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New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a report that more than 300 people have been killed in politically motivated attacks in the past two decades during the rule of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.
The report suggested senior Cambodian government officials and
security forces were involved in a series of serious rights abuses since
Cambodia signed peace agreements in 1991 to pave the way for democracy.
It
said officials allegedly responsible for extrajudicial killings and
other abuses against opposition politicians, security forces, activists
and journalists have not been prosecuted, but instead were rewarded.
“The message to Cambodians is that even well-known killers are above
the law if they have protection from the country’s political and
military leaders,” said Brad Adams (pictured), HRW’s Asia director.
Adams said Obama should demand that Hun Sen solve the issue of impunity to bring justice to the victims.
“On his historic first visit to Cambodia, President Obama is uniquely
placed to publicly demand that Hun Sen make genuine reforms so the
Cambodian people can enjoy the same rights and freedoms that Americans
take for granted,” Adams said.
Obama is scheduled to attend the
East Asia summit in Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital. It is part of his
first overseas trip since being re-elected into office on Nov. 6.
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