Cambodia: Chilling Account of Attacks on Legislators
Brazen Assault on Opposition Calls for UN Investigation
Human Rights Watch | 30 October 2015
(Bangkok) – Two opposition members of parliament described in
chilling detail how an organized group dragged them from their cars and
beat them as they tried to leave Cambodia’s National Assembly building
in Phnom Penh on October 26, Human Rights Watch said today. Prime
Minister Hun Sen called for the surrender of those who attacked
Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP) members of parliament Kung Sophea
and Nhay Chamraoen, who are recuperating from serious injuries in a
Bangkok hospital. However, the police have made no arrests, despite
extensive video and photo coverage of the attacks.
“The brazen nature of these brutal attacks on members of parliament
sends the message that the little remaining democratic space in Cambodia
is seriously threatened,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human
Rights Watch. “Donor governments should make clear that Prime Minister
Hun Sen’s condemnation of the attacks only have credibility if he calls
for an independent UN investigation.”
Human Rights Watch said the government should ask the Cambodia field
office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to
conduct an independent investigation into the attack, and make a
commitment to act on its findings.
Human Rights Watch interviewed Kung Sophea and Nhay Chamraoen as
they lay in their hospital beds in Bangkok, and spoke with other
witnesses to the assaults. [read their direct testimonies at end of this HRW report.]
The two men told Human Rights Watch that when they arrived at the
National Assembly on October 26, the barbed wire barricades that
normally surround the building for protection during parliamentary
sessions were not set up. Guards told them on entering the building that
the security scanners were not functioning.
Later that morning, several thousand “protesters” gathered outside
the National Assembly to demand the removal of Kem Sokha, deputy leader
of the opposition CNRP, from his post as National Assembly first
vice-chairman. Witnesses and photographs identified elements of the
prime minister’s bodyguard unit in civilian dress and non-uniformed
members of units under the Phnom Penh Municipal Police, including
regular and para-police.
While the demonstrations continued outside, at about noon, after
casting their last parliamentary vote for the day, Sophea and Chamraoen
attempted to leave the National Assembly compound in separate cars. Both
cars approached their usual exit gate on the northwest corner to find
the gate closed, with a guard directing them south toward the main west
gate. After arriving at the west gate, both cars were again turned away
by a guard, although another car was allowed to exit just ahead of them.
Sophea and Chamraoen then drove to the rarely used “side” exit to the
south of the National Assembly.
Sophea said that his driver told him that after the car turned from
the gate, he saw a man in a red hat across the street speak into a
walkie-talkie and gesture at their car. After heading down the street a
short distance, their car was blocked by another man holding a
walkie-talkie. Soon, a crowd of roughly 20 to 30 men surrounded their
car. The man with the red hat opened the car door and, with two others,
pulled Sophea out of his car and began punching and kicking him in the
chest, head and back.
Altogether, the men beat Sophea three times as he got back into his
car and was pulled out again. Video shows the last two times Sophea is
pulled from his car while being kicked on the ground by his attackers.
The beating only stopped when the men left Sophea to attack Chamraoen.
Chamraoen told Human Rights Watch that by the time he exited the
gate in his vehicle, he could see that Sophea was being attacked about
10 meters ahead of him. Police were standing about five meters from
Sophea’s car watching the violence – without attempting to stop it.
The assailants soon surrounded Chamraoen’s car, with one using a
walkie-talkie to smash the car window, open the door, and drag Chamraoen
out. He recalls seeing a man pointing at him from outside his car
saying, “This one too!” The men began to punch and kick Chamraoen in the
face, arms, and back. Video shows the end of Chamraoen’s attack, as an
assailant stomping on his chest. While apparently struggling to remain
conscious, he was helped back into the National Assembly.
Later that day, several hundred men arrived at Kem Sokha’s residence
in northern Phnom Penh and hurled rocks and bottles at his home. Calls
were made by Sokha and his wife to the Ministry of the Interior with no
response for more than five hours, while Sokha’s wife hid inside in
terror.
The injuries to Sophea and Chamraoen were extensive. Sophea suffered
a broken nose and welts and bruises to his head. Repeated kicks to the
back resulted in lingering lower-back pain. He suffered a sprained
finger and a bruised shin. His right eardrum was torn, requiring an
operation, and it is unclear whether he will recover full hearing in the
ear. Chamraoen suffered three fractures in his right wrist. He
underwent a five-hour operation on his eye socket, as a broken bone
below the eye was pushing up into the socket, endangering the eye. He
also has a broken nose, a broken front tooth, a bruised left wrist, and
significant chest pain.
The two members of parliament told Human Rights Watch that they fear for their safety if they return to Cambodia.
The October 26 violence in Phnom Penh occurred days after
demonstrators gathered in Paris to protest Hun Sen’s visit to meet with
French President François Hollande. Hun Sen had warned of attacks
against the CNRP if the rally against him went on as planned.
“This attack is sadly reminiscent of the March 30, 1997 grenade
attack on opposition leader Sam Rainsy that killed 16 and injured more
than 150, when the police stood down and Hun Sen’s bodyguard unit was
implicated,” Adams said. “Those responsible for the 1997 attack were
never prosecuted, so Cambodia’s donors should send a clear message that
government involvement in the attack on members of parliament will have
consequences for their relationship and assistance.”
On October 30, the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) organized a
session of the National Assembly to remove Kem Sokha from his post as
vice-chairperson of the parliament. The session was boycotted by the
CNRP. Sokha had been installed in the post as part of the deal between
the CPP and CNRP, in which the CNRP agreed to end its boycott of the
National Assembly after the fundamentally flawed elections in 2013.
“The ruling party’s removal of Kem Sokha from his parliamentary post
is a blatant attempt to divide and scare the opposition into
submission,” Adams said. “One day Hun Sen says he wants to work with the
opposition, the next day they are attacked and removed from their
positions in parliament. No deal with Hun Sen is worth the paper it is
written on.”
Please see below for photos and a more detailed account of the attacks from Kung Sophea and Nhay Chamraoen.
Appendix
Statement of Kung Sophea
Let's stop wasting our time, efforts and resources dealing with Puppet Hun Sen,
ReplyDeletego after the Puppeteer Hanoi.
To dethrone the Viet Puppet, the CNRP and the
Khmer people can, among other means :
1. Simultaneously mass- protest all over the country
2. Advise the signatories of the 1991 Peace Accords and at the same time solicit their support and help
Youn use sold-out ,Khmers to fight Khmers.
As a signatory, Yuon flagrantly and systematically breached the solem spirits of the
Accords.