A crowd of dictators is coming to Southern California
On
Monday and Tuesday, Obama will meet heads of state from the 10 Assn. of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries at the Sunnylands estate in
Rancho Mirage, marking the first U.S.-ASEAN summit to be held on
American soil. Obama will focus on deepening political and economic ties
to the region, primarily to bolster his Trans-Pacific Partnership trade
agreement and form buffers against China’s growing regional clout.
Yet
human rights groups have noted that only three participating countries —
Indonesia, the Philippines, and arguably Singapore, a de facto
one-party state — will be represented by elected leaders. They have
raised concerns that the meeting could serve as an endorsement of
repressive regimes.
“President Obama knows that human rights are
under assault in Southeast Asia; the question is whether he’s going to
say or do something about it,” John Sifton, Asia advocacy director at
Human Rights Watch, said in a statement on Wednesday. “The risk is that
the Sunnylands summit will empower and embolden ASEAN leaders who have
been responsible for jailing journalists, cracking down on peaceful
protesters and dismantling democratic institutions after coups.”
Here’s a list of the authoritarian leaders who will attend:
Hun Sen, Cambodia
Hun
Sen, 62, has ruled Cambodia for 30 years, making him Asia’s longest
serving ruler. A former commander in the Khmer Rouge — a murderous
regime that killed nearly a quarter of the country’s population in the
1970s — his security forces have imprisoned critics, executed political
opponents and embarked on systematic campaigns of torture, killing and
land confiscation. He has said he wants to lead till he’s 90.
When
Secretary of State John F. Kerry met with Hun Sen in January, he
praised Cambodia’s recent economic growth but also admonished the
Cambodian government on its human rights record, saying that
improvements would be necessary to “to fulfill the potential” of
bilateral relations with the U.S..
Prayuth Chan-ocha, Thailand
Since
Prayuth, 61, took power in a military coup in 2014, he has shuttered
outspoken media and detained activists for the slightest acts of
dissent. He has also burnished a reputation as an eccentric strongman,
replete with long, nonsensical televised rants. In the fall, he told an
audience that he once doused himself in holy water to ward off curses
from opponents.
Although the U.S. still looks to Thailand as an
ally, Prayuth has taken a sharp turn toward Beijing — last year, Bangkok
formally handed at least two Chinese dissident refugees and 100
persecuted Uighur Muslims back to China, where rights groups say they
could face unjust imprisonment and torture.
Najib Razak, Malaysia
Najib,
62, Malaysia’s Prime Minister since 2009, passed a controversial new
security law in December that gives him unchecked powers to crack down
on all perceived threats to “socio-political stability,” possibly
including protests. Last summer, he was embroiled in a major financial
scandal after he failed to account for $700 million in his bank account,
raising concerns that he embezzled the money from a state fund.
Hassanal Bolkiah, Brunei
Since
1968, Bolkiah, 67, has been the sultan and leader of Brunei, a tiny,
conservative, Sunni Muslim nation on the island of Borneo. As the
absolute monarch of an oil-rich state, he is one of the world’s
wealthiest men, with an estimated net worth of $20 billion (in 2009, he
reportedly spent $21,000 on a haircut).
In 2014, Bolkiah put the
country under sharia criminal law, decreeing that citizens can be put to
death for blasphemy and insulting verses of the Koran. Adultery and
homosexuality are punishable by stoning. This past December, he banned
celebrations of Christmas in public spaces including city streets and
shopping malls, warning that celebrators could face five years in jail.
Thein Sein, Myanmar
Myanmar’s
opposition National League for Democracy party, led by Nobel laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi, won a landslide election victory in November. Yet the
summit was planned before her victory, and Thein Sein, an unelected
former military officer who has helped oversee Myanmar’s recent
democratic reforms, will be representing the country at Sunnylands. He
will step down in late March.
Choummaly Sayasone, Laos
Choummaly,
79, the head of the Lao People's Revolutionary Party — the landlocked
country’s only legal party — presides over one of the world’s most
repressive states. The communist government censors the Internet,
detains activists without due process and strictly censors the media.
Journalists can be sentenced to 15 years in prison for writing critical
reports.
Choummaly recently bought a house with a $615,000 garden,
according to a report by Radio Free Asia, a U.S. government-funded news
service. (In 2013, the country’s per capita income was $1,450). The
party replaced Choummaly as its top leader during a twice-a-decade party
congress last month, and he will soon step down after almost a decade
in power.
Nguyen Tan Dung, Vietnam
Dung,
66, is one of the most powerful leaders in Vietnam’s ruling Communist
Party, along with General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong. Over two five-year
terms as prime minister, he has gained a reputation as a pro-business
reformer and champion of closer ties with the U.S.. In January, he was
sidelined at a Communist Party internal election, leaving Trong as the
party’s top official.
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