Hong Sok Hour was arrested in 2015 for criticizing on Facebook the treaty demarking the border between Cambodia and Vietnam.
Jailed Cambodian opposition senator Hong Sok Hour is taken from court to Prey Sar prison, June 17, 2016. RFA/Brach Chev |
Cambodia National Rescue Party Looks For European Help
RFA | 17 June 2016
Cambodia’s opposition party wants the European Union’s help in
resolving the political crisis that is gripping the nation as Prime
Minister Hun Sen’s government continues to apply pressure to the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, senior CNRP officials told
RFA’s Khmer Service.
While the European Union's ambassador to Cambodia, George Edgar,
visited CNRP acting president Kem Sokha at the party’s headquarters on
Friday, CNRP officials declined to tell RFA what they talked about.
CNRP lawmaker Pol Ham told RFA the ambassador met with Kem Sokha for a simple talk, but he didn’t provide details.
“I have observed that the European Union wants to help resolve the
crisis,” he said. “That is why they visited us. We all know about the
EU’s stand, but we don’t know yet how will they resolve this.”
“It is the ambassador’s right to visit anyone,” he said.
Hun Sen’s government and the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP)
have been backing a push in Cambodia’s courts to bring CNRP leader Kem
Sokha in for questioning regarding his alleged affair with a young
hairdresser.
The case has seen the arrest of four employees of the human rights
group ADHOC and a member of the National Election Commission (NEC),
while an arrest warrant was also issued for a U.N. worker. Heavily armed
police also attempted to arrest Kem Sokha at CNRP headquarters for
failing to appear in court in a pair of cases related to the alleged
affair.
Petition problems persist
Meanwhile, CNRP activists in Pursat province say they are being
persecuted and threatened when they attempt to collect villagers’
thumbprints for petitions seeking King Norodom Sihamoni’s intervention
in the situation.
Thumbprints serve as signatures in Cambodia.
CNRP Provincial Director Yann Seng Huot said the 19 activists were
summoned to local police headquarters where authorities pressured them
to stop collecting thumbprints for the petitions.
“Our activists didn’t cause any security issues or disturb social
order. We are collecting thumbprints from villagers voluntarily,” he
said. “Authorities shouldn’t discriminate against us.”
Provincial Deputy Police Chief Penn Tung said his officers didn’t
threaten any activists or confiscate any thumbprinted documents. He told
RFA that the activists have the right to collect thumbprints, but that
he had summoned them to the police station because villagers complained
about the petition drive.
“Villagers said activists claimed they collected villager’s
thumbprints to demand the government fight inflation, but their
thumbprints were being used for a different purpose,” he said.
Also on Friday, the Phnom Penh Municipal Court questioned jailed
opposition senator Hong Sok Hour in his case as the investigating judge
wanted to find out if there are more suspects and more evidence in that
case.
Hong Sok Hour was arrested in 2015 for criticizing on Facebook the treaty demarking the border between Cambodia and Vietnam.
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