CNRP lawmaker summonsed
Kandal Provincial Court has summonsed opposition lawmaker-elect
Chan Cheng to appear on Tuesday to stand trial on long-dormant charges
of allegedly helping an activist escape from police custody, the
lawmaker and his co-defendants said yesterday.
The move came as seven of his fellow Cambodia National Rescue Party
lawmakers-elect were being held in Prey Sar prison on charges ranging
from holding an illegal demonstration to insurrection, and was decried
by the defendants yesterday – as it was in 2011 when the charges were
first made – as purely political.
“I reckon it is political pressure because it is an old story from
years ago, and I also clarified it at that time,” Cheng said, noting
that his lawyer would appear on Tuesday but that he was uncertain
whether he himself would attend.
The case was put under the supervision of an investigating judge in
early 2012 and Cheng was stripped of his parliamentary immunity, but it
never progressed and no one was detained.
Cheng’s lawyer, Ket Khy, said that his client had in no way
participated in the alleged breakout, but rather “just went to buy rice
for Meas Peng; suddenly he saw the detainee walk out of the jail and he
handed [the rice] over to him”.
Choung Choungy – who has consistently maintained that Peng had been
released and didn’t escape – said yesterday that he would file for a
delay of the hearing as his own lawyer had not had time to go over the
case file.
Kim Meng, the provincial judge who signed the summons, could not be reached yesterday for comment.
Political analyst Lao Mong Hay agreed yesterday that the case was
politically motivated, and intended to compound the pressure imposed by
the detention of the seven lawmakers-elect.
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