Hun Sen — who was foreign minister at the time in a government installed by a Vietnamese occupation force that invaded Cambodia
Cambodian PM Warns of Arrests for 'Fake' Border Map Claims
AP / ABC News (US) | 12 April 2016
Cambodia's prime minister threatened Tuesday to arrest anyone who
repeats opposition accusations that his government used "fake maps" to
demarcate the country's border with Vietnam, reviving a campaign of
pressure against his foes and critics.
Opposition lawmaker Um Sam An was charged Tuesday with two criminal
offenses for having made the accusations in Facebook posts last year. He
faces up to five years in prison if convicted. The lawmaker was
arrested a day earlier in the Cambodian city of Siem Reap after having
returned from a trip to the United States.
He was the latest member of the opposition Cambodia
National Rescue Party to be criminally charged for making comments on
the politically sensitive topic and implying that Prime Minister Hun
Sen's government failed to counter land encroachment by Vietnam,
Cambodia's traditional enemy.
"I strongly declare that whoever talks about fake maps will be immediately arrested," Hun Sen
said Tuesday. "Regardless of who you are — a member of parliament, a
senator — if you are talking about fake maps, I will arrest you
quickly." [Our Dear Leader waxing eloquent again.]
The Phnom Penh Municipal Court charged Um San An with incitement to
commit a criminal act and inciting prejudice against another country,
said his lawyer, Sam Sokong. The charges carry prison sentences of up to
two and three years, respectively.
The Cambodia National Rescue Party decried his arrest, saying it
breached his immunity as a lawmaker. The government rejects such claims,
saying such arrests are allowable because the lawmakers have been
caught in the act of committing a crime.
One of Um San An's colleagues in the Cambodia National Rescue Party,
Hong Sok Hour, is facing trial on several charges after making similar
criticisms last year.
Hun Sen has been in power for three decades. While Cambodia is formally
democratic, his government is authoritarian and known for intimidating
opponents.
The opposition has faced physical and legal intimidation, and
politically motivated legal actions against charismatic opposition
leader Sam Rainsy have convinced him to stay abroad.
The opposition for its part had sought to capitalize on its election
gains by hitting Hun Sen on the sensitive issue of relations with
Vietnam, with some of its lawmakers charging that Cambodia was losing
land to its neighbor.
Hong Sok Hour was arrested last August after Hun Sen accused him of
treason for an online posting that included the purported text of a 1979
treaty with Vietnam that declared that their mutual border would be
dissolved.
Hun Sen — who was foreign minister at the time in a government installed
by a Vietnamese occupation force that invaded Cambodia to oust the
murderous Khmer Rouge regime — insisted that the treaty was forged.
Hong Sok Hour apparently had reposted a bad translation of a document he
found on the Internet, and was indicted on three charges, including
falsifying public documents, using fake documents and inciting chaos.
The charges carry maximum sentences of 10 years, five years and two
years, respectively.
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