Cambodian PM wants US to amend deportation agreement
AP / Washington Post | 27 April 2017
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia’s prime minister said Thursday that
he wants to amend a 15-year-old pact with Washington that calls for
Cambodians with permanent resident status in the United States to be
repatriated if they have been convicted of a felony crime.
Prime
Minister Hun Sen said at a school graduation that he has been urging the
United States to review the agreement, which calls for deporting the
Cambodians after they have served their prison terms. More than 500 have
been sent back so far.
His approach comes at a period of cooling
relations between Cambodia and the United States. China is Cambodia’s
main political and economic ally, and relations between the two
countries have grown even closer as Beijing tries to project its
influence in Southeast Asia.
Critics of the deportation policy
say many of those convicted fell into crime as a result of social
dislocation suffered as refugees after living under the genocidal 1970s
Khmer Rouge regime. Returnees are seen as having difficulty
reintegrating into Cambodian society as many have spent most of their
lives in the United States.
Hun Sen, who has led Cambodia for
more than three decades, said Thursday that the agreement should be
reviewed on “humanitarian” grounds because it splits up families settled
in the United States. Calls to review the act were first raised last
year by Cambodian officials, who asked that the agreement be
renegotiated or suspended in order to ease the reintegration problem.
U.S.
Embassy spokesman Jay Raman said Thursday that Washington’s response to
Hun Sen’s remarks is the same as to those earlier calls: The
repatriations can be discussed during joint talks allowed for under the
agreement. Raman said such talks were expected in the coming months.
The
2002 agreement between Cambodia and the United States allowed for the
implementation of the Clinton-era Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, meant to combat illegal
immigration and terrorism.
Until recently, Cambodia was largely reliant on foreign aid from the
West to support its economy, and attempted to win favor with Washington
and others who were critical of his human rights record. Hun Sen
particularly took advantage of Washington’s desire for allies in the
global war against terrorism in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks
against the United States.
Chinese aid and investment, along with
a non-interference policy that doesn’t criticize Hun Sen’s human rights
shortcomings, has inclined the Cambodian leader to move closer to
Beijing.
Cambodia in January informed the United States that it was canceling an
annual joint military exercise this year, even though planning for the
event had already begun. And this month, the U.S. announced that
Cambodia had canceled a nine-year-old U.S. Navy humanitarian mission to
the country that had been meant to build projects such as maternity
wards and school bathrooms.
No comments:
Post a Comment