CNRP commune official summonsed again
The Phnom Penh Post | 16 May 2017
Despite a request to postpone questioning until after June’s commune
elections, prominent Cambodia National Rescue Party commune official Sin
Chan Pov Rozet [Sin Rozeth] was summonsed to court for the second time
last week, this time as a suspect for allegedly obstructing the
implementation of a Battambang Provincial Court decision in a land
dispute case.
In December, the court found in favour of police officer Sao Buntith,
who claimed that his grandmother had lent land to a commune chief in
1984 to build a kindergarten. When villagers protested a court order to
hand back the land in mid-January, Buntith lodged a complaint against
them.
[Sin Rozeth] Chan Pov Rozet, O’Char commune second deputy commune chief, was
summonsed to testify on April 20, but at that time was not named as a
suspect. In response, she sent a request to the court, which was not
granted, to postpone questioning until after next month’s commune
elections. Chan Pov Rozet said last month that she attended the
villagers’ protest but only to monitor the events.
According to a second summons on May 8, which Chan Pov Rozet[h] posted
on her Facebook page yesterday, the CNRP candidate is suspected of
“obstructing the implementation of the court decision” and is expected
to appear on May 23.
Chan Pov Rozet[h] said yesterday that she was surprised to be a suspect
in the case but said she would appear in court despite the fact that
doing so will interfere with her campaign.
“If a people’s representative observes whether actions by the court
officials are implemented, and that makes the representative a suspect, I
believe that none of the representatives of the people dare to serve
the people anymore,” she said.
Meanwhile, police official Buntith repeated his earlier claim
yesterday that he had not lodged a complaint against any specific
individuals but only a general complaint about obstruction of the court
order.
One of the protesters, speaking on condition of anonymity, said
yesterday that Chan Pov Rozet did not participate in the protests. “She
did not join [the protests], and we also did not ask her to help us
either,” the person said.
The protester also said Chan Pov Rozet was summonsed alongside five others who had ignored an initial summons.
Yin Mengly, Battambang coordinator for rights group Adhoc, said he
feared the case could become more complicated if politics were involved.
“What concerns us is that after the prosecutor questions her, he
could forward the case and the investigative judge could decide to
detain her. This would make the political atmosphere bad,” he said.
“We request that the prosecutor can process the case, but should not arrest her. The [accusation] is not a serious one.”
Chan Pov Rozet has been viewed as a rising star in the opposition
party since she nearly beat longtime sitting commune chief Kem Chhorng
in 2012.
Legal expert Sok Sam Oeun said he was not aware of the case, but noted political figures are not immune to summonses.
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