UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights Surya Subedi speaks to villagers in Pursat, Dec 10, 2012 [RFA] |
HIMALAYAN NEWS SERVICE
KATHMANDU: United Nations Human Rights Envoy to
Cambodia Professor Surya P Subedi has received widespread international support,
including from US President Barack Obama in his dealings with the Cambodian
government.
During his Cambodia visit in November to attend the
US-ASEAN summit meeting in Phnom Penh, President Obama called Cambodia’s lack
of respect for fundamental freedoms an ‘impediment’ to a deeper relation
between the two countries. He went on to say countries that do not uphold
certain universal principles, such as respect for human rights, will have
difficulty integrating with the international community.
Last week, the State Department in a letter sent on
behalf of President Obama to a group of leading US Senators expressed concern
about the situation of human rights in Cambodia. It stated that the US had
called on the Cambodian government to pay heed to the recommendations of Prof
Subedi.
Subedi, a Nepali by origin and a law professor at the
Leeds University, UK, has been serving as the UN Human Rights Rapporteur for
four years. He has already submitted four reports, voicing for sweeping reforms
to ensure the independence of judiciary and free and fair elections in
Cambodia.
Prof Subedi has receivedcriticism from Cambodian Prime
Minister Hun Sen. Censuring Prof Subedi, Sen said the professor better keep his
idea to Nepal, his home country’s political mess rather than lecturing on
Cambodia’s human rights record.
In a letter to THT, Subedi mentioned that European
Parliament, the Inter-Parliamentary Union, the Senates of Australia, and the
Philippines have passed resolutions calling on the Cambodian Government to implement
the recommendations made by him. In the letter, he also mentioned that the
Cambodian main opposition party leader is in exile in Paris as he faces long
prison sentence if he were to return to Phnom Penh.
Likewise, the owner and director of an independent
radio station, Beehive, Mam Sonando, was sent to 20-year prison sentence
recently. Subedi had gone to meet him in prison at the outskirts of Phnom Penh
during his recent mission to Cambodia.
No comments:
Post a Comment