Cambodia: Coerced Confessions Silence Activists, Opposition
Fabricated Charges, Abusive Prosecutions Induce Defections to Ruling Party
Cambodia effectively is a single-party state, with noncompetitive elections, a lack of independent media, and ruling party control of all state institutions including the judiciary. There is widespread harassment, prosecutions and even violence against government critics, political opposition figures, and activists. Following July 2023 national elections that barred the main opposition party, Hun Sen, in power since 1985, handed the position of prime minister to his son Hun Manet. Hun Sen remains head of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party and serves as Senate president. Restrictions on civil and political rights have tightened, belying claims that Hun Manet would be a “reformer.”
Fabricated Charges, Abusive Prosecutions Induce Defections to Ruling Party
Many Fleeing Thailand at Government’s Urging Saddled with Predatory Loans
Predatory Microfinance Loans and Exploitation of Cambodia’s Indigenous Peoples
Tokyo Should Denounce Phnom Penh’s ‘Transnational Repression’
Joint Letter
New Sub-Decree Allows Revocation without Conviction, Review, or Appeal
Both Parties Should Abide by Laws of War
New Use, Country Withdrawals Threaten Treaty
Many Fleeing Thailand at Government’s Urging Saddled with Predatory Loans
Online Activists, Journalists, Opposition Members Charged with Incitement, Treason
Deadly Explosion Might Be Traced to Recent Thailand-Cambodia Border Clashes
Malaysia Summits Should Focus on Human Rights, Humanitarian Crisis
To States Attending the 2025 ASEAN Summit, ASEAN Partners Summit, and East Asia Summit
Human Rights Watch argues that Cambodian microfinance institutions, backed by investors such as IFC, are targeting Indigenous communities with predatory lending and debt collection practices.