Mu Sochua Urges Fight on Rights 'Battlefield'  
      By Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer 
      Original report from Washington
      14 September 2009
      

     
      Mu Sochua and three other rights defenders testify at a US Congressional 
hearing on Thursday.  
Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker Mu Sochua, who is on a mission to the US, appealed to 
Cambodians here to provide stronger support to the struggle for freedom and 
human rights in their home country.

"Compatriots in the US, please continue your work by meeting with your 
congressmen and senators in all states," Mu Sochua told a group of some 60 
participants gathered Thursday in Arlington, Va., a suburb of the capital.

"We now go to the hot battlefield [in Cambodia], and back here the battlefield 
is also hot, but please go on," she said, following her testimony at a 
congressional hearing on human rights the same day. 

The Virginia gathering was part of an effort to update Cambodian-Americans 
about the human rights situation in Cambodia, which has deteriorated in recent 
months following apparent government attacks on its critics.

"I, as a Cambodian American, will make an appeal to and work with different 
organizations, associations and Cambodian community that I know," Kuch Chanly, 
a participant from Maryland, told VOA Khmer after the gathering. "I have been 
traveling throughout the US, France, Australia, Canada and Germany, so I will 
follow and protect any Cambodian hero who dares stand up to protect democracy 
in Cambodia, so that they have support for the work."

Mu Sochua was stripped off her parliament immunity in a defamation case brought 
against her by Prime Minister Hun Sen and was ultimately fined more than $4,000 
by the courts.

She joined other rights advocates from Cambodia in a rare hearing by the Tom 
Lantos Human Rights Commission in Washington Thursday.

"I represent a community that has the second-largest Cambodian population in 
this country,  
      Rep. Niki Tsongas (D-MA). 
the city of Lowell, Mass.," Niki Tsongas, a Democrat from Massachusetts, told 
the congressional hearing. "What happens in Cambodia is very, very important to 
so many of my constituents, because they remain quite concerned for their loved 
ones that have remained there."

Mu Sochua is due next to meet with the Cambodian communities in Long Beach and 
Stockton, Calif. 

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