Outcasts look for worldwide investigation of Cambodian political crackdown
Kem Monovithya, a Cambodian political radical, was passing by Switzerland in September when she got a phone call from her father. Kem Sokha, the pioneer of Cambodia's guideline confinement party, told his daughter that organization authorities were striking their family's home in Phnom Penh. "He let me know: 'They're restricting me now,'" Kem Monovithya, 36, checked on in a gathering with The Related Press. Months sometime later, her father remains in prison, facing charges of bad form, and she is in the Gathered States. She said she can't go home since she fears she, also, will be caught as an element of an organization crackdown that hosts confined the political get-together her father drove, shut down news outlets and scattered a few Cambodian government authorities, human rights activists and feature writers into remove in the U.S., Australia, Thailand and diverse countries. Head manager Hun Sen's choice gathering, the Cambodian People...