A Cambodia's history of violence | The Phnom Penh Post
David Boyle and May Titthara, 14 November 2012
Free Trade Union President Chea Mony (R) places incense by a photograph
of his brother, slain labour rights leader Chea Vichea, at a memorial
service held on the anniversary of his death in Jan. 2012. Photograph:
Pha Lina/Phnom Penh Post
Systematic extra-judicial killings
were directed and executed for decades by death squads established
under Prime Minister Hun Sen’s regime and run by men who are now some of
the highest-ranking members of government, a report released yesterday
by Human Rights Watch (HRW) alleges.
The report, Tell Them That I Want to Kill Them, unearths hundreds of cases of political killings investigated by the United Nations, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation,
rights groups and the media that are linked to individuals including
chief of the Ministry of Interior’s criminal department Mok Chito and
Central Security Directorate chief Sok Phal.
From the “A-teams”
or death squads established in the 1980s to the grenade attacks on
opposition parties in the 1990s, the bloody 1997 coup d’etat to the
killing of Chut Wutty this year, the report outlines how alleged
murderers have been promoted in the Cambodian People's Party-led
government rather than prosecuted.
The government has said the report is a baseless, politically timed stunt intended to try and derail the ASEAN summit that begins on Thursday.
Phil
Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said the
farcical explanation for the death of fierce anti-logging activist Chut
Wutty — an official investigation revealed he was shot by a military
police officer who was then, accidentally, killed with his own gun by a
man trying to disarm him — showed murders were rewarded by the Cambodian
People's Party (CPP).
“The fact that, for instance, Mok Chito is
tapped to go down to lead the investigation and come up with a story to
try to explain away the Chut Wutty murder shows that these people are
still the go-to people for the CPP,” Robertson said.
“Somebody
like Mok Chito, who is known to have a long association with the most
senior people in the government and is known to have a reputation as
someone who has repeatedly got their hands dirty for the CPP as an
enforcer type, this is the type of person that... when this person says
what the story is, everybody salutes.”
Wutty was killed on April 26 while investigating illegal logging in the Cardamom Mountains.
The
report quotes a senior operative under the State of Cambodia, the
regime that ruled Cambodia immediately after the Khmer Rouge, detailing
how a secret death squad called A-92 was directed by Sok Phal and Mok
Chito.
“When [senior police officer] Mok Chito or my unit
discovered something or a target, we first had to make a report to our
superiors. They take the decision to kill. Mok Chito was involved in
lots of killings,” the anonymous operative is quoted as saying.
“Sok
Phal was in charge of internal security, while Luor Ramin was
responsible for foreigners. A-teams reported to Sok Phal, who reported
to Sin Sen. Sometimes they went directly to Sin Sen.”
Sok Phal said yesterday he was very surprised to hear of the allegations against him.
“It
is the first time that I heard people accuse me; I am always helping
people,” he said, requesting a copy of the report before he could
comment further.
Mok Chito, who, according to the report, was
referred to by one US diplomat as “the ultimate fox in the chicken
coop”, said he was at the gym yesterday and then switched off his phone.
Many others who were subsequently promoted to high-level
positions in the CPP and government are named as having been involved in
extrajudicial killings or death squads.
They include You Sin
Long, secretary-general of the National Authority for Combating Drugs;
Heng Pov, who became Phnom Penh police chief and an adviser to Hun Sen
until he was jailed on a slew of charges including extortion and murder;
and Luor Ramin, who has also been promoted to the upper ranks of the
NACD.
None of them could be reached yesterday, and Sin Sen died in 2008.
Information Minister Khieu Kanharith said on the sidelines of a meeting
on Tuesday morning that Human Rights Watch was just trying to make noise
ahead of ASEAN, and called such attempts standard practice for rights
groups and protesters operating during international meets.
“First
of all, he must give the proof to say that [these men] are responsible
for all these things. I think for Human Rights Watch, it is just a
personal vendetta between them and the present prime minister,” he said.
HRW references, among many other sources, a September 1993 United
Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia human rights report, which
found 39 incidents of “killing political opponents” that resulted in 26
casualties and 25 killings intended to intimidate the public.
The
death squads that HRW said performed these operations were dissolved
after a failed 1994 coup attempt and eventually reintegrated into the
police, today operating as two distinct units, Kamlang la’or (good
forces) and Kamlang samngat (secret forces).
Time and time
again, the report points to murders conducted with complete impunity.
There were no subsequent arrests, instead, authorities frequently
devised ludicrous conclusions, including outlandish claims of suicide, a
trend the report suggests continues today.
When investigating
the death of senior Funcinpec General Chao Sambath, who the UN reported
was shot three times in the head by soldiers immediately following the
1997 coup d’etat, authorities concluded the deceased had committed
suicide “by biting his own tongue”, the report states.
In
another case, Khmer Krom monk Eang Sok Thoeun – who was found dead with
his throat slit three times amid an official crackdown on monk protests –
was also deemed to have committed suicide by police.
They then ordered his immediate burial and prohibited monks from conducting funeral proceedings.
The
report highlights a speech in which Hun Sen suggests that an infamous
1997 grenade attack at a rally held by an opposition party led by Sam
Rainsy, which left 16 dead and more than 150 injured, had been
orchestrated by party leadership in order to blame the CPP.
Most
recently, HRW points to the farcical and contradictory official accounts
of how Chut Wutty and military police officer In Rattana were killed, a
narrative that was finally settled by none other that Mok Chito.
The
intimidation is also shown to have stretched to the media in cases such
as the killing of journalist Khim Sambo, a reporter with the
opposition-affiliated newspaper Moneaksekar Khmer, who was gunned down
with his son in a drive-by shooting.
The grisly details of how
bullets were extracted from the dead body of outspoken newspaper editor
Thun Bun Ly’s body by a gloved soldier in 1996, almost immediately after
he was killed in a crime that never led to a single arrest, are also
recounted.
“It is not my job to hold the testicles of the
co-prime ministers [Norodom Ranariddh and Hun Sen],” Bun Ly is quoted as
having told an amused courtroom during a trial instigated against him
because of critical articles he published.
Human Rights Watch
also quoted Hing Bun Heang, former deputy head of the notorious Brigade
70, who told the Post after the 1997 grenade attack that he wanted to
kill journalists who alleged Hun Sen’s bodyguards were involved.
“Tell
them that I want to kill them... publish it, say that I, chief of the
bodyguards, have said this. I want to kill... I am so angry,” Bun Heang
is quoted as saying.
Hing Bun Heang is now commander of Hun Sen’s bodyguard unit and deputy commander-in-chief of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
A Cambodia's history of violence | The Phnom Penh Post
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