U.N. Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association speaks to reporters outside the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Phnom Penh, Feb. 6, 2014. RFA.
UN Envoy Asks Cambodia to Lift Demonstrations Ban
Radio Free Asia | 6 February 2014
A U.N. rights envoy suggested Thursday that Cambodia lift a ban on
public gatherings in the capital imposed amid a violent crackdown on
demonstrators a month ago.
Maina Kiai, the U.N.’s global Special Rapporteur for freedom of
peaceful assembly and association, made the suggestion to Foreign
Minister Hor Namhong in Phnom Penh while on a three-day visit to
Cambodia.
“I raised concern about the blanket ban that was extended in January,
expressing the strong view that under international law, blanket bans
are not recommended,” Kiai told reporters after the meeting.
Kiai’s trip comes less than a month after police shots during a
crackdown on striking garment workers left five dead in what rights
groups have decried as the worst state violence against civilian in the
country in years.
Later, the authorities instituted a ban on public gatherings,
violently dispersing opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party(CNRP)-led
protests that had been held alongside strikes by garment workers.
Call for official visit
Kiai’s trip, which also included a meeting with opposition CNRP
deputy chief Kem Sokha on Thursday, is an unofficial academic visit made
on the invitation of civil society groups, rather than an official
reporting visit organized by the government.
Kiai said he had urged the foreign minister to invite him for an official visit.
“I think it’s in the interests of the government to invite me
officially so that I can come and hear the government’s side and be able
to take a considered and reasonable view of what’s going on to address
the freedom of assembly and association.”
Officials at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs provided no information about Kiai’s meeting with Hor Namhong.
Urging international pressure
Kem Sokha told RFA’s Khmer Service that during their meeting, the two
had discussed the government’s crackdown on CNRP supporters and that he
had urged the envoy to appeal to the international community for
pressure on Cambodia to respect democratic freedoms.
Kiai met with the Coalition of Cambodian Workers’ Democratic Union
earlier in the week and is expected to meet with land rights activists
from Phnom Penh’s Boeung Kak Lake community on Friday, the Cambodia
Daily reported.
The envoy will submit a report on global developments on freedom of
assembly and association to the U.N. in June and said he may include
events in Cambodia in the document.
Rights groups have raised concerns about excessive forces used by
government authorities in Cambodia to suppress a series of
demonstrations held since national elections in July.
CNRP-led demonstrations calling for the resignation of Prime Minister
Hun Sen drew tens of thousands of participants in recent months before
the ban was imposed.
Also last week, at least 10 people were injured in Phnom Penh when security forces clashed with protesting activists, trade union leaders, and laborers demanding higher wages and the release of 23 people arrested in the January crackdown on garment workers’ strikes.
What does this fat black dude know about freedom? He's clearly obese. He may well come from some backwater African country where savage killings and mob lynching are regular practices.
ReplyDelete