FBI to open office with Cambodia police amid frosty ties
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) will set up an office at Cambodia’s national police headquarters to help track down American criminals, at a time when Washington is seeking to repair strained relations with a close ally of China.
The office will serve to support Cambodian police in efforts
to arrest American fugitives and to fight terrorism, police spokesman Chhay Kim
Khoeun said on Tuesday.
“Before, we cooperated on a case-by-case basis and now we
are having an office to work with the objective to work fast,” Chhay Kim Khoeun
told Reuters.
Chhay Kim Khoeun said he did not know about the timeframe
for when the office would be established.
In an email statement to Reuters, the U.S. Embassy in Phnom
Penh declined to comment on the FBI office but said the two institutions had an
established relationship.
“A joint FBI-Cambodian National Police task force
established to fight crimes against children, money laundering, and financial
crime is now operational. Our law enforcement cooperation makes both our
countries safer,” it said.
An agreement was made last year to create the task force,
which would also address organised crime, money laundering and locate
international fugitives, the embassy said.
Ties with the United States have been frosty in recent
years, with Cambodia’s government angered by Washington’s criticism of the
dissolution of the main opposition party and arrest of rival politicians and
activists.
Last week, the Pentagon expressed concern about the razing
of a U.S.-funded Cambodian navy tactical headquarters, which Prime Minister Hun
Sen said was for renovations.
Cambodia has repeatedly denied reports there was a secret
deal with China, its biggest economic and diplomatic ally, to place forces at
the base.
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