Army Would Ensure CNRP Leaders’ Arrests
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CNRP acting president Kem Sokha attends a briefing on voter registration at party headquarters in Phnom Penh this week. Facebook |
General stands ready to arrest CNRP leadership
Phom Peh Post | 31 August 2016
The Kingdom’s armed forces stand ready to arrest the leaders of
Cambodia’s opposition party, one of the country’s highest-ranking
military officers said in video uploaded to social media yesterday.
Four-star General Kun Kim, deputy commander-in-chief of the Royal
Cambodian Armed Forces, said his troops would “enforce the law” if they
receive an order to seize CNRP president Sam Rainsy and his deputy, Kem
Sokha.
The comments followed the Supreme Court setting an appeal hearing
date for Sokha who, like the self-exiled Rainsy, faces several cases
widely considered politically motivated.
Discussing the necessity of “arresting” the pair, he said, “I am a
law enforcer, and the armed forces defend the government. Provided that
there are orders, I must enforce, I must defend the government.”
The general, a close ally of Prime Minister Hun Sen, further said
that if RCAF received orders, it would “guarantee to arrest” the CNRP
leaders.
“Even . . . if we expend flesh and blood, we must enforce the law,”
said the general, who has been labelled the premier’s “axe man” by Human
Rights Watch.
According to the general statute for military personnel, the armed
forces have a duty to manage the “defence of the motherland and the
supreme interests of the nation”, but in “necessary circumstances” can
defend public security and assist citizens.
Speaking yesterday, Kevin Nauen, a senior research fellow at the
Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, said that the military’s
role should be limited to external defence, with police handling court
enforcement.
“Such military involvement in ongoing internal politics runs contrary
to good governance of the security sector, but it also demonstrates a
lack of respect for the role of the police,” Nauen said. “Also . . .
these comments can be taken as an indication that the outcome has
already been decided by high-level authorities and imposed on the
court.”
Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak said all branches of
Cambodia’s security forces could “enforce the law”, provided there was a
court order.
The Supreme Court on Friday will hear an appeal by Sokha’s lawyers over his refusal to submit to summonses for questioning tied to his alleged affair with a hairdresser, a case for which a trial date has already been set.
The attorneys have appealed on the grounds that Sokha has
parliamentary immunity and that his lawyers had submitted valid
explanations about his absences.
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