Cambodia crackdown casting ‘dark shadow’, Asian lawmakers warn
An ongoing crackdown against
opposition politicians and activists in Cambodia has cast a “dark
shadow” ahead of upcoming elections and is part of a wider authoritarian
“disease” infecting the region, Southeast Asian politicians warned on
Monday.
The damning assessment comes as
Cambodia plans to hold nationwide polls next year in what some have
warned could be the country’s last chance of seeing genuine democracy
take root.
Cambodians are facing grave threats to their fragile democratic institutions
Filipino lawmaker Tomasito Villarin
Cambodia has been ruled by strongman
premier Hun Sen for more than three decades. His reign has brought
stability and growth but been criticised as corrupt and autocratic.
The country’s once fractured opposition
took many by surprise in 2013 when it united to win 55 seats in
parliament, an unprecedented move that rattled Hun Sen, a man unused to
losing at the ballot box.
At a press conference in Bangkok on
Monday, regional lawmakers said Hun Sen’s administration has been
hitting back ahead of the 2018 polls with measures to cripple the
opposition’s ability to contest his party.
Asean Parliamentarians for Human
Rights, a group made up of former and serving Southeast Asian lawmakers,
said Hun Sen has “created a climate of fear, which casts a dark shadow
over all of Cambodian society” adding that there was “an ongoing assault
on parliamentary democracy”.
Recent examples they cited included
multiple opposition parliamentarians either jailed or facing court
proceedings; recent legislation making it easier to dissolve opposition
parties; physical attacks on lawmakers by members of the security forces
and the ongoing detention of rights workers.
“Cambodians are facing grave threats to
their fragile democratic institutions,” Filipino lawmaker Tomasito
Villarin told reporters in Bangkok, adding that court cases or the
threat of legal action was used “like a Damocles sword” to stifle
opponents.
Charles Santiago, a serving lawmaker in
Malaysia, said attacks on the political opposition in Cambodia were
part of “a new disease sweeping across Southeast Asia”.
Examples he cited included recent
sedition charges brought against lawmakers in Malaysia and the arrest of
a prominent senator and government critic in the Philippines.
Former Thai lawmaker Kraisak Choonhaven
said his own country had seen a similar descent into autocracy since
the military’s 2014 coup.
“We are being buried alive under
authoritarian laws against democracy which each day are piling up higher
and higher,” he told reporters.
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