The Phnom Penh Post

UN urges gov’t to protect rights

- Leonie Kijewski

THE United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights yesterday urged the Cambodian government to guarantee all political and civil rights ahead of next year’s election, while the government’s Human Rights Committee dismissed allegation­s of wrongdoing.

During the 36th regular session of the Human Rights Council, UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said he was “seriously concerned at the recent arrest of opposition leader Kem Sokha, which appears to have been undertaken without respect for due process guarantees or his parliament­ary immunity”.

Sokha was arrested earlier this month and faces up to 30 years in prison on charges of treason.

Al Hussein also said that “numerous public statements” by Prime Minister Hun Sen and other high-ranking officials about the opposition leader’s alleged guilt seemed to “violate the presumptio­n of innocence and the right to a fair trial”, adding the arrest came shortly after the closure of US-based NGO National Democratic Institute, the shuttering of the Cambodia Daily, and the revocation of licences of numerous radio stations.

But Cambodian Human Rights Committee President Keo Remy stressed the importance of economic developmen­t through stability.

“Unfortunat­ely, political manipulati­on has been persistent­ly conducted against the Royal Government,” he said. “Without peace and stability . . . human rights are only paper left on a bookshelf collecting dust.”

Any connection to the upcoming elections, Remy said, was “unfair”.

Prior to the session, a conglom- eration of civil society organisati­ons urged government­s within the UN to support a Human Rights Council resolution to address the “human rights crisis” and the “escalating crackdown”, which they say takes place in the context of a “marked deteriorat­ion in the civil society and political rights environmen­t over the past two years”.

According to the NGOs, including Human RightsWatc­h and Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists, this deteriorat­ion led to the closure of independen­t media outlets and Sokha’s arrest.

They then list a number of human rights breaches that occurred in the Kingdom over the past two years, including the beating of two opposition parliament­arians in October 2015 by Hun Sen’s Bodyguard Unit; court cases against opposition members; and the detention of the Adhoc 5, who were released in June after a year in prison in a case that is widely seen as political.

The group also points to the assassinat­ion of analyst Kem Ley and ex- pressed concern about references to “colour revolution­s” as well as the depiction of Sokha’s activities as “treason”.

But Remy yesterday said the concerns were illegitima­te. He said the arrest of the opposition leader was justified.

“Some foreign entities have nurtured hostile policies against the Cambodian government,” he said, explaining that this contribute­d to a so-called colour revolution.

Another group of Cambodian NGOs including election watchdog Comfrel, rights group Adhoc and labour rights organisati­on Central, also released a statement yesterday stating they were “deeply disturbed” about the decision to prosecute political party leaders and curtail free press.

They urged the government to “restore a regular and peaceful political environmen­t and allow for the participat­ion of political party leaders, independen­t media and internatio­nal nongovernm­ent organizati­ons during the registrati­on period”.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Cambodian representa­tive Keo Remy (second left) speaks at the 36th regular session of the Human Rights Council at the UN’s office in Geneva yesterday.
FACEBOOK Cambodian representa­tive Keo Remy (second left) speaks at the 36th regular session of the Human Rights Council at the UN’s office in Geneva yesterday.

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