Friday, August 14, 2009

Hun Sen's regime is a "chimera of democracy" generously subsidized by foreign aid: The Wall Street Journal

Meeting of the dictators: Hun Xen visiting Than Shwe

Burmese Justice

Smarter sanctions against the Burmese generals after their latest sentence of Suu Kyi.

AUGUST 13, 2009
The Wall Street Journal

Tuesday's sentencing by a Burmese court of opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi to three years of hard labor is a fresh reminder of the ruling junta's cruelty. That the sentence was then magnanimously reduced to an 18-month extension of her house arrest is a reminder of its cynicism.

Ms. Suu Kyi is Burma's rightful prime minister, having been elected in a vote overturned by the junta in 1990. The latest verdict ensures that the regime will get through parliamentary elections scheduled for next year without her participation. It's also a signal to the world that the junta isn't about to reach for any reset buttons, even as the Obama administration attempts to do so through a policy review that has being dragging on since February.

As the Obama team ponders its position, it's useful to consider the policies that have come before. The United States has imposed investment sanctions on Burma since 1997. Those sanctions have multiplied along with the junta's brutality. In 2003, after an assassination attempt on Ms. Suu Kyi, Congress passed the Burmese Freedom and Democracy Act which banned imports from Burma into the U.S. In 2008, following violent suppression of the previous year's peaceful "saffron revolution," the JADE act placed sanctions on Burmese gems. President George W. Bush also signed targeted financial sanctions aimed at individuals in the Burmese military elite and their associated businesses.

Burma's junta has mostly shrugged off Western sanctions thanks to billions in sales of natural gas to China and Thailand, along with sales of timber and gems. Some of those sanctions have achieved little except to further impoverish the Burmese people and should be lifted. But the targeted sanctions have been more effective and could be tightened. No less valuable are Burmese language broadcasts of Radio Free Asia, which are vital in breaking the regime's monopoly on information.

Now the junta is becoming as much a menace to its neighborhood as it already is to its people. Burma is getting nuclear technology from Russia and possibly North Korea. Burmese and North Korean officials have signed an agreement on military cooperation, according to reports from the Burmese exile community. In July, a North Korean ship heading to Burma—presumably bearing arms—was tailed by a U.S. warship until it turned back. Burma is also a hub for drug and human trafficking, taking in as much as $2 billion annually from exports of narcotics like opium and methamphetamine, according to U.S. Congressional reports.

In response, the Obama Administration and Democratic allies in Congress seem inclined to introduce more sweeteners into the mix. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hinted last month at the possibility of "investment" and "other exchanges" for Burma if Ms. Suu Kyi was freed. Today, U.S. Senator Jim Webb will travel to Burma, the first visit by a U.S. Senator in over a decade. Not a bad photo-op for a regime that last year impounded humanitarian aid for more than 100,000 victims of Cyclone Nargis.

The danger here is that the junta will use these visits, along with next year's elections, to generate a chimera of democracy—generously subsidized by foreign aid—on the model of Hun Sen's regime in nearby Cambodia. For the sake of Ms. Suu Kyi and every other imprisoned Burmese dissident, we hope the Obama Administration doesn't conclude from all this that now is the time to engage.

8 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:14 PM

    Democratic Kampuchea Pol Pot Khmer Rouge Regime had committed:

    Tortures
    Executions
    Massacres
    Atrocities
    Crimes Against Humanity
    Starvations
    Overwork to Death
    Slavery
    Rapes
    Human Abuses
    Assault and Battery


    Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime had committed:

    Assassinations
    Assassinated Journalists
    Assassinated Political Opponents
    Assassinated Leader of the Free Trade Union
    Attempted Assassinations on Chea Vichea and Sam Rainsy
    Attempted Murders on Chea Vichea and Sam Rainsy
    Executed members of FUNCINPEC Party
    Murders members and activists of Sam Rainsy Party
    Killings
    Extrajudicial Execution
    Grenade Attack
    Terrorism
    Drive by Shooting
    Tortures
    Intimidations
    Death Threats
    Threatening
    Human Abductions
    Human Rights Abuses
    Human Trafficking
    Drugs Trafficking
    Under Age Child Sex
    Corruptions
    Bribery
    Illegal Mass Evictions
    Illegal Land Grabbing
    Illegal Firearms
    Illegal Logging
    Illegal Deforestation
    Illegally use of remote detonation on Sokha Helicopter, while Hok Lundy and others military official on board.
    Illegally Sold State Properties
    Illegally Remove Parliamentary Immunity of Parliament Members
    Plunder National Resources
    Acid Attacks
    Turn Cambodia into a Lawless Country
    Oppression
    Injustice
    Steal Votes
    Bring Foreigners from Veitnam to vote in Cambodia for Cambodian People's Party.
    Abuse the Court as a tools for CPP to send political opponents and journalists to jail.
    Abuse of Power
    Abuse the Laws
    Abuse the National Election Committee
    Abuse the National Assembly
    Violate the Laws
    Violate the Constitution
    Violate the Paris Accords
    Impunity

    Under Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime, no criminals that has been committed all of these crimes above within Hun Sen Khmer Rouge government have ever been brought to justice.

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  2. Anonymous12:19 PM

    UNDER AGE CHILD SEX
    Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime had committed under age child sex.
    Svay Sitha is a senior government official from Cambodian People's Party.
    Svay Sitha had a sexual relationship with Tat Marina, she was only 16 years old.
    Source: Human Rights Watch

    ACID ATTACK ON TAT MARINA
    Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime had committed acid attack.
    "On December 5, 1999, Tat Marina, age 16, was severely disfigured in an acid attack in Phnom Penh. The attack was allegedly committed by Khun Sophal, the wife of a senior government official, Svay Sitha, because she was angry her husband had a sexual relationship with Tat Marina. Neither Khun Sophal nor those suspected of being her accomplices in the attack were brought to justice. Intense media publicity compelled the Phnom Penh Municipal Court to issue an arrest warrant for Khun Sophal for attempted murder, but the police claimed that they could not locate her, although journalists reported that she was living at home as usual."
    Source: Human Rights Watch

    TORTURE AND MURDER ON PRAK SITHA WHILE IN CUSTODY BY MISNISTRY OF INTERIOR OFFICIAL
    Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime had committed torture and murder.
    "On the night of January 16, 2003, a street youth named Prak Sitha was beaten to death at the Ministry of Interior (MOI) headquarters after he was arrested and detained by off-duty MOI officers on suspicion of theft. His body - bearing numerous injuries to the head, torso, arms, and legs - was dumped at a Phnom Penh pagoda the following morning by ministry officers, in violation of police regulations regarding deaths in custody. No criminal charges were filed in connection with this death. In December 2004, the case was cited by the UN secretary-general's special representative for human rights in Cambodia - who stated that Prak Sitha died at the ministry "following beatings by a known police officer" - as an example of a "consistent and continuing pattern of impunity" in Cambodia."
    Source: Human Rights Watch

    PUT SAMPHORS WAS SHOT DEAD BY MEAN SOKCHEA, A RCAF MAJOR WORKING IN BRIGADE 70.
    Hun Sen's personal Bodyguards Unit (Brigade 70) is a terrorist organization.
    Hing Bunheang is a March 30, 1997 Grenade Attack suspect identified by the FBI.
    Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime had committed murder, again.
    "On September 4, 2008, Mean Sokchea, a RCAF major working in Brigade 70, shot dead 21-year-old waitress Put Samphors at a restaurant in Kandal province. Mean Sokchea, in a drunken stupor, fired his gun and apparently mistakenly hit Put Samphors in the stomach. She was taken to a hospital but later died of her wounds. Mean Sokchea was detained by the police overnight but was then released, allegedly after intervention by Hing Bun Heang. Put Samphor's family received US$2,700 from Mean Sokchea, and the police told them that their daughter was shot while authorities were chasing robbers."
    Source: Human Rights Watch

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  3. Anonymous1:50 PM

    Wall Street Journal? lol If They and their crook and criminal friends at the wall street didn't rob the savings of many innocent Americans, the US wouldn't be in the recession right now. Yea, it takes a group of people whose system no longer working to tell us what is going on with my country. Give me a break, you greedy ass monkey yuppies. Clean up your acts and stop stealing from American people's savings first. The Wall Street journal and their wall street criminal friends are the most corrupted. Too bad the judicial system in the US protects businessmen when they are "too big to fail." If these damn wall street journal people are so righteous, why did they not report on the bad behaviors of those fucking banks? No, because they are friends and they jump in the same bed every night.

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  4. Anonymous5:45 PM

    No one can take this son-of-viet animal out, except those Khmer CIA agents, of course, with blessing order from the US. We are painfully waiting for the order to come in.

    --Janitor

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  5. Anonymous8:28 PM

    Posted by Xocheata

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  6. Anonymous2:56 AM

    oh, whatever! don't hate just because we don't think the same like you! being different is what make every nation and people beautiful and unique in this world, ok. please don't hate and don't be ignorant! get used to it. thank you and god bless cambodia.

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  7. Anonymous12:37 PM

    Cambodia should give Thailand anothe lessons! why allowing Thai military plane flew all over our territory, our airspace and do nothing about it? there's a international law! if Thai violated our airspace, cambodia has a right to shoot them down!! why khmer leader still playing soft and kissing Thai-ass again and again? when will khmer leader stop being Thork Tiep!!

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  8. Anonymous12:40 PM

    correction = khmer should give Siamese another lessons! don't let them take advantage on khmer like that!...and look down on khmer like that!

    ReplyDelete