Cambodia: End Political Prosecution of 6 Unionists
Donors Should Press Government to Drop Cases
“Cambodian authorities are pursuing trumped-up charges against labor activists in an apparent attempt to get them to abandon demands for better pay and conditions. This is just the latest government effort to scare activists and the political opposition into dropping plans to use protests to advance their causes.” - Brad Adams, Asia director
(New York) – Cambodian authorities
should end the politically motivated prosecution of six trade unionists
accused of involvement in violent incidents in January 2014, Human
Rights Watch said today. The court summons date, September 12, is five
days before unions have scheduled the start of a new campaign for an
increase in the minimum wage.
Prosecutors have accused the prominent activists Pav Sina, Chea Mony,
Art Thun, Rong Chhun, Mam Nhim, and Yang Sophon of aggravated violence
and destruction, threats of destruction, and obstruction of traffic
during violent confrontations between protesting workers and factory and
government security forces in the Veng Sreng area of Phnom Penh between
December 25, 2013, and January 3, 2014. The accused face up to 14 years
in prison.
“Cambodian authorities are pursuing trumped-up charges against labor
activists in an apparent attempt to get them to abandon demands for
better pay and conditions,” said Brad Adams,
Asia director. “This is just the latest government effort to scare
activists and the political opposition into dropping plans to use
protests to advance their causes.”
Cambodian workers have made increased wages a central demand of an
expanding series of strikes that reached a crescendo in December 2013.
The government warned then that it would no longer tolerate widespread
industrial unrest. Prime Minister Hun Sen ordered a ban on all
demonstrations, including rallies by the opposition Cambodian National
Rescue Party and civil society gatherings. On January 2, 2014, the army,
police, and gendarme units enforced this policy with excessive and
unnecessary lethal force. They opened fire with assault rifles and other
firearms at demonstrators over two days, killing at least seven people
and injuring dozens of others.
The Cambodian government has previously brought baseless charges against workers, activists, and others linked to the protests.
In May, a Phnom Penh court convicted 23 workers and activists and
sentenced them to suspended prison terms after holding them in harsh
conditions for more than four months. They were accused of
responsibility for the January 2-3 violence, even though no evidence was
presented to connect any of them to it.
Cambodia’s judiciary lacks independence and serves the interests of the
ruling Cambodian People’s Party, which Hun Sen leads. No charges have
been filed against security force members responsible for killing and
wounding the protesters on January 2-3.
“Hun Sen has yet again promised big reforms and claims he has suddenly
become aware of the need to resolve long-festering socioeconomic
disputes, yet the courts he controls are still being used to persecute
activists,” Adams said. “Cambodia’s donors should make it clear that
they will not accept another round of politically motivated prosecutions
and demand that these cases be dropped.”
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