A Change of Guard

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Friday 15 July 2011

FM Hor Namhong summoned the US Charge d'Affaires over WikiLeaks



Cambodia protests over US cable's Khmer Rouge claim

Friday, 15 July 2011
Business Recorder

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia's foreign minister has strongly protested to US officials over a leaked diplomatic cable repeating allegations that he was a former Khmer Rouge prison chief, his department said Friday.

Hor Namhong (pictured) summoned the US Charge d'Affaires in Phnom Penh, Jeff Daigle, on Thursday to complain about the "highly defamatory" 2002 cable, which was released via WikiLeaks this week, the foreign ministry statement said.

In the meeting, the Cambodian asked Daigle "to convey to the US State Department his strong protest" over the cable, "which is full of unacceptable maligned indictment", the ministry said.

The cable cites an "undated, unattributed report" on file at the US embassy, which said Hor Namhong took charge of Boeung Trabek camp in the capital after the brutal communist movement took power in 1975.

"Hor Namhong came back to Cambodia after the Khmer Rouge took over, but was not killed because he was a schoolmate of Ieng Sary," the report said, referring to the regime's ex-foreign minister now on trial for genocide.

Hor Namhong "became head of the Beng Trabek (sic) camp and he and his wife collaborated in the killing of many prisoners," it added.

The minister himself has long said that he and his family were prisoners at a Khmer Rouge camp, and he has successfully sued people in the past for claiming that he had links to the blood-soaked communist movement.

The US embassy in Cambodia confirmed that Daigle met Hor Namhong on Thursday but said it was unable to comment on the content of any allegedly leaked US government documents.

Up to two million people died of overwork and starvation or were executed under the Khmer Rouge, which outlawed religion, property rights, currency and schools during its four-year rule.

A number of the current administration in Cambodia had links to the regime, and Prime Minister Hun Sen himself was mid-level Khmer Rouge cadre.

In April, a Cambodian court slapped opposition leader Sam Rainsy -- who lives in exile in France -- with a jail term and a fine for accusing Hor Namhong of being a former regime member.

He was found guilty in absentia of defamation and inciting discrimination for claiming in a 2008 speech that Hor Namhong once belonged to the movement.

Sam Rainsy, seen as the main rival to Hun Sen, has been convicted by Cambodian courts on various other counts, which his party and rights groups say are an attempt to sideline him ahead of elections in 2013.

In May 2010, a French appeals court upheld a guilty verdict against Rainsy for remarks in his autobiography about the foreign minister's alleged role in the movement, but the French Supreme Court overturned the decision last April.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is very interesting. So what is the true story?

Anonymous said...

The more Namhong is trying to react the more his involvements with the Khmer Rouge crimes will be exposed. The truth is Namhong was chief Boeung Trabek re-education camp where many inmates were sent to tortures and then to their deaths and executions at at Cheung Ek Killing Fields. Many of his victims said that.