Paris Peace Accords 23 Oct. 1991

Friday, April 21, 2017

Government Bars CNRP From Prison Visits


Government Bars CNRP From Prison Visits

 The Cambodia Daily | 21 April 2017

The Interior Ministry will no longer allow CNRP officials to visit their jailed comrades after it accused the party of bringing a Radio Free Asia (RFA) staff member to a prison visit under false pretenses, a claim disputed by the party and the employee.
Huot Vuthy, an RFA local deputy director better known to listeners as Chun Chanboth, signed himself in as an “assistant” when he accompanied CNRP lawmakers Mu Sochua and Long Ry to the meeting with jailed party activists and former officials at Prey Sar prison on Wednesday, ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak said.
CNRP lawmaker Mu Sochua visits Phnom Penh’s Prey Sar prison on February to meet with imprisoned activists and opposition officials. (Siv Channa/The Cambodia Daily)CNRP
“They are not honest with us,” General Sopheak said on Wednesday. “They let Chun Chanboth secretly go with them…. We will postpone their visits for a long time because they spread the political message.”
Gen. Sopheak said Mr. Vuthy claimed to be “an assistant to the CNRP. In fact, he is a reporter for RFA.” However, he was vague on Thursday about what laws might have been violated, saying any decision to pursue the case was “up to the courts.”
“It states in the criminal code that to do this kind of thing is wrong,” he said.
A photograph posted to the government-aligned Fresh News website showed Mr. Vuthy wearing a baseball cap and sunglasses and standing behind Ms. Sochua. The outlet also posted a photo of the purported sign-in book for the prison showing Mr. Vuthy’s legal name alongside the title “assistant.”
But Mr. Vuthy said he had simply signed his name and had not provided a title.
“I am not involved with the party,” he said on Thursday. “I went to get the news.”
Mr. Vuthy, who also hosts interviews and roundtables at the station, said he initially intended to visit political commentator Kim Sok, who was imprisoned in February for accusing a government-affiliated “network” of orchestrating the murder of political analyst Kem Ley. Mr. Sok made the comments in RFA interviews.
A guard turned Mr. Vuthy away from visiting Mr. Sok, saying he needed a permission letter from the courts, Mr. Vuthy said.
But the CNRP delegation arrived minutes later, and Mr. Vuthy said he joined them, listening silently to their conversation with 16 former opposition officials and activists, all of whom were charged in cases the CNRP has claimed are politically motivated.
“I don’t care what I am accused of doing because I work based on journalism,” he said. “I want to know the situation [inside the prison]. Everyone knows me. How can I disguise myself?”
Ms. Sochua said she stood by Mr. Vuthy’s account of the visit, but said the CNRP would work with the ministry to resolve the situation.
“We have no intention whatsoever to disrespect the rules,” she said. “We hope that the situation will be clarified…. And after clarification there will be a solution.”
RFA and its guests have had a difficult year. Kem Ley, a social scientist and regular guest on the popular “Listener Forum” talk show, was gunned down in July, just days after speaking critically of alleged government corruption. Prime Minister Hun Sen warned another guest, Meas Nee, not to “go too far” in a speech in November, and sued Mr. Sok in February.
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan has repeatedly claimed RFA and Voice of America are in cahoots with the U.S. government and the opposition party, with the clandestine aim of instilling chaos and instability through biased reporting. The U.S. government funds both stations.
Lao Mong Hay, a political analyst and regular guest on broadcasts hosted by Mr. Vuthy, said that it was the longtime editor’s outspoken charisma that had landed him in the government’s crosshairs.
“Actually, he is one of the harsh government critics,” Mr. Mong Hay said.
“I fear that, in terms of popularity, he is next to Dr. Kem Ley.”




2 comments:

  1. Anonymous9:06 AM

    Why do the Opposition keep playing dirty tricks, breaking the law, get caught and then cry foul?

    Nobody will listen to you any more. I am would enjoy watch a few baton bashing on the Opposition.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous9:09 AM

    For a long time, I actually suspect that the Opposition tried to cheat in the 2013 election but failed. Then they cried foul and nobody cared. Then they surrendered and joined the National Assembly to bid their time.

    Then they tried to cheat again while under the flag of truce, "the Culture of Dialog", they tried to cheat again with "the Culture of Slandering, Lies."

    How many times have you seen the Opposition would attack Hun Manet as a son of a Vietnamese, not from Mr. Hun Sen. The Opposition are so sick and pathetic.

    ReplyDelete