IBAHRI urges Cambodia’s Supreme Court to uphold international standards on media freedom in appeal case

Thursday 18 June 2026

The International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) has filed an amicus curiae (friend of the court/independent adviser) brief before the Supreme Court of Cambodia, urging the Court to consider international and regional human rights standards on freedom of expression and media freedom in the context of criminal sanctions on journalists.

The brief was filed on 17 June 2026, in advance of a Supreme Court hearing scheduled for 19 June 2026, to assist the Court in its determination of an appeal case concerning two journalists, Phorn Sopheap and Pheap Pheara, who were sentenced to 14 years imprisonment after sharing photographs on social media.

Background to the case

Phorn Sopheap and Pheap Pheara were arrested in July 2025 after publishing photographs of the Cambodian military and unexploded landmines taken near the disputed Thai-Cambodian border. The journalists were prosecuted under Article 445 of the Cambodian Criminal Code for allegedly ‘supplying a foreign state with information prejudicial to national defence’.

Following conviction before the Siem Reap Provincial Court, the verdict was upheld by the Battambang Appeal Court in March 2026. The case now comes before Cambodia’s highest court.

IBAHRI submission focuses on limits of national security restrictions

The IBAHRI’s amicus curiae brief underscores the obligations on Cambodia to protect media freedom under international human rights law.

The IBAHRI highlights that restrictions on expression justified by national security concerns must remain exceptional and narrowly tailored. Under international standards, authorities must be able to demonstrate a specific and serious threat to national security directly linked to the expression in question.

The amicus curiae brief further emphasises that criminal sanctions against journalists require the highest level of scrutiny and should not be imposed for legitimate journalistic activity.

Concerns over disproportionate criminal sanctions

The IBAHRI asserts that international human rights law requires states to exercise substantial restraint when considering criminal penalties in cases involving journalism and public-interest reporting.

The amicus curiae brief notes that even in the most extreme circumstances, including cases involving incitement, courts should impose the least restrictive possible criminal measure and ensure that any limitation on freedom of expression meets the tests of legality, necessity and proportionality.

IBAHRI calls for international standards to guide the Court’s review

The IBAHRI hopes that the Supreme Court of Cambodia will find the amicus curiae brief valuable and will re-examine the case based on Cambodia’s obligations under international human rights law.

ENDS

Contact: IBAHRI@int-bar.org

Notes to the reader

  1. The International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI), established in 1995 under Founding Honorary President Nelson Mandela, is an autonomous and financially independent entity, working to promote, protect and enforce human rights under a just rule of law, and to preserve the independence of the judiciary and the legal profession worldwide.

  2. Find the IBAHRI (@IBAHRI) on social media here:
  3. The International Bar Association (IBA), the global voice of the legal profession, is the foremost organisation for international legal practitioners, bar associations and law societies. Established in 1947, shortly after the creation of the United Nations, it was born out of the conviction that an organisation made up of the worlds' bar associations could contribute to global stability and peace through the administration of justice.

Website page link for this news release:

Short link: www.tinyurl.com/yav7jveh
Full link: www.ibanet.org/IBAHRI-urges-Cambodias-Supreme-Court-to-uphold-international-standards-on-media-freedom-in-appeal-case