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COLUMNIST: LAO MONG HAY
Lao Mong Hay
Rule by Fear
Dr. Lao Mong Hay is currently a senior researcher at the Asian Human Rights Commission in Hong Kong. He was previously director of the Khmer Institute of Democracy in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and a visiting professor of political science at the University of Toronto, Canada, in 2003. Earlier, he served as director of the Cambodian Mine Action Center, dedicated to mine clearance and mine education. In 1997 he received an award from Human Rights Watch and the Nansen Medal in 2000 from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

  • June 18, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — Since 1993 the international community has been assisting Cambodia in establishing parliamentary democracy, rule of law, and the administrative machinery of government. Fifteen years later, the infrastructure is physically present but is so wracked by corruption that it is largely dysfunctional.

  • May 28, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — On May 16, 2006, a petition with over 1 million signatures and thumbprints was presented to the National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, calling on the assembly to urgently enact an anti-corruption law that had been in the drafting process for years. Yet still no such law has appeared.

  • May 07, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — Cambodia will hold a general election on July 27, but court cases against the leaders of two opposition parties may mar the electoral process. One is a lawsuit against Sam Rainsy for defaming the deputy prime minister; the other involves Prince Norodom Ranariddh. Neither is likely to get a fair trial.

  • April 16, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — Between 1975 and 1979 the Cambodian people suffered the world's worst torture in recent history under the Khmer Rouge regime. Torture did not end with the end of that murderous regime; it is still perpetrated at police stations, prisons and detention centers.

  • March 26, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — Cambodia is bound by international agreements to adopt democracy, to observe and respect human rights and to be governed by the rule of law. It has abandoned communism, embraced a market economy and become more open; yet communist legacies have stalled full parliamentary democracy and rule of law.

  • March 05, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — Land-grabbing has affected many people and forestry areas across Cambodia; it has been feared that this could spark a "peasant revolution." Last year Prime Minister Hun Sen declared "a war against land-grabbers" whom he identified as officials of the Cambodian People's Party and people in power.

  • February 14, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — The Cambodian government is bound by the Paris Peace Agreements of 1991, which set up a field office of the U.N. high commissioner for human rights. From the beginning there has been friction between this U.N. office and the Cambodian government, however.

  • January 23, 2008
    Hong Kong, China — Fear on the part of ordinary people in relation to their rulers at all levels of public administration, from village chiefs to the head of state, is a norm in Cambodia, where these rulers behave as masters, not servants, of their people.

  • December 12, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — In October 1991, the warring factions in Cambodia and 17 concerned countries gathered in Paris to sign, in the presence of the secretary-general of the United Nations, a set of agreements to end the war in Cambodia.

  • November 21, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — The Khmer Rouge tribunal has now arrested five top Khmer Rouge leaders who are charged with crimes against humanity and/or war crimes. All but one have denied the charges.They are, in the chronological order of their arrests, Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch,

  • October 31, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — Cambodia is currently making preparations for the election of members of parliament to be held in July next year, making it the third, after the one organized by the United Nations in 1993. It has now proceeded to update the electoral rolls.

  • October 10, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — Some years ago, at a public forum to debate a future trial of the Khmer Rouge, three "intellectuals" who had been senior Khmer Rouge officials laid the blame for the mass killings and the devastation of Cambodian society squarely on the shoulders of Pol P

  • September 19, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — In August there was a flurry of statements from the Cambodian government and other state institutions to affirm and defend former King Sihanouk's immunity from any court order to appear in the Khmer Rouge Tribunal as a defendant or a witness. This tribu

  • September 05, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — Over the last two weeks, the Cambodian government has mounted vitriolic attacks against a request for former King Sihanouk, now 84, to be stripped of his immunity and face trial in the mixed Cambodian-U.N. tribunal set up to try senior Khmer Rouge leaders

  • August 22, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — On July 31, the Cambodian government sent a delegation of officials, ten excavators and over 100 workers under the protection of armed policemen to reclaim a site that once included Lake Kob Srov. Long Chhin (Cambodia) Investment Ltd.

  • July 18, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — At the end of May this year, the London-based environmental organization Global Witness published a report in which it held a "kleptocratic elite" close to Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen responsible for illegal logging. A week later, instead of addressi

  • June 27, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — The Cambodian delegation to the United Nations Human Rights Council launched an unprecedented and unwarranted attack on U.N. special representative of the secretary-general for human rights in Cambodia, Prof.

  • June 06, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — It is nearly 10 years since the Cambodian government requested U.N. assistance in organizing the trials of Khmer Rouge officials accused of some 1.7 million deaths during their rule from 1975 to 1979.


  • April 25, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — In August 2005, two men -- Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun -- were convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison for the murder of Chea Vichea near a newspaper kiosk in Phnom Penh in January 2004. The two men subsequently appealed against their conviction.

  • April 04, 2007
    Hong Kong, China — Last week the Cambodian government threatened to revoke the visas of staff members of the Open Society Justice Initiative, a New York-based human rights NGO, and expel their organization after OSJI publicized allegations of corruption at the Khmer Rouge T






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