Prime Minister’s Children Accuse Media Of Colluding With NGO
Cambodia Daily | 8 July 2016
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s children took to Facebook on Thursday with sarcasm and denials in reaction to a new report by Global Witness accusing the first family of using its political connections to amass a sprawling business empire rife with legal abuses.
By
mining the Commerce Ministry’s public corporate filings, the
London-based anti-corruption group found 21 family members—from Mr. Hun
Sen’s siblings and scions to nephews and nieces and their spouses—owning
or investing in 114 companies with a combined capital of more than $200
million.
“Hostile
Takeover,” released on Thursday, says the list is the “tip of the
iceberg,” with other interests likely hidden behind layers of shell
companies. It notes the listed companies’ business deals with major
international brands including Apple and General Electric and warns
foreign companies of falling foul of anti-corruption laws at home should
they partner up.
On
Thursday, however, Mr. Hun Sen’s children broke their silence with
posts on Facebook deriding the report and the local newspapers that
published articles about it.
Hun
Mana, the prime minister’s eldest daughter, and the family’s reigning
businesswoman according to the public filings, accused Global Witness of
seeking to hobble her father in upcoming elections and of conspiring
with The Cambodia Daily and The Phnom Penh Post.
“We
should thank you for your destructive efforts, which as a consequence
will help my father in the coming election as they are all lies and
deceitful to confuse the public about what my father has accomplished,”
she wrote in a post on her Facebook page.
“I
hope Global Witness, The Phnom Penh Post and The Cambodia Daily will be
liable for the information in the newspapers. It clearly showed
collusion among the three organizations to publish the articles at the
same time in an attempt to attack my family. Please go ahead and
continue your work if you have nothing else to do.”
Global
Witness has over the years published a number of reports exposing
rampant corruption within the Cambodian government, often tethered to
some of Mr. Hun Sen’s closest associates. The exposure saw the group’s
staff kicked out of the country in 2005 and some of its past reports
officially banned.
Taking on
the latest report on Thursday, the prime minister’s eldest son, Hun
Manet, who holds multiple senior military positions including deputy
chair of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces Joint Staff, used his own
Facebook page to pick up on his sister’s themes.
“Whenever
it is close to an election, an organization called Global Witness comes
up with very colorful accusations aimed at attacking the government
and, in particular, making personal attacks on my father. It is that
time again,” he said.
“Through
its coordination with The Cambodia Daily and The Phnom Penh Post, it has
expanded the scope of its accusations, targeting not only my father but
the whole family, and no one can escape. So what is next?”
Lieutenant General Manith said the report and the articles were full of mistakes.
“This
is a very well coordinated attack on the Hun family by Global Witness,
The Cambodia Daily and The Phnom Penh Post,” he said. “As usual, full of
mistakes and false information. The single purpose of the report and
the articles is to disparage and defame the Hun family with false
information.”
Lt. Gen. Manith did not explain what the mistakes were and did not reply to a new request for comment.
Mr.
Hun Sen did not address the Global Witness report directly but shared
his children’s posts on his own Facebook page, along with photographs of
the family making a toast with Phnom Penh governor Pa Socheatvong and
Sok Puthyvuth, the husband of his daughter Hun Maly and the son of
Deputy Prime Minister Sok An.
“Today, my sons and daughters showcased their abilities on the social network Facebook,” he wrote in a message.
Perhaps
the most blatant example of legal abuse pointed out by Global Witness
is Lt. Gen. Manith’s position as a director of Cambodia Electricity
Private, which sells to state energy provider Electricite du Cambodge.
The Law on the General Statute of Military Personnel bars military men
and women from sitting on a company’s board of directors.
Defense
Ministry spokesman Chhum Socheat said on Thursday that he would reply
to a request for comment on the apparent legal breach but failed to do
so by press time.
The Commerce
Ministry and the Council for the Development of Cambodia, which
regulates foreign investments, have ignored repeated requests for
comment about the Global Witness report.
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