Political intimidation, oppression, beatings: welcome to today's Cambodia, refugees
Sydney Morning Herald | 26 May 2016
Bangkok: The Turnbull government is attempting to
salvage Australia's $55 million agreement to send refugees to Cambodia
at a time when the country's leader, Hun Sen, has launched the worst
crackdown on freedoms in recent memory.
Australian officials on Nauru have convinced two Iranian refugees to take a one-way ticket to Phnom Penh by portraying the south-east Asian nation as a kind of tropical utopia with no violent crime, refugee advocates say.
But
Cambodia's security forces are behind escalating political
intimidation, the suppression of political expression and restrictions
on freedom of assembly, according to opposition figures and human rights
groups.
Cambodia National Rescue Party assembly
members Kung Sophea and Nhay Chamraoen at a Bangkok hospital after the
October attack in Phnom Penh. Photo: Human Rights Watch
In a report released on Thursday,
Human Rights Watch linked Mr Hun Sen's bodyguard unit to an attack
outside Cambodia's parliament last October in which two opposition MPs
were dragged from their cars and beaten, kicked and stomped unconscious.
The New York-based organisation detailed a cover-up to protect those
who planned and organised the attack while three junior soldiers who
were put on trial refused to identify them.
"From start to finish
the assault had all the hallmarks of an operation carried out by
Cambodian state security forces," Human Rights Watch said, adding it was
brazen even in a country where for decades security forces have been
responsible for harassment, threats, arbitrary arrests, prosecutions and
physical attacks against political opponents, civil society activists
and anyone deemed critical of the ruling party.
A demonstrator holds a candle in support
of detained human rights activists in Phnom Penh on Monday. Photo: AP
Mr Hun Sen's personal unit has long been notorious for serious human rights violations, including a 1997 grenade attack on an opposition rally that killed at least 16 and injured more than 150.
Those detained include human rights investigators, opposition MPs, student representatives and environmental activists.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, left,
shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the ASEAN-Russia
summit in Sochi, Russia, on May 20. Photo: AP
Youth activists aligned with Mr Hun Sen's ruling Cambodian People's Party have whipped up an
alleged sex scandal involving Kem Sokha, deputy president of the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, and a young hairdresser.
The
youths demanded that Mr Kem Sokha face legal consequences for the
affair that was purportedly exposed in recordings published on-line,
while police arrested four members of the local human rights group Adhoc and a member of the National Election Committee, all of whom were accused of bribing the hairdresser to deny the affair.
When Ou Virak, head of the Future Forum policy institute and a respected political commentator, described the scandal as a political confection he was sued for defamation.
Police block human rights activists during their candlelight vigil in Phnom Penh on Monday. Photo: AP
The United Nations human rights agency described the arrests as "politically motivated persecutions" and pointed to "woefully flawed due process".
Five
officials of Mr Kem Sokha's party, including two MPs, are also in jail
on various charges while the party's president Sam Rainsy remains in
Paris, fearful of returning to Phnom Penh to face defamation and other
charges.
Sebastian Strangio, an Australian analyst and author of Hun Sen's Cambodia, said the
crackdown reached a new low on May 9 when eight human rights defenders
were arrested merely for the unauthorised wearing of black T-shirts.
Human rights activists light candles at
Monday's protest in Phnom Penh. Human Rights Watch and Cambodian human
rights groups have decried increasing persecution of dissent in the
country. Photo: AP
Though the group were later released, Strangio wrote in the Phnom Penh Post
that the arrests were a typical example of Cambodia's paranoid politics
where there is a tendency to see any stirring of opposition, however
small, as a threat to social cohesion and national survival.
"For
more than two decades Hun Sen has deftly alternated periods of pressure
with periods of calm in just the right balance to cripple his opponents
and maintain the grudging support of foreign donor governments," he
wrote. "But while the frequency remains the same, the amplitude is
rising."
Mr Hun Sen, a former commander of the murderous Khmer
Rouge who defected to Vietnam in the late 1970s, has remained in power
for more than three decades.
In long rambling speeches on national television he has compared himself to great Cambodian historical figures.
Early in May, state officials ordered Cambodia's media to use Mr Hun Sen's official titles in the opening line of any print, radio or television articles about him.
Mr
Hun Sen's title is Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techno Hun Sen, which
according to Associated Press translates into "princely exalted supreme
great commander of gloriously victorious troops".
Only five
refugees on Nauru have agreed to resettle in Cambodia since then
immigration minister Scott Morrison signed the controversial agreement
with Cambodia at a ceremony toasted with champagne in late 2014.
Three of them have returned to their countries of origin despite having well founded fears of persecution there and Fairfax Media has revealed that the two remaining in Phnom Penh are deeply unhappy and want to quit the country.
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