Cambodia’s exiled opposition leader on trial again
AP / Washington Post | 9 December 2016
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Exiled Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy
was tried in absentia Friday for allegedly conspiring to incite chaos in
the country through false documents posted on his Facebook page, a
crime punishable by up to 17 years in prison.
Two other
opposition members who maintained Sam Rainsy’s Facebook page also were
tried on the same charges - conspiracy to falsify public documents,
inciting chaos and using fake documents. The two fled Cambodia in August
2015 to avoid arrest. Sam Rainsy, president of the Cambodia National
Rescue Party, lives in exile in France.
After a brief hearing
that included statements by the prosecutor and the defense attorney, the
Phnom Penh Municipal Court adjourned the trial and set the verdict for
Dec. 22.
Sam Rainsy’s troubles stem from a post by a member of
his party, Sen. Hong Sok Hour, in August 2015 criticizing a 1979
Cambodia-Vietnam border treaty, which implied that Prime Minister Hun
Sen’s government was Vietnam’s puppet. Hong Sok Hour posted on Sam
Rainsy’s page, and was subsequently arrested and tried.
To
support his accusation on Facebook he attached a map of the border and a
disputed copy of the treaty that said the two countries had agreed to
“dissolve” their border. Defense lawyers said the word “dissolve” was a
mistranslation of the word “redefine,” but he was convicted last month
and sentenced to seven years in prison.
On Friday,
prosecutor Sieng Sok urged the court to punish Sam Rainsy and his two
colleagues, saying they were part of the conspiracy by allowing his
Facebook page to be used by Hong Sok Hour. The convicted senator
appeared as a defense witness Friday and testified that Sam Rainsy had
nothing to do with the post.
Defense lawyer Sam Sokong told the
court that Sam Rainsy was in the United States when the post was made
and knew nothing about it. He said the page was operated by other
officials.
The trial 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 November last year 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. The government last month banned his
re-entry from abroad, making it more difficult for him to fight the
charges even if he chooses to return.
He has also been found
guilty of defamation for alleging that a senior government official
sought to inflate Hun Sen’s online popularity by buying “likes” for his
Facebook page.
Hun Sen has been Cambodia’s leader for three decades. But in a general election in 2013, his grip on power was shaken.
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