Cambodia Tells Foreign States to Butt Out Over Hun Sen's Crackdown
RFA | 2 June 201
Cambodian
opposition party deputy leader Kem Sokha (C) greets supporters during a protest
near the Phnom Penh municipal court, July 16, 2014.
AFP
Prime Minister
Hun Sen’s government lashed out Thursday at other countries that have expressed
concern about Cambodia’s deepening political crisis, saying they are trying to
meddle in the internal affairs of the Southeast Asian nation.
“The Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation is surprised by such
interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign state that has only carried
out the same rules of legal and judicial procedures [that are] also in effect
in [those] states,” the ministry wrote in a press release.
The ministry’s
release follows a call U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry placed to Cambodian
Foreign Minister Prak Sakhon earlier this week, RFA’s Khmer Service has
learned. While the U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh confirmed the call, they refused
to discuss what was said.
Various foreign
governments including the U.S. and the European Union, as well as the United
Nations, have expressed varying degrees of concern and urged a peaceful end to
the political crisis that has seen Hun Sen’s government try to arrest the top
leaders of opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), forcing one into
exile and another effectively into hiding.
The ministry
criticized those foreign governments, saying they don’t understand [Hun Sen's s]Cambodia or
its laws [of the jungle].
“These reactions reflect the lack of knowledge or the will to pretend not to know the rules of the Criminal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Kingdom of Cambodia,” the press release reads.
The U.S., the
EU and UN have all expressed concern over an extended crackdown on opponents of
Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) that has featured a raid by
heavily-armed police of the opposition headquarters in an attempt to arrest Kem
Sokha, the CNRP’s acting president.
New summons
On Thursday, a
Phnom Penh court issued a new summons for Kem Sokha to appear in court on June
14 regarding to his refusal to appear in court as a witness in May.
Kem Sokha’s
defense team planned a meeting for Friday to examine legal procedures on the
failure-to-appear charge and develop a strategy if the court continues to issue
new summons, sources tell RFA.
Sam Sokong, a
member of the defense team, told RFA that a group of attorneys sent a letter to
the court asking it to stop issuing new summons to Kem Sokha.
“So far, the
prosecutor has not responded to our group, but instead issued a new summons,”
he said. “If the judge has already decided, then we can file a complaint to the
prosecutor regarding the decisions of the investigative judge.”
Cambodian
authorities have also jailed four members of the human rights group ADHOC and
an election official, and have issued a warrant for the arrest of a U.N.
employee as part of the government’s wide-ranging probe into an alleged affair
Kem Sokha had with a young woman named Khom Chandaraty.
The government
has ordered Kem Sokha to appear before the court in connection with at least
two complaints that have been filed related to his alleged affair, but he has
refused as the CNRP and its supporters claim the charges are a trumped up
attempt to damage the CNRP ahead of elections slated for 2017 and 2018.
On May 30, the
EU condemned the “dangerous political escalation” that is gripping the country
as the Hun Sen government pursues members of the CNRP on various cases.
CNRP President
Sam Rainsy has been staying in France or traveling since an arrest warrant was
issued for him in November over a 2008 defamation case, and he was removed from
his office and stripped of his parliamentary immunity. After Sam Rainsy left
the country, the CNRP named Kem Sokha its acting president.
The conflict
with Kem Sokha is just one of the legal cases the government or the ruling CPP
has brought against opposition party members.
Human rights
workers say the entire scandal is a bald attempt by the ruling party to crack
down on its political opponents and silence its critics ahead of the elections.
Hun Sen has ruled the country for 31 years.
Attempt to free
NEC member
In a related
move, National Election Committee Vice Chairman Kuoy Bunroeun says the NEC is
seeking a way to get committee Deputy Secretary-General Ny Chakrya released on
bail so that he can help with the upcoming elections.
Ny Chakrya and
ADHOC staffers Ny Sokha, Nay Vanda, Yi Soksan and Lim Mony are in jail facing
bribery or accessory charges, accused of attempting to pay Khom Chandaraty to
keep quiet about the alleged affair with Kem Sokha.
A warrant was
also issued for the arrest of U.N. staffer Sally Soen.
Kuoy Bunroeun
told RFA that he and a group of lawyers visited Ny Sokha to examine “possible
legal procedures, because the NEC is an independent institution which must
implement the law.”
Ny Chakrya is
in poor health as he is suffering from high blood pressure, intestinal and
respiratory problems.
Sam Sokong, an
attorney for Ny Chkarya told RFA that he is legally qualified for bail.
“We hope the
investigative prosecutor and the appeals court will consider the conditions and
will compare them with the law, and decide properly and fairly in accordance
with the law to give him justice,” he said.
Forensic
analysis
Also on June 2,
the Ministry of Interior formed a new commission to perform forensic analysis
of 170,000 thumbprints affixed to a CNRP petition submitted to King Norodom
Sihamoni on May 30 that seeks his intervention in the case of the Kem Sokha
five.
While the CNRP
welcomed the move, independent political observer Kem Ley said he considered it
a threat to citizens’ rights and an attempt to intimidate them.
“Thumb printing
is a kind of expression of opinion,” he said. “Citizens can express their
opinion by words, by writing, open and secret, but sometimes the government
acts with political anger without considering the impact on the people’s
rights.”
The Khmer people have endured so much sufferings and lost their lands because Vietnam for just not butting out, but installed a puppet regime to further its expansionism.
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