Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen addresses at the National Assembly, Jan. 31, 2017.
Photo courtesy of the National Assembly
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Cambodian Crackdown on ‘Culprits’ Targets Hun Sen’s Opponents
RFA | 31 January 2017
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen is stepping up the pressure on his
chief political rival as he pushes the National Assembly to approve
legislation preventing so-called “culprits” from heading a political
party.
“It is necessary that we amend the Law on Political Parties by
stipulating clearly that any individual with culprit status shall not be
entitled to serve as president or vice-president of any political
party,” he said in a floor speech at the National Assembly on Tuesday.
“I request that the National Assembly add this [clause] to strip them off their rights,” he added.
The change would remove Sam Rainsy from the top post of the Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP) because he has been convicted in several
court cases brought by members of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party
(CPP) led by Hun Sen.
Cambodian courts are notorious for their lack of independence and are
often used by the ruling party to punish dissidents and opposition
party officials.
Hun Sen is likely to prevail in the legislature as the ruling party
has enough votes to amend the Law on Political Parties because it
requires only a bare majority to succeed. This means Hun Sen has to get
the votes of 63 lawmakers, and the ruling party holds 68 seats.
Hun Sen is also targeting property held by the CNRP lawmaker.
Opposition party headquarters targeted
Hun Sen told the National Assembly that he wants to confiscate the
CNRP’s headquarters as a way of enforcing a judgement against Sam Rainsy
in a lawsuit he has yet to win.
“I heard that the [CNRP] headquarters was registered in Sam Rainsy’s
name, so let’s have his party’s headquarters sold at auction,” Hun Sen
said in the speech. “He walks freely by fleeing his jail sentences. A
lot of properties belong [to Sam Rainsy] including his plot[s] of land
in Kompong Som province.”
In a $1 million lawsuit, Hun Sen has accused his political rival of
defamation for remarks made during a Jan. 14 speech in Paris in which
Sam Rainsy accused the Cambodian strongman of giving a $1 million bribe
to rising opposition social media star Thy Sovantha to persuade her to
switch loyalties.
Thy Sovantha had made a name for herself by attacking Hun Sen and the
ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) through social media, but she
abruptly changed her tune this year and began attacking Kem Sokha as the
government engaged in a wide-ranging probe into a purported affair
between him and a young hairdresser.
In December, Kem Sokha and provincial CNRP official Seang Chet were
granted royal pardons in the case against the CNRP leader, but five
other people accused in connection with the case remain in prison.
In his Jan. 14 remarks, Sam Rainsy, who was joined by Kem Sokha via
Skype, talked about what he called the judicial double standard faced by
the CNRP’s members and human rights workers who are jailed on charges
over what amounted to a few hundred dollars.
Leaked phone messages allegedly show the prime minister’s second son
Hun Manith – head of the military’s intelligence unit – conspiring with
Thy Sovantha to discredit Kem Sokha, according to local media reports.
While Thy Sovantha filed a separate defamation lawsuit against Sam
Rainsy that seeks $250,000 in damages, Sam Rainsy has been down this
legal road before, as there have been at least six lawsuits filed
against him by government or CPP figures.
In September he was found guilty of defamation for claiming that
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s social medial team bought “likes” on Facebook
from “click farms” abroad to increase the appearance of support.
And in December, he was sentenced to five years in prison in absentia
for posting what authorities said was a fake government pledge to
dissolve the Southeast Asian country's border with Vietnam.
Sam Rainsy has been living in France since 2015 to avoid arrest for a
defamation case brought by former Foreign Minister Hor Namhong in 2008.
In October, Hun Sen ordered police, immigration, and aviation
authorities to "use all ways and means" to prevent the opposition leader
from returning to the country, as Sam Rainsy has pledged to do before
the country’s elections.
Cambodia’s local elections are set for June 2017 and national
elections are scheduled for 2018. In the disputed 2013 elections, the
CPP lost 22 seats in its worst showing since 1998.
Minority leader title stripped
Adopted in 1997, the Law on Political Parties consists of 11 Chapters
with 45 articles, but it contains no language that lays out punishments
for any individual with “culprit status.”
Age restrictions are the only limits the Cambodian constitution
places on political office as it fails to mention “culprit status”
preventing anyone from serving.
“A political party is the only institution which is entitled to
solely choose its party president, and Mr. Sam Rainsy is our party
president,” said CNRP Chief Whip Son Chhay.
The Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (COMFREL)’s
Executive Director Koul Panha told RFA’s Khmer Service that the attempt
to amend the Law on Political Parties was unfair.
“In a fair election environment, each party involved shall not be
pressured by court orders, the armed forces or the National Assembly,”
he said.
Tuesday’s move against “culprits” came after the National Assembly
at the behest of Hun Sen stripped the minority leader title from CNRP
deputy leader Kem Sokha.
CNRP lawmakers boycotted the National Assembly session in protest.
Hun Sen keeps opposition in jail
Hun Sen also dashed hopes that two opposition lawmakers, Hong Sok
Hour and Um Sam An, could be released from prison, telling the National
Assembly they pose a danger to CPP members.
“I think these cases should not be touched because they are too
serious and could pose a danger to [then] President of the State
Council, Mr. Heng Samrin, who was accused of signing a deal to eliminate
the border [between Vietnam and Cambodia],” he said. “It was not
right.”
In November, Hong Sok Hour was found guilty of forging and
publishing public documents and of incitement to cause instability, when
he posted a disputed copy of a 1979 Cambodia-Vietnam treaty on Facebook
that said the two countries had agreed to dissolve their mutual border.
Um Sam An was handed a two-and-a half year sentence in October for
“inciting discrimination” and “inciting social instability” for posts on
the lawmaker’s Facebook page accusing the CPP of failing to stop land
encroachment by Vietnam and using improper maps to demarcate the border
between the two former colonies of France.
Hun Sen had ordered police in April to arrest anyone accusing the
government of using “fake” maps to cede national territory to Vietnam,
which invaded and occupied Cambodia in 1979 to overthrow the rule of the
Khmer Rouge.
Hun Sen also raised the Boeung Kak Lake case, and the case of the “Kem Sokha Five’” in his speech.
Hun Sen said he will use his prime minister’s privilege to decide if
he will ask King Norodom Sihamoni for a pardon in the Boeung Kak Lake
case, but he described the action of the activists there as a “riot.”
Land rights activist Tep Vanny was convicted on Sept. 19 of insulting
and obstructing public officials and was sentenced to six months in
prison in relation to a protest in November 2011 near Hun Sen’s
residence.
She first gained prominence as an activist fighting the Boeung Kak
Lake land grab, when some 3,500 families were evicted from the
neighborhood surrounding the urban lake in Phnom Penh. The lake was
later filled with sand to make way for a development project with close
ties to Hun Sen and the CPP.
Seizure of land for development—often without due process or fair
compensation for displaced residents—is a major cause of protests in
Cambodia and other authoritarian Asian countries, including China and
Laos.
As for the “Kem Sokha Five,” the prime minister said he had to wait for the legal process to run its course.
“In accordance with the law, it takes two months for a judgment to be
final,” he said. “We cannot request amnesty while the judgement is not
yet entered into force.”
Lim Mony, Nay Vanda, Ny Sokha, Yi Soksan—all workers for ADHOC (the
Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association—and National Election
Commission (NEC) deputy secretary-general Ny Chakrya have been
imprisoned since April.
They are accused of attempting to pay hush money to Kem Sokha’s
purported mistress in the government’s wide-ranging probe into the
alleged affair that many inside and outside of Cambodia see as
politically motivated.
Cambodia is “not free”
Hun Sen’s moves come as the U.S.-based watchdog group Freedom House
ranked Cambodia “Not Free” in its “Freedom in the World 2017” report.
Cambodia clocked in at a 5.5 rating with one representing the greatest
degree of freedom and 7 the smallest degree of freedom.
Spokesperson of the Office of the Council of Ministers Phay Siphan told RFA the report does not reflect reality.
“It is a report written by those reactionary cliques aiming at
sabotaging Cambodia,” he said. “They arrange their people to create such
reports to be used by their echoing tools, including Radio Free Asia.”
He added: “Had we taken proper measures, RFA would never exist here,
because we know clearly that RFA is a tool for sabotaging the
government.”
Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) Director Chak Sopheap took a different view.
“Citizens or civil society, in particular those [opposition
political] analysts have always suffered from harassment, including
being charged with criminal case of defamation,” she said.
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