CPP to Sue Senator for Linking PM To Murder
Cambodia Daily | 1 August 2016
The ruling CPP says it will sue an opposition senator over a recent
speech in which she appeared to accuse Prime Minister Hun Sen of having
political analyst Kem Ley murdered, although the senator has denied the
allegation.
The threat comes amid a spate of legal action against government critics widely seen as politically motivated.
“Now I don’t know what Hun Sen
was thinking,” she is seen and heard saying in the clip. “He was
agitated and then shot at Kem Ley, who was a political analyst who spoke
up about Global Witness, Hun Sen’s corruption, his family’s corruption
and the millions of dollars they saved. Global Witness documented
everything, but [Kem Ley] just referenced the document.”
Global
Witness, a London-based anti-corruption group, released a report last
month linking the prime minister’s family to a vast network of private
firms with a combined capital of more than $200 million. Kem Ley, a
popular political commentator, discussed the report during a radio
interview a few days before he was gunned down inside a convenience
store in central Phnom Penh.
“Hun Sen did this to intimidate
people who support the National Rescue Party [CNRP], so that they don’t
stand up to vote for the National Rescue Party,” Ms. Lany says in the
clip. “So he appeals to the people to see Sam Rainsy as a bad guy who
blocks aid, makes workers suffer and opposes garment exports. But that’s
an exaggeration; Sam Rainsy did not say that.”
Mr. Rainsy, whose
eponymous party merged with the Human Rights Party to form the CNRP in
2012, has urged the E.U. to make aid and garment imports from Cambodia
conditional on improvements to the country’s human rights record.
Although
Mr. Hun Sen has denied any role in Kem Ley’s murder, public suspicion
has fallen heavily on the government. Mr. Rainsy has himself labeled it a
political assassination.
Contacted on Sunday, CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said the party would sue Ms. Lany for defaming the prime minister.
“On
Monday or Tuesday, we will sue and accuse her of defamation,” he said.
“Once the police analyze the voice we will know whether it was edited or
not. Now everyone has heard it. She can’t be excused.”
Ms. Lany
denied accusing the prime minister of ordering Kem Ley’s murder and said
the audio from her speech in Ratanakkiri had been edited to make it
seem as though she had.
“I did not say that Samdech Hun Sen
killed,” she said. “I just said there was someone who killed Dr. Kem Ley
on that day. But they cut out my words ‘there was someone who killed’
and connected the words ‘Samdech Hun Sen.’”
“I said Global Witness
reported that Hun Sen and his family were corrupt, and that Dr. Kem Ley
interpreted it on Radio Free Asia without fear, so two days later
someone shot Dr. Kem Ley dead,” she said.
Ms. Lany said she was untroubled by the prospects of a lawsuit.
“It is his right to sue,” she said of the prime minister. “I am not concerned. Whatever happens, we will resolve the problem.”
Two
opposition lawmakers have already been arrested, charged and jailed in
the past year over their online claims about Cambodia’s contentious
border with Vietnam. Mr. Rainsy is in self-exile avoiding a two-year
prison term attached to a defamation conviction in a case brought by
Deputy Prime Minister Hor Namhong. CNRP Vice President Kem Sokha has
been hiding inside the party’s Phnom Penh headquarters since May, when
police tried and failed to arrest him for not showing up in court to
answer questions about his alleged affair with a hairdresser.
During
a brief visit to Cambodia last month, the U.S. government’s assistant
secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor, Tom
Malinowski, said the recent court cases had a clear political bent.
“It
is pretty plain that over the last several weeks and months in
Cambodia, the vast majority of these legal actions have been taken
against one side—against people who are seen as critics of the
government,” he said at the time. “And I think that gives rise to
legitimate questions of politicization of the process.”
Sue, sue, sue!!! what's else new with the CPP majority Viet-controlled regime in Phnom Penh, Cambodia?
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