The United Nations proclaimed this day September 21st, an International Peace Day, and a week ago, September 15th, the Democracy Day. Peace did not come by itself, sometime at a heavy price in blood and tears, and life... Sometime people live in peace but behind the peaceful facade, people live shame and misery. The late President of the US, John Kennedy, once talked about "Peace of the Graves" and "Security of the Slaves" that we do not want. We need true peace not for our generation but for our posterity, people living in dignity, free and equal within the law.
The late Martin Luther King Jr. once said that "Peace is not merely the absence of conflicts, but the presence of Justice", and it is so true. And this important that true Democracy - again it should be true- should be present t ensure true Peace. Again Democracy with its complete separation of power between the Legislative, the Executive and the Judiciary. All of it with the protection of declaration of Human Rights a free and independent media.
Look back at Cambodia, my motherland, I have the impression that Peace is not the one that we hope for, when the Prime Minister is in need to have the protection by an army of "Body Guards", and the foreign influence is still present.
It is now 25 years since the Paris Peace Agreements were signed on October 23rd, 1991, truly the Khmer people deserve better... it is true that they have food and shelter, but this is enough? - Most of us need dignity and freedom that they are willing to die for.
Hopefully our leaders share the same moral values...
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Proverbe du Jour
La raison du plus fort est toujours la meilleure. (French)
The reason of the strongest is always the best.
and
The boss is always right ...
The reason of the strongest is always the best.
and
The boss is always right ...
S. MEACH vs Manet HUN
Initial Court Hearing: September 1st, 2016:
Meach Sovannara Wins the
First Legal Round in U.S. Case against Hun Manet
2016-09-01 RFA
Jailed Cambodian
opposition member Meach Sovannara (Top C) is escorted by police officials in
front of the appeal court in Phnom Penh, Aug. 23, 2016. AFP
Meach
Sovannar’s case in the U.S. accusing Cambodian General Hun Manet of unlawful
imprisonment, torture, terrorism and other crimes cleared its first legal
hurdle on Thursday when a federal district judge in the case decided the court
has jurisdiction, according to one of his attorneys.
Judge
George H. Wu of the Central District Court of California ruled that the case
against the son of long-ruling Prime Minister Hun Sen could go forward, Morton
Sklar told RFA’s Khmer Service.
"The
judge in essence granted everything that we wanted,” Sklar told RFA. “It was a
tremendous success this morning, and what he granted us was the right to carry
out what's called jurisdictional discovery under the supervision of the court.”
Sklar
said the decision was a key to unlocking information necessary to the case.
“That
means we're able to obtain disclosure of vital pieces of information that
the government of Cambodia and Hun Manet previously have been keeping secret,
and we will be able to do this very, very quickly,” he said.
The
suit alleges that Hun Manet’s family connections and leadership role within
Cambodia’s security forces make him liable for the emotional and financial
damage borne by Sovannara’s family.
Hun
Manet heads the Cambodian military’s anti-terror unit, is deputy chairman joint
staff of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces and is the deputy commander of the
Prime Minister's Bodyguard Unit – an elite unit that has often been at the
center of complaints about rights abuses.
Hun
Manet is widely viewed as the successor to his father Cambodian Prime Minister
Hun Sen who has ruled the country for more than 30 years.
The
country of Cambodia is also named as a defendant, and Sklar said Wu’s ruling
gives Hun Manet two choices.
"What
that means is that the government of Cambodia and Hun Manet have a choice:
Either they can agree and let the court-ordered jurisdictional discovery
proceed, so that we can ask these questions and get the answers, or they could
say: 'No, we’re not going to participate in this,' in which case under the
court rules they have automatically lost the case and we have a verdict against
both the government of Cambodia and Hun Manet."
In
April, as Hun Manet toured parts of the U.S. that are home to large Cambodian
diaspora communities, he was greeted by Cambodian-Americans protesting Phnom
Penh's human rights violations and domestic property seizures.
On the
last day of Hun Manet's visit, he was served with court documents by a private
investigator named Paul Hayes, who was hospitalized after allegedly being
thrown to the ground by Hun Manet’s bodyguards outside of a restaurant in Long
Beach, California.
Hayes's
subpoena was tied to a wrongful imprisonment suit brought in a U.S. federal
court by Meach Sovannara, who is the Cambodian National Rescue Party’s
information director. He has dual U.S. and Cambodian citizenship.
Meach
Sovannara was given a 20-year sentence for taking part in a protest in Phnom
Penh in late 2014. He and 10 other activists were jailed on insurrection
charges for clashing with police over the closure of a protest site in the
capital.
While
Cambodia’s courts are viewed as a tool of the Hun Sen and the ruling Cambodian
People’s Party (CPP), the Cambodian strong man isn’t likely to find U.S. courts
are so friendly.
"What
we've been able to do with this case is get a U.S. court, not subject to
the dictates of Hun Sen and the Hun Sen government, exercising independent
jurisdiction to deal with what's going on in Cambodia,” said Sklar.
“There
has to be that outside monitoring, and outside way of checking on what's
happening in Cambodian government. Without that there will be no improvement in
the human rights and democracy situation in Cambodia,” he added.
Sklar
told RFA that Wu seemed to be a “very determined and very clear-cut judge” who
“wants results.”
"When
the counsel for the defendant tried to object to the discovery, the judge said:
'This is my order. If you do not agree to let this take place, if you do not
come to an agreement on the items to be included and the questions to be asked,
I will order it done myself.'"
Hun
Manet’s attorney, John Purcell, could not be reached after the hearing, but he
has previously said that the accusations made in Meach Sovannara’s complaint
are “groundless.”
Reported by RFA's Khmer Service. Written in English by Brooks Boliek.
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