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| LICADHO official Am Sam Ath (inside circle) is shown getting attacked by security forces as he observed a land-rights protest, Oct. 10, 2016. |
Cambodian Rights Official Tries the Bait-and-Switch with U.N. Special Rapporteur
RFA | 11 October 2016
Rhona Smith, the U.N. special
rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Cambodia, got an earful from the
country’s top human rights official on Tuesday, only he wasn’t talking about
the situation in Cambodia.
Cambodian Human
Rights Commission President Keo Remy said he told Smith that the U.N. needs to
examine Syria instead of concerning itself with Cambodia.
“We are strongly concerned about
Syria,” he told RFA’s Khmer Service. “The Syrian people are waiting for the
solution. However, the security council of the United Nations meeting was equal
to zero, so we are really concerned about this matter.”
Smith’s remit,
however, is Cambodia, where critics of the government are often jailed, forced
into exile, are beaten, or die under mysterious circumstances.
She refused to be
distracted by the bait-and-switch tactic of Keo Remy, who is a member of the
ruling Cambodian People’s Party and a secretary of state to the Council of
Ministers.
“We are concerned
about a lot of things related to the human rights situation, and we continue to
talk about this with ministers in our mission to Cambodia,” she said.
For examples Smith
need look no further back than Monday when the Phnom Penh Municipal Court
jailed opposition party lawmaker Um Sam An for two years and six months and
security forces attacked demonstrators protesting land grabs in Cambodia.
Cambodia National
Rescue Party (CNRP) lawmaker Um Sam An was sentenced to a two-year-and-six-month
jail term and a 4 million riel (U.S. $976) fine for inciting discrimination and
inciting social instability.
The charges arose
from Um Sam An’s accusations that the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) had
failed to stop land encroachment by Vietnam and used improper maps to demarcate
the border between the two former colonies of France.
Also on Monday, Doun Penh district
security forces attacked the demonstrators who carried lotus flowers, banged
drums, waived the national flag and unfurled banners demanding a fair solution
to the land-grab issue.
Protestors and
human rights observers told RFA’s Khmer Service the attacks were a surprise.
Am Sam Ath, a
senior coordinator for the rights group LICADHO, was monitoring the event when
he was severely beaten, suffering blows to the face, neck and head.
Smith began a
10-day visit to Cambodia on Monday to observe the situation in the country,
where political tensions have been rising this year ahead of local commune elections
in 2017 and parliamentary polls in 2018.
Smith, a British
academic, is scheduled to meet with NGOs, labor unions, the land-conflict
communities and others who say the government is restricting the people’s
political rights.

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