Opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party leader Sam Rainsy (right), and his deputy Kem Sohka speak at a press conference at their party headquarters in Phnom Penh yesterday. Heng Chivoan |
Leadership of CNRP digging in
The Phnom Penh Post | 6 Jan. 2014
Opposition
leaders Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha have been summonsed to appear at the
Phnom Penh Municipal Court for questioning in the wake of a weekend that
saw their occupation of Freedom Park end with the abrupt, violent
eviction of scores of demonstrators.
In a summons dated Friday and
issued on Saturday, the court called on the two Cambodia National
Rescue Party leaders to submit to questioning on January 14 for having
allegedly incited striking garment workers to commit a crime and disrupt
social order.
Rainsy said he would face the questioning head-on.
The questioning won’t be the first brush with the court for the two.
Sokha
served several weeks in prison on defamation charges before receiving a
Royal pardon in early 2006, while Rainsy fled the country in 2009 after
being handed a series of charges related to uprooting markers along the
Vietnamese border – charges many observers say were politically
motivated – and remained in self-imposed exile until July last year.
In
a telephone interview, Rainsy said yesterday that the situation now is
“definitely” reminiscent of 2009, and characterised the summons as
“another attempt by the [ruling Cambodian People’s Party] to eliminate
me from the political scene”.
But unlike 2009, he continued, even
if the case went to trial and he was convicted of incitement, he would
stay and face the sentence.
“The situation is much different from
the one prevailing five years ago in that the opposition is much
stronger now,” Rainsy said, maintaining that the CPP needed the
opposition’s implicit approval of last year’s election.
“They want
to negotiate, they want us to sit in the National Assembly, they want
us to endorse the result of the last election,” he said. “The government
already has problems of legitimacy. If they put the two opposition
leaders in jail, they would look worse.…They would lose any
credibility.”
Political analyst Chea Vannath agreed that fleeing the charges again would be the wrong move politically.
“I
think that he will face a lack of confidence from his supporters if he
goes into exile again,” she said. “Maybe he prefers to face the court
rather than run away from the country, because in the past [there was] a
lot of criticism about him leaving the country, rather than facing the
hardship in Cambodia … so I don’t think he’ll do that again.”
Even
last night, though, rumours still swirled that the two leaders were
planning to leave the country – rumours that Rainsy dismissed, saying he
“intend[s] to stay and to fight back peacefully”.
CNRP
lawmaker-elect Mu Sochua, meanwhile, called the summons “the same trick”
as the one used against her when she was stripped of her parliamentary
immunity and sued by Prime Minister Hun Sen for defamation in 2009.
“As
far as the court is concerned, it’s crystal clear,” she said. “He is
using the court to silence us. This is a political case, and this is a
challenge to the international community” to confront the regime, she
added.
However, legal expert Sok Sam Oeun yesterday questioned whether the charges would hold.
“If
they base [the charges] on the demonstration organised by the two of
them, then I don’t think that this is grounds for incitement,” he said,
maintaining that the charge was too vague. “If it’s [incitement] to
commit a crime, what crime? Killing? Robbery? Murder?”
Though
dated the day before the eviction from Freedom Park, the summons wasn’t
made public until well after the square had been brutally cleared. In
the morning, military police in full riot gear descended on the park and
– with the help of plainclothes thugs wielding makeshift truncheons and
wearing red armbands – scattered protesters and beat stragglers.
Yeng
Virak, the executive director of the Community Legal Education Center,
said the sweeping of Freedom Park was yet another example of “jungle
law”.
“Can we say the country has laws? What laws do they enforce?” he asked.
“Every day they enforce the law of the jungle. Whoever is strong, that one wins.”
The
action came after a letter from City Hall to Rainsy informing him that
the opposition would no longer be allowed to hold demonstrations due to
recent violence, despite the fact that opposition protests had been
studiously non-violent.
City Hall, however, conflated the CNRP’s
demonstrations with a violent garment worker protest on Friday in which
at least four protesters were shot dead by military police.
Though
the protest was not officially affiliated with the opposition, the CNRP
had sought to bring protesting garment workers into its fold in recent
days, a gambit that political analyst Kem Ley said had been “high-risk”.
Nonetheless, he said, the association with workers had been the right move.
“It is not a mistake, because everybody can help,” Ley said.
“When the garment workers are suffering from the low wage, everybody must help to advocate.”
Rainsy too defended the decision to link his movement with that of the garment workers, calling it a “matter of principle”.
Will the court summon the killers of the protesting garment workers?
ReplyDeleteWill the court summon Hun Sen when he said his would use his third hand toward the CNRP party?
Will the court be legitimate when the current gov't is unconstitutional?