Cambodia signs pact to renew UN human rights presence
AP / Washington Post | 20 December 2016
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia has agreed to let the U.N. human
rights agency keep an office in the country for another two years, its
foreign ministry announced Tuesday.
The agreement with the U.N.
High Commissioner for Human Rights has been renewed every two years
since 1993, but Cambodia let it expire last December over concern the
U.N. agency was interfering in domestic political affairs. The agency
monitors human rights developments and has been critical of Prime
Minister Hun Sen’s government.
The foreign ministry’s
announcement noted that the memorandum of understanding, signed Monday,
follows principles in the U.N.’s charter about it not authorizing U.N.
intervention in a state’s domestic affairs. Cambodia had sought mention
of non-intervention in the new pact, but it was unclear if it was in the
text, which was not available.
The announcement said the
Cambodian government was committed to its partnership with the United
Nations and to enforcement of the agreement with a view to further
strengthening the rule of law and fostering the protection of human
rights.
Cambodia had threatened to close down the agency’s office if agreement was not reached by Dec. 30.
Foreign
Minister Prak Sokhonn in November had released a letter he wrote to
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights,
accusing his agency of abusing its mandate and its representatives of
behaving disrespectfully toward the sovereignty of Cambodia.
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