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Cambodia's Hun Sen demands closure of key human rights group

November 26, 2017

The prime minister of Cambodia has asked the interior ministry to investigaate the Cambodia Center for Human Rights. The move comes admist a crackdown on threats to Hun Sen's 20-year rule.

https://p.dw.com/p/2oHSD
Kambodscha Prey Veng province Politiker Kem Sokha
Image: Reuters/Samrang Pring

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen called for the closure of one of the country's most important human rights groups on Sunday. The Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) was founded by jailed activist and opposition politician Kem Sokha (pictured above).

Hun Sun has described the opposition as "children" of the United States, and claims he told President Donald Trump as much during a summit in the Philippines earlier this month.

"The Cambodian Center for Human Rights must be shut down because it was created by foreigners not Cambodians," Hun Sen was quoted by the Phnom Penh Post as saying. "The ministry of the interior should look into this."

A longtime advocate of increased democracy and non-violent opposition in Cambodia, Kem Sokha founded the CCHR in 2002 during a brief hiatus from his career as a politician.

Kem Sokha was arrested in September on charges of espionage, with the government claiming he was conspiring with the US to unseat Hun Sen. Denying the charges against him, Kem Sokha has argued that Hun Sen is simply getting him out of the way before next year's election.

Hun Sen, who has been prime minister for nearly 20 years, has been accused of a widespread crackdown on opposition voices, including in the media. The move prompted the US to revoke its funding for the election, allowing the gap to be filled by China.

es/rc (dpa, Reuters)