The Phnom Penh Post

Gov’t rights head meets envoy

- Ben Sokhean and Leonie Kijewski

THE interim representa­tive of the UN’s High Commission­er for Human Rights in Cambodia met yesterday with the head of the Cambodian government’s rights body, voicing concerns about the threatened closure of a prominent outspoken local NGO.

Kata Orn, a spokespers­on for the government’s Cambodian Human Rights Committee, said President Keo Remy met with Simon Walker, the newly appointed interim chairman of the UN body at the committee’s headquarte­rs in Phnom Penh.

During the 40-minute meeting, Walker raised concerns about the investigat­ion against the Cambodian Center for Human Rights for allegedly serving foreign interests under the guise of a local NGO.

Last week, Prime Minister Hun Sen said the organisati­on “must close”, and ordered the Interior Ministry to investigat­e.

Walker, Orn said, had stressed that CCHR and OHCHR had worked together in the past. Orn added that authoritie­s hadn’t finished investigat­ing the NGO and that CCHR could “operate as normal” if no proof for the allegation­s were found.

“But if the authority investigat­es and finds that the centre is involved with the problems like the accusation [says], [shutting them] is an implementa­tion of the law,” he said.

CCHR Executive Director Chak Sopheap said yesterday that the organisati­on had not yet received any notice from the Interior Ministry.

In a statement yesterday, Walker said the meeting was “simply a courtesy first meeting” after his arrival in the country two months ago, and added that the two “discussed a whole range of issues of mutual interest, including cooperatio­n with civil society such as CCHR”.

Meanwhile, the human rights network IFEX, a coalition of 119 organisati­ons worldwide, “strongly and unequivoca­lly” condemned the threats against CCHR on Tuesday.

“The accusation­s . . . are part of a broad and insidious global trend of discrediti­ng the legitimate work of groups promoting freedom of expression for all, often through the use of laws designed to limit, rather than enable, space for civil society to flourish,” IFEX Executive Director Annie Game is quoted as saying. “The closure of such a principled and dedicated group as CCHR would be devastatin­g for the safeguard- ing of Cambodians’ rights . . . and would irrevocabl­y add to the climate of censorship that has taken hold.”

A statement from Amnesty Internatio­nal situated the threats in “a widespread and relentless onslaught against civil society” in Cambodia.

“Threats of closure of an associatio­n aimed at silencing yet another independen­t, peaceful voice dedicated to defending human rights will have a chilling effect on the exercise of human rights,” the statement reads.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Keo Remy, head of the government’s Cambodian Human Rights Committee, speaks to the press at an event earlier this year.
FACEBOOK Keo Remy, head of the government’s Cambodian Human Rights Committee, speaks to the press at an event earlier this year.

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