[Background / related]
Sam Rainsy: ពាក្យបណ្តឹង បរិហារកេរ្តិ៍ មួយទៀត | New defamation lawsuit

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Cambodian Opposition Chief Found Guilty Over Facebook Claim
AP / New York Times | 8 November 2016
PHNOM
PENH, Cambodia — A Cambodian court on Tuesday found the country's
exiled opposition leader guilty of defamation for alleging that a senior
government official sought to inflate Prime Minister Hun Sen's online
popularity by buying "likes" for his Facebook page.
Hun
Sen has a very active online presence, and his opponents likewise use
the internet to mobilize supporters. The rivalry between Hun Sen and Sam
Rainsy evolved into a "Facebook war," with each seeking to claim a
greater number of "likes."
At
the height of their battling in March, the Phnom Penh Post published
its finding that most of Hun Sen's "likes" originated from abroad,
raising suspicions about their legitimacy. Currently, Hun Sen's page has
6.1 million "likes," and Sam Rainsy's has 3.3 million.
Cambodia's courts are widely seen as being under the influence of Hun Sen's government and his ruling Cambodian People's Party.
The
conviction is the latest in a series of cases against opposition
leaders in what is generally seen as an attempt to disrupt their
organizing efforts ahead of local elections next June. The next general
election is not until the middle of 2018, but holding power at the local
level is an advantage when national polls are held.
Sam
Rainsy is the most prominent target of these prosecutions, and has been
in exile since last November to avoid a jail term on a conviction that
he had thought was covered by a royal pardon. There are several other
cases pending against him, at least two involving online postings. The
government this month banned his re-entry from abroad, making it more
difficult for him to fight the charges even if he chooses to return.
Deputy
party leader Kem Sokha has also been tied up in legal knots after a
well-orchestrated scandal involving his alleged mistress, and was
sentenced to a five-month jail term for refusing to appear in court to
testify in a related case. He has been holed up at party headquarters in
the Cambodian capital for several months.
On
Monday, a court sentenced an opposition senator to seven years in
prison over comments he posted on Facebook criticizing a 36-year-old
border agreement with neighboring Vietnam. The Phnom Penh Municipal
Court found Hong Sok Hour guilty of falsifying public documents, using
fake documents and inciting chaos.
Sam
Soeun filed his lawsuit about Facebook "likes" in March after Sam
Rainsy accused him of being involved in a plan to boost Hun Sen's
popularity by buying "likes" originating in places such as India and the
Philippines, as well as ordering civil servants and soldiers in
Cambodia to set up dummy Facebook accounts.
Judge Im Vannak said Tuesday that Sam Rainsy acted with ill intentions.
Sam Rainsy, in a statement posted on Facebook after the court's ruling, repeated his original allegation.
"Prime
Minister Hun Sen has been manipulating Facebook figures in order to
boast about his (apparently impressive but fake) popularity, which he
uses as a political justification to legitimize the ongoing violent
crackdown on his more and more numerous critics," he said.
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