CNRP Not Allowed to Meet With Elected Officials in Prison
Cambodia Daily | 22 June 2016
Ten opposition lawmakers were barred from
meeting three elected officials at Phnom Penh’s Prey Sar prison on
Tuesday, with prisons authorities saying they should have sought
permission from the courts because criminal cases against each remain
open.
A spokesman for the court, however, said
no such permission was needed and that such visits did not interfere
with court procedures.
More than 20 CPP critics—many of them
opposition officials and activists—have been jailed over the past year,
and CNRP lawmaker Eng Chhay Eang and his group were hoping to meet all
the opposition figures to check on their health and living situations.
They were allowed inside to meet with 15
party members and activists, spending more than an hour talking with
them in a meeting room, but were not allowed to inspect their cells,
Mr. Chhay Eang said.
They were also not allowed to see Senator
Hong Sok Hour, lawmaker Um Sam An or Seang Chet, a commune councillor
from Kompong Cham province, who are all still awaiting trial, with
authorities issuing a letter saying that the visits could affect the
judicial process.
After leaving the prison, Mr. Chhay Eang
said that the prisoners they did meet—including Meach Sovannara, a U.S.
citizen suing the Cambodian government in a U.S. court for false
imprisonment over his 20-year sentence for “insurrection”—were mostly in
good health.
The opposition party would nevertheless
send a request to the Interior Ministry to make a doctor available to
its imprisoned members and to create a smoke-free area for them to live
in, Mr. Chhay Eang said. He said the opposition figures had been
separated from each other inside the prison.
“As we know, most of them are living in
different places, and those already sentenced are staying with robbers
and drug detainees,” he said.
He added that it was unreasonable for
authorities to reject the CNRP’s request to meet with party officials
whose trials are still ongoing, and that politics was likely at play.
“I don’t understand what the rule is, but we are only visiting them. Why is it so complicated?” he said.
Ly Sophanna, a municipal court
spokesman, said the court would not have objected to the delegation
visiting the prisoners but that decisions about granting access to
prisoners were up to prison officials.
“To visit, they must have permission
from the prison,” he said, adding that the court could only offer advice
to prison officials on specific cases.
“A visit would not affect court procedures,” he added.
Nuth Savna, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry’s prisons department, could not be reached.
No comments:
Post a Comment