*HRW: The World Report 2015*

http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015

World Report 2015 <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015>


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World Report 2015 <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015>
World Report 2015 is Human Rights Watch’s 25th annual review of human
rights practices around the globe. It summarizes key human rights issues in
more than 90 ...
View on www.hrw.org <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015>
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*Cambodia*: http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/cambodia
Demonstrators gathered at the Cambodian National Assembly on November 14,
2014, calling for release of imprisoned human rights defenders. © 2014
Reuters

The past year saw determined and often-violent efforts by the government of
Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) to suppress
mass protests against the deeply flawed July 2013 parliamentary elections,
and force the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), to accept
the election results, and end its boycott of the National Assembly. The
government imposed bans on peaceful protests, including strikes by trade
unions campaigning for increased wages. In some cases, protesters engaged
in attacks in response to security force repression.

A July 2014, CPP-CNRP agreement ended the opposition’s boycott of the
National Assembly. The agreement, which followed the arrest of prominent
CNRP leader Mu Sochua, and six other CNRP assembly members on trumped-up
charges, failed to commit the CPP to implement institutional and legal
reforms to ensure that future elections will be free and fair, or to
guarantee freedom of expression and opinion, peaceful assembly and
association, or fair trials.

Poverty remained particularly severe in the countryside, while urban
workers also suffered from wages so low they contribute to widespread
malnutrition. Victims of land concessions to agro-industrial business
interests—the major cause of dispossession of land from farmers, and
resulting land disputes—made little progress in receiving adequate
compensation and resettlement packages. Government officials and judges
remained mired in corruption, but almost all were immune from action by
courts and the government’s Anti-Corruption Unit, which only targeted petty
cases involving those without CPP political protection.
Excessive Use of Lethal and Other Force

In early January, authorities banned all protests, in part to try to force
organized labor in the garment industry to lower their demands for a
minimum wage increase. Gendarme, police, and para-police personnel killed
at least seven people and injured dozens of others mostly during the first
seven months of the year, before the ban was partly lifted. Protesters also
injured several members of the security forces.
Impunity and Politically Motivated Prosecutions

Since the CPP has been in power, members and commanders of government
security forces have enjoyed impunity from investigation, let alone
prosecution, for serious human rights abuses, including political
assassinations, other extrajudicial killings, and torture.  Instead,
politically partisan police, prosecutors, and judges pursued at least 87
trumped-up cases against CNRP leaders and activists, members of other
opposition political groups, prominent trade union figures, urban civil
society organizers, and ordinary workers from factories around Phnom Penh.

The Phnom Penh Municipal Court sentenced 55 people to prison after unfair
trials, on charges such as “treacherously plotting” to stage an armed
insurrection, or instigating, inciting, or perpetrating violence,
obstructing traffic, or “violent resistance against a public official.” In
these proceedings, no credible evidence was presented to support a guilty
verdict, while evidence of security force violence was systematically
disallowed. Although 30 of the 55 received suspended sentences, 23 had
already spent many months of pretrial detention in an overcrowded,
substandard, and isolated prison.

Criminal cases pending included, alleged incitement to violence by CNRP
President Sam Rainsy, Vice President Kem Sokha, and union leader Rong Chhun
for opposing the government’s blanket ban on protests; charges against
seven other CNRP assembly members and nine CNRP activists for leading, or
participating in a violent “insurrection” and other crimes related to a
security force-provoked melee at a CNRP-sponsored protest in July 2014;
charges of incitement to violence and other crimes against six union
leaders in connection with worker unrest during a general strike in
December 2013-January 2014; charges of “treacherous plotting” and other
crimes against a political activist for distributing a banned book in 2014;
and charges against a Buddhist monk and three youths in connection with
protests against election unfairness and other alleged government abuses
dating back to 2011.
Land Confiscation and Forced Evictions

The ill-effects of often illegal land acquisitions, by politically powerful
individuals and their business partners, and forced evictions, continued to
mount. The number of people affected by state-involved land conflicts since
2000 passed the half-million mark in March 2014, according to calculations
by the local nongovernmental organization LICADHO. The rate of new disputes
was higher than in 2013. Many of the new disputes ensued from the failure
of the authorities to distribute land titles awarded to rural residents as
part of a 2012-2013 scheme, personally conceived and overseen by Hun Sen.

In August 2o14, Hun Sen blamed his government subordinates for failing to
resolve disputes, repeating many previous pledges to end unlawful land
takings. At least four people remain imprisoned after convictions in
previous years for opposing land takings, while charges against at least 19
others were pending in various provincial courts.
Arbitrary Detention, Torture, and Other Ill-Treatment

The authorities detained hundreds of people they deemed to be
“undesirable,” without judicial recourse in so-called drug treatment
centers, where they face torture, sexual violence, and—in at least two
centers—forced labor. Authorities locked up alleged drug users, homeless
people, beggars, street children, sex workers, and people with disabilities
in these centers for arbitrary periods.

People held during investigation, or prosecution for common criminal
offenses, or convicted in court, were still routinely tortured, or
otherwise ill-treated. The police and prison authorities, beat,
pistol-whipped, used electro-shock, kicked, slapped, and punched inmates,
often until they become unconscious. Much of the torture was aimed at
extracting confessions or extorting money.
New Laws Strengthening Government Control of the Judiciary

Amid politically motivated prosecutions and unfair trials, the CPP further
tightened its control over the judiciary by rushing passage of three laws
through the National Assembly during the opposition boycott.

Laws on the Organization of the Courts, the Statute of Judges and
Prosecutors, and the Organization and Functioning of the Supreme Council of
the Magistracy, promulgated on July 13, 2014, increased government control
over a politically subservient Supreme Council of the Magistracy, and
weakened provisions for judicial independence.

Together, the laws facilitated further encroachment by the government on
areas properly reserved for the judiciary under the principle of separation
of powers including, government control over the judiciary’s budgetary
finance and administrative matters, restrictions on the rights of judges
and prosecutors to freedom of expression, and fewer safeguards for judicial
independence in selection, promotion, removal, and disciplinary procedures
for judges.

The legislation put the minister of justice at the center of all key
decision-making by the judiciary and the Supreme Council of the Magistracy,
the body charged with appointing, disciplining, and overseeing the
country’s judicial system.
Khmer Rouge Tribunal

On August 7, 2014, eight years after the creation of the United
Nations-assisted Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, former
Khmer Rouge leaders Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan were convicted of crimes
against humanity, including extermination and political persecution. These
were committed as part of the Khmer Rouge’s forced relocations of
Cambodians from urban areas to the countryside and around the countryside
in 1975, during which many were executed.

The two continued to face trial on other charges, including genocide, in
connection with Khmer Rouge policies and practices from 1975 to 1979.
However, given their advanced age, it was far from certain that a second
trial would ever be completed. Hun Sen’s public opposition to trials of
other Khmer Rouge suspects made it unlikely that others responsible for the
deaths of as many as 2 million people, would be held accountable. While the
trial had initially generated considerable interest, the drawn-out
proceedings over many years resulted in the Cambodian public showing little
interest by the trial’s end.
Labor Rights

The brutal suppression of garment and textile worker protests in January,
and the subsequent prosecution of labor leaders and workers on trumped-up
charges, did not deter some trade unions from continuing to protest for an
increased minimum wage, demanding US$177 monthly, as suggested in a
government task force report. Instead, the government on November 12
declared a minimum wage of $128.

The authorities introduced more burdensome procedures for union
registration, and independent unions complained that their union
registration was intentionally being delayed.  The government also moved
toward passage of a revised law on trade unions that fell far short of
international standards guaranteeing freedom of association.

Ongoing reports of employees fainting en masse in factories, prompted
authorities to create a committee to investigate the causes. However, the
general state of labor inspection and remedial action remained poor,
although officials from the Ministry of Labor and Vocational Training
began conducting joint inspections of “low compliance” factories named in
the Transparency Database launched by the International Labour
Organization’s Better Factories Cambodia program.
Key International Actors

China, Vietnam, Japan, and South Korea were Cambodia’s major foreign
investors during the year, while Japan, the European Union and United
States were the major foreign donors. China, Vietnam, and the US provided
material military assistance and training to the Cambodian security forces,
including units known to have recently been involved in serious human
rights violations.

Positively, the US conspicuously refrained from endorsing the 2013
elections as free and fair, and repeatedly and publicly called on the
authorities to respect human rights, especially to restore the rights to
freedom of association and peaceful assembly. However, the US was virtually
alone among foreign countries in seriously addressing Cambodia’s human
rights crises, whether in public or private.

The World Bank, which suspended new lending to Cambodia in 2011 because the
government had forcibly evicted people in a manner violating bank policy,
began to consider resuming funding for government land projects, even
though the government had not fully resolved the problem that had led to
the suspension, or ceased and remedied reprisals against those who have
advocated on these issues, among them activists sentenced to prison in
November

In September, Cambodia agreed with Australia to accept an unknown number of
refugees transferred from the island nation of Nauru. The Australian
government will pay costs towards “resettling” the refugees, and also
agreed to pay $35million in developmental assistance over four years
towards electoral reform, de-mining, and rice-milling as part of the
bilateral refugee agreement.
--

Best Regards,

*Khmer Forum*
*A place for sharing community events and public news.*

*From:* Human Rights Watch <[email protected]>
*Date:* January 29, 2015 at 3:32:29 PM PST
To: Khmer Forum <[email protected]>
*Subject:* *The World Report 2015*

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Human Rights Watch] <http://www.hrw.org/> THE WEEK IN RIGHTS
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January 29, 2014
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Issues Around the Globe
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Photo © 2014 Reuters

The *World Report 2015* is Human Rights Watch’s 25th annual review of human
rights practices around the globe. It summarizes key human rights issues in
more than 90 countries and territories worldwide.

<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015>The World Report 2015 »
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 <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/essays/tyranny-false-comfort>Tyranny’s
False Comforts
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By Kenneth Roth, executive director

The world has not seen this much tumult for a generation. The once-heralded
Arab Spring has given way almost everywhere to conflict and repression.
Islamist extremists commit mass atrocities and threaten civilians
throughout the Middle East and parts of Asia and Africa. Cold War-type
tensions have revived over Ukraine. Sometimes it can seem as if the world
is unraveling.

Many governments have responded to the turmoil by downplaying or abandoning
human rights. In this difficult moment, they seem to argue, human rights
must be put on the back burner, a luxury for less trying times. That
subordination of human rights is not only wrong, but also shortsighted and
counterproductive. Human rights violations played a major role in spawning
or aggravating most of today’s crises. Protecting human rights and enabling
people to have a say in how their governments address the crises will be
key to their resolution. Particularly in periods of challenges and
difficult choices, human rights are an essential compass for political
action.
  <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/essays/tyranny-false-comfort>Read
more »
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<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/central-african-republic>Central
African Republic
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Attacks on civilians remained alarming and widespread in the Central
African Republic, despite a decrease of violent attacks from the previous
year.


<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/central-african-republic>
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<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/mexico>Mexico
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Although President Enrique Peña Nieto acknowledged that the “war on drugs”
launched by his predecessor Felipe Calderón had led to serious abuses by
the security forces, the government has made little progress in prosecuting
widespread killings, enforced disappearances, and torture committed by
soldiers and police.

Read more >> <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/mexico>

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<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/china>China
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China remains an authoritarian state, one that systematically curbs
fundamental rights, including freedom of expression, association, assembly,
and religion, when their exercise is perceived to threaten one-party rule.

 <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/china>
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<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/ukraine>Ukraine
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The “Maidan” uprising in Kiev led to the ouster of President Viktor
Yanukovich in February and a complete overhaul of Ukraine’s political
system. The uprising that began in November 2013 was marked by clashes
between police, street fighters, and protesters, which killed over 100
people.

 <http://www.hrw.org/europe/central-asia>
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<http://www.hrw.org>

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<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/egypt>
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Egypt <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/egypt>

Egypt’s human rights crisis, the most serious in the country’s modern
history, continued unabated throughout 2014.

 <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/egypt>
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<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/united-states>United
States
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The United States has a vibrant civil society and strong constitutional
protections for many basic rights. Yet, particularly in the areas of
criminal justice, immigration, and national security, US laws and practices
routinely violate rights.

 <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/country-chapters/united-states>
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<http://www.hrw.org>

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     *
ESSAY *
<http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/essays/internet-crossroads>[image:
WIR.2015.Jan.29.MM.surveillance.jpg]
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   *Internet at a Crossroads*
How Government Surveillance Threatens How We Communicate
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   *
ESSAY *      <http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2015/essays/deadly-cargo>[image:
WIR.2015.Jan.29.MM.explosiveweapons.jpg]
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   *Deadly Cargo*
Explosive Weapons in Populated Areas
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