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Sam Rainsy: ពាក្យបណ្តឹង បរិហារកេរ្តិ៍ មួយទៀត | New defamation lawsuit
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| Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy delivers a speech to members of the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) at a hotel in metro Manila, Philippines June 29, 2016. REUTERS/Romeo Ranoco |
Cambodia opposition leader fined for fake Facebook 'likes' jibe
Reuters | 8 November 2016
Cambodian
opposition leader Sam Rainsy was fined in absentia on Tuesday for
accusing Prime Minister Hun Sen of having fake Facebook page "likes",
the latest government case against the opposition before a general
election in 2018.
Hun
Sen is taking a belated leap into the digital age in a bid to court
young, urban voters ahead of the election, tipped to be the biggest test
of his three-decade rule.
Hun
Sen's Facebook page has surged to over six million likes, comparing to
Sam Rainsy's 3.3 million, after he embraced the platform following
almost losing a 2013 election when the opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party (CNRP) won a surge of support online.
The Phnom Penh Municipal Court found
exiled CNRP president Sam Rainsy guilty of defamation over his social
media post in March accusing a ruling party senior official of ordering
civil servants to boost Hun Sen's Facebook page "likes" by creating fake
accounts.
The court ordered Sam Rainsy to pay a total of $6,250 in fines and compensation.
Som
Soeun, a government official who handles Hun Sen's Facebook page, said
that Sam Rainsy was embarrassed after his rival's surge in likes so he
had made up the allegation.
"This is like a competition," Som Soeun told reporters. "When he lost, he cried foul."
Sam Rainsy's lawyer said the opposition planned to appeal.
Tension
between Cambodia's two main political parties, Hun Sen's Cambodian
People's Party and the CNRP, has risen in recent months, with the
opposition complaining of a crackdown in a bid to intimidate critics
before the election.
The court jailed an opposition senator on Monday
for seven years over his Facebook posting of a fake government pledge
to dissolve the border with Vietnam, a verdict opposition members say
could fuel tension in the Southeast Asian nation.
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