Kem Sokha was arrested at midnight last night. Photo supplied |
Developing: CNRP leader Kem Sokha arrested for 'treason'
Phnom Penh Post | Sunday, 3 September 2017
2:30pm: The Cambodia National Rescue Party will
place its faith in the international community to “find a solution”
following the arrest of its president Kem Sokha, with the party now
feeling “powerless”, CNRP lawmakers said this morning.
Speaking to a local radio station, CNRP spokesman and Phnom Penh
lawmaker Yim Sovann would not discuss any plans to mobilise supporters
to protest Sokha’s imprisonment.
“If the ruling party wants to lead the country down this path we can
only watch and see the situation because we have seen the situation from
2014 to 2017, it is not good, we have seen [an] endless series of
problems and we are very concerned,” he told Vayo FM radio station.
The decision to “watch and see” rather than call supporters out to
the street contrasts with the party’s stance last year when they
threatened mass demonstrations after authorities attempted to arrest
then-vice president Sokha for ignoring a court summons stemming from a
“prostitution” case built on an alleged affair with a hairdresser.
“I do not want to talk about a demonstration and we want to talk to
solve things peacefully,” Sovann said. “I want both to be tolerant and
to find a solution peacefully because when we do something that causes
our people suffering, we should not do it.
“This situation is only the international community can find [a] solution.”
Lawmaker for Battambang Long Botta said the party had no choice.
“Since 1991 Hun Sen has not respected any agreements ... the
popularity of the CNRP since the merger in Manila has continued to grow
and at each step he tried to block us," he said, referring to the
amalgamation of the Sam Rainsy Party with Sokha's Human Rights Party to
form the CNRP.
"The red line is not so far away. We are powerless.”
Representatives at the embassies of the US, the EU, Japan, France and Australia have not yet responded to requests for comment.
12pm: Military police are mobilising in Tbong Khmum
province, while several military leaders publicly voiced their support
for this morning’s arrest of opposition leader Kem Sokha, with one
saying soldiers “would not stand still” if “a small group of people”
were allowed “to topple the legitimate government”.
The mobilisation follows the decision to send Sokha to CC3 prison in
Tbong Khmum’s Trapaing Phlong commune, which a CNRP lawmaker said was
likely to avoid a demonstration in Phnom Penh.
Tbong Khmum CNRP activist Chok Huor, 35, said “many” military police
and police from the area were stationed along the road to the prison and
conducting patrols.
“According to villagers nearby the prison, at night there were many
cars travelling back and forth to the prison. They told me Mr Kem Sokha
was inside the prison,” Huor said.
“Local activists are very concerned about the arrest of our president
Kem Sokha and we are waiting for the orders from the leadership. If
there is an order to protest or demonstrate we are ready to
participate.”
Meanwhile, in a flurry of statements published by the pro-government
outlet Fresh News, several military top brass slammed Sokha, who is yet
to be charged but who has been accused of “treason” over what the
government says was a plot to conspire with the United States to topple
the government.
Under the constitution, the military is ostensibly politically
neutral, however almost all senior military commanders are members of
the ruling Cambodian People’s Party’s central committee.
Among those to put out similar statements backing the arrest are army
commander and deputy supreme commander of RCAF General Meas Sophea,
deputy army commander Lieutenant General Prum Din, Military Region 1
commander Lieutenant General Huot Chheang, commander of the Intervention
Brigade 1 Lieutenant General Prum Pheng and head of Brigade 70 General
Mao Sophan.
Ministry of Defence Department of Military Service head Meas Savorn,
head of the military in Prey Vihear Chan Sopheaktra and head of Military
Region 5 Bun Seng also released statements carried on Fresh News.
Battambang military commander Uk Khnuoch, quoted by Fresh News, said
he “strongly condemned” the opposition leader, citing a 2014 clip of the
CNRP president speaking which has re-emerged as part of the
government’s efforts to justify the arrest.
In the clip, Sokha talks of receiving support from the United States as part of his efforts to change Cambodia’s leadership.
Khnuoch said the clip “clearly shows [a] secret plan in an attempt to
topple the legitimate government with colluding with foreigners”.
“We military commanders, deputy commanders, and all soldiers will not
stand still if a small group of people are allowed to continue to do
activities that topple the legitimate government,” he said.
“Under the law, we could not tolerate this. We all firmly continue to
work to protect the territory and the law of the constitution, and the
legitimate government, which is developing the country to achieve total
peace.”
11am: Prime Minister Hun Sen has justified the
arrest of opposition leader Kem Sokha, saying it was necessary to
counter a “national conspiracy” and proved there was the influence of a
“third hand” – an oft-used reference to foreign interference – in
Cambodia.
The premier was speaking to garment workers at Koh Pich in Phnom
Penh, when he said Sokha’s arrest was necessitated by the “seriousness”
of the case and that authorities had finally found the “third hand”,
although he did not refer to Sokha by name.
“We have been searching for a third hand, who is that? And now we finally found the third hand,” he said.
The arrest followed the circulation of a 2014 video clip on social
media, originally published by Cambodian Broadcasting Network in
Australia, in which he purportedly admits to getting assistance from the
United States to effect a regime change in Cambodia.
“I want you all to broadcast on all the TVs. [The] seriousness is
very big and this issue is an act of the national conspiracy,” he said.
The prime minister’s comment seemed to echo his son’s, Hun Manith,
who took to Facebook just after the arrest to decry the opposition
leader as a traitor.
“Kem Sokha betrayed Cambodia. He confessed to have long term plans
with the United States of America… Thank[s] to him, we now know who [is]
the Third Hand.”
9:27am: In a dramatic midnight arrest, opposition
leader Kem Sokha was taken into custody by around 100 police over
accusations of conspiring with a foreign power and treason and sent to
Tbong Khmum province’s Trapeang Thlong prison, according to an Interior
Ministry official.
Sokha and his bodyguards were taken away after police raided his home
just after midnight on Sunday after a 2014 video clip, originally
published by Cambodian Broadcasting Network in Australia, was posted to
Facebook in which he purportedly admits to getting assistance from the
United States to effect a regime change in Cambodia.
While Sokha’s whereabouts were initially unclear, Khieu Sopheak,
spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said that a court had ordered the
opposition leader be sent to Trapaing Thlong prison in Tbong Khmum
province.
“We cannot let him run anywhere, and he had taken money [from]
foreigners to organise and follow foreigners to topple the government …
He did not use the word ‘vote’, but he said to ‘change’ and ‘topple’.”
A government statement last night said Sokha had been arrested for
“conspiracy with [a] foreign power” under Article 443, which comes with a
sentence of 15 to 30 years.
“This conspiracy is an act of treason,” the statement read. “[I]t
clearly proves the conspiracy between Kem Sokha and the accomplices with
a foreign power, which harms the Kingdom of Cambodia.”
The arrest follows weeks of unsubstantiated conspiracy theories put
up by Facebook user “Kon Khmer” and parroted by government mouthpiece
Fresh News alleging foreign interference through pro-democracy NGOs, and
more recently taking aim at Sokha's Cambodia National Rescue Party for
being trained by foreign groups to replace the Cambodian People's
Party-led government.
The CNRP released a statement condemning the arrest of their leader and called for Sokha’s unconditional release.
CNRP lawmaker Long Botta also confirmed that Sokha had been sent to
prison in Tbong Khmum, potentially to prevent any mass demonstrations
from being held in Phnom Penh.
He said the speech made in Australia was being portrayed in mostly
government-aligned local media outlets as Sokha being a spy attempting a
coup to overthrow the government.
“Whether the CPP will eliminate the party, I could not imagine it
yet,” he said. “Maybe they try and gather all the testimony or documents
so they can arrest all the leaders.”
Human Rights Watch’s John Sifton called the arrest at “setback for
Cambodia’s human rights situation”, saying it was time for the
international community to put Prime Minister Hun Sen on “notice”.
“The international community, which provides a major percentage of
the Cambodian government’s annual budget, should put Hun Sen on notice
that if he doesn’t reverse course, it will be impossible to consider
next year’s elections free and fair,” he said.
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s son, Hun Manith, took to Facebook to decry the opposition leader as a traitor.
“Kem Sokha betrayed Cambodia. He confessed to have long term plans
with the United States of America… Thank[s] to him, we now know who [is]
the Third Hand.”
Help from international community? Good luck! If there was actually an international community who's willing to help, there wouldn't be a genocide in Cambodia in the 70s and millions died. History will repeat itself. The only hope is for khmers to be brave enough and stand up as a nation to bring down this dictator.
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