The website stirred up controversy after a major Khmer-language newspaper published pictures from the website of the bare-breasted dancers as well as a woman scantily dressed in the clothing of a Khmer Rouge cadre.
Access to the website has been blocked since the end of January for users of domestic internet service providers Angkor Net, Mekong Net and Online. Mobile service provider qb has also blocked access via its 3G internet network.
In late February, the website of the UK-based corruption watchdog Global Witness was also unavailable for some local web users following the organisation's release of a scathing report on the Kingdom's oil and mining industries.
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications So Khun confirmed at the time he had sent a letter to the internet providers, but said he did not know what effect it had.
Sy Define, a secretary of state at the Ministry of Women's Affairs, had told the Post her office cooperated with the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications to have the reahu website banned domestically along with other websites that she considered pornographic.
She also asked the Education Ministry to include lessons on traditional culture in school curriculums around the country to reaffirm Khmer morality. "Nowadays, youths seem more interested in Western culture than in their own," Sy Define said.
First lady Bun Rany has also crusaded against images and technologies that, she says, compromise the social mores of the Kingdom, such as when she spearheaded an effort among the wives of senior officials in 2006 to ban 3G net connections, citing concerns the video technology would be used to send pornography.
For his part, Koke Lor has shot back at local critics, calling them myopic.
"I am pushing the boundaries and that's being creative," he said. "If you don't push the boundaries, you cannot find your limits."
Phu Leewood, secretary general of the National Information Communications Technology Development Agency (NIDA), said he was sympathetic to Koke Lor but stood by the line of the Ministry of Women's Affairs. "With reahu in the US, this is freedom of information - it's fine art, attractive commercial art," Phu Leewood said.
"But, in Cambodia, some people say its pornography. The Ministry of Women's Affairs says it's degrading to women, and that stood."
However, he added that any decision to ban access to a website should have been approved by the Council of Ministers first.
Government denials The government-prompted blacklistings follow denials from the Ministry of Information that new legislation it is drafting for audiovisual media will bear on content or online material.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- If you don't push the boundaries, you cannot find your limits. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In mid-January, first reports of the proposal, the details of which have not been publicly disclosed, drew a sharp response from local media who cautioned it would be used as a tool of state censorship against online material critical of the government.
Information Minister Khieu Kanharith has since said the draft law is widely misunderstood, insisting that it would regulate the platforms of radio, TV and print media, but not their content - and would not apply to the internet.
However, Mao Chakrya, director general of the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, said the draft law was explicitly about the content. The technology that allowed its delivery was not relevant, which was why the proposed law would be regulated by the Ministry of Information rather than the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, he said.
Local leaders of Cambodia's online community remain deeply cynical of any government efforts to govern the internet given its shaky track record with freedom of speech.
Cambodia is currently ranked 128th - or "partially free" - on the US-based Freedom House organisation's 2008 press freedom list.
Norbert Klein, a German national who is credited with introducing the first internet connection to Cambodia and is editor of the Cambodian Mirror website, said the government was running a haphazard campaign to "clean society".
He said an internet content law was no magic bullet, as developing a consensus on what content should be admissible had proved nearly impossible in other countries.