CNRP calls on UN to join investigation
Phnom Penh Post | 2 November 2015
The opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party has called on the
United Nations to join an investigation into the beating of two CNRP
parliamentarians last Monday, expressing serious doubts the Cambodian
People’s Party-led government could conduct an independent inquiry into
an incident it was almost immediately accused of orchestrating.
On October 26, CNRP lawmakers Nhay Chamroeun and Kong Sakphea were
brutally beaten as they left a parliamentary session by men who had
joined a pro-CPP demonstration calling for CNRP deputy president Kem
Sokha to step down.
Although the CNRP quickly called the attack a “reprisal” from the
CPP, the ruling party denied any ties to the incident and Prime Minister
Hun Sen vowed to investigate the matter in a televised address on
Wednesday.
But after almost a week without anyone arrested – despite numerous
accounts on social media purporting to identify the attackers – the CNRP
says it wants an independent voice in the matter.
“For [the government] to be independent in an investigation that [the CNRP] can be confident in, the CNRP requests the government to invite representatives of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights [OHCHR] to join the process of this investigation,” a statement released yesterday read.
Sokha, who held the position of National Assembly vice president, was
stripped of that title on Friday, just days after the beatings.
The CNRP said yesterday that it had decided not to appoint a
replacement to fill the role, charging that his removal violated the
constitution and broke the bipartisan spirit that ended the party’s
year-long boycott of parliament in 2014.
“We welcome the establishment of an investigative commission into
last Monday’s incident, but we stress that the investigation will only
be credible if it is independent, impartial, thorough and prompt,” the
statement read.
The OHCHR also joined the opposition and other human rights groups in
suggesting the government turned a blind eye to the beatings, in stark
contrast with heavy-handed government crackdowns on opposition protests
in the past.
Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch strongly suggested the government’s
involvement in the case after publishing interviews conducted with both
of the beaten lawmakers – who are currently hospitalised in Bangkok – on
Saturday.
The rights group noted the pair were diverted to a little-used side
exit from the National Assembly and then promptly ambushed, adding that
photographs and witnesses from the incident showed the assailants to be
plainclothes members of the Phnom Penh Municipal Police and the prime
minister’s bodyguard unit.
HRW linked the attack to a broader crackdown on the opposition as
evidenced by the subsequent removal of Sokha from his position.
“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,”
said HRW’s Asia director Brad Adams in the statement.
However, the government is standing firm that the assault of the two
lawmakers and Sokha’s removal are unrelated, dismissing the attack as
stirred up by a small minority of malcontents.
“[The CNRP] issuing this statement seems more politically motivated
than an attempt at finding out who is wrong and who is right and
bringing the perpetrators to justice,” said government spokesman Phay
Siphan.
Siphan added that the choice not to appoint a new first vice
president was the CNRP’s own, noting that the position did not amount to
more than an “assistant” of the parliament’s president Heng Samrin
anyway.
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