Cambodian court charges opposition leader over criticism of government
A prominent lawmaker has been arrested and faces up to five years in
jail for his criticism of Prime Minister Hun Sen's government.
Cambodia's border policy with Vietnam has been a source of controversy.
Deutsche Welle | 12 April 2016
The lawmaker had been critical of premier Hun Sen's use of contested
maps to demarcate the border between Cambodia and Vietnam, and said the
government was conceding land to its neighbor.
Now, Um Sam An faces up to five years in prison after being charged with
incitement to commit a criminal act and inciting prejudice against
another country. An [Vietnamese puppet] Interior Ministry spokesman told AFP news agency
that Um Sam An had incited "racism between Cambodia and Vietnam."
Fraught relations
The two countries have a long, fraught history with each other, having
engaged in a decade-long conflict that began when Vietnam invaded
Cambodia in 1979. Anti-Vietnamese sentiment remains strong in Cambodia
to this day.
While Cambodia is a democracy, Hun Sen, who's been in power for three decades, is known for
his authoritarian tactics.
In a speech broadcast on state-run radio, the premier threatened that
anyone who brought up the issue of contested maps "must be handcuffed."
One of Um Sam An's colleagues from the National Rescue Party is also
facing charges for having criticized the government's border policy.
Fractured politics
The opposition party did surprisingly well in the 2013 general election,
and Hun Sen eventually reached a political truce with the party after
it boycotted parliament following the beating of two of its members by
pro-government protesters.
The National Rescue Party criticized the arrest of Um Sam An, calling it
a violation of parliamentary immunity, but the government defended his
detention as legal.
Um Sam An remains in detention until his trial, which has yet to be scheduled.
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