‘Escalation’ a threat to elections: UN envoy
Phnom Penh Post | 13 October 2016
UN Special Rapporteur to Cambodia for
Human Rights Rhona Smith said yesterday that a recent “escalation” in the
country’s political standoff and limitations on the work of political parties –
as evidenced by the opposition’s boycott of parliament – would raise concerns
over upcoming elections.
Speaking to the Post yesterday
evening, Smith said there was evidence that political parties were increasingly
being restricted in their efforts at engagement, and questions were being
raised over whether elections in 2017 and 2018 would truly be “full and fair”.
What’s more, she
said, the increase in the country’s political tensions had spilled over into
curbs on other human rights despite having no basis in law.
“Of course we are
concerned that many laws are being applied in a way that restricts the freedom
of assembly and association, and those restrictions are not provided for in the
law,” she said.
Referring to recent
revelations of text messages allegedly sent by Prime Minister Hun Sen threatening the opposition with
violence, Smith said statements concerning “violence and bloodshed”
were a matter of concern in any situation. The military’s continued vows to
crack down on any dissent in the country, she added, went against its
constitutional duty to remain impartial.
“The army’s job
should be to defend the country, and not any political party.”
Earlier in the day,
Smith met with acting Cambodia National Rescue Party president Kem Sokha to
assess the “current state of affairs” and to get his views on recent criminal
charges and convictions – including his own, which saw him sentenced to five months in
jail for failing to
honour a court summons. Sokha is currently outside of custody as the case is
still subject to appeal.
“I think there are
a lot of issues to be discussed. The constitution is to be applied correctly,
and the law is to be applied correctly and equally to all people,” she said
upon exiting party headquarters.
Opposition lawmaker
Eng Chhay Eang said the UN official had discussed recent court cases against
CNRP members, and had asked the party for its position on the protection of
ethnic minorities.
The CNRP has faced
accusations of race-baiting in the past with regard to its anti-Vietnamese
rhetoric, and Chhay Eang would only say yesterday that the party had vowed to
implement the Law on Immigration and Nationality to guarantee that all people
living in Cambodia did so legally.
Of the political
situation, he said, Smith told party members “that from the first time [she
came here] up to this visit, the situation has grown more and more serious”.
Smith also held a
meeting with Minister of Social Affairs Vong Soth yesterday to discuss progress
of reforms at Phnom Penh’s
notorious Prey Speu detention
centre.
Ministry spokesman
Em Chan Makara said the minister invited Smith to visit the centre if she
wished, and insisted that despite criticism from the UN Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the centre was being improved.
“The negative
things she heard about Prey Speu are old information, but the centre is
changing and there is a lot of development there,” he added.
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