State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, in talks Tuesday, discussed the importance of “appropriate participation across the political spectrum” in the 2013 elections.
But Nuland said Wednesday that it was “an issue for the Cambodians”
whether opposition leader Sam Rainsy is allowed to take part in the
vote. Rainsy lives in exile in France following 2010 convictions in
Cambodia that he claims were politically motivated.
This year,
Cambodia is the chairman of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, a
regional grouping that Washington wants to engage more actively as the
Obama administration steps up the U.S. diplomatic and security presence
in the Asia-Pacific.
Cambodian’s prime minister, Hun Sen, has
dominated the Southeast Asian nation for nearly three decades. Rights
groups accuse him of squelching dissent and intimidating political
opponents.
Last month, 13 women were sentenced by a Cambodian
court to 2½ years in prison for protesting their eviction from the land
where their homes once stood. The case was seen as emblematic of a
broader problem of forcible evictions of poor Cambodians to make way for
property development in its fast-growing economy.
Their houses
were demolished in 2010 to make way for a Chinese company’s development
of a hotel, office buildings and luxury houses in Phnom Penh’s Boueng
Kak lake area. The women were found guilty of aggravated rebellion and
illegal occupation after attempting to reconstruct their homes. Four
have reportedly begun a hunger strike in prison.
Nuland said
Clinton urged Cambodia grant the detainees due process, and said their
release “would be a sign of support for freedom of expression.”
1 comment:
Dear Secretary Clinton,
Khmers know Hun Sen and his cronies are not going to follow your wish list.
The question is this: What are YOU and the US government going to do about it ?
Business as usual with Hun Sen and his Jungle Regime ?
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