Cambodian opposition MP jailed for Facebook post
Sam An claimed to have found original maps of Cambodian-Vietnamese border that contradict those currently in use
Anadolu Agency | 10 October 2016
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
A Cambodian opposition lawmaker
was jailed for 2 1/2 years Monday for a Facebook post he made last year about
maps used to try and settle a border dispute with neighboring Vietnam.
Sam An, a member of parliament
for the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), was arrested in April.
The year before, he had
questioned the originality of maps loaned to Cambodia by the United Nations’
New York-based Dag Hammarskjold Library, and which were being used to compare
the country’s borders with the Cambodian government’s own maps.
The CNRP has repeatedly claimed
that the border with Vietnam has not been properly demarcated, which has led to
encroachment and dispossession of land.
The borders on the UN and
Cambodian maps lined up, but Sam An had said on Facebook that he had found
other scaled maps that predated those sent over by the UN.
That was enough to have him
charged with committing a “flagrant offence” and, in addition to the jail
sentence, the lawmaker was also levied with a $1,000 fine.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann told
the Anadolu Agency on Monday that the trial was “politically motivated” and
“against the Constitution, because he still has immunity and then they arrest
him, put him in jail and try him”.
“It’s illegal detention and we would
like to appeal to the stakeholders to come to the meeting and try to find a
peaceful solution,” he said, referring to the ruling Cambodian People’s Party.
On Friday, the CNRP’s 55 lawmakers again refused to
take their seats as the latest session of parliament opened.
On Monday, Sovann told Anadolu
Agency that the refusal was not a boycott.
“The duty of MPs is to meet the
people, listen to demands and we have brought the message from the grassroots
level to the government. We will go to the National Assembly to attend a
meeting when we think it is appropriate and useful for the people.”
In March, a university student
was jailed for 18 months for making a Facebook post that called for a “color
revolution” -- a term that has become synonymous with a wave of anti-government
mass movements in recent years, mainly in the former Soviet bloc.
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