WHILE CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM IN VIOLATION OF 10 UN RESOLUTIONS.
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights.
 
The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6,, calling for a 
withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from Cambodia.

 

THE SECOND PHASE OF VIETNAMIZATION OF THE CAMBODIAN MINISTRY OF JUSTICE IS 
TAKING PLACE HERE.


 


 







WHILE CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM IN VIOLATION OF 10 UN RESOLUTIONS.
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights.
 
The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6,, calling for a 
withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from Cambodia.
 
Police in Cambodia still torture inmates, rights group reports 


 
 



Written by CHRISTOPHER SHAY AND KHOUTH SOPHAK CHAKRYA    

Thursday, 25 June 2009 


The Asian Human Rights Commission urges greater transparency and legal 
protection for prisoners held in police detention facilities.

DESPITE improvements in the treatment of prisoners, torture is still being used 
to extract confessions at police detention centres, where there is little 
oversight from outside groups, according to a statement released by the Asian 
Human Rights Commission (AHRC) on Wednesday that urged the Prosecutor General's 
Office to do more to protect detainees from abuse.

"Torture exists in Cambodia in one form or another," said Lao Mong Hay, the 
senior researcher for Southeast Asia at the AHRC, adding that it typically 
takes the form of "beatings and kickings".





Some police have committed crimes and ... torture suspects to get a confession. 


Friday is International Day Against Torture, and the AHRC acknowledged that 
Cambodia had made strides over the years, pointing to efforts by the Prosecutor 
General's Office to inspect police stations across the country. But the Hong 
Kong-based human rights group pushed the government to do more to protect 
detained suspects from police abuse.

"The government has committed itself to [ending torture], but when translated 
into action, it takes time," he said. "The police officers are not well-trained 
in finding evidence, and they are not well-paid."

Kirt Chantharith, a police spokesman, said that some police have mistreated 
detainees in the past, but that it was against the law, and new mechanisms to 
protect detainees were unnecessary. 

"Some police have committed crimes and they tried to torture suspects to get a 
confession," he said. "The prosecutor will investigate the case. If they find 
torture ... the police will be punished."

AHRC recommended that the Prosecutor General of the Court of Appeal create a 
torture complaint unit, which would have the power to order a prosecutor to 
conduct an investigation. It also urged all prosecutors to examine suspects 
brought before them to determine if they have been tortured.

But Lao Mong Hay said even with these changes, "the prosecutors cannot do it 
alone", adding that prosecutors often "don't want to antagonise police ... 
[because] their work depends on working with them".

Organisations blocked out
Unlike prisons, outside organisations have little access to police detention 
facilities, according to AHRC, and suspects can be interrogated for up to 24 
hours without any legal counsel.

Lao Mong Hay blamed the Criminal Code of Conduct, which he said was based on 
colonial-era criminal procedures.

"We need to change the Crimininal Code of Conduct to ensure that accused 
persons have access to legal counsel straight after their arrests," he said. 
Officials with the Prosecutor General's Office were unavailable for comment on 
Wednesday. 

 
 
 



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