“The actions against Sam Rainsy again expose the absurdity of Cambodia’s legal system, which seems to serve as little more than Hun Sen’s tool to maintain power,” Adams said. “His persecution of those peacefully challenging his authoritarian rule appears boundless. Donors should step in now to say there are bounds.”
Cambodia: Drop Case Against Opposition Leader
Resurrecting 2011 Convictions Fundamentally Threaten Rights, Democracy
Human Rights Watch | 13 November 2015
(New York) – Cambodian
authorities should rescind the politically motivated arrest warrant for
opposition leader Sam Rainsy and quash the wrongful convictions on
which it is based, Human Rights Watch said today. Cambodia’s donors
should publicly call for the case to be dropped and for Prime Minister
Hun Sen to end his repeated use of the criminal law against political
opponents.
In the last several days, Sen has repeatedly denounced Rainsy, head of the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), and threatened to have him prosecuted. The arrest warrant, issued on November 13, 2015, results from a request by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Hor Namhong, a leading member of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP). Rainsy is currently in South Korea.
“In a week when Burma’s military accepted defeat at the polls, Hun
Sen has responded to opposition party statements about winning the next
election by trying to imprison the opposition leader,” said Brad Adams,
Asia director. “Such political use of the criminal law against critics
has happened over and over again. It’s like watching a video on an
endless loop.”
The arrest warrant was issued by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court for
politically motivated convictions in 2011 for “public defamation” and
“incitement of discrimination.” The convictions relate to comments made
by Rainsy in May 2008, alleging that Namhong was implicated in crimes at
a Khmer Rouge prison camp in the late 1970s. Namhong has denied the
claims, saying he was a prisoner and victim of the Khmer Rouge.
The convictions against Rainsy were upheld by Cambodia’s Appeals
Court in March 2013, but the sentence against Rainsy was never enforced.
Rainsy left the country in 2009, going into exile to avoid imprisonment
for convictions on these and other trumped-up charges. King Norodom
Sihamoni agreed on July 11, 2013 to grant Rainsy a royal pardon for
various other cases, a move that Namhong publicly welcomed and that
allowed Rainsy to return to the country. However, the pardon did not
mention the convictions in the Namhong case.
The 2011 conviction came after the highest court in France in April 2011 ruled in favor of Rainsy on a defamation claim by Namhong. In a landmark ruling, the court declared that, as Rainsy’s allegations were made neither knowing they were untrue nor with malice, they did “not go beyond what freedom of expression allows when it comes to critiquing the conduct of a politician,” and are protected by public interest in “a general topic about the recent history of Cambodia and the conduct of an important figure during the tragic events that occurred there between 1975 and 1979.”
“After three decades of using the courts as a political cudgel
against opponents, one might expect Hun Sen to be more sophisticated in
his misuse of the criminal law,” Adams said. “He will fool no one by
dredging up this case now.”
Sen’s ruling CPP claimed victory over the CNRP in national elections in 2013, which were marred by serious fraud and irregularities,
though the CNRP did substantially increase its number of seats in
parliament. Since the election, Cambodia has been beset by recurring
rounds of political crises, punctuated by arbitrary arrests and jailings
of CNRP members of the National Assembly and party activists.
In response to public statements by CNRP leaders that they would win
the next elections in 2018, Sen and other CPP leaders, including those
in the armed forces, have made a series of public threats against the
opposition. This culminated in a campaign to remove Kem Sokha, CNRP
deputy leader and vice president of the National Assembly, from his
post. In October 2015, elements in CPP-organized mobs carried out a brutal assault on two CNRP parliamentarians. The CPP then voted to strip Sokha of his leadership post in the National Assembly.
“The actions against Sam Rainsy again expose the absurdity of
Cambodia’s legal system, which seems to serve as little more than Hun
Sen’s tool to maintain power,” Adams said. “His persecution of those
peacefully challenging his authoritarian rule appears boundless. Donors
should step in now to say there are bounds.”
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