Wednesday, June 27, 2012
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A soldier speaks to villagers near the site of a violent eviction in Kratie province last month. Photograph: Heng Chivoan/Phnom Penh Post |
Wednesday, 27 June 2012
Chhay Channyda
The Phnom Penh Post
Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia Division, said the government’s claim of a secessionist plot was unfounded.
“If the prime minister has evidence, then he should let that do the talking rather than continuing his ranting and raving against NGOs and anyone else who raises well-founded questions about what he has to say,” he said.
An alleged
accomplice of “secessionist”
leader Bun Ratha has confessed and been granted immunity as a witness,
Prime Minister Hun Sen said yesterday, a deal he left on
the table for any of the four remaining fugitives who are willing to
co-operate, including Ratha.
Warrants for the five were
issued after a forced eviction in Kampong Damrei commune’s Pro Ma
village, in which a 14-year-old girl was shot dead by government forces.
The government has described the
Kratie operation – in which roughly 1,000 police and military police
evicted some 200 families – as an attempt to quell a “secessionist plot” purportedly
led by Ratha.
Ratha and other villagers have repeatedly
denied any such plot, saying they
were simply applying for land titles.
“I will be responsible for the four who
come out to confess,” Hun Sen said. “You will be free of guilt if you
come out and admit the guilt. We can withdraw the arrest warrants and
turn you into witnesses, because you were also deceived by others.”
In his speech, Hun Sen warned
that the court will sentence Bun Ratha in absentia if he doesn’t
resurface on his own.
“I appealed to [the four] to
come out, whether they are hiding in the forest, at home, at an embassy
or with NGOs,” he said.
Hun Sen also told NGOs that
villagers should address their grievances through the courts rather than
NGOs, and that the government wouldn’t expel residents from their
villages.
However, those expelled from Pro
Ma, he said, were rightfully evicted, and would not be given back their
land.
Phil Robertson, deputy director
of Human Rights Watch’s Asia Division, said the government’s claim of a
secessionist plot was unfounded.
“If the prime minister has
evidence, then he should let that do the talking rather than continuing
his ranting and raving against NGOs and anyone else who raises
well-founded questions about what he has to say,” he said.
Bun Sithet, 25, Bun Ratha’s
younger brother, also denied the plot.
“The residents just depended on
my brother, who has knowledge in law, to write the complaints for them,”
he said.
Ministry of Interior spokesman
Khieu Sopheak could not be reached for comment.
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