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HRW Says PM’s Bodyguards Beat Lawmakers
Cambodia Daily | 1 February 2016
In a report released last week, Human Rights Watch (HRW) came to the
predictable—and mostly well-supported—conclusion that Prime Minister Hun
Sen’s government was failing in its duty to protect its people.
In a statement accompanying the World Report 2016, titled “Cambodia: New Waves of Repression,” which summarized the government’s most
egregious rights abuses, the group made one claim that had previously
existed only as rumor and speculation.
HRW wrote that members of Mr. Hun Sen’s personal bodyguard unit were among those who brutally beat two opposition lawmakers in October.
“On October 26-27, following Hun Sen’s public encouragement of
anti-CNRP demonstrations, the prime minister’s bodyguards and others in
civilian clothes brutally assaulted two CNRP parliamentarians outside
the National Assembly,” the statement said.
“In short, all three who turned themselves in physically assaulted
CNRP and are and/or have been bodyguards,” Mr. Adams said via email,
referring to the three men, claiming to be soldiers, who handed
themselves over to authorities in the days following the attacks.
“I think your paper and others have reported this already?”
However, neither The Cambodia Daily, nor any other newspaper has published reports substantiating the claims.
An article published by The Phnom Penh Post following the beatings
noted that an image of one of the confessed attackers had been
circulated online, apparently showing him in a bodyguard uniform.
Another article in the Post connected a leader of the protest during
which the lawmakers were beaten to the PMBU, identifying him as a deputy
commander in the force, but did not link him directly to the beatings.
Mr. Adams said he would send further information about HRW’s
statement by Friday, but did not respond to subsequent emails in time
for press.
Hing Bun Heang, chief of Mr. Hun Sen’s elite bodyguard unit, has
previously denied that any of his men were involved in beating the
lawmakers. Contacted on Sunday, Lieutenant General Bun Heang hung up on a
reporter.
In the wake of the attacks, the government created a committee of
top-level police officials to investigate, appointing two CPP stalwarts
to head the inquiry.
Sok Khemarin, director of the Interior Ministry’s penal police
department, who is also a member of the eight-man investigating
committee, said on Sunday that the three jailed men—Chay Sarith, 33; Mao
Hoeun, 34; and Suth Vanny, 45— were not asked about their unit before
being sent to court.
“I am not clear because…I quickly sent them to court and I did not ask them about details,” he said.
Asked about the claims in the HRW report, Major General Khemarin
said: “You can follow them and say, ‘This is what Human Rights Watch
said,’ but for me I am not clear and I dare not say.”
Meas Chanpiseth, the deputy prosecutor who processed the case against
the three suspects, referred questions about their unit to
Investigating Judge Y Thavareak, who could not be reached.
And while Mr. Chanpiseth said the court was continuing its search for
more attackers, a prominent human rights investigator said the
government’s espoused efforts were insincere.
“I think if the three guys did not turn themselves in, they may not
have found any suspects,” said Am Sam Ath, technical supervisor for
human rights group Licadho, noting that there was plenty of evidence
available to investigators.
“For this case we see cameras, videos clips, a lot of photos that
were posted to Facebook about violence against the opposition
lawmakers,” he said.
But Mr. Sam Ath said the trove of evidence still did not leave him with any certainty as to where the attackers came from.
“It’s not clear if they are bodyguards or not,” he said.
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