Paris Peace Accords 23 Oct. 1991

Saturday, February 25, 2017

[Vietnamization: Prey Veng] Man jailed for Facebook threat to Cambodian PM Hun Sen

FACEBOOK THREATS. This handout photo taken on April 4, 2016 shows Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen speaking during a meeting at the National Assembly building in Phnom Penh. Photo from Cambodia National Assembly/AFP
FACEBOOK THREATS. This handout photo taken on April 4, 2016 shows Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen speaking during a meeting at the National Assembly building in Phnom Penh. Photo from Cambodia National Assembly/AFP

Man jailed for Facebook threat to Cambodian PM Hun Sen

Ven Sopheap, a resident of eastern Prey Veng province, is given a two-year prison sentence for issuing a death threat and inciting discrimination

AFP / Rappler | 24 February 2017

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia – 

A Cambodian court on Friday, February 24, sentenced a 27-year-old to two years in jail for Facebook posts that threatened strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen. 
 
Ven Sopheap, a resident of eastern Prey Veng province, admitted during his trial last week to posting threats against Hun Sen – the authoritarian premier who has ruled Cambodia for more than 3 decades. 

He reportedly wrote "Hun Sen, today is the day of your death" and "Beheading Yuons (derogatory term for Vietnamese people) is the duty of all Khmer children" on his Facebook account, leading to his arrest in October.

[Ignorance has become a form of weaponized refusal to acknowledge the violence of the past, and revels in a culture of media spectacles [T2P: risible charge of "racism" based solely on use of neutral word "Yuon"] in which public concerns are translated into private obsessions, consumerism and fatuous entertainment. As James Baldwin rightly warned, “Ignorance, allied with power, is the most ferocious enemy justice can have.” - NYT]

 
On Friday a Phnom Penh court handed the man two years in prison for issuing a death threat and inciting discrimination, according to judge Ly Sokleng. 

Rights groups criticized the verdict as the latest smothering of free speech in Cambodia as Hun Sen clamps down on critics ahead of a 2018 poll.

"Flippant social media posts or throw away comments, without any real intention to follow through, should be handled with a common-sense approach and treated with leniency," Chak Sopheap, executive director of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, told AFP.

Prison sentences for social media posts have become increasingly common in Cambodia and around the region, with governments often leaning on defamation laws to muzzle dissent. 

The clampdown in Cambodia comes as 64-year-old Hun Sen brandishes his own social media arsenal in a bid to connect with young voters fed up with the corruption and rights abuses that have flourished under his tenure.

The premier's political rivals have accused him of buying "likes" from foreign click farms to boost engagement on his active Facebook page – a charge Hun Sen vehemently denies.






1 comment:

  1. Anonymous4:44 AM

    Good riddance. Just jail all the trouble makers.

    ReplyDelete