Published in: The Wall Street Journal, NOVEMBER 18, 2012
Brad Adams |
"Like Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi, Mr. Rainsy has always practiced non-violence. Unlike Ms. Suu Kyi, he and Cambodia's opposition have been largely ignored by the world."
-Brad Adams
In his election-night victory speech in Chicago, U.S. President Barack Obama recognized that people in many parts of the world are still struggling for the most basic of rights. "We can never forget that as we speak, people in distant nations are risking their lives right now just for a chance to argue about the issues that matter…" Mr. Obama could have been talking about Cambodia, where this week he will make the first-ever visit by a U.S. president to attend the East Asia Summit.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has a different view. As
Arab Spring protests broke out in 2011, leading to the fall of fellow
strongmen, some in Cambodia had the temerity to suggest that it was also time
for him to go. Hun Sen's response was typically threatening: "I not only
weaken the opposition, I'm going to make them dead ... and if anyone is strong
enough to try to hold a demonstration, I will beat all those dogs and put them
in a cage."
During Hun Sen's time in power, many opposition figures have
indeed ended up dead. Death squads have targeted opposition figures in
election-related violence, while labor leaders and journalists have been
assassinated.
Despite the fact that in many cases the killers are known,
in not one case has there been a credible investigation and conviction. Worse,
many have been promoted. The Ministry of Defense and Ministry of Interior
websites listing senior military and police officials are a veritable Who's Who
of human rights abusers.
One person now in a cage is Mam Sonando, the owner of
Cambodia's most prominent independent radio station, Beehive Radio. Mr. Sonando
has long angered the government by broadcasting Khmer-language news from
U.S.-funded Radio Free Asia and hosting call-in shows where average Cambodians
vent against corruption and abuses.
Facing trumped-up charges publicly endorsed by Hun Sen of
participating in a secession movement, Mr. Sonando showed considerable courage
and returned from Paris to stand trial. On Oct. 1, a Phnom Penh court sentenced
him to 20 years in prison–essentially a life sentence for a 71-year-old.
Hun Sen has long wanted to put opposition leader Sam Rainsy
in a cage. Since he started an opposition party in 1995, Mr. Rainsy has
survived assassination attempts, constant threats and a variety of criminal
charges. He now lives in exile in Paris after being sentenced to a total of 12
years in a trial transparently aimed at preventing him from taking part in next
year's national elections.
Like Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi, Mr. Rainsy has always
practiced non-violence. Unlike Ms. Suu Kyi, he and Cambodia's opposition have
been largely ignored by the world.
Hun Sen has been in power for 27 years, while his Cambodian
People's Party (CPP) has ruled the country since 1979. He is now one of the
world's 10 longest-serving leaders, while the CPP is on the verge of succeeding
in returning Cambodia to the one-party state it ran in the 1980s.
The parallels with Mubarak's Egypt, Ben Ali's Tunisia and
Gaddafi's Libya are striking. Yet the lessons of the Arab Spring seem not to
have been learned when it comes to Cambodia. The U.S. and other governments
issue critical statements from time to time, but they have no strategy or
policy to ensure pluralism, the protection of opposition politicians and
critics, or an end to the violence and impunity that characterize contemporary
Cambodia. Hun Sen has run circles around feckless governments, laughing all the
way to the bank as donor assistance continues to roll in.
Cambodians have high expectations for Mr. Obama's visit.
Villagers facing illegal eviction near Phnom Penh's airport even painted
pictures of Obama on the roofs of their corrugated metal homes with the message
"SOS." Eight of them were arrested on Thursday.
Cambodians hope Mr. Obama will publicly and clearly demand
the pardon of Sam Rainsy and Mam Sonando, the creation of a new and independent
national election commission to administer next year's elections, and the
dismissal of known human rights abusers in the government, military and police.
Failure to speak out would be a huge missed opportunity that
would significantly tarnish Obama's second term even before it starts. Quiet
diplomacy will not be enough, as the government will use its near monopoly of
the media to say that the President of the United States left town without
making any demands on the government. Such a visit, complete with smiling
photo-ops, would give Hun Sen and the CPP the international legitimacy they
have long sought.
A strong and public stand in favor of rights and democracy
could give hope to and even galvanize the Cambodian people. It would send a
message to the region that the vaunted U.S. "pivot" on Asia has moral
as well as economic and security content. As he did in his first term in China
and Egypt, Mr. Obama shouldspeak over the head of an abusive government, making
it clear that his election-day remarks were not just hollow words to please a
crowd in Chicago.
Mr. Adams is Asia director at Human Rights Watch
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