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Former Funcinpec official Lu Lay Sreng apologises for allegedly insulting the King in a video posted to Facebook on Saturday. Facebook |
PM, Funcinpec to sue ex-deputy PM over leaked phone call
Phnom Penh Post | 23 October 2017
Hun Sen and Funcinpec will file lawsuits against former Deputy
Prime Minister Lu Lay Sreng following the leak of a private phone
conversation in which he disparaged the King and accused Funcinpec of
taking money to accept the opposition’s National Assembly seats in the
event of its dissolution.
On Saturday, anti-opposition Facebook page Seiha published a
recording of a conversation between former Funcinpec officials Lay Sreng
and Ky Lum Ang, in which they discussed Lay Sreng’s plan to meet with
King Norodom Sihamoni and ask him to relieve political tensions in the
Kingdom.
“If he doesn’t dare to do so, abdicate! Let another do it,” Lay Sreng said, going on to call the King “a castrated chicken”.
Seiha has a long history of leaking private conversations, texts and
emails damaging to opponents of the Cambodian People’s Party, many of
which are subsequently republished by government mouthpiece Fresh News.
In the conversation, Lay Sreng also accused Funcinpec of taking $1
million from the CPP in exchange for filing a complaint requesting the
dissolution of the beleaguered Cambodia National Rescue Party’s and for
agreeing to accept the bulk of their parliamentary seats once the party
is dissolved. “My goodness! They wear nice suits but aren’t even ashamed
to take those seats,” he exclaimed.
“This idiot prince is worse . . . I cannot stand it anymore; he is
too cheap,” Lay Sreng said, referring to Funcinpec President Prince
Norodom Ranariddh.
After the leak, Lum Ang called Lay Sreng again, asking him to clarify
that she was not involved. That conversation was also leaked by Seiha.
Lay Sreng apologised on Facebook later that same day.
“What I said was wrong, I would like to say sorry to the King, to Samdech [Hun Sen] . . . Please all, forgive me,” he wrote.
But during a speech yesterday on Koh Pich, Hun Sen said he would not forgive him.
“Now, don’t run, don’t run. I would like to send my message to Lu Lay
Sreng to tell you that the prince and I will sue you . . . You say
sorry to the King and Samdech Hun Sen, but I don’t pardon you because
you are too insolent,” the premier said.
Hun Sen’s lawyer, Ky Tech, said yesterday that he had “received
instruction from Samdech Techo [Hun Sen], and I am preparing the
complaint . . . This is public defamation of him.”
Funcinpec spokesman Nheb Bun Chin also confirmed a lawsuit was in the works.
“He said the prime minister gave $1 million to Funcinpec, which is
not really true,” Bun Chin said, adding the party would also sue over
the comments about the King.
The National Assembly recently passed a series of amendments allowing
the redistribution of the CNRP’s seats to minor parties in the event of
its dissolution. Funcinpec, who filed one of the initial lawsuits to
dissolve CNRP, would receive 41 of the CNRP’s 55 seats, an arrangement
that has prompted accusations of a political deal.
“He doesn’t understand he’s playing with fire,” Bun Chin said, adding
Lum Ang would likely be named as an accomplice.
“The Constitution is
clear already – don’t talk about his majesty,” he added.
The Constitution, however, is not particularly clear. Stating only
that “the Person of the King shall be inviolable”, the document does not
elaborate on what precisely that means or whether such a violation
carries any punishment.
Legal expert Sok Sam Oeun said there is no law banning insults to the
King. Moreover, he said, any private conversation cannot be grounds for
public insult or defamation.
Political analyst Meas Nee said the public should be focusing on how
and why private conversations were being leaked, rather than what was
said. “It is prohibited by the law, but there is becoming a culture
where it is OK to leak conversations,” he said.
Calling Fresh News “the government media”, Nee said it is possible
that the dual lawsuit is a sign of a continuing partnership between
Funcinpec and the CPP.
Lay Sreng and Lum Ang could not be reached yesterday.
Meanwhile, Um Daravuth, adviser to the royal family, yesterday said,
“The King doesn’t touch on politics. He is the father of all Cambodians.
We can make requests to him, but we must not criticise him,” he said,
adding that he did not know if the royal family would take additional
action.
“If he doesn’t dare to do so, abdicate! Let another do it,”
ReplyDeleteThis man is very brave. He dares to say what nobody in Cambodia dares to say. He is 100& right to say that the king is useless. Not only he's useless, he's very harmful to Cambodia too since he's being used by Hun Sen to pass all kinds of crazy and illegal laws to destroy the oppositions. And Hun Sen also uses him to legitimize his dictatorship government to fool the international community. if the king's gone, Cambodia will definitely be better off.
Well, looks like everybody in Cambodia [the little people, young and old, and every rank and file of the Hun Sen regime included] has just had it with the HUN SEN Viet/CPP's oppression of the Khmer people in favor of the Viet/YUON. Down with the HUN SEN/Viet CPP regime in Phnom Penh!!! Bravo and long live the Khmer people!!!
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