US Passes Resolution Slamming CPP Regime
The Cambodia Daily | 14 September 2016
A U.S. resolution condemning the oppression of Cambodia’s political
opposition and human rights groups passed on Tuesday in Washington as
the U.N. Human Rights Council convened in Geneva to highlight recent
rights abuses in Cambodia and elsewhere.
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s “thuggish regime continues to crack down on
his political opposition and other activists, arresting and beating
those who oppose his rule,” Congressman Ed Royce, House Foreign Affairs
Committee chairman, said on the floor before the vote.
“This systematic persecution of the government’s opposition
completely undermines the legitimacy of upcoming local elections, as
well as the country’s 2018 national elections,” said Mr. Royce, a
California Republican and longtime critic of Mr. Hun Sen.
Meanwhile in Geneva, the U.N. Human Rights Council convened its 33rd
regular session with an agenda that includes the presentation of reports
outlining alleged human rights abuses in Cambodia, which will be
discussed later this month.
In his introductory remarks, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein defended the U.N. body against what he described
as frequent attacks from around the world in response to “credible
allegations of violations” including prosecutions that appear
politically motivated.
“Efforts to duck or refuse legitimate scrutiny raise an obvious
question: What, precisely, are you hiding from us?” Mr. Al Hussein said.
The U.N. human rights office issued a statement last week expressing
its deep concern over the “escalating atmosphere of intimidation of
opposition politicians, their supporters, civil society, and peaceful
demonstrators in Cambodia.” It also said the trial of Mr. Sokha had a
“weak evidentiary basis” and “accompanying procedural flaws.”
The government responded by claiming that the U.N. was attempting to
meddle in Cambodia’s internal affairs and interfere in its judiciary.
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan on Tuesday shrugged off
the U.S. resolution, saying it would have no tangible impact on the
Cambodian government.
“We don’t take that resolution seriously,” Mr. Siphan said,
explaining that it was pushed through by a contingent of U.S.
congressmen who supported the CNRP. “Cambodia has no obligation to abide
by it.”
What many are calling suppression of opposition politicians in Cambodian was simply a matter of punishing criminals, he said.
“They have full rights and freedoms to do politics here, but we have a
few politicians who abuse the law, so they are to sit in front of the
court,” Mr. Siphan said.
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy, currently living in exile to avoid a
two-year prison sentence, said that even if the CNRP had lobbied U.S.
congressmen for the resolution, the American lawmakers had “acted
according to their consciences.”
Asked if the congressmen behind the resolution were CNRP supporters,
he replied: “No, all the concerned U.S. House Representative support
democracy in Cambodia.”
Sophal Ear, associate professor of diplomacy and world affairs at
Occidental College in Los Angeles, noted that the latest resolution
lacked teeth.
“It’s about going on the record, a bit of political persuasion, and
an attempt to influence foreign affairs,” Mr. Ear said in an email. “But
there’s no bite. What do they propose to do? Nothing.”
A spending bill approved by the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee
in July proposes to make U.S. aid to Cambodia next year contingent on an
end to the government’s harassment of the opposition and civil society.
The bill has yet to reach the Senate floor.
Mr. Ear said measures laid out in another bill now being considered
by the U.S. House of Representatives—which would allow the U.S. to
freeze foreigners’ assets and ban their visas if they have committed
gross human rights violations—could be far more effective.
“No more trophy U.S. visas to brag about on Facebook and shopping
trips by the misses for Birkin bags and luxury goods; no more real
estate buying sprees to launder ill-gotten gain,” he said. “It could be a
real game-changer.”
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