Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher declared that "it's time for Hun Sen to go."
US lawmakers raise plight of gov't critics in Cambodia
AP / Daily Mail | 14 July 2016
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. lawmakers
called Thursday for Cambodian leader Hun Sen to cease harassment and
intimidation of the political opposition, days after a prominent
government critic was gunned down in the capital.
The
House Foreign Affairs Committee approved a resolution supporting human
rights and democracy in the Southeast Asian nation, where Hun Sen has
been prime minister for three decades.
Democratic
Rep. Alan Lowenthal called for a defamation charge to be dropped
against opposition leader Sam Rainsy, who is in self-imposed exile.
Lowenthal said Rainsy's deputy, Kem Sokha, is under effective house
arrest in Cambodia and fears for his life. He said he spoke to Kem Sokha
on Wednesday.
A political
analyst and prominent government critic, Kem Lay, was shot dead Sunday
in Phnom Penh, raising accusations of a political conspiracy. Hun Sen
has promised a thorough investigation.
A former Cambodian soldier was charged Wednesday with Kem Lay's murder, purportedly motivated by a money dispute. In an interview with The Associated Press, the accused's wife cast doubt over that explanation.
Lowenthal
said the resolution would send a message to the Cambodian government
"that political violence of any kind will not be tolerated."
Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher declared that "it's time for Hun Sen to go."
He
said some have argued that Hun Sen helped get rid of former Khmer Rouge
leader Pol Pot, but "whatever happened in the past does not justify Hun
Sen's continuing iron-fisted grip."
The
resolution was among a raft of measures swiftly approved by the House
committee Thursday, paving the way for them to be taken up by the full
House. The resolution does not compel any action or sanction by the
executive branch of the U.S. government, which ultimately sets and
carries out foreign policy.
Political
tensions have been rising in Cambodia with legal and other pressures by
the government on Rainsy's Cambodia National Rescue Party ahead of
national elections due in 2018.
No comments:
Post a Comment