-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, Jul 8, 2010 1:46 pm
Subject: Halt US Aid to Abusive Military Units 




For Immediate Release

Cambodia: Halt US Aid to Abusive Military Units
Land-Grabbing Tank Unit to Host Upcoming Regional Peacekeeping Exercises

(New York, July 8, 2010) – The US selection of a Cambodian military unit with a 
record of human rights abuses to be the host of an annual peacekeeping exercise 
in Asia undermines the US commitment to promoting human rights in Cambodia, 
Human Rights Watch said today.

The “Angkor Sentinel” exercise is part of the 2010 Global Peace Operations 
Initiative, an effort jointly run by the US Departments of Defense and State to 
help train peacekeepers. Co-hosted by the US Pacific Command, Angkor Sentinel 
will be the largest multinational military exercise held this year in the 
Asia-Pacific region, with more than 1,000 military personnel from 23 
Asia-Pacific countries taking part.

The peacekeeping exercises will begin on July 12, 2010, with a five-day 
“command post” exercise in Phnom Penh. A two-week field training exercise will 
follow, with Cambodia’s ACO Tank Command Headquarters in Kompong Speu province 
as the host. The US Defense Department funded construction there of a US$1.8 
million training center for the 2010 initiative.

“For the Pentagon and State Department to permit abusive Cambodian military 
units to host a high-profile regional peacekeeping exercise is outrageous,” 
said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The US 
undermines its protests against the Cambodian government for rampant rights 
abuses like forced evictions when it showers international attention and funds 
on military units involved in grabbing land and other human rights violations.”

For years, the ACO Tank Unit has been involved in illegal land seizures, as 
documented by the US State Department and by Cambodian and international human 
rights organizations. In November 2008, the unit seized the farmland of 133 
families in Banteay Meanchey province, ostensibly to build a military base. In 
2007, soldiers from the unit in Kompong Speu province used armored vehicles to 
flatten villagers’ fences, destroy their crops, and confiscate their land.

Since 2006, the US has provided more than $4.5 million worth of military 
equipment and training to Cambodia. Some of that aid has gone to units and 
individuals within the Cambodian military with records of serious human rights 
violations, including Brigade 31, Brigade 70, and Airborne Brigade 911.

The Phnom Penh portion of Angkor Sentinel is likely to showcase elite Cambodian 
military units based near the capital, such as Prime Minister Hun Sen’s 
personal bodyguard unit and Brigade 70, both of which have been linked to a 
deadly March 1997 grenade attack on the political opposition, and Airborne 
Brigade 911, which has been involved in arbitrary detentions, political 
violence, torture, and summary executions.
US material assistance has also gone toward rights-abusing units such as 
Brigade 31, formerly known as Division 44, which in 2008 used US-donated trucks 
to forcibly move villagers evicted from their land in Kampot province. In 
recent years Brigade 31 has been implicated in illegal logging, land grabbing, 
and intimidation of opposition party activists during the 2008 national 
elections. The unit was also involved in summary executions of captured 
soldiers loyal to the FUNCINPEC party during a 1997 coup staged by Hun Sun.

Cambodian military personnel are not held accountable for serious rights 
violations. Instead, Hun Sen has promoted military officers implicated in 
torture, extrajudicial killings, and political violence, such as Hing Bunheang, 
the deputy commander of Brigade 70 at the time of the 1997 grenade attack, who 
was made deputy commander of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces in January 2009.

In December 2009, Cambodia deported 20 ethnic Uighur asylum seekers at grave 
risk back to China on the eve of a visit by senior Chinese officials to Phnom 
Penh. The US cancelled delivery of 200 surplus military trucks and trailers to 
Cambodia under the US Excess Defense Articles program. This was only the most 
minimal response to a serious breach of Cambodia’s obligations as a party to 
the 1951 Refugee Convention, Human Rights Watch said.

In February, Hun Sen announced plans for corporate sponsorship of military 
units as a way to support defense costs. More than 40 Cambodian businesses have 
agreed to subsidize military units, including some companies that have long 
been allowed to misuse military units as the equivalent of security contractors 
to protect and support their business ventures in agri-business, banking, 
casinos, and national media.

“By essentially auctioning off military units, Hun Sen revealed that many 
military units are little more than guns for hire, not the defenders of the 
Cambodian people,” Robertson said. “The US should not be training corrupt and 
abusive military units for global peacekeeping.”

The US government should suspend military aid to Cambodia pending an improved 
and thorough human rights vetting process that screens out abusive individuals 
or units from receiving any aid or training, Human Rights Watch said. Certain 
military units, as well as individual personnel from them, should be 
immediately banned from Defense Department assistance, including Hun Sen’s 
bodyguard unit, Brigade 70, Brigade 31, and Airborne Brigade 911, and any of 
their sub-units.

“US support for peacekeeping training cannot mean turning a blind eye to 
soldiers and units who have violated human rights,” Robertson said. “Instead, 
military units that are called to deploy abroad as international peacekeepers 
must be true professionals, not only in technical expertise, but in their 
respect for human rights.”

To read the February 2010 letter to US Secretary of State Clinton on Cambodia’s 
deportation of Uighur asylum seekers to China, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2010/04/09/letter-secretary-clinton-cambodia-s-deportation-uighur-asylum-seekers-china

To read the September 2009 Human Rights Watch testimony before the Tom Lantos 
Human Rights Commission, please visit:
http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2009/09/human-rights-watch-testimony-provided.html

For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Cambodia, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/en/asia/cambodia

For more information, please contact:
In Bangkok, Phil Robertson (English, Thai): +66-85-060-8406 (mobile)
In Washington, DC, Sophie Richardson (English, Mandarin): +1-202-612-4341; or 
+1-917-721-7473 (mobile)
In Brussels, Lotte Leicht (English, French, German, Danish): +32-2-737-1482; or 
+32-47-568-1708 (mobile)
 

 

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