UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferré |
Cambodia: UN experts call for immediate release of five human rights defenders
UN News Centre | 25 January 2017
Two United Nations human rights experts today
called on the Government of Cambodia for the immediate release of five
human rights defenders detained in May 2016 on charges, which they see
as politically motivated.
In November 2016, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention ruled their detention to be ‘arbitrary.’
“The use of criminal provisions as a pretext to suppress and prevent the
legitimate exercise of the right to freedom of expression and to
silence human rights defenders is incompatible with article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which has been signed by Cambodia,” said
the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Cambodia,
Rhona Smith, in a news release issued by the Office of the UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).
Ms. Smith recalled that, on 11 May 2016, a group of UN human rights
experts sent a follow-up joint urgent appeal to the Cambodian Government
on the cases of the five detainees, but has not received any response
to date.
The experts requested detailed information on the legal basis for the
detention of four staff of human rights NGO Cambodian Human Rights and
Development Association (ADHOC) –Lim Mony, Ny Vanda, Ny Sokha and Yi
Soksan – as well as the Deputy Secretary General of the National
Election Committee and former ADHOC staff member, Ny Chakrya.
“As a party to the ICCPR, Cambodia is obliged to respect freedom of
expression and the right to a fair trial, which entails a prompt and
fair trial within a reasonable period of time or release,” Ms. Smith
stressed.
“With so much effort and resources invested in improving the functioning
of the judiciary, which had begun to see improvements in some respects,
all that is lost with these cases,” she cautioned. “They have damaged
even further the standing of the Cambodian judiciary, which according to
studies commands the least respect of the public among all the State
institutions.”
The Special Rapporteur's call was also endorsed by human rights expert
Sètondji Roland Adjovi, who currently heads the UN Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention.
Special Rapporteurs and independent experts are appointed by the
Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council to examine and report back on a
specific human rights theme or a country situation. The positions are
honorary and the experts are not UN staff, nor are they paid for their
work.
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