Cambodia jails more opposition politicians for sedition
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[March 17, 2022]
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - A Cambodian
court sentenced 20 former politicians and activists to up to 10 years in
prison on Thursday for sedition, a lawyer and a human rights group said,
part of a broad crackdown on the opposition that has drawn international
condemnation.
Sam Rainsy, the self-exiled founder of the disbanded opposition Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP), has already been convicted of multiple
offences and was among those found guilty on Thursday over remarks the
authorities says were tantamount to plotting to overthrow the
government.
More than 100 opposition members or supporters have been charged with
treason and incitement in the past few years in Cambodia, where Prime
Minister Hun Sen, who has ruled for 37 years, has been accused of trying
crush all challenges to his party's political monopoly.
Former CNRP leader Kem Sokha is among dozens of people on trial for
treason, many of whom are living in exile.
The government has denied targeting the opposition and says the trials
are not politically motivated.
Rainsy, Hun Sen's biggest rival, who fled to France for fear of
persecution in 2015, said the justice system was corrupt.
"The will for democratic change which the Cambodian people have
demonstrated on every available occasion is impossible to extinguish.
Opposing dictatorship is a duty, not a crime," he said in an email, when
asked about his conviction.
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Self-exiled Cambodian opposition party founder Sam Rainsy speaks
during an interview with Reuters at a hotel in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, November 10, 2019. REUTERS/Lim Huey Teng
Seven senior CNRP members were tried
in absentia and sentenced to 10 years in prison while 13 of its
supporters, who were in custody, were each ordered to serve three
years and eight months in prison, defence lawyer Sam Sokong said.
He said the case was politically motivated and all his clients were
guilty of was voicing their support for Rainsy to return.
"What (our clients) said was just a right to express opinions as
guaranteed by the constitution," he said.
Plang Sophal, the court's deputy prosecutor, said he was unaware of
the case and declined to comment.
New York-based Human Rights Watch called for international
condemnation of the convictions, which it said amounted to a "witch
hunt that discredits both the Cambodian government and the country's
courts".
(Reporting by Prak Chan Thul; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor)
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