Published June 20, 2012
Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia – Cambodia's
government said Wednesday that China had asked it to arrest a Frenchman
for possible involvement in a murder linked to one of China's biggest
political scandals in years. But authorities said they would not
extradite him unless China provides more evidence.
Cambodian
authorities on Tuesday acknowledged they had arrested Patrick Devillers, but declined to say why. On Wednesday, government spokesman
Khieu Kanharith said China had requested Devillers' arrest because of
possible involvement in the murder in China last November of British
businessman Neil Heywood.
Kanharith gave no details of Devillers' alleged involvement, however, and said Cambodia was studying whether to extradite him.
Heywood
had close ties to Bo Xilai, a Chinese political high-flier who was
ousted as Communist Party chief of the Chinese city of Chongqing. But
those ties had soured and Heywood's death led to the end of Bo's career.
Bo's
fall came after his former police chief and longtime aide fled to a
U.S. consulate and divulged suspicions that Bo's wife, Gu Kailai, was
involved in Heywood's death. Bo was removed as Chongqing party secretary
on March 15 and was suspended as a Politburo member amid questions over
whether he tried to quash an investigation of his wife and a household
employee over the Briton's death.
Though authorities
in China initially said Heywood died from either excess drinking or a
heart attack, they have since named Gu as a suspect. She faces criminal
charges.
News reports have said that Devillers was closely linked to Bo, Gu and Heywood.
Khieu
Sopheak, a spokesman for Cambodia's Interior Ministry, also said China
had asked Cambodia to arrest Devillers for possible involvement in
Heywood's death.
But he said China must give more evidence before Cambodia will extradite him.
"We
need more evidence, clear information from China, before we are going
to make a decision," Khieu Sopheak said. "If there is no clear evidence
from China, Devillers will be set free."
He said Cambodia could hold Devillers for up to 60 days before deciding whether to extradite him.
Eric
Bosc, deputy to the French Foreign Ministry spokesman, said Tuesday
that Devillers was arrested June 13 and that the reason remains unclear.
Kanharith
said Devillers was living openly in Cambodia and was not in hiding.
Devillers, an architect, had helped Bo rebuild the northeastern Chinese
city of Dalian when Bo was the city's mayor in the 1990s, The New York
Times reported last month.
The Frenchman and Gu were
partners in setting up a company in Britain in 2000 to select European
architects for Chinese projects and both gave the same address of an
apartment in the English city of Bournemouth, the newspaper said.
It
cited an unidentified friend of Devillers as saying the architect left
China in 2005 and has been living in Cambodia more or less continuously
for about six years.
China has considerable influence in Cambodia, having provided millions of dollars in aid over the past decade.
In
2009, Cambodia deported 20 members of the Uighur ethnic minority group
who said they were fleeing ethnic violence in China's far west and
wanted asylum.
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