The Phnom Penh Post

Government agrees to renew MoU with UN

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the principle “shall not prejudice the applicatio­n of enforcemen­t measures” under the charter’s Chapter 7, which deals with action concerning threats to the peace, breaches of the peace and acts of aggression.

OHCHR country representa­tive for Cambodia Wan-Hea Lee had previously told the Post that the government had wanted the MoU to include a select reference to the section. UN negotiator­s, meanwhile, had said they would include the passage, but only if it were accompanie­d by the rest of the principles contained in the charter, which establish the UN’s role in protecting and promoting human rights.

Via email from Geneva, OHCHR media officer Elizabeth Throssell would say only that the parities had reached “a mutually acceptable agreement that takes into account the positions of both sides and preserves the integrity of the MOU, which largely underpins the agency’s mandate in Cambodia”.

“We welcome the fact that we were able to arrive at this agreement and look forward to continuing to offer our co-operation with the Cambodian Government to foster the promotion and protection of human rights in Cambodia,” Throssell said.

Though the renewal of MoUs with the OHCHR is usually a matter of routine, the govern- ment this year refused to renew the MoU, which lapsed last December.

Relations between the UN and government dived in April after a court issued an arrest warrant for a local UN staff member in connection with opposition leader Kem Sokha’s alleged affair.

Though the government belatedly acknowledg­ed the staffer’s immunity, tensions have continued, with government officials repeatedly lashing out at UN criticism over the persecutio­n of government critics, saying it amounted to interferen­ce in the Kingdom’s affairs.

In its statement yesterday, the Foreign Ministry said the MoU would extend the OHCHR’s “legitimate operationa­l presence” in Cambodia for two years. “This renewal affirms the [government’s] unequivoca­l commitment to upholding and advancing principles of respect for fundamenta­l freedoms and democracy as enshrined in the Constituti­on of the Kingdom of Cambodia,” it reads.

Contacted yesterday, government spokesman Phay Siphan said the new agreement would “strengthen human rights” while stopping to UN from meddling in the country.

“It is clear that the officers of the UN who come to work in Cambodia have no right to interfere in the internal affairs of Cambodia. It is very important,” Siphan said.

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