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Cambodia jails critics deported by Thailand


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PHNOM PENH, Nov 22 (Reuters) - Three Cambodian refugees deported by Thailand have been jailed on charges of conspiracy and incitement, police said on Monday, as pressure grows on Thailand to protect activists at risk of persecution at home.

 

The pre-trial detention of the three members of Cambodia's disbanded opposition party comes amid a broad crackdown that started in the run up to a 2018 general election and has been condemned by the United Nations and the West.

 
Veourn Veasna and Voeung Samnang were registered refugees under U.N. protection and returned earlier this month. Thavry Lanh, a former commune chief, was sent back to Cambodia on Saturday, according to Human Rights Watch.
 

"The 'swap mart' arrangement between Cambodian and Thai authoritarians is operating at full speed, running roughshod over refugee protections and rights," its Asia deputy director Phil Robertson told Reuters on Monday.

 

Thailand's embassy in Phnom Penh declined to comment. Thailand's immigration bureau said it had no details on the specific cases but it was typical for the U.N. refugee agency to be consulted, even though Thailand is not a party to the refugee convention.

The bureau's spokesman Achayon Kraithong said Thailand would prioritise immigration law but avoid sending people into danger

 

Cambodian police spokesman Chhay Kim Khoeun said the three jailed activists had violated immigration law in Thailand and Cambodia had not sought their deportation.

 

"They have arrest warrants against them so when they arrived, we must enact the arrest warrants," Chhay Kim Khoeun said.

"How can this be a human rights violation when living in Thailand illegally? I don't understand. Thailand enforced its law and we enforce our law," he said.

 

Dozens of activists are likely to be in hiding in the two respective countries, rights groups say, fleeing crackdowns by authorities on opponents.

"These individuals deserve protection, not deportation to a country where they could face persecution or ill-treatment," said Ming Yu Hah, Amnesty International's Deputy Regional Director for Campaigns.

 

 

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