Saturday, June 27, 2009

Hun Sen versus Mu Sochua and the state of democratic reforms

Written by SEBASTIAN STRANGIO AND SAM RITH
Friday, 26 June 2009
Comment: The academicians described current political situation in Cambodia with open-minded and bright vision, but government agents have blamed this and that to avoid confronting the reality. Suy Mong Leang tried to blame NGOs for their work of human rights advocate by picking a slight thing of some youth misbehavior. Of course, there are bunches of lessons taught about rights and obligation by NGOs. Government has not invested to provide education of citizenship rights and obligations, but denounced others who have continuously done this. Otherwise, the real issue that Hun Sen forced Cambodian rubber-stamp parliamentarians to lift Mu Sochua's and Ho Van's parliamentary immunity as well as arrested Hang Chakra, the editor of a newspaper, is just his emotional habit and strategy. Hun Sen's emotional habit is to do something that can scare everyone even though it is illegal and unnatural to do that. Do you think Hun Sen's private issue is more important than the national issue, the border conflict and the economic crisis? Do you think, Cambodian people are disappointed because those elected parliamentarians are good in fighting with their own Cambodians especially are good only for personal dispute, not the national interests. Other issue that is hiding outsiders not to sea the reality is that Hun Sen has tried to bully opposition members in order to implicitly intimidate his internal rivals. Inside the CPP, the competition has put in a high price...you can see in case of Hok Lundi, and many more including Hun Sen will spend a high price for their internal rife, arrogance and retaliation.

Observers say the recent legal offensive against government critics raises questions about how far Cambodia has come on the road to democracy - and how far the nation has yet to go.
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Photo by: TRACEY SHELTON
Prime Minister Hun Sen at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs earlier this month.

THE National Assembly's decision to strip two opposition lawmakers of their parliamentary immunity on Monday has soured views on the status of democratic reform in Cambodia, with local and international observers saying the gap between the letter of the law and the country's daily reality remains substantial.

On paper, Cambodia has relatively progressive laws: The Kingdom's Constitution guarantees the independence of the judiciary, and other key pieces of legislation, including the 2001 Land Law, largely conform to international standards.

But with eight separate lawsuits filed against government critics in recent months, including one against Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker Mu Sochua after she filed a defamation complaint against Prime Minister Hun Sen, some claim that nearly two decades of NGO- and donor-led reforms have left the bedrock of Cambodian People's Party power largely untouched.

"Things are going back to square one," said Yeng Virak, executive director of the Community Legal Education Centre, a local legal aid group.

Yeng Virak drew a parallel to the 1980s, when he said a layer of "invisible law" held sway in Cambodia, informed by personal patronage and the selective application of formal law. In those days, he said, NGOs making legal arguments that ran counter to "invisible" prerogatives were quickly shut out.

He said those charged with enforcing the law would "refuse to listen" and "ignore the law" altogether.

"But the government is more sophisticated [now] - it is using the legal system," he said.

An authoritarian pattern
According to overseas observers, Cambodia's progress - from the outright violence of the inter-factional fighting of 1997 to the judicial intimidation of the present - is following a familiar path.

"This is a common pattern, evident especially throughout Asia, where autocratic leaders first rely on means of physical violence until they manage to consolidate power within state institutions, particularly the judiciary," said Sorpong Peou, a professor of political science at Sophia University in Tokyo.

Now that military threats have subsided, she said, the regime is relying on a quasi-legal framework to stifle dissenting voices - a similar path to that taken by Singapore under Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.

But as in Singapore, the government's response to international criticism is that foreign observers somehow do not understand "the realities" of the local culture.


COMMUNISM... SUPPRESSED ALL NOTION OF THE RULE OF LAW. ... ITS LEGACY IS LIKE A VERY HEAVY IRON BALL TIED TO CAMBODIA's FOOT.


Hun Sen's warning to foreign observers not to "interfere" in the lifting of the parliamentary immunity of Mu Sochua and Ho Vann matched recent government criticism of international watchdog Global Witness and US Ambassador Carol Rodley for airing corruption allegations.

But how much is Cambodian culture to blame for the stalled progress of legal reforms? Lao Mong Hay, a campaigner at the Hong Kong-based Asian Human Rights Commission, said the communist political culture of the 1980s - rather than Cambodia's Buddhist tradition - was to blame for the present state of the rule of law.

The civil law system introduced by the French had planted a seed of judicial independence that was uprooted by the onset of CPP rule in 1979, he said.

"Communism, after the ousting of the Khmer Rouge, suppressed all notion of the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary," he said.

"Its legacy is like a very heavy iron ball tied to Cambodia's foot."

Hollow institutions?
Professor Oliver Richmond, director of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at University of St Andrews in the United Kingdom, said Cambodia's "misuse" of the law was hardly unique, describing it as "a normal part of a local negotiation with liberal international frameworks".

Although that "misuse" could frustrate reformers in the short term, he said, even unimplemented laws and hollow institutions could help pry apart the government's hold on power.

"I do think that even empty institutions are very influential ... and allow questioning to occur," he said by email.

"But this also provokes local cooption, resistance, fragmentation and misuse."

Meanwhile, judicial officials say they are optimistic that the country is moving in the right direction, despite a lack of resources.

Chiv Keng, head of Phnom Penh Municipal Court, said a new Civil Code and the Council of Ministers' approval of the new Penal Code last Friday had put two critical pieces in place.

"When we have adopted the two codes, we can upgrade the courts," he said, though he added that a lack of human resources and funds would continue to hamper the court system.

"Right now, we have enough judges to satisfy about 50 percent of the country's current demand. The salary for clerks is still small, which impacts their attitudes towards work."

Suy Mong Leang, secretary-general of the General Secretariat for Legal and Judicial Reform in the Council of Ministers, said the reform process was necessarily slow but was moving along the right tracks.

"The goal of the program is to establish a legal and judicial framework that is credible, stable and foster[s] the principle of individual rights and freedoms," he told the Post.

To do so, the government has established seven strategic objectives, he said, including efforts to enhance rights awareness; educate judges, notaries and lawyers; and improve access to judicial and legal information and access to legal services.

He said that four model courts - in Phnom Penh, Kandal, Kampong Cham and Banteay Meanchey - would receive extra funding and would serve as centrepieces of the reform program.

The French government, which has provided assistance to bolster the government reform programme, believes that proper training will help close the gap between theory and practice.

"The main challenge for legal and judicial reform in Cambodia is capacity-building (familiarisation with legal texts, professional codes of ethics, etc) and deployment of this training throughout the country," said Fabyene Mansencal, first secretary at the French Embassy.

Opening too quickly
But Suy Mongleang said a major barrier to reform was the pace of the reforms themselves. In the early 1990s, the one-party Cambodian state was thrown into the liberal democratic deep end, he said, adding that many Cambodians were still struggling to find their feet.

"I see that some young people, when they violate the traffic lights, it seems that they're proud of [themselves]," he said.

"Vietnam opened the door to liberal reforms very slowly, but Cambodia [did it all at once]."

He said many reformers' emphasis on "rights" had instilled a sense of entitlement in Cambodia's youth, and that education must also focus on legal and civic duties.

"Usually, NGOs provide lessons and provide training to people about rights. But I tell them, ‘Don't talk just about rights; you have to talk to them about obligations too,'" he said.

Some NGOs remain optimistic that rights-based education will push the country in the right direction. Along with the deterioration in freedom of dissent, Yeng Virak said he has also seen an increased awareness of the law - and a willingness to argue in legal terms.

"[Due to] the level of awareness of rights and increasing public participation of the citizens, I hope that people will dare more to demand rulers and lawmakers to be accountable," he said.

Not everyone shared his optimism. With the courts again being used to narrow the democratic space, Sorpong Peou said foreign donors are unlikely to become a powerful agent of democratic change.

"Donors have no choice but to go along, hoping that the hegemonic power will not turn malignant," she said.

From The Phnom Penh Post

25 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hun Sen picture look very angry. He should be calm and need to show his personality as a Prime Minister.

If Hun Sen as a Gread Leader all our Khmer around the world will be stand by him, but he don't understand what he doing, for holding of his position and the power, he became a evil person.

Hun Sen serving Youn government and do what have been told by Youn's, he not serving his own country at all.

We have to gathering and fight for our Right and for our Freedom.

Kaun Khmer in Blood

Anonymous said...

And where's Ah PPU , come Here Ah Jkea TORK TEAP .. come Here , come Lick My Cunt .
PI ANH , BUNRANY

Anonymous said...

I disagree. Before Defamation under the UNTAC criminal law was a crime, but the PM called for it to be made civil law only, and immediately after it was decriminalized. He should be credit for that. The National Assembly is truly independent although Cambodia follows the parliamentary system and laws come from the executive side. Actions such as immunity are purely a function of the NA and certainly the NA acts on its own.

Anonymous said...

Ah Sam Rainsy . Come Here ..Come to suck my dick , I just finished fuck your Femals dog family , and now my dick are full of your female Cum stain , come suck my dick ,I don't want to use water to clean it .

Anonymous said...

Cambodia will have a true democracy until the old guards ( the three stooges) are gone.Well, twenty more years to go are not that bad.Fuck, do we have to wait that long ?.

Anonymous said...

Domocracy is a way to run a country. But how democracy be used to run it when people ethics level is so low.
It is said that corrupted people will elect corrupted leaders/rulers, educated poeple will elect educated leaders/rulers, crooks will elect crook leader etc...
Until this is well understood that one will work on what area of life to run a country.

Anonymous said...

The opposition case is trivial, but Hun Sen did that in order to tame his internal rival.

The lifting immunity is unjust and illegal.

Anonymous said...

12:54 AM
you better stop using that drug because it really messed up your brain . you had sex with a dog because you thought it was your wife , maybe one day you will try to have sex with your mom because you think she is a prostitute . drug is bad for you dude 12:54 AM

Anonymous said...

3:54AM
You are the best I am applause your comment.
You jer pirous mless!

Anonymous said...

3:54 AM
you better stop using that drug because it really messed up your brain . you had sex with a dog because you thought it was your wife , maybe one day you will try to have sex with your mom because you think she is a prostitute . drug is bad for you dude 3:54 AM

Anonymous said...

Gentleman

Laws will become effective when the officers of the ranking respect the laws and practice them.
These officers in govt are supposed to be role models,to showing how practicle the laws are;and they themselve are NOT the abusers or manipulaters to suit their selfish attitute.

There are so many grey or black areas that law enforcement/govt officers put themselve into,in the name of greed or being powerful.

Those youngsters learn from the peers and the social environment they fit in.These are not to blame ,but can be enforced when their parents excercise their role models.

The real dilema is those in govt are too old and re- inforced with unlealistic Phds,where new generation with ability and strenght to take part in leading roles.

For better social outcomes, collaboration of three fundamental areas:

1)Independent judicial system

2)Enforcement of Human rights, while we can ,with assistances of national and international NGOs.

3)Enforcement of practicle Buddhism, and better understanding of it,applicable to secondary and tertiary schools.

Our king has to take this social roles,and build better relationship with these organisations for external and internal peace of cambodians.

May I add that is not necessary to give temporary aids to the poors,and leave this task to the monks to deliver on compassinate ground and transparent.And this will also build relationship between temple and surroundings.

Neang SA

Anonymous said...

12:54 AM

fuck yourself, brobably you do your masterbate and dreamy about som ransy femal for you fantastic, keep dreaming dude low, ignorant and dump stupidillity and small pennis lik ah pourk cpp party can't have hot srp party female becouse our female very bright brain and dark and low brain like ah pourk cpp can only dreaming to fuck srp female.

Anonymous said...

continue from 11:39 am ah pourk cpp and ppu stop stealling our style of writting to claim as your. low ignorant , dump stupitlity like apourk ppu and cpp party should find your own style writting.

Anonymous said...

continue from 11:39 am ah pourk cpp and ppu stop stealling our style of writting to claim as your. low ignorant , dump stupitlity like apourk ppu and cpp party should find your own style writting.

Anonymous said...

Hi : Neag Sa ! that is very good idea
and thanks for comment .

God Bless all Cambodia people and
and the whole world be safe and peaceful .

Thanks From Revere Ma

Anonymous said...

9:13
you should write aletter to hun sen and address the issues you brought up in your posting. He would be happy to make you his personal assistant/secretary general/or deputy primister.

Anonymous said...

Gentleman

Thank you for your aboved comments, however I only wish to share what could possibly be useful, for our interest and likewise for our national interests.

We are in this blog as just we are as cambodians and also concerned over issues that impact our society
as well as our children.

What will make things changed for the cambodians' benefits possible,is opened -minded of our officials in govt for constructive criticism. Under circumstance of duty of care, reasonable and professional communication can be maintained, but nothing is personal.

Thank again.

Neang SA

Anonymous said...

That is the only way the current government can hold on to power forever.

Anonymous said...

continue from 11:39 am ah pourk Sam Rainsy and Seim infiltrators stop stealling our style of writting to claim as your. low ignorant , dump stupitlity like apourk Sam Rainsy and ah Seim infiltrators should find your own style writting.

Anonymous said...

To think that Cambodia now move in the right direction is pure ignorant. Of cause they are more sophisticated now simply put they need to satisfy the demand from the international community to get more money and of cause the rule of law is hallow only the ordinary people must abide by the law the elitist and government official simply actors in this theatrical show and nothing more. I truly understand what these people do to innocent Cambodian and victim you have to be one of them. Try buy a properties from the government official and what you do after you pay the money and the land is claimed to be illegally sold.
The worst thing is you can not sue them because they are the law.

Anonymous said...

8:46 You wrote:

"Try buy a properties from the government official and what you do after you pay the money and the land is claimed to be illegally sold.
The worst thing is you can not sue them because they are the law."

If that has ever happened to you or any of your investors, then what you can do is bring them to court. Make sure you keep documents of the agreement so you can show it to the judge.

Anonymous said...

7:58 PM

ah pleu and ignorant

Anonymous said...

2:34 AM
ah pleu and ignorant

Anonymous said...

Look the face of Viet dog puppet Hun Xen. So means, angry, unhappy to all Khmers, the poors and the oppressed.

Over 5 millions Viet are everywhere in Cambodia, controlled and raped khmer resources of all kinds, lands grabbings, Depleted fishstock in Tonle Sap with over 3 millions as permanent residents in that lake, and practiced illegal methodes of fishing, Angkor Wat owned by ah Sok Kong, ex- Viet Cong general who did lead troops invading Cambodia in 1979, deforestation over 90% of khmer lands.....

Khmer people, the poorest, the owners of the country and as descendants of Angkor builders are living with half dollar a day, but Viets, the invaders, had more RIGTHS and Priveleges that Khmers.

Viet DogHun Xen, you won't live over 100 years to hold your Viet puppet power. You will die like a mad dog, god damaged you and cursing you for your killing of khmer people.

Anonymous said...

12:31 AM

The scenario raised is not a one off occurrences, it did not happened to me nor my relatives but had happened to a close friend who spent their life saving and family to the properties and now just been told it's the Government's land. Who do you think have such sophistication process to sell the Government's land?
I am feeling their pain and desperation.
taking these people to court is a matter of judgment of their safety and those involved but above all the chance of finding justice, the current system provide no such thing.

What we can do now is to discourage people to invest in Cambodia, avoid at all cost if you are not a willing collaborator to the corrupt practices.