CPP Loyalists Leading Lawmaker Assault Probe
Cambodia Daily | 3 November 2015
It was promoted beforehand by Prime Minister Hun Sen as a response to
opposition demonstrations that had angered him. Many of the men
protesting against deputy opposition leader Kem Sokha had military
haircuts and wore pieces of red cloth—a longtime signal of CPP
allegiance during episodes of violence against opponents. Some were even
known security forces in plain clothes.
Finally, as the event came to an end, several dozen protesters
dragged two opposition lawmakers out of their cars and beat them bloody.
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy was quick to accuse Prime Minister Hun
Sen of orchestrating the attacks, while civil society groups noted that
police posted at the protest did not try to stop the beatings. Human
Rights Watch (HRW) described the event as typical of CPP attacks over
the years.
Yet even with the U.N. stressing the need for an independent inquiry,
the Interior Ministry last week dug deep into the CPP’s own leadership
ranks for officials to lead the investigation into the violence.
Choosing Interior Ministry Secretary of State Em Sam An as inquiry
chairman and National Police Deputy Commissioner Chhay Sinarith as his
deputy, the ministry put two prominent members of the CPP’s central
committee at the helm of the investigation.
Lieutenant General Sinarith is also a member of the CPP’s new “propaganda and education committee,” which was formed in September to help the ruling party present a better image to the general public.
No progress has been announced in uncovering who beat the lawmakers
at the protest a week ago, but officials stressed Monday that the
appointment of two CPP central committee members to lead the inquiry
would not harm its credibility.
“It doesn’t mean anything. You cannot find any independents here, my
friend,” Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said, promising that
the committee would find the organizers of the attack even if they were
affiliated with the CPP.
“Can you find one person in Cambodia who is free from a political
party? There is due process, and this is their expertise. No matter
which party [the perpetrators] belong to, they will be found,” he said.
CPP spokesman Sok Eysan also noted that most leaders of the nation’s
civil service and police force are senior members of the CPP, but said
Mr. Sam An and Lt. Gen. Sinarith would be neutral.
“They do not work based on a political trend, but they work according to their police skills,” he said.
“The government has announced that whatever group you come from,
whether that is CPP or as an official from another party, you have to
bear responsibility before the law—no exceptions,” he said.
Mr. Eysan said anyone doubting the credibility of the inquiry into
the assault on the two opposition lawmakers, who are still recovering in
a Bangkok hospital, should give the committee time to work.
“They have to trust Cambodian authorities,” he said. “It has no
influence [on the inquiry] whether they are in the central committee or
propaganda committee. Don’t be concerned about this.”
The other six members of the inquiry team are all CPP officials in
the Interior Ministry or police force, including Sieng Sen, who
succeeded Lt. Gen. Sinarith as head of the Interior Ministry’s internal
security department.
Committee members Song Ly and Soem Vuthy are both Phnom Penh deputy
police chiefs reporting to municipal police chief Chuon Sovann, who was
added to the CPP central committee at its congress this year.
Lieutenant General Sovann was also identified in a HRW report last
week as a “key protege” of deputy army commander Kun Kim—a close
confidante of Mr. Hun Sen who rallied soldiers to call for Mr. Sokha’s
removal on the same day as the protest in Phnom Penh.
The two police officials also work under National Police Commissioner
Neth Saveoun, a CPP standing committee member who Mr. Hun Sen warned
last month might launch a rebellion against a future CNRP government if
it tried to remove him.
Neither Mr. Sam An nor Lt. Gen. Sinarith could be reached for
comment. However, the head of the Interior Ministry’s penal police
department, Sok Khemarin, said he did not believe the inquiry’s leaders
would be influenced by their political affiliations.
“We take the law and the procedures of the law in Cambodia to be
implemented,” Major General Khemarin said, explaining that whoever the
evidence condemns will be arrested.
“Criminal law is that if it’s your hair, then it’s your head,” Maj.
Gen. Khemarin said. “We are not biased and it is people’s right to speak
like this, but the most important thing is that we have our laws.”
Yet Maj. Gen. Khemarin already appeared to be playing down the CPP’s
role in the assaults, noting that last week’s protest officially ended
at 11 a.m. and the attacks against the lawmakers occurred shortly after
midday.
“The protest ended at 11 a.m. and therefore the next people were
opportunists, and it sometimes is revenge,” he said. “We need to finish
the investigation first before we can say what it was.”
Muong Sothea, a member of the inquiry committee and director of the
Interior Ministry’s scientific and technical department, also said he
would not be swayed by politics when trying to uncover who organized the
beatings.
“I am a professional. We are independent,” he said.
Kem Ley, the founder of the grassroots political advocacy
organization Khmer for Khmer, said it was not new for the CPP to create
an inquiry stacked with its loyalists.
“How can they be independent? I cannot believe it at all, except if
they create a committee by engaging the opposition, civil society and
international community,” Mr. Ley said.
“The committee is to show to the international community and blame
others. They will always just take the words from their bosses and
report that automatically,” he added. “We already know the results.”
ហាហា ពួក ស៊ីភីភី ថា ចយអើយ អាញ់មិនដឺងថា គេថតបានអញ្ចឹងទេ ទេវាថាមិនអីទេ អាឯងទៅបង្ហាញខ្ឡួនទៅ រួចដើរតួ ដូចអាកុយទៅវាស្រេចហើយ ស្អីៗស្រេចតែអាញ់វើយ ឯងឆ្កែល្អអ្នកណាគេកាប់ស៊ីនោះ។ គេទុកឲ្យចាំផ្ទះទៀត
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