Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Hun Sen threatens to close crony Mong Reththy's dry port 


Hun Sen threatens to close S'ville port

Wednesday, 01 April 2009 
Written by May Kunmakara 
The Phnom Penh Post


PRIME Minister Hun Sen on Tuesday threatened to close agriculture tycoon Mong 
Reththy's dry port if outstanding taxes are not paid.

The prime minister also pressed for a broader crackdown on illegal goods 
passing through the country's southern border checkpoints, which is depriving 
the government of taxes.

"Don't blame me if I close [the port], leaving employees jobless," he said, 
during a ceremony in Sihanoukville. 

"Today, I ask that authorities help the government to collect taxes from all 
sea-crossing points, especially Preah Sihanouk province. We have to use this 
occasion to collect taxes," he said.

He encouraged customs officers, police and the navy to cooperate to curb 
smuggling and other illegal businesses.

"The authorities have to crack down on traders that don't pay their taxes," he 
said.

He also warned customs officers and traders to stop colluding to dodge taxes.

Agriculture tycoon Mong Reththy endorsed the premier's pronouncement and urged 
authorities to scrupulously collect taxes on goods crossing through the 
southern borders.

"I want all ports to cooperate to collect tax on imported goods ... to take 
this money to develop our country," he said.

However, he would not provide figures on the volume of goods passing through 
his facility.

Minister of Economy and Finance Keat Chhon said that tax income has increased 
this month after falling for the past two months due to declining imports.
 

Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2009 19:22:07 -0700
From: [email protected]
Subject: Cambodia: 1997 Grenade Attack on Opposition Still Unpunished
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]; [email protected]





  
For Immediate Release

 

Cambodia: 1997 Grenade Attack on Opposition Still Unpunished

Suspects in Attack Have Been Promoted Instead of Prosecuted

 

( New York , March 30, 2009) – Twelve years after a grenade attack on an 
opposition party rally that killed at least 16 people and wounded more than 
100, the Cambodian government has still taken no steps to bring the 
perpetrators to justice, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch 
criticized the recent promotions of officials suspected of involvement in that 
attack.

 

On March 30, 1997, about 200 supporters of the opposition politician Sam Rainsy 
gathered in a park across the street from the National Assembly in Phnom Penh 
to denounce the judiciary’s lack of independence and judicial corruption. In a 
well-planned attack, four grenades were thrown into the crowd, killing 
protesters and bystanders, including children, and blowing limbs off street 
vendors. An FBI investigation concluded that Cambodian government officials 
were responsible for the attack.

 

“The attack on Sam Rainsy and his supporters remains an open wound in Cambodia 
, but neither the government nor Cambodia ’s donors are doing anything to hold 
those responsible to account,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights 
Watch. “The perpetual failure to address this crime has made March 30 ‘Impunity 
Day’ in Cambodia . This anniversary, on the day the Khmer Rouge trials are 
beginning, shows how far Cambodia has to go toward holding human rights abusers 
accountable.”

 

On the day of the grenade attack, Prime Minister Hun Sen’s personal bodyguard 
unit, Brigade 70, was, for the first time, deployed at a demonstration. The 
elite military unit, in full riot gear, not only failed to prevent the attack, 
but was seen by numerous witnesses opening up its lines to allow the 
grenade-throwers to escape and threatening to shoot people trying to pursuing 
the attackers.

 

Rather than punishing the people who ordered and carried out the grenade 
attack, the government has handed out high-level promotions to several known 
human rights abusers in Cambodia ’s armed forces and national police – 
including at least two linked to the 1997 attack.

 

The commander of Brigade 70 at the time, Huy Piseth, who ordered the deployment 
of Brigade 70 forces to the scene that day, is now undersecretary of state at 
the Ministry of Defense. Hing Bunheang, who was deputy commander of Brigade 70 
at the time and who threatened to kill journalists investigating the case, was 
promoted to deputy military commander of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces 
(RCAF) in January 2009.

 

“Handing out promotions to people implicated in massacring peaceful 
demonstrators is a slap in the face for the victims,” said Adams . “This seems 
to be an intentional message from Hun Sen – that those who do his bidding will 
be promoted, no matter how egregious their acts.”

 

Other RCAF officials promoted in January to deputy commander face serious 
allegations of human rights abuses. They include Military Intelligence Chief 
Mol Roeup and Military Police Commander Sao Sokha. Like the commanders of 
Brigade 70, these men are close confidants of Hun Sen who have been implicated 
in abductions, torture, and extrajudicial killings.

 

The failure to pursue those responsible for the 1997 attack is part of a 
widespread pattern of well-connected perpetrators evading justice. Some 
examples include:

 

*    On September 4, 2008, Mean Sokchea, a RCAF major working in Brigade 70, 
shot dead 21-year-old waitress Put Samphors at a restaurant in Kandal province. 
Mean Sokchea, in a drunken stupor, fired his gun and apparently mistakenly hit 
Put Samphors in the stomach. She was taken to a hospital but later died of her 
wounds. Mean Sokchea was detained by the police overnight but was then 
released, allegedly after intervention by Hing Bun Heang. Put Samphor’s family 
received US$2,700 from Mean Sokchea, and the police told them that their 
daughter was shot while authorities were chasing robbers. 

 

*    On the night of January 16, 2003, a street youth named Prak Sitha was 
beaten to death at the Ministry of Interior (MOI) headquarters after he was 
arrested and detained by off-duty MOI officers on suspicion of theft. His body 
– bearing numerous injuries to the head, torso, arms, and legs – was dumped at 
a Phnom Penh pagoda the following morning by ministry officers, in violation of 
police regulations regarding deaths in custody. No criminal charges were filed 
in connection with this death. In December 2004, the case was cited by the UN 
secretary-general’s special representative for human rights in Cambodia – who 
stated that Prak Sitha died at the ministry “following beatings by a known 
police officer” – as an example of a “consistent and continuing pattern of 
impunity” in Cambodia . 

 

*    On December 5, 1999, Tat Marina, age 16, was severely disfigured in an 
acid attack in Phnom Penh . The attack was allegedly committed by Khun Sophal, 
the wife of a senior government official, Svay Sitha, because she was angry her 
husband had a sexual relationship with Tat Marina. Neither Khun Sophal nor 
those suspected of being her accomplices in the attack were brought to justice. 
Intense media publicity compelled the Phnom Penh Municipal Court to issue an 
arrest warrant for Khun Sophal for attempted murder, but the police claimed 
that they could not locate her, although journalists reported that she was 
living at home as usual. 

 

While the Cambodian police and courts regularly allow well-connected or 
financially able criminal suspects to escape prosecution, the justice system is 
also routinely used by the government to lock up its political opponents who 
have committed no crimes. For example, on March 20, 2009, Tuot Saron – former 
Sam Rainsy Party commune chief in Kompong Thom – was convicted on charges of 
kidnapping and illegal confinement, although no credible evidence was put 
forward by the prosecution 
(http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2008/03/22/cambodia-opposition-officials-arrested-sway-elections).
 On February 19, the Appeal Court upheld the murder conviction of Thach Saveth, 
who is serving a 15-year prison sentence for the 2004 murder of a trade union 
official, Ros Sovannareth, despite the government’s failure to produce any 
credible evidence against Thach Saveth.

 

Human Rights Watch said that the Cambodian judiciary’s lack of independence 
will impact its ability to provide fair and impartial justice in the trials of 
former Khmer Rouge leaders, being carried out with a mix of Cambodian and 
international judges.

 

“The political control of Cambodia ’s courts is the main reason so many 
Cambodians and observers are concerned that the trials of Khmer Rouge leaders 
will lack credibility,” said Adams . “In this way, Cambodia ’s tragic history 
and troubled present are deeply connected.”

 

For more information, please contact:

In Phnom Penh , Sara Colm : +855-12-804-755 (mobile)

In London , Brad Adams : +44-20-7713-2767; or +44-790-872-8333 (mobile)

In Washington , DC , Sophie Richardson : +1-202-612-4341; or +1-917-721-7473 
(mobile)

 

"My Khmer Compatriots, ask not what Cambodia and her People can do for you, ask 
what you can do for Cambodia and her People"

The Khmer Politicians have only interpreted the Cambodia and her beloved people 
in various ways.
The point, however, is to change it... 
---Khmer Blood---





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