Hun Manet Launches Lawsuit Over Facebook Post
Cambodia Daily | 23 January 2016
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s eldest son, Hun Manet, said on Friday he had
filed a defamation complaint against a Facebook user who linked him and
his mother to the illicit trade of luxury timber.
In a post to his own Facebook page on Friday afternoon, Lieutenant
General Manet, a deputy commander of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces,
said that a user writing under the name Chham Chhany had damaged his
family’s “honors and decency.”
“Today, I take legal action against one person named Chham Chhany,
who have fabricated stories, which affected my and my family’s honors
and decency,” Lt. Gen. Manet wrote.
“In a democratic society, every citizen has the rights to freedom of
expression. Yet, the exercise of a person’s freedom of expression must
be accompanied by a certain degree of personal responsibility.”
The offending post, titled “Forestry criminals are challenging to
occupy logging areas, and the benefits go to the Hun family,” was made
in response to the government’s newly formed task force to suppress the
rampant illegal trade of luxury timber.
It links Lt. Gen. Manet and his mother, Bun Rany, to two wealthy
businessmen, Soeng Sam Ol and Lim Bunna, who were recently named by
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan as prime targets in a new
crackdown on illegal logging.
“Soeng Sam Ol has Bun Rany standing behind him, while Hun Manet
stands behind Lim Bunna, so the authorities who searched Lim Bunna’s
timber stockpile said it’s legal wood,” the post said, referring to
raids last week, the results of which are yet to be made public.
Chham Chhany wrote that he had acquired intelligence suggesting that
“authorities have received an order from Bun Rany Hun Sen to facilitate
the business of the two Oknhas.”
“Oknha” is an honorific granted to wealthy businesspeople in exchange for a sizable financial contribution to the state.
“My source clarified that, in the past, Bun Rany Hun Sen did not know
that Oknha Khna [Mr. Bunna] has a relationship with Hun Manet, which is
why she borrowed Samdech [Hun Sen’s] hand to get rid of Oknha Khna and
pave the way for Oknha Soeng Sam Ol to fell the trees,” the Facebook
user wrote.
“But after Oknha Khna begged for intervention from Hun Manet, things
were changed to ‘legal wood,’ meaning that the two Oknhas still have the
opportunity to fell trees, especially to feed Bun Rany and Hun Manet.
If they do not feed them enough: imprison, imprison, imprison.”
Earlier this month, the National Police Commissariat posted a report
to its website accusing Mr. Sam Ol of laundering illegally cut timber
through an economic land concession inside the Phnom Prich Wildlife
Sanctuary in Mondolkiri province.
After the news was picked up by the media, however, the report
vanished from the website, and police officials suggested it never
existed.
[Oh! What a tangled web we weave when first we practiced to deceive!]
The Mondolkiri provincial governor also said this week that Mr. Bunna
had been granted an economic land concession inside the Phnom Prich
sanctuary after Mr. Hun Sen put a freeze on such developments in 2012,
though the Environment Ministry said the contract was only for clearing
wood on a canceled concession.
Members of Mr. Hun Sen’s family and inner circle were previously
linked to illegal logging—which has seen Cambodia’s forests chopped
down at one of the fastest rates in the world—in the 2007 Global Witness
report “Cambodia’s Family Trees: Illegal logging and the stripping of
public assets.”
It said the most powerful illegal logging syndicate was operated by
Mr. Hun Sen’s cousin and his ex-wife, a friend of Ms. Rany. The
government ordered all copies of the report seized and destroyed.
Following the release of an earlier report on illegal logging in
2005, “Taking a Cut,” Global Witness had been banned from working in
the country, though it continued to conduct investigations into the
plundering of Cambodia’s natural resources.
Lt. Gen. Manet said in his post on Friday that he had submitted his
defamation complaint to the National Police and requested that Chham
Chhany—whose Facebook page says he was educated in the U.S. and suggests
he lives there—be prosecuted with the full force of the law.
The Facebook user did not respond to a request for comment.
However, in a post on his Facebook page responding to the lawsuit,
he wrote, “Right after Hun Manet sued me, many people said that Chham
Chhany could not escape jail. Although Ny has gone abroad, Interpol will
track him down. Ooh, is Interpol hunting [people] down for defamation
cases? Do not do such a thing. Ny will not go anywhere except staying at
home. Ny is afraid of mosquito bites.”
National Police Commissioner Neth Saveoun said it was too early for him to discuss Lt. Gen. Manet’s complaint.
“I have not received the complaint in my hand,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment