Thirty-seven Cambodian Americans deported
THIRTY-SEVEN Cambodian Americans arrived in the Kingdom on Thursday following their departure from the US on Tuesday.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said the 37, most of whom are convicted criminals, were deported following immigration court proceedings. Their flight left from Dallas, Texas.
ICE sa id t he 37 had committed various crimes ranging from drug offences, auto theft, resisting arrest, robber y, forger y, child abuse, rape, aggravated assault and murder.
“ERO [Enforcement and Removal Operations] carries out its mission to remove a l iens who present a danger to nationa l securit y or are a risk to public safet y, as well as those who undermine the integrity of our immigration laws with the utmost professiona lism daily, and often in t he face of adversit y,” said ERO acti ng a s s i s t a nt d i r e c t or J e f f r e y Ly nch.
“This most recent removal flight took 35 criminals – many convicted of the most heinous possible crimes – off our streets and made our communities safe,” he added.
Bill Herod, spokesperson for the Khmer Vulnerability Aid Organisation (KVAO), a Cambodian-based NGO which assists deportees during their integration, said on Thursday
the political, historical and societal contexts of each country. He said sovereignty, territorial integrity, non-interference and neutrality should be respected.
“Human problems should be dealt with in the context of the world based on a constructive approach with uniform standards, without confrontation and political agenda, and based on dialogue,” he said, after describing how the Kingdom had managed to improve significantly after overcoming its bitter history.
Political analyst Lao Mong Hay was of the view that the rule of law in a free society matched what was laid out in the Cambodian Constitution.
He said rule of law in Cambodia came from legality normally practised in communist countries, with it being a legacy of the Kingdom’s communist government of the 1980s.
“The constitution provides for an independent judiciary whose one task is to defend the rights and freedoms of the Cambodian people.
“The King is the guarantor of the respect for judicial independence and the Cambodian people’s rights and freedoms as recognised by the constitution,” he said.
Kin Phea, the director of the International Relations Institute at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, said Hun Sen may have been referring to the US and the EU when he said Cambodia’s human right practices were being denigrated.
“The US and the EU seem to be prejudiced against Cambodia. They judge Cambodia due to geopolitics and their vying for power.
“They always talk about human rights, democracy and the rule of law, but they forget the rule of law when Cambodia applies it against those who violated the Kingdom’s laws,” he said.
Meanwhile, people in Europe were preparing to protest against Hun Sen on Friday in front of the UNHRC headquarters to demand democracy in Cambodia.
Tha Yoeung, a Cambodian living in the French city of Lyon, told The Post on Thursday that he had asked for permission to protest and was waiting for the green light from the Geneva authorities.
He said less than 200 people would join the demonstration as it was being held on a workday. He said he had little hope that permission would be granted as the request had been submitted late.
“We will demand that democracy returns to Cambodia because it is currently a country where an opposition party supported by almost 50 per cent of the people was dissolved. All elections held after this dissolution cannot be genuine,” Tha said.
Mong Hay said that while the protest, if it were to happen, may annoy Hun Sen, any confrontation between demonstrators and supporters of the prime minister should be avoided as it would achieve nothing.
Kin Phea said people had the right to protest, but any demonstration would have no influence on Hun Sen and Cambodia.