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A Cambodian Prisoner of Conscience is Set Free

A prisoner of conscience in Cambodia is set free. But that does not mean the country is becoming any more welcoming of dissent.

Cambodian radio station owner and human rights activist Mam Sonando has been released, in a surprising reversal of policy that has many Cambodians and Cambodia-watchers genuinely shocked. Analysts are now questioning whether the release constituted an official indication that Cambodia’s top-brass are lightening up on freedom of speech — or if it was instead a somewhat cynical attempt at displaying tolerance for democracy to both local and international critics.The drama began in October of 2012, when Sonando was arrested on charges that he had attempted to foment a separatist revolution in the remote province of Kratie, though in fact the 72-year-old, who holds French citizenship, was not even the country at the time.

During the crackdown on these so-called secessionists (angered over official land-grabbing, but with little aspiration of actual separatism), security forces fatally shot and killed a 14-year-old girl in a violent land eviction, a murder which was officially deemed a “accident” and never fully investigated.

Sonando, who had only broadcast charges against Hun Sen in an international court on his radio station, proved an easy scapegoat in the incident: he bravely returned to Cambodia and was promptly sentenced to a 20 year long prison sentence on sedition charges.

The world reacted with speed: Amnesty International deemed him a prisoner of conscience, US President Obama demanded Sonando be released during his decidedly awkward pow-wow with Hun Sen during his ASEAN visit in November. French President Francoise Hollande,US assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner, various NGOs, and others also condemned his arrest publicly and often.

When Sonando’s sentence came up for appeal on March 5th, streams of supporters, many elderly and frail, came out to the court to advocate for him. Surprisingly, no military police had appeared to scatter the supporters or intimidate them with hard plastic riot shields, even as the gathered hundreds partially blocked the busy street running by the appeals court.

Shouting “Dakhing!” over and over (which translates into “walk freely”), Sonando’s supporters threatened Cambodian curses on those who would keep Sonando in custody, and demanded to be allowed to share the burden of custody with him. One elderly man told me that he ridden his bicycle all the way across town, in the profound heat of a Phnom Penh March, to attend the proceedings.

By March 6th, it was revealed that the prosecutors had decided to suggest dropping the two worst charges against Sonando and replace them with a decidedly lesser charge of “destruction to the forest,” a legislative bait and switch that’s been used in Cambodia before, in the case against a prominent group of land grabbing activists.

When the ruling finally came on March 14th, the news was good: Sonando was to be freed, his sentence reduced to five years with four years and four months of that suspended. Two men convicted alongside Sonando on similar charges, Kan Sovan/Chan Sovann, and Touch Siem/Touch Rin also had their sentences reduced and were slated to walk.

He walked out of prison early on March 15th to a crowd of hundreds exultant supporters, who trailed him across town from Pray Sar prison back to his home outside of Phnom Penh. He was soon enough back in his old Beehive Radio office: beaten, but unbowed.Did they imprison him in the first place out fear? That was the stance of Association of Democrats Pannary Huon, who was visible releasing symbolic flights of birds into the air as she and her supporters waited for the ruling on March 5.

“I guess they [the government] is afraid of the elections, and also afraid because a lot of people support Sonando,” she told me. “He never did anything wrong, he followed the rules, that’s why it was a crime they put him in prison.”

But it is more than likely that fear explains why he walked into freedom on March 15th as well: fear by the government of international condemnation, and fear that the people’s uncomfortable attention to the case will prove troublesome for the Cambodian People’s Party in the upcoming elections.

He is only one man, and, the ruling party likely hopes, is sufficiently chastened to remain quiet for a while, as the July elections approach.

Meanwhile, to avoid the illusion that Cambodia’s leaders are entirely ceding to international requests, the government has lashed out against Amnesty International and other NGOs and individual who condemned Mam Sonando’s arrest, deeming them enemies of the Cambodian constitution — although critique of Obama and other international leaders has remained curiously absent.

The question remains: who will gather in droves as yet another peasant protesting land grabbing is disenfranchised, or as yet more of Cambodia’s dwindling natural resources are auctioned off to the highest well-connected bidder, or when yet another journalist turns up dead under mysterious circumstances? In my opinion, international observers would be foolish in the extreme to assume that this ruling indicates that Cambodia is becoming more free.

Photo credit: Faine Greenwood

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Top of the Morning: Experts Warn About TB; War Criminal Inside US Embassy

Top stories from DAWNS Digest

The Terminator Walks into the US Embassy…

…and asks to be handed over to the ICC. Though it is a relief that such an infamous criminal may finally be brought to justice, the move is puzzling and has analysts scrambling for an explanation. “[Ntaganda] denies charges of conscripting child soldiers, murder, ethnic persecution and rape. Those charges relate to his time as the leader of a militia in the north-eastern DR Congo between 2002 and 2003. Since then he has fought for other rebel groups in the region, as well as the Congolese army. Most recently he was believed to be one of the leaders of the M23 rebel group, which is fighting government troops in the east of the country. …On Sunday, the DR Congo government said Gen Ntaganda, who comes from the Tutsi ethnic group, had fled to Rwanda after he and some of his followers were apparently defeated by a rival faction of the M23 group.” (BBC http://bbc.in/YMgsTC)

TB: Invest Now or Pay More Later, Warn WHO and Global Fund

The spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in general is worrying enough; frankly, this is terrifying. They didn’t call it “consumption” for nothing. “TB is often seen as a disease of the past – but the emergence of strains that can not be treated by various drugs has turned it into one of the world’s most pressing health problems over the past decade. …In 2011, 8.7 million people fell ill with TB and 1.4 million died of the disease. The WHO says as many as 2 million people may be suffering from drug-resistant strains by 2015…[E]xtensively drug-resistant TB – which can evade even the most highly effective drugs – was reported in at least 77 countries in 2011, according to the WHO. Doctors in India have also reported cases of totally resistant TB, for which there are no effective drugs.” (AlertNet http://bit.ly/ZmxlEc)

Photo credit: AK Rockefeller

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Bosco “The Terminator” Ntganda at US Embassy in Rwanda

UPDATE: Bosco Ntganda is a guest of the US embassy in Kigali. He has apparently decided to surrender to the ICC. Now, the USA is figuring out the logistics of getting him to the Hague. This was just confirmed by the State Department spokesperson, Victoria Neuland.

A couple of quick thoughts on this development:

1) I cannot imagine the government of Rwanda is terribly pleased. He received their backing and now is about to face charges in court. The trial will be a long and drawn out airing of the evidence that very well may implicate Rwanda’s top brass. (See below)

2) This is a great victory for the ICC as an institution. Ntganda has been hiding in plain site for years.  The government of the DRC did not want to try to arrest him, fearing it would upset an uneasy truce. Indeed, he briefly joined forces with government troops as part of a short lived peace deal. This was an embarrassment for the ICC, that has now apparently been rectified. He will get his day in court.

ORIGINAL POST

Moments ago, Rwanda’s foreign minister tweeted that Bosco Ntaganda — a militia leader wanted for war crimes by the ICC — surrendered to the US embassy in Kigali, Rwanda. The US Embassy in Kigali would not confirm nor deny the reports, but told me “we have no authority to take anybody into custody.”

The details are murky. But here’s a quick explanation on why, if true, this would be a very big deal.

Ntganda is wanted for war crimes committed 10 years ago in the Ituri province of the DRC. Since then, he has been a terribly destabilizing force, leading militias accused of rape and plunder across eastern DRC. Most recently, he was a leader of the M23 rebellion which late last year briefly sacked the city of Goma in the DRC.

Ntganda has long been rumored to have been backed by Rwanda. A report from a UN panel of experts laid this claim explicitely clear last year in a report linking the M23 rebellion to the Rwandan government. Specifically, the UN experts released evidence suggesting that the Rwandan minister of defense sat atop the chain of command of the M23 rebels. Ntganda, it is alleged, is directly supplied and supported by the Rwandan government.

It is hard to understand what would motivate Ntganda to surrender to the US embassy. If he is with the US this would put Washington in a seriously awkward spot. The USA would be under enormous pressure to hand over Ntganda to the ICC. However, Rwanda is a key US ally in the region, and any subsequent trial would likely implicate top members of the Rwandan government. Rwanda would presumably prefer he stay put–and certainly away from the Hague.

This is all very intriguing. But, so far, it is all just pure speculation until we get some confirmation that he is at the US embassy.

 

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Swearing-in Ceremony: - Mr. Jeffrey Feltman  (USG, DPA)

Real Talk from Under Secretary General Jeffrey Feltman

In his role with the United Nations as the Undersecretary General for Political Affairs, Jeffrey Feltman’s portfolio covers the entire world’s political conflicts. As President Barack Obama’s former Assistant Secretary of State for the Near East, it’s clear that the Middle East and North Africa is the area he’s most comfortable in discussing.

He’s getting the hang of the rest of it, however, and that was on display in a briefing to the press hosted ahead of his latest appearance before the UN Security Council. Speaking at the invitation of the Better World Campaign in Washington, DC, on Friday Feltman parlayed a sense of cautious optimism about many of the world’s hotspots.

Feltman had particularly hopeful words for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict ahead of US President Barack Obama’s visit to the region. “Right now, we see a new opportunity to try and push again seriously for a final status agreement and we strongly encourage U.S. engagement,” Feltman said. He pointed to factors including the ceasefire in Gaza continuing to hold, the end of U.S. and Israeli elections and formation of a new government in Tel Aviv as reason why “we’re at a better time [for talks] than we’ve been in a few years.”

Regarding the situation in Mali, Feltman felt sure that the UN Security Council would indeed authorize a new UN peacekeeping force shortly. A UN assessment team is on the ground in Mali this week to gather information for a recommendation to the Council, Feltman said. The security gains achieved by France and African nations would not be enough to save Mali, Feltman cautioned, without addressing the underlying political issues as well. A new Department of Political Affairs mission was recently opened in Bamako to do just that, Feltman informed journalists. Its political functions would then be taken forward by any Security Council-authorized peacekeeping mission.

A new DPA office is also to be opened soon in the capital of Somalia, underscoring a time of change for the country. Thanks to improving security Mogadishu is undergoing a boom in construction and a “renaissance of sorts,” according to Feltman, who visited the country last month. Challenges are still present, however, including the inability of the state to provide many of the most basic service and the fragility of the current stability.

Feltman saved his most dire words for the ongoing catastrophe that is Syria. Speaking on the second anniversary of the first protests against Bashar al-Assad’s regime, he was sanguine about the odds of containing the disaster, highlighting the danger of Lebanon being drawn into the conflict as well. Feltman praised the efforts of Joint UN-Arab League Envoy Lakhdar Brahimi in lobbying for a peaceful outcome, pointing out that the UN is ready and willing to serve as a facilitator in dialogue between the Syrian government and rebel forces.

Asked whether in his view the ‘Arab Spring’ has been a blessing or a curse, Feltman admits that he had never considered the idea. Instead, he said that while the UN supported the spirit of the revolutions against the old order, whatever replaces it “may take years to crystallize.”

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Top of the Morning: UN Arms Trade Treaty Talks Resume; Worldwide Poverty Is Falling

Top stories from DAWNS Digest

UN Arms Trade Treaty Talks Resume Today

The first round of talks fizzled in July, mostly because the US wanted to delay the talks until after the elections. Now, ten days of talks will start again to find a treaty on the conventional arms trade.“Whether the treaty’s prospects have improved remains to be seen, not only in the United States, which accounts for about 30 percent of the $60 billion to $70 billion annual trade in conventional arms, but also among other major weapons exporters like Russia and China. They have expressed ambivalence about language in the treaty that could be interpreted as banning weapons trade with human rights violators, arguing that such a distinction is subjective.” (NYT http://nyti.ms/117kWrP)

UN Peacekeeping Mission in Mali Could Begin in July

A quote from a key UN official suggest that there may be UN peacekeeping mission in Mali rather soon. The peacekeeping operation could be in place in Mali this July, with approval from the Malian government and the Security Council, a senior United Nations official today said, wrapping up his week-long visit to Mali. “‘July could see the transfer of AFISMA to a UN stabilisation mission,’ Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, Edmond Mulet, told journalists in the Malian capital city of Bamako, referring to the African-led International Support Mission in Mali by its French acronym – AFISMA.” (UN News Service http://bit.ly/Yl6czg)

Humanity-Affirming Study of the Day: World Poverty is Falling Fast

The brighter news is a result of international aid and national investments in health, education and other areas. “The report, by Oxford University’s poverty and human development initiative, predicts that countries among the most impoverished in the world could see acute poverty eradicated within 20 years if they continue at present rates. It identifies “star performer” nations such as Rwanda, Nepal and Bangladesh as places where deprivation could disappear within the lifetime of present generations. Close on their heels with reductions in poverty levels were Ghana, Tanzania, Cambodia and Bolivia.” (Guardian http://bit.ly/117o331)

HIV Game Changer? Rapid treatment after HIV infection may be enough to “functionally cure” about a tenth of those diagnosed early. (BBC http://bbc.in/Z7ZT4n)

Photo credit: Control Arms Treaty campaign stunt under Brooklyn bridge – Oxfam International

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Talking Syria and North Korea Diplomacy With Ambassador Christopher Hill

Ambassador Christopher Hill stopped by the HuffPo Live studios this afternoon to talk about diplomacy towards North Korea and Syria. The good folks at HuffPo had me on as well to weigh in on his remarks. Other guests include the always excellent Heather Hurlburt of the National Security Netword; and Christine Hong, Assist. Professor at UC- Santa Cruz; Executive Board Member of the Korea Policy Institute (KPI).

Regular readers would not be surprised to see that I used the perch to raise the issue of our pitiful international humanitarian response to Syria.

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