Monday, November 10, 2008

AFP:Cambodia probes chopper crash that killed police chief

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — Cambodian authorities on Monday pledged to
investigate a helicopter crash that killed the country's powerful top
policeman, amid conflicting reports about the doomed craft's last moments.

Chief of police Hok Lundy died along with deputy army commander Sok Sa
Em and two pilots on Sunday evening when their chopper went down in bad
weather shortly after taking off from Phnom Penh airport.

"There will be an immediate investigation of the cause of the crash,"
government spokesman Khieu Kanharith told AFP, without providing further
details.

Ministry of interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak said that "in general, the
crash was caused by bad weather" but there were witness reports that the
tail of the helicopter may have hit something on its way down and caught
fire.

"According to eyewitnesses, there was a fire on the tail of the
helicopter before the crash, but this is not the official reason for the
crash," Khieu Sopheak said.

Hok Lundy had been a close associate of Prime Minister Hun Sen for
nearly three decades, and one of his daughters is married to one of the
premier's sons.

Born in 1950 and a former governor of southeastern Svay Rieng province,
where the crash occurred, Hok Lundy was appointed national police chief
in 1994.

He was routinely criticised by international organisations for alleged
human rights abuses and corruption within his force, and last year Human
Rights Watch said Hok Lundy "represents the absolute worst that Cambodia
has to offer."

The police chief was accused of involvement in drug trafficking and
politically motivated killings, including a 1997 grenade attack against
anti-government demonstrators that killed at least 19 people and wounded
more than 120 others.

However, he was also praised by US officials for cooperation in
counter-terrorism.

Human rights groups protested a decision to allow him a visa to the
United States last year for counter-terrorism talks with the FBI.

The State Department had refused him a visa in 2006 due to allegations
he was involved in trafficking prostitutes.

Before leaving for his trip last year, Hok Lundy said the allegations
against him were cooked up by his political opponents.

"The US government thinks that I am a good law enforcement leader," he
told local media.

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