L’Allemagne en tête de la croisade
pour la défense de la démocratie au Cambodge !
Il faut que la France suive l’Allemagne !
Le gouvernement d’Allemagne a pris des mesures de sanction contre le gouvernement de HUN Sen, en suspendant les attributions des visas préférentiels à HUN Sen et à sa Famille, aux membres du Gouvernement, aux officiels militaires de haut rang et aux Présidents de la Haute Cour. Fin novembre, elle a refusé le visa d’entrée en Allemagne à SAR Kheng, Ministre de l’Intérieur de HUN Sen. Elle a encouragé les autres membres de l’Union Européenne à faire de même.
Elle est en tête de la croisade contre les mesures de répression menées par HUN Sen contre les médias, les ONGs et le parti d’Opposition, le CNRP qu’ HUN Sen a dissout après avoir emprisonné son Président, Mr. KEM Sokha, le 3 Septembre 2017.
Le Conseil européen du 26 Février va décider des actions possibles à prendre contre le Gouvernement de HUN Sen.
Germany suspends visas for Cambodian government members over crackdown
Germany puts pressure on Cambodia, ending preferential visa treatment for Hun family and high-ranking officials
In a response to a parliamentary inquiry, the German government on Wednesday laid out a number of measures it has quietly taken over recent months to pressure the Cambodian government following its crackdown on media outlets, NGOs and the political opposition.
The response – which has not yet been made public, but was sent to the German parliament on Wednesday and obtained by The Post on Friday – reveals that the German government suspended preferential visa treatment for private travel by Cambodian government members, “including by Prime Minister Hun Sen and his family, by high-ranking military officials and the presidents of the highest Cambodian court”. It also says that Germany has encouraged other European Union members to impose similar measures.
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Another measure taken by the German Foreign Affairs Ministry, according to the response, was to cancel a visit by Interior Minister Sar Kheng that was scheduled for the end of November – shortly after the CNRP’s dissolution – and to postpone it indefinitely.
According to the German government’s response to the parliamentary questions, the European Council – a body comprised of EU members’ heads of state – will meet on February 26 and decide on potential actions to take regarding Cambodia.