Suthep: Democrats won't be dissolved

Thursday, December 17, 2009


Democrat Party secretary-general Suthep Thaugsuban said he is confident that the alleged illegal 258 million baht campaign donation from petrochemical company TPI Polene will not lead to the dissolution of the ruling party.
The Election Commission decided on Thursday to hand the case to the political party registrar for a ruling. EC chairman Apichart Sukhagganond is the ex-officio political party registrar.
The deputy prime minister said this matter involves individuals and not the party as a whole.
If the party registrar rules that the donation was inviolation of Section 94 of the Political Party Act, the EC will take up the case again for consideration.
If the party registrar decides the case against the party is unfounded, it will be dismissed immediately.

How can you label someone a 'spy' without spying on him?

SIVARAK CHUTIPONG was right. The Thai engineer was victim of a bizarre "spy" scam. If there was a conspiracy behind his arrest, he had nothing to do with it. He put it aptly when he asked: "Who would want to stage an incident to spend 32 days in jail?"

By Suthichai Yoon
The Nation
Published on December 17, 2009
After all, Thaksin Shinawatra, the former premier whose previous visit to Cambodia ended with Sivarak being put behind bars, is afraid to spend even one day in prison. He is still wanted in Thailand to serve a two-year jail term. And his desperate attempt to create chaos everywhere has only one objective: Avoid jail at all cost. 


In that context, Sivarak has proved to be a much more courageous man than Thaksin.
The well-scripted charade began even before Sivarak was brought into the picture. Cambodian Premier Hun Sen and Thaksin colluded to set the stage for a showdown with the Abhisit government. When the Thai government sought Thaksin's extradition, Hun Sen didn't waste one minute in rejecting it.
That wasn't enough though. The plot had to be thicker than just a recall of ambassadors. That's when the Thai Embassy's first secretary, Kamrob, was declared persona non grata. And that's when Sivarak was brought into the picture.
The young Thai engineer, an employee of aviation traffic firm CATS, was charged with spying. He was accused of having stolen classified documents that could threaten national security and Thaksin's personal safety.
He was supposed to have talked to the Thai diplomat, who enquired about Thaksin's flight to Cambodia. Sivarak maintained in the court hearings that there was nothing confidential about Thaksin's flight plan. In fact, when he talked to Kamrob on the phone, the plane had already landed 20 minutes earlier.
"I didn't give the first secretary any confidential information. What I got was general knowledge," Sivarak told the court.
But the court ruled him guilty anyway ("as expected", as one newspaper here put it.) The verdict said that Thaksin, being Hun Sen's economic adviser, was an honorary Cambodian citizen whose life had to be protected. So, any sign of a possible threat would be considered a violation of the law. The question of whether what Sivarak told Kamrob was confidential or not conveniently became secondary.
The seven-year jail term came as a shock to Sivarak. But observers in Bangkok were quick to point to a prompt pardon. The thinly-veiled script was a no-brainer. Thaksin would ask Hun Sen to seek a royal amnesty for Sivarak - and everything would be done to ensure that the Abhisit government was put in a highly embarrassing situation.
As if on cue, Thaksin's Pheu Thai Party quickly drew up a letter to request amnesty. The party's chairman, General Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, didn't waste any time in telling the world that Sivarak would be free soon. The letter didn't even have to be delivered. Thaksin was readying to fly to Phnom Penh - and, sure enough, the royal pardon was granted even before a request could be filed.
In one of the strangest twists in the whole episode, Thaksin rushed to Prey Sor Prison to "question" him about "who was the mastermind?" Why he was permitted into jail to conduct a personal interrogation of someone who had just been released on a royal pardon was never explained. It could only happen in a country where the leader calls all the shots.
 But there was no mastermind. The Thai diplomat had called Sivarak to enquire about the arrival in the Cambodian capital of a man wanted for having fled a two-year jail term. Sivarak was only telling him what he knew - what every reporter in town knew. And the diplomat was only doing his duty.
The following day's release ceremony at Hun Sen's home was even more bizarre. Sivarak, the alleged spy who could threaten Thaksin and Hun Sen's lives, suddenly became a hero. No former inmate had ever been given such treatment before, here or anywhere else.
The drama was all to ensure that tension continues between Hun Sen's Cambodia and the Thai government under Abhisit. But amidst the show of great mercy and compassion, one question has yet to be answered: Where's the evidence that Sivarak actually spoke to Thai diplomat Kamrob - not to mention what they had actually discussed?
How did the Cambodian officials drum up the espionage charge against the Thai engineer if there was no counter-espionage involved?
In other words, were the Cambodian authorities eavesdropping on the Thai Embassy in Phnom Penh? If not, where's the proof against Sivarak?
If the answer is yes, a new diplomatic incident may be in the offing. After all, you can't call someone a spy without having spied on him.

Tribunal views from Khmer Rouge town


By Philippa Fogarty
BBC News, Pailin, Cambodia


Former Khmer Rouge fighter Sak Sokhum
Sak Sokhum says he does not know why so much killing took place
Sak Sokhum does not know who to blame for the estimated 1.7 million people who died under the Khmer Rouge. He was only 15 when he joined the Maoist movement in 1974.
Everyone had to, he says. They were going to save Cambodia from capitalists and the mounting threat from the Vietnamese.
First he was a driver. Later, when the Khmer Rouge had emptied cities and sent millions of people to work in the fields, he became a bodyguard for a mid-ranking commander.
When the regime fell in 1979, he and many thousands of fighters fled northwest to continue the battle.
For years he was a signals operator, relaying information between base commanders and guerrillas in the jungle along the Thai border.
Then he worked in a medical corps. In 1995 his leg was blown off by a landmine laid by another Khmer Rouge unit.
WHO WERE THE KHMER ROUGE?
Maoist regime that ruled Cambodia from 1975-1979
Founded and led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998
Abolished religion, schools and money to create agrarian society
Estimated 1.7 million died from starvation, overwork or execution
Ex-leaders on trial: Head of State Khieu Samphan; Pol Pot's deputy Nuon Chea; Foreign Minister Ieng Sary; Social Affairs Minister Ieng Thirith; Tuol Sleng prison chief Duch
When the fighting finally ended in the mid-1990s, Sak Sokhum settled down with his family to work as a welder.
He has regrets about the past, but says it was a war and he had to follow orders. He was happy when fighting ended, he says, because he always expected to die.
Now a UN-backed genocide court is preparing to try five of the most senior Khmer Rouge leaders for crimes against humanity.
"The trials are good for Cambodia, because we are all victims of the Khmer Rouge," he says. "It is a good example for the children - it shows that if you do wrong, you must face trial."
But he does not know who should take responsibility for the 20% of the population who died - from starvation, disease, execution and torture - under the Khmer Rouge.
Former head of state Khieu Samphan was a good guy, he says, as was Nuon Chea, deputy to the now deceased Pol Pot.
"At that time, there was killing everywhere. It is hard to say who specifically killed who and where," he says.

Country profile: Cambodia

 

Map of Cambodia
The fate of Cambodia shocked the world when the radical communist Khmer Rouge under their leader Pol Pot seized power in 1975 after years of guerrilla warfare.
An estimated 1.7 million Cambodians died during the next three years, many from exhaustion or starvation. Others were tortured and executed.
Today, Cambodia is one of the poorest countries in the world and relies heavily on aid. Foreign donors have urged the government to clamp down on pervasive corruption.

Genocide charge for Khmer Rouge leader Khieu Samphan

Khieu Samphan is helped to the dock for a hearing Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Khieu Samphan, detained in November,denies repsonsibility
A UN-backed tribunal in Cambodia has charged Khieu Samphan, formerly the head of state for the Khmer Rouge, with genocide.
The move came after genocide charges were filed against two other Khmer Rouge leaders, Ieng Sary and Nuon Chea.
All the genocide charges relate to the men's treatment of Cambodia's Vietnamese and Muslim minorities.
All three men had already been charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Those charged are already in pre-trial detention although the trial is not expected to begin before 2011.

Cambodia's brutal Khmer Rouge regime


Boy looking at the skulls of Khmer Rouge victims at a memorial outside Phnom Penh
More than a million people died under the four-year regime
The Khmer Rouge was the ruling party in Cambodia from 1975 to 1979, but during this short time it was responsible for one of the worst mass killings of the 20th Century.
The brutal regime claimed the lives of more than a million people - and some estimates say up to 2.5 million perished.
Under the Marxist leader Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge tried to take Cambodia back to the Middle Ages, forcing millions of people from the cities to work on communal farms in the countryside.
But this dramatic attempt at social engineering had a terrible cost, and whole families died from execution, starvation, disease and overwork.
Communist philosophy
The Khmer Rouge had its origins in the 1960s, as the armed wing of the Communist Party of Kampuchea - the name the Communists used for Cambodia.

Genocide charge for Cambodia's KRouge ex-head of state

PHNOM PENH (AFP)— Cambodia's  UN-backed war crimes court Friday charged Khmer Rouge former head of state Khieu Samphan with genocide, a tribunal spokesman told AFP. 
The 78-year-old former leader was charged over the hardline communist regime's slaughter of Vietnamese people and ethnic Cham muslims during the 1970s, said spokesman Lars Olsen.
"This morning Khieu Samphan has been brought before the court and informed that the charges against him have been extended to include genocide against the Chams and the Vietnamese," Olsen said.
The UN-backed court issued genocide charges for the first time this week, a gainst two other leaders of the brutal regime -- former Khmer Rouge number two Nuon Chea and foreign minister Ieng Sary.


Tribunal Charges 2 Khmer Rouge Leaders with Genocide

PHNOM PENH—The UN-assisted tribunal trying former leaders of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge has for the first time charged two defendants with genocide.

Tribunal spokesman Lars Olsen said on Wednesday the co-investigating judges issued the charges this week against the group's top ideologist, Nuon Chea, and former the foreign minister, Ieng Sary.

The tribunal is seeking justice for an estimated 1.7 million people who died from execution, overwork, disease and malnutrition as a result of the ultra-communist group's policies during its 1975-79 rule.

A Cambodian wounded by Thai soldiers found alive after missing for 9 days

By Khmerization

A Cambodian logger shot and seriously wounded by Thai soldiers has been found alive, nine days after he was shot, reports Radio Free Asia.

Twenty one year-old Phal Sokha was wounded and his father-in-law, 55 year-old Plork Lai was killed in the shooting.

Mao Morn, chief of Bak Anlong commune, said Phal Sokha has been found by family members after he crawled for 9 days to reach the borders as his thighs hav been seriously wounded by the shooting. "He was found at O'Malou point on the Khmer-Thai borders. He was shot on the left side thigh, the wounds have been badly infected, infested with worms. He is very thin and very tired," Morn Mao said.

Phal Sokha said he crawled for nine days without any food and he survived only by drinking waters from the creeks along the ways before reaching the Cambodianborders. "The Thai soldiers shot a man and when I saw my uncle was shot I went to his aid and I was shot on the leg. I escaped to hide in the forest and crawled back home. It took me 9 days. I just got home yesterday. I didn't have anything to eat, just drinking water", he said.

On 4th December, a group of 13 loggers were shot at by the Thai soldiers, killing 2 people and seriously wounding one person. Since September, 5 Cambodian have been shot and killed by Thai soldiers along the borders.

In another incident, 13 Cambodian loggers had been surrounded and shot by about 20 Thai soldiers on 14th December and seriously wounding 32 year-old Him Ros. The incident happened in Tropeang Prasat district in Oddor Meanchey province.

Him Ros was seriously wounded on the thigh and he was rescued by forest rangers and was sent for treatment at Siem Reap Hospital.

Cambodian troops detained Thai road workers and machinery

By Khmerization - Cambodian troops have reportedly detained Thai road construction workers and their machinery on 15th December for building road in the disputed areas along the Khmer-Thai border in Oddor Meanchey province, reports everyday.com.

The report says a number of Thai construction workers, their machinery and 10 Thai troops had been detained while working to build roads in Tropeang Prasat district opposite border post 905 in Choup Roun village, Preah Prolay commune in Tropeang Prasat district of Oddar Meamchey province.

Thai crisis set to turn towards Burma

Published on December 18, 2009
The Nation

The crisis in Thailand is set to take another major turn in the next few days, and this time it will relate to our neighbour to the northwest when the Supreme Court wraps up its hearing on ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's frozen Bt76 billion in assets.

The prosecution hopes its final blow will arrive next Tuesday.

Former foreign minister Surakiart Sathirathai will testify as a state witness, purportedly to provide the final piece of the jigsaw, proving Thaksin's failure to be honest about his assets was no honest mistake.

The prosecution is confident it has what is needed to prove Thaksin did not relinquish control of his business empire as legally and constitutionally as required when he served as primeminister.

THAI-CAMBODIA TIES : Little will change : Suthep

Govt will stick to its stance if Hun Sen ignores the conditions
By the Nation, Published on December 18 2009
Relations with Cambodia will not improve soon because Thailand is not yet ready to change its stance, Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said yesterday.


"If the conditions are not changed, relations would remain the same for a period of time," he said.

Thailand has set as a prerequisite Cambodia removing fugitive former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra from his position of adviser to the Cambodian government and extraditing him to Bangkok if the country wants ties to be normalised. Thaksin's appointment is seen as interference in domestic affairs and an insult to the Thai justice system.

Suthep dismisses Hun Sen's attack

Bangkok Post - Published: 18/12/2009 at 12:00 AM
Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban has brushed aside remarks by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen that relations between his country and Thailand could only return to normal when a new government takes power.
The deputy prime minister yesterday said Hun Sen's remarks tarnished his own image.
In an attack on the Thai government on Wednesday, Hun Sen said in a speech at a Phnom Penh ceremony that he was waiting for a new government so relations between the two countries could return to normal.
Mr Suthep said the government would not send an envoy back to Cambodia any time soon even though the Cambodian government stated it would send an ambassador to Bangkok if the Thai government made the first move.

Top city police official accused in assault


091217_04
Photo Supplied
Phat Dara says he was pistol-whipped by police officials racing their cars.
A COMPLAINT was filed with the Ministry of Interior on Wednesday accusing a senior police official and two accomplices of beating a 25-year-old mechanic and leaving him for dead, the victim’s employer said.
The document, which has been seen by the Post, accuses Neang Sok Na – deputy police chief of the Phnom Penh Minor Crimes Bureau – and two others of threatening Phat Dara’s life and pistol-whipping his face and hands on Sunday in an incident witnessed by nearly 50 people who thumb-printed the formal complaint. The allegations have been denied by the police.

Om Heng, the owner of the Heng Heng garage on Phnom Penh’s Street 39 and a witness to the incident, said that staff members, including Phat Dara, were eating dinner in front of the establishment when two cars raced past at high speed.

“One of my staff shouted to the children nearby not to cross the road while we were eating because they might be in danger when the two cars stopped near the pagoda about 30 metres away,” he said.

“One man we knew as senior police officer Neang Sok Na was extremely drunk. He got out of his car and with a pistol – hit my staff member on the head. The other three men started hitting him as well.”

Abhisit regime must go, PM says


091217_02
Photo by: Kem Sovanarra
Hun Sen displays the phone records of convicted Thai spy Sivarak Chutipong during a speech at the Ministry of Education on Wednesday.
PRIME Minister Hun Sen said Wednesday that frayed relations with Thailand cannot be normalised while the current Thai government is in power, accusing the neighbouring country of continuing to breach Cambodia’s border in disputed territory near Preah Vihear temple.
Speaking at a scholarship ceremony at the National Institute of Education, Hun Sen held forth on the diplomatic fallout that has followed in the wake of fugitive former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s visit to Cambodia last month as a newly appointed economic adviser to the government. Thailand withdrew its ambassador to Phnom Penh in protest of Thaksin’s appointment, with Cambodia immediately following suit.

“I will wait to see the establishment of a new government in Thailand, so that they will send back their ambassador,” Hun Sen said. “You accuse us of abusing the Thai justice system, but you forget to mention that you are invading Cambodian territory,” he added.

Thai-Cambodian row a popularity boost for govts

Normalisation of bilateral relations between Thailand and Cambodia remains an uphill task at this moment as both sides continue to enjoy - for domestic consumption - political benefits from the dispute.


The Nation Published on December 17, 2009
The Thai government has set conditions for normalisation of relations - Cambodia must respect the Thai judiciary; stop interference in Thailand's internal affairs; and remove fugitive former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra from the position of adviser to the Cambodian government.

Cambodia: Cut off by Khmer Rouge, film scene revives at refugees return


In Cambodia, filmmakers are slowly returning after decades as refugees who fled the Khmer Rouge.

Phnom Penh, Cambodia —Christian Science Monitor - He sent his daughter to represent him and his films at the exhibition called “Golden Reawakening.” Just before the communist Khmer Rouge marched into the capital in 1975, Tea Lim Koun, the director of the classic Cambodian film “The Snake Man” (1972), escaped bloodshed by fleeing to Canada. Over the next four years, the genocidal regime executed most of Phnom Penh’s remaining directors and actors, wiping out Cambodia’s vibrant filmmaking scene.
Traumatized, Mr. Koun vowed never to make a film again. But he was overwhelmed when he learned that Davy Chou, the French Cambodian grandson of a famous director who disappeared in late 1969, had returned to Cambodia last summer to start an annual film festival. “The younger filmmakers will give hope to Cambodian society again,” Koun says.

Suthep cold-shoulders Hun Sen

Bangkok Post- The government pulled down the shutters on Thursday, with Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban tight lipped on Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen's comment that relations will not improve as long as the Democrats remain in office.
"I will not respond to Prime Minister Hun Sen's comment because the situation isn't good at the moment," the Democrat secretary-general said.
"The Thai government must be patient in the face of the frequent criticism emanating from Cambodia."

Cambodian addicts forced into drug trials - rights groups

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Rights groups are accusing Cambodian authorities of arresting drug addicts and forcing them to take part in trials of experimental detox drugs, claims denied by an official of a government anti-addiction agency.

Police rounded up a group of addicts on Friday and Saturday and brought them to Phnom Penh's Orkas Knhom, or "My Chance" treatment facility, where they were pressured to sign up for a medical trial, according to local human rights group Licadho.

ASEAN hopes dispute between Thailand, Cambodia not jeopardizes its solidarity

  JAKARTA, Dec. 16 (Xinhua) -- The Association of the Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) said on Wednesday that it hopes border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia would not jeopardize its solidarity.

    "The dispute is one thing but the most important thing is that the incident would not pose risk to the ASEAN's solidarity," Tommy Koh, Chairperson on the High-Level Task Force on the Drafting of the ASEAN Charter, told the press after the second ASEAN Secretariat Policy Forum at its secretariat here.

Party leader affirms close ties with Cambodia



Vietnam will do its utmost to promote its traditional friendship and comprehensive cooperation with Cambodia, Party leader Nong Duc Manh told King Norodom Sihamoni during their talks in Phnom Penh on December 17-VOVNEWS.VN.

He said he was happy to return to Cambodia and meet with King Sihamony who has succeeded his father, Norodom Sihanouk, in reigning in the royal nation, and made a great contribution to maintaining and developing the Vietnam-Cambodia relationship. 

CAMBODIA: Pressure grows over Uyghur asylum seekers



Photo: Contributor/IRIN
Uyghurs in Xinjiang Province checking posters put up by the Chinese government after the July 2009 protests, which show scenes associating Uyghurs with destruction, or cooperating with Han Chinese
PHNOM PENH, 17 December 2009 (IRIN) - Cambodia is facing mounting pressure over the fate of 22 Uyghurs who fled China to avoid prosecution for their alleged involvement in violent protests earlier this year.

Aided by an underground network of Christian missionaries, the group covertly crossed China’s southern border into Vietnam and then Cambodia in recent weeks, according to the Uyghur American Association (UAA), a US-based advocacy group.

In Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh, the whereabouts and condition of the group remains unknown.

Besides the Philippines, Cambodia is the only Southeast Asian signatory to the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, committing it to protect people fleeing persecution who qualify as refugees.  

 
 
 
 
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