Cambodian Court Orders Arrest of Opposition Leader Sam Rainsy
Mr. Rainsy has parliamentary immunity, so it is unclear if he will actually be arrested
[If we're operating under law (of justice) than this is a non-issue; however, in the Kingdoom, it is the law of man (Hun Sen, or more accurately of the jungle)]
Wall Street Journal / AP | 13 November 2015
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—A Cambodian court on Friday ordered the arrest of opposition leader Sam Rainsy in connection with a seven-year-old defamation case, and his party accused Prime Minister Hun Sen of being behind the move to gain the upper hand in their ongoing political fight.
Rainsy was ordered to be arrested in connection with a defamation and incitement case brought by Foreign Minister Hor Namhong
in 2008. In a speech, Mr. Rainsy had accused Mr. Namhong of colluding
with the Khmer Rouge while being held as a prisoner by the radical
group.
The Phnom Penh municipal court convicted Mr. Rainsy and
sentenced him to two years in jail. Mr. Rainsy appealed but lost in
2013. The conviction was never enforced and he continued to live freely
in Cambodia, serving as the leader of his party in Parliament.
According
to Friday’s arrest warrant, Mr. Namhong’s lawyer, Kar Savuth, requested
that the verdict be enforced. In issuing the warrant, the court ordered
“all public forces to search for and arrest” Mr. Rainsy.
The
timing of the arrest warrant raised questions about a possible political
motivation given that Mr. Rainsy has been engaged in a war of words
with Prime Minister Hun Sen. On Thursday, Mr. Hun Sen called Mr. Rainsy
the “son of a traitor” after the opposition leader said in Tokyo that
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s electoral victory foreshadowed the downfall of Cambodia’s prime minister.
”I cannot keep calm because of this insult by the son of a traitor,” Mr. Hun Sen wrote on his Facebook
page.
Opposition lawmaker Eng Chhay Eang said the arrest
warrant is a “new threat” from Mr. Hun Sen and is aimed at forcing Mr.
Rainsy out of the country to leave the party leaderless ahead of 2017
village elections and 2018 national elections.
”This a
politically motivated warrant. It is not about exercising the court’s
verdict because Sam Rainsy has been living freely (in Cambodia) for
nearly three years,” he said.
Mr. Chhay Eang questioned why the
verdict wasn’t enforced when Rainsy first returned to Cambodia in 2013
after nearly five years in self-imposed exile.
Mr. Hun Sen has
been in office for almost three decades. While Cambodia is formally
democratic, the government is notorious for intimidating opponents. Mr.
Hun Sen has warned of civil war if the opposition wins the next
election, suggesting that his followers wouldn’t accept such a result.
Relations
between the government and the opposition deteriorated earlier this
year after the opposition tried to exploit a volatile issue by accusing
neighboring Vietnam, with which Mr. Hun Sen’s government maintains good
relations, of land encroachment.
The anti-Vietnamese position
proved politically popular, and the government reacted by stepping up
intimidation of the opposition party in the courts, which are seen as
being under its influence.
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