No deal for jailed 'insurrection' activists: Cambodia PM
AFP / Bangkok Post | 27 July 2015
PHNOM PENH - Cambodia's strongman premier
Monday brushed off recent criticism over a string of lengthy jail
sentences handed to opposition activists, adding that there would be no
political deal for their release.
Cambodia has been ruled for 30 years by Prime Minister Hun Sen
A
group of 11 Cambodian opposition members and activists were jailed on
insurrection charges last week -- including three who received 20-year
sentences -- an outcome rights defenders and relatives decried as
disproportionate and politically-motivated.
The conviction
triggered a fresh wave of criticism against premier Hun Sen for stepping
up suppression of dissent in a kingdom that he has led for more than
three decades.
The
CNRP had expressed hopes that a political deal might win the group
their freedom -- a suggestion Hun Sen flatly rejected Monday.
"I
can meet everybody -- except terrorists," he said during a religious
ceremony in Phnom Penh. "But if they bring me court issues which are not
in my power to discuss, then I will not talk with them."
"I do
not have any rights on this issue," he added, urging the activists to
"find good lawyers" to help them appeal against what he described as
"lenient" sentences.
Hun Sen also hit out at foreign groups and
local rights defenders for ignoring the injuries sustained by security
guards during the protest.
On Friday, the UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights described the convictions as a "worrying development"
adding that "there were irregularities in the conduct of the trial".
Earlier
Monday opposition deputy leader Kem Sokha visited the 11 inmates and
said he hoped to seek their release through a political deal.
"The culture of dialogue can be a door to have them released," he told reporters.
The
insurrection charges levelled against the activists last year came
during a protracted political standoff between the ruling Cambodian
People's Party (CPP) and the CNRP.
At the time opposition
lawmakers were refusing to take their seats in parliament, alleging that
a 2013 general election had been rigged.
But their year-long
boycott ended a week after the charges were laid against the activists
with the CNRP taking its seats in parliament in return for electoral
reforms.
Several of its MPs are also accused of insurrection over the protest but their trials have not yet started.
Hun
Sen has conducted Cambodia's politics for more than three decades,
tolerating little dissent and keeping his rivals on the back-foot
through a mix of court cases, crackdowns and occasional compromises.
No comments:
Post a Comment