Focus on Southeast Asia – Suppression of emerging protests in Cambodia Vol. 12 – No. 04 ,Vol. 13 – No. 01 This issue is also available in PDF format. To download the PDF File, click here: http://alrc.asia/article2/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/v13n01.pdf Table of contents Insights and Report on Cambodia: ‘People realized that they can make change’ Insights and Report on Cambodia: “A week that shook Cambodia” Torture in Southeast Asia – INDONESIA: ‘None of the torturers were punished for their crimes’ Torture in Southeast Asia – INDONESIA: ‘Police officials do not understand that torture is always wrong’ Torture in Southeast Asia – Philippines: ‘I’ve seen obvious bias against poor, innocent persons’ Torture in Southeast Asia – Philippines: ‘Police, prosecutors & judges do not perform according to the law’ Torture in Southeast Asia – Thailand: ‘Victims are not son of a rich man, they are poor’ Torture in Southeast Asia – Thailand: ‘Disappearances is a systematic pattern of extra-legal policing’ Appendices I: For justice to be more accessible to victims, an anti-torture Appendices II: Torture and violence against children in child care institutions Appendices III: Ten years without justice for Somchai Neelaphaijit in Thailand Introduction: What it means when emerging protest are suppressed ‘Help us find justice for my son, and others’ ‘They shoot anyone on streets, in their homes’ How and why the 23 protestors were arrested, prosecuted Interviews on the idea of justice and accountability in Cambodia Insights and Report on Cambodia: ‘The possibility of justice does not exist in Cambodia’