UN rights envoy ‘saddened’ by situation in Cambodia
Notes that poor members of Cham Muslim community struggling with 'access to clean water, sanitation and healthcare'
Anadolu Agency | 19 October 2016
PHNOM PENH
The United Nations human rights
envoy to Cambodia has wrapped up her third mission by lamenting the
deterioration of the political situation in a speech peppered with references
to the upcoming 25th anniversary of the Paris Peace Accords.
The accords marked the official end of the
Cambodian-Vietnamese War in 1991, paving the way for Cambodia to establish a
new constitution and hold UN-backed elections two years later.
The anniversary is to be held
Oct. 23 -- a public holiday [for a few years, this Beastly regime dropped PPA as a publc holiday, only to reinsert it within the past several years] -- when the opposition Cambodia National Rescue
Party is hoping to hold a gathering in the capital.
The situation today, according to
Smith, is one in which she is “saddened by the deterioration in the political
situation” since her last mission in March.
This time, police beat three
people --including a human rights monitor -- during a World habitat Day march
on the first day of her mission.
Smith said she had also visited
two overcrowded men’s and women’s prisons; a detention center where homeless
people are swept up off the streets and held “against their will,” and met with
indigenous communities, where she noted that poor members of the Cham Muslim
community are struggling with “access to clean water, sanitation and
healthcare”.
At the prisons, Smith said she
was refused meetings with five human rights workers awaiting trial for
assisting the mistress of an opposition leader, and an opposition senator, who
is accused of posting a fake Cambodia-Vietnam border treaty on his Facebook
page.
“With respect to the five
detained individuals from ADHOC, I reiterate my call at the UN Human Rights
Council that their charges should be proven or they should be released
immediately with their case closed,” Smith said after claiming that the law is,
in many cases, “applied in an apparently discriminatory or politicized manner”.
In response to a question, Smith conceded that
there is “no doubt that many elements of the Paris Peace Accords are not fully
fulfilled in Cambodia”.
Council of Ministers spokesman
Phay Siphan told Anadolu Agency on Wednesday that Smith should “put the blame
on her own organization, the UN”.
“It was the UN’s job as UNTAC to
disarm the Khmer Rouge soldiers, and they failed to encourage the Khmer Rouge
to participate in the general elections. Besides that, the wishes from the
signatories have been formulated in the constitution already,” he said.
As for the political situation,
Siphan denied any deterioration.
Self-exiled opposition leader Sam
Rainsy has “run away from home,” he said, and the ruling Cambodian People’s
Party doesn’t have “any problem at all, except the persons who are involved in
wrong activities that abuse the law.”
Smith's concerns about the failure to uphold the
basic tenets of the accords coincided with the release of a separate statement
by a consortium of NGOs on Wednesday, which said they were “deeply concerned”
about the current climate in Cambodia.
“The past year and a half has
been marked by an increasing disregard for the democratic principles enshrined
in the Paris Peace Accords,” the groups said.
“As Cambodia looks to elections
in 2017 and 2018, there remains concerns that the situation, if neglected, will
decline further, leading to a complete collapse of the settlement agreed in
Paris a quarter of a century ago.”
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