Saturday, September 02, 2006

CCHR Criticizes Immunity Law as Unconstitutional

Saturday and Sunday, September 2-3, 2006

By Lor Chandara
THE CAMBODIA DAILY

The Cambodian Center for Human Rights has called on the Senate, the Constitutional Council and King Norodom Sihamoni to reject the newly approved law that criminalizes certain comments by National Assembly members.

In an act of self-censorship, 90 CPP and Funcinpec lawmakers voted in favor of the law on Wednesday, effectively scrapping their parliamentary immunity from prosecution for comments that "abuse an individual's dignity, social customs, public order and national security."

The law, which included a pension and funeral expenses package for lawmakers, also included a clause pertaining to undefined "obvious crimes" for which a lawmaker can be charged, arrested and detained without an immunity-lifting vote of the Assembly.

"This statute seriously harms the mission of those elected by the people," the CCHR said in a statement released on Friday.

"It will encourage government officials to use the judiciary system for silencing Members of Parliament that criticized their policies or actions. This is a major setback for freedom of expression in Cambodia," CCHR said. "Instead of creating laws that will promote civil liberties we are moving backwards."

The CCHR noted that the statue violates Article 80 of the Constitution, which reads "No Assembly member shall be prosecuted, detained or arrested because of opinions expressed during the exercise of his (her) duties."

"We call on the Senate, the Constitutional Council and the King to refuse this statue," CCHR President Kem Sokha said in the statement.

Cheam Yeap, CPP lawmaker, said that the law would not affect the lawmakers' freedoms but it would simply "smooth out" the procedures related to their behavior.

"The law doesn't allow anyone to use their immunity as a raincoat to protect themselves when they behave unprofessionally," Cheam Yeap said. "They still have all kinds of freedoms to criticize corrupt officials or anything else but they must not go beyond their responsibility."

"It is not walking backward [from democracy] like communism or the Taliban," he added, citing recent examples of regimes that have been evoked by critics of the new law.

European Parliament Member Marco Pannella told reporters at a news conference at the SRP offices inside the Assembly that the law was unconstitutional.

Pannella, an SRP supporter, said the law effectively eliminated what people call "the National Assembly."

"The law that Cambodia just passed...is like that of a dictatorship," he said.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hey a gotten a great idea, lets give these bastard an early funeral pension now. Let gases them to DEATH like the Hitler did to the Jews.

Send these CPP &F'pec to Hell.