Wednesday, December 9, 2015

My career as an Australian filmmaker ends with a whimper; not a bang!

Graeme Mason
Chief Executive
&
Nerida Moore
Senior Development Executive
Screen Australia
Level 7, 45 Jones St
Ultimo 2007     

4th Dec. 2015

Dear Graeme and Nerida

re NEST OF VIPERS (formerly ANGKOR)

Neither of you has had the professional courtesy to acknowledge receipt of, let alone respond to, my letters of September and October re ANGKOR, now NEST OF VIPERS.

You have both, along with the Screen Australia board, and with the tacit approval of the new Minister for the Arts, Mitch Fifield, pronounced my career as an Australian filmmaker dead.

I can, of course, continue to make films; just not in a way that makes it possible for me to take advantage of tax concessions designed to gear into production quality Australian TV and feature film projects. A Pyrrhic victory for Screen Australia’s film bureaucrats and board members.

What a shame it is that Screen Australia has, in such important executive positions, people such as yourselves who not only believe that the banning of a filmmaker is appropriate, but that the filmmaker need not be provided with any evidence of the crime he has been accused of. This is a mind-set that is not conducive to the development or production of exciting film or TV. That you do not understand this only serves to compound the problem.

The project that the Screen Australia computer accepted as an application (ANGKOR), but which you both rejected for assessment and consideration, is now entitled NEST OF VIPERS.

Whilst I have no choice but to accept Screen Australia’s decision to end my career as an Australian filmmaker, the fat lady has not sung yet. VIPERS can and will be made as as non-Australia series.

Please place these three episodes of NEST OF VIPERS on file. I hope that they, and the five others that make up the entire series, cause you some embarrassment in a year or so.

best wishes


James Ricketson

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Malcolm Turnbull's Hun Sen photo opportunity!


Malcolm Turnbull
Prime Minister
Parliament House
Canberra
ACT
Australia

24th November 2015

Dear Prime Minister

In the not-too-distant future you will welcome to Australia Cambodia’s long-term dictator, Hun Sen.

You will smile and shake his hand. Photos will be taken and published.

Captured in this frozen moment, for eternity, will be you shaking hands with a man who you know stole the 2013 election in Cambodia; a man who is now quite brazenly, in the full light of day, using intimidation and manipulation of the Cambodian judiciary to steal the next election.

Why does Australia treat Hun Sen as though he were the democratically elected Prime Minister of a functioning democracy?

Is it because a Turnbull government, following in the footsteps of an Abbott government, needs to remain on friendly terms with a country to which you hope to send more refugees to Australian shores in the future?

The Cambodian people made it clear in the 2013 election, almost certainly won by the opposition Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP),  despite electoral fraud, that they have had enough of Hun Sen and his Cambodian People’s Party. 

Hun Sen knows that the only way he can possibly win the next election, if it is conducted in accordance with Cambodian electoral law, is to destroy the opposition by expelling members from the National Assembly, as he has in recent months; by having other members bashed outside the National Assembly whilst the police look on and do nothing; by jailing CNRP activists on trumped up charges and, a little over a week ago, by issuing a warrant for the arrest of the leader of the opposition, Sam Rainsy.

This is Hun Sen’s standard operating procedure – forcing Sam Rainsy into exile in the hope that a jailed, intimidated, leaderless and demoralized opposition will be unable to participate in any meaningful way in the next election.  Hun Sen, the Robert Mugabe of South East Asia, is a classic 20th C dictator trying desperately to cling to power in a new digitally-connected Facebook world.

The photo of you shaking hands with him, along with similar photos of him shaking hands with other world leaders,  will lend Hun Sen an air of political respectability that he does not deserve.

You know this, though it may be difficult to admit in public if you wish to retain Cambodia as a dumping ground for refugees trying to reach Australian shores.

Hundreds of millions of Australian tax-payer dollars have, directly and indirectly, been given in aid to Cambodia over the past 20 years of the Hun Sen regime.

To achieve what result?

To foster the development of democratic institutions in Cambodia.  To alleviate poverty?

No, Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party, and the patronage system that supports it, has plundered the country’s natural resources, stolen the land and homes of tens of thousands of Cambodians, intimidated, killed and imprisoned indigenous people and others who protest at being dispossessed and left 40% of the population suffering from malnutrition.

As the Hun Sen kleptocracy has pillaged the country this past 20 years, the international donor community has stood by, wringing its hands and expressing platitudes of ‘concern’ at regular intervals, as its members, including Australia,  continue to write large cheques to prop up what is, quite clearly, a dictatorship.

If Hun Sen succeeds in destroying Sam Rainsy’s CNRP in the next few months, if he steals the next election, there will be nothing him to stop him doing whatever is necessary to see to it that one of his sons succeeds him and that Cambodia remains a hereditary dictatorship. And the international donor community will be financing this constitutional coup.

History will not treat you kindly Mr Turnbull if, in 20 years time, Cambodia remains a dictatorship. You and other world leaders who turned a blind eye to Hun Sen’s breaches of Cambodian law and human rights abuses will, in your latter years, be held up as an example of what happens when short term gain (dumping refugees in Cambodia, in Australia’s case) is placed ahead of moral principle and the rule of law.

Your welcoming Hun Sen to Australia, your shaking of his hand, will Hun Sen’s corrupt regime with an undeserved imprimatur of respectability.

You could show real leadership here; demonstrate that your moral compass is pointed in the right direction by being the first member of the international donor community to stop funding the Hun Sen dictatorship to the tune of close to $100 million a year; by requesting of all those donor countries that pour half a billion dollars of aid into the country each year, that they turn the money spigot off until Hun Sen  stops subverting the will of the Cambodian people, stops stamping on every new green democratic shoot that seeks to push its way out of Cambodia’s blood-sodden soil and retracts his politically motivated arrest warrants.

You should cancel Hun Sen's visit and instead let him know,  in no uncertain terms, that Australian aid to Cambodia is tied to the development of democracy in Cambodia; not in propping up dictatorships such as the one he has visited upon Cambodia this past 20 years.

The photo opportunity of you shaking hands with Hun Sen is not one you need, Prime Minister.

best wishes


James Ricketson

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop remains silent on 'constitutional coup' in Cambodia


Australia's Foreign Minister, Julie Bishop

The Hon Julie Bishop
Minister for Foreign Affairs
House of Representatives, Parliament House
Canberra ACT 2600

19th Nov 2015

Dear Minister

Why do Australian tax-payers contribute in the vicinity of $100 million a year in aid to Cambodia? 

Is it to alleviate poverty and promote democracy? Or is it to prop up Prime Minister Hun Sen’s 3 decades long dictatorship?  

You will be aware of recent events that point to Hun Sen’s intention to bring about, in late 2015, what is, in effect, a ‘constitutional coup’ of the kind he perpetrated in 1997. 

Hun Sen’s latest manipulation of the Cambodian judiciary to issue an arrest warrant for Opposition leader Sam Rainsy is the most blatant evidence of the constitutional coup that has been taking place in broad daylight for some months now:

- Opposition Cambodian National Rescue (CNRP) party legislators Nhay Chamroeun and Kong Saphea were beaten up outside the National Assembly a few weeks ago whilst police stood by and made no attempt to intervene.

- CNRP co-leader Kem Sokha has been removed from his position as first vice president of the National Assembly.

- CNRP legislator Hong Sok Houk has been jailed for posting a map on his Facebook page.

- CNRP activists have been found guilty of, and have received lengthy jail sentences for, taking part in an “insurrection” - a demonstration led by CNRP lawmakers in July 2014. The demonstration turned violent when Cambodian authorities and the black helmeted thugs employed by them attacked peaceful demonstrators.

Do you, as Foreign Minister, have no comment to make about Hun Sen’s clear intention to solidify his position as dictator? 

Will you, on behalf of Australia, not merely express an opinion about the destruction of democracy in Cambodia but do something concrete – like suspend all aid to the country until Hun Sen adheres to the rule of law? 

Or will you wait until Sam Rainsy is arrested and placed in jail to express your “extreme concern” at the course of events and “encourage all parties to refrain from violence.”

There is a time for mealy-mouthed diplomatic platitudes and there is a time for action. Now is a time for action; to demonstrate solidarity with Cambodia’s very delicate democracy by letting Hun Sen know that the time of old-style 20th century dictators has passed; that it is time for him to hand the reins of power over to legislators who have been elected by the Cambodian people in elections free of intimidation and fraud.

If you have any doubts at all about the way in which the Hun Sen regime deals with peaceful protests, please look at the following video I shot last year:


And this one:


Minister, instead of using Cambodia as a dumping ground for refugees to our country, Australia should be doing all it can to encourage the establishment of true democracy in Cambodia. This necessitates standing up to Hun Sen and saying, in appropriate diplomatic language: “Enough is enough.”

best wishes

James Ricketson




Sam Rainsy, leader of Cambodia's opposition CNRP