Cambodia Jails Opposition Lawmaker Critical of Government
AP / ABC News | 10 October 2016
A Cambodian court on Monday sentenced an opposition lawmaker who
has been a strong critic of the government's handling of demarcating the border
with neighboring Vietnam to 2 1/2 years in prison for online
postings he made.
Um Sam An is the latest member of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party to be sentenced
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.
In handing out the
sentence, Judge Heng Sokna of the Phnom Penh Municipal Court said the
accusations made by Um Sam An in Facebook posts last year aimed to cause chaos
in society.
The lawmaker was arrested in April in the Cambodian city of Siem Reap after having returned from a trip to the United States.
A month ago, the
same court sentenced Kem Sokha, deputy to the opposition party's leader, to
five months in prison for twice ignoring a summons to answer questions related
to a case involving his alleged mistress.
Critics say Hun Sen
is manipulating the courts to weaken the opposition's chances in next year's
local polls and the 2018 general election. The opposition made an unexpectedly
strong showing in the 2013 general election, which it claimed it was cheated
out of winning.
One victim of the
legal moves has been opposition leader Sam Rainsy, who did not return from a
trip abroad last November when an old conviction for defamation was restored
and his parliamentary immunity was stripped by the government's legislative
majority. It had been generally assumed that the conviction, carrying a
two-year prison sentence, had been lifted by a 2013 pardon that allowed Sam
Rainsy to return from a previous period of self-exile.
Monday's conviction
of Um Sam An came after the opposition unexpectedly failed to attend the
reopening of parliament on Friday, setting back hopes of a political truce with
the government.
The party stopped
attending parliamentary sessions about four months ago after ruling party
lawmakers stripped some opposition lawmakers of their legal immunity. The
opposition says lawsuits have been used to unfairly harass its members.
Hun Sen has been Cambodia's leader for three decades. But in a
general election in 2013, it seemed his grip on power was shaken when the
Cambodia National Rescue Party mounted a strong challenge, winning 55 seats in
the National Assembly and leaving Hun Sen's Cambodian
People's Party with 68. The opposition claimed it had been cheated and staged a
boycott of parliament. Seeking to shore up his legitimacy, Hun Sen reached a
political truce with the opposition in 2014, making some minor concessions over
electoral and parliamentary procedures.
But relations
deteriorated last year after the opposition tried to exploit a volatile issue
by accusing neighboring Vietnam, with which Hun Sen's government maintains good
relations, of land encroachment. The move proved politically popular, and the
government reacted by stepping up intimidation of the opposition party in the
courts, which are seen as being under its influence.
Hun Sen's party has
often been accused in the past of using violence or the threat of violence
against opponents, but in recent years has stalked its foes mostly in the
courts.
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