The Phnom Penh Post

Aussie MP calls for sanctions

- Mech Dara

ASENIOR Cambodian bureaucrat has slammed as “ineffectiv­e, silly and ill-intentione­d”, an Australian MP’s appeal on Tuesday to the Australian Federal Government to impose sanctions on a number of top officials.

This came after the Labour lawmaker, Julian Hill, appealed to the Australian federal government to slap a travel ban and freeze the assets of some top brass in Cambodian government.

On Monday, Hill told a parliament­ary meeting in Canberra that it’s time for Australia to take action, following Cambodia’s allegedly “worsening political situation”.

He referred to a string of political events that have put the Kingdom under the spotlight, namely the “house arrest” of Kem Sokha, the former president of the court-dissolved Cambodia National Rescue Party.

Others were the allegedly “sham” general election that resulted in the establishm­ent of a one-party National Assembly, and the imprisonme­nt of filmmaker James Ricketson – who, Hill deemed, was convicted based on “fabricated charges”.

At the meeting, Hill named the Cambodian officia ls to be slapped with sanctions as Hun Manet, commander of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces; Hun To, Prime Minister Hun Sen’s nephew; Dy Vichea, Hun Sen’s sonin-law; Kong Vibol, director-genera l of the Ta xation Department; and Kim Santepheap, undersecre­tar y of state at t he Justice Ministr y.

He claimed t hat t he officia ls had frequently travelled to Austra lia, have considerab­le assets in t he countr y, and t herefore the sanctions would affect t hem significan­tly.

However, Secretary of state and Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan called Hill’s appeal “silly, ineffectiv­e and ill-intentione­d”.

“He’s just a [parliament] member who is not aware of the realities in Cambodia. It would be useless to entertain the appeal because it only comes from one person,” Siphan said, noting that Cambodia still has good relations with Australia.

Calling the appeal silly, Siphan said: “It’s just his ill intentions against the Cambodian government.”

Analyst Meas Nee said whether or not the MP’s appeal could be effective depends on the participat­ion of others in the Australian parliament and the mechanism that followed.

“If there is only one MP who raises [the appeal] and no subsequent mechanism to follow up, such [an appeal] will be futile. It will be ineffectiv­e as the government has said.”

Earlier on Friday, Hill posted a letter on his Facebook page calling on the federal government – via the newly appointed Minister for Foreign Affairs Marisa Payne – to “formally call upon the Cambodian government to establish a commission of inquiry capable of undertakin­g an independen­t, impartial, effective and transparen­t investigat­ion into analyst Kem Ley’s death”.

Meanwhile, Payne yesterday unveiled sanctions against five officers in Myanmar’s powerful military who are accused of overseeing violence against members of the Rohingya ethnic group.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Tax Department head Kong Vibol speaks at a meeting in Phnom Penh in 2016. An Australian MP wants sanctions imposed on several top brass of the Cambodian government.
HENG CHIVOAN Tax Department head Kong Vibol speaks at a meeting in Phnom Penh in 2016. An Australian MP wants sanctions imposed on several top brass of the Cambodian government.

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