Voice of America
Human Rights Watch is urging U.S. President Barack Obama to use his
upcoming visit to Cambodia to call for an end to longstanding human
rights abuses, including alleged extrajudicial killings, torture, and
abductions.
The New York-based rights group said in a report Tuesday over 300
people have been killed in politically motivated attacks in Cambodia in
the past two decades of Prime Minister Hun Sen's rule. The group says
rather than investigate the crimes, Cambodia's government has instead
ignored them and in some cases even promoted those believed to be
responsible.
Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phil Roberts tells VOA that
President Obama, who next week will become the first ever U.S.
head-of-state to visit Cambodia, is in a unique position to publicly
demand human rights improvements.
“We're calling on President Obama to really strongly and publicly
raise these human rights concerns, to press for accountability, and to
insist that it can't be business as usual with the Cambodian government,
given the gravity of these human rights violations.”
The report praised the U.S. for being “one of the most outspoken
critics of the Cambodian government's human rights record.” But
Robertson says Washington's actions have not always been consistent with
its words.
“For instance, when the U.S. gave national police chief Hok Lundy an
award (in 2006) for his contribution to anti-terror work. I mean, Hok
Lundy was well-known throughout Cambodia as a brutal killer, someone who
struck fear in the hearts of ordinary Cambodians. He was certainly no
one who deserves any sort of accolade from the United States
government.”
During his 27 years in power, Prime Minister Hun Sen has repeatedly
promised reforms, such as creating an independent judicial system and
more accountable police force. But Human Rights Watch says he has not
followed through on those promises, and that foreign governments have
failed to hold him accountable.
Robertson says it is time for the U.S. and other governments and
donors, which he says account for up to 50 percent of the Cambodian
national budget, to insist on changes.
“The president should … make it quite clear to Hun Sen that the U.S.
is not fooled, that the U.S. is not having the wool pulled over its
eyes, that it understands in a very clear way the human rights
challenges that exist in Cambodia and that it is prepared to comment on
those.”
Cambodian officials have suggested that Prime Minister Hun Sen will
hold bilateral talks with Mr. Obama when the U.S. leader travels to
Phnom Penh for the ASEAN and East Asia summits beginning next Monday.
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