The Phnom Penh Post

Small celebratio­ns planned for Int’l Human Rights Day

- Niem Chheng

THE UN in Cambodia, local NGOs and the government’s Cambodian Human Rights Committee (CHRC) will observe Human Rights Day online and in small groups following instances of Covid-19 community transmissi­on last week.

UN in Cambodia staff said they will celebrate human rights day virtually, with the theme The Right to Create (a better world post-Covid-19), where human rights are placed at the heart of the recovery.

The theme was selected to aspire that every child, woman and man may truly enjoy the rights and freedoms enshrined in the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights 72 years ago, said Pauline Tamesis, resident coordinato­r for the UN in Cambodia.

She said the events will be held in partnershi­p with the Delegation of the European Union to Cambodia and the Swedish embassy.

“The digital campaign to celebrate human rights day in Cambodia will be released throughout the month of December and will feature the work of talented artists, musicians, performers and dancers based on a participat­ory process of art production into a musical-visual experience,” she said in an email.

Globally, celebratio­ns of Human Rights Day are being held being under the shadow of the Covid-19 pandemic and focus on the need to “Build Back Better” with human rights being central to rebuilding the world economy. The ceremonies aim to reaffirm the importance of human rights and highlight the need for global solidarity and interconne­ctedness with a shared vision of humanity, Thamesis said.

CHRC spokesman Chin Malin said: “In the past, we gathered and issued messages to educate the public about human rights. Due to the Covid

19 situation, there will be no gathering this year. Instead, we will release educationa­l videos about human rights, including a message from the CHRC president about the current human rights situation in Cambodia.”

Last week, the Phnom Penh Municipal Hall rejected a request from local and internatio­nal NGOs seeking permission­s to hold an event in the capital’s Freedom Park with 1500 participan­ts.

Sotha Ros, senior adviser for the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee (CHRAC), a coalition representi­ng local NGOs, said on December 6 that the organisati­ons agreed with the municipal administra­tion to postpone the mass gathering. Celebratio­ns on the day of the memorial would now be conducted by individual NGOs in small groups so as to abide by Covid-19 preventati­ve measures.

The originally planned mass gathering will be delayed but will still go ahead, Ros said. Organisers are set to meet with municipal hall officials again on December 15 to discuss plans for assembling at Freedom Park on December 20.

“We don’t want to miss com

memorating this important day because human rights pertain to all of us and it’s a basis for our country’s developmen­t. Cambodia endured a protracted human rights tragedy – for three decades – and we must remember this. If the Covid-19 situation is not too serious, we should continue with our plan to gather.

“The Covid-19 problem will not go away entirely soon – it could be any where – and it’s important that we remain v igilant, [but] we a lso should not let Covid-19 hinder t he developmen­t of our countr y. We can be cautious, but if we are too afraid of Covid-19, ever y t hing will be paralysed, not only in terms of human rights celebratio­ns, but a ll ot her socia l developmen­t as well,” Ros said.

Meanwhile, the US embassy in Phnom Penh is dedicating December for “Democracy and Human Rights” while celebratin­g 70 years of US-Cambodia diplomatic relations. The topic was selected in connection with UN Human Rights Day on December 10.

The theme elicited a reaction from justice ministry spokesman Malin, who last week said the topic was im

pertinent to the situation in Cambodia, in light of the current Covid-19 outbreak.

In response v ia an email to The Post, US embassy spokesman Chad Roedemeier said since the pandemic began, the US had donated more than $11 million in Covid-19 -related assistance to Cambodia, much more than any ot her countr y.

He said the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other US health agencies have longstandi­ng partnershi­ps with t he Cambodian Ministr y of Health, including programmes to develop sur veillance and contact-tracing capacities.

“Our partnershi­p with the Cambodian people is multidimen­sional. In fact, even during the pandemic, t he United States has contribute­d $700,000 to meet emergency needs in communitie­s impacted by significan­t flooding,” he said.

Since 1992, the US has invested more than $1 billion in Cambodia in programmes promoting health, education, improved agricultur­e, environmen­tal protection and human rights, Roedemeier said.

 ?? HEAN RANGSEY ?? Human Right Day Celebratio­n in Phnom Penh’s Russey Keo district on December 10 last year.
HEAN RANGSEY Human Right Day Celebratio­n in Phnom Penh’s Russey Keo district on December 10 last year.

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