Friday 9 December 2016

Jailed Senator Testifies at Rainsy Facebook Post Trial

Imprisoned opposition Senator Hong Sok Hour, allowed to testify in civilian clothes, is led to the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Friday to be a witness in a case against CNRP President Sam Rainsy. (Siv Channa/The Cambodia Daily)
by Khy Sovuthy | December 10, 2016

An imprisoned opposition senator testified on Friday at the trial of opposition leader Sam Rainsy and two assistants that he had not contacted Mr. Rainsy before posting a video of a false border treaty onto the exiled CNRP president’s Facebook page.

The three defendants, all currently in France, were charged as accomplices in crimes committed by opposition Senator Hong Sok Hour when he posted the document—said to contain a key mistranslation of a 1979 treaty between Cambodia and Vietnam—last year.

Cambodia: Dissident group claims members being hunted

Khmer National Liberation Front says members sought by both Thai and Cambodian police in Bangkok, fear for their safety


PHNOM PENH
The leader of an outlawed Cambodian nationalist group has claimed that its members are being hunted by both Thai and Cambodian police in Bangkok, and that they are now on the run and fear for their safety.
Sam Serey, exiled founder of the outlawed Khmer National Liberation Front (KNLF), wrote in an email to Anadolu Agency late Tuesday that he is “seriously concerned about the safety of KNLF members in Thailand”.

The KNLF, which was established in 2012, considers Cambodia to be a neo-colonial puppet, with its neighbor, Vietnam holding the strings. 

Cambodia investigating coup declaration against PM

Video posted online shows man declaring coup d’etat before listing 30 years of alleged human rights abuses by Hun Sen

World Bulletin / News Desk
Cambodian police say they are investigating the declaration of a coup against the government of Prime Minister Hun Sen, but have laughed off any suggestion of the threat being serious.
A video posted to YouTube and the Facebook page of a Vichea Som on Sunday showed a man sitting in front of a camouflage-print banner declaring a coup d’etat before listing numerous alleged human rights abuses by Hun Sen over the course of his more than 30 years in power.

KNLF ‘plotters’ sentenced

Members of the Khmer National Liberation Front were sentenced to between five and nine years in jail at Phnom Penh’s Municipal Court yesterday, for ‘plotting’ to commit an attack. Hong Menea
The Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday sentenced Sam Serey, the Denmark-based leader of the anti-government Khmer National Liberation Front, and 10 other accused members of his group to between five and nine years in jail for “plotting” to commit an attack.

The 10 besides Serey were arrested in October 2014 over a protest they planned in front of the Vietnamese Embassy to demand respect for the 1991 Paris Peace Accords. All have denied “plotting” anything.

Prime Minister’s formula put to test

Sam Rainsy, left, and Prime Minister Hun Sen pose for photos after meeting at the National Assembly in 2014. Heng Chivoan
For the many who have pinned their hopes on Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha’s Cambodia National Rescue Party, it would be a crushing blow for the delicate alliance to have come so far only to split now.

Yet less than six months from the June 4 commune elections – the most important test yet of the nearly five-year-old experiment in placing the downfall of Prime Minister Hun Sen ahead of competing egos – the still-maturing marriage of convenience has never been so openly fractious.
From Sokha’s open rebuke of Rainsy’s refusal to leave the safety of Europe, to Rainsy’s obvious displeasure in giving up the title of parliamentary “minority leader” for Sokha, never before have the deep personal differences in the CNRP appeared so at risk of blowing up. (Last month, Sokha’s daughter even publicly taunted Rainsy as “Peter Pan” for his perceived childishness.)

Sok Hour revisited Rainsy, Facebook admins’ case to be heard

Hong Sok Hour arrives at the Supreme Court in Phnom Penh earlier this year. Pha Lina


The Phnom Penh Municipal Court today is set to hear the cases of CNRP president Sam Rainsy and two of his Facebook administrators, who stand accused as “accomplices” in the forgery and incitement case that saw opposition Senator Hong Sok Hour sentenced to seven years.

Sok Hour was convicted over comments in which he said a copy of a 1979 treaty showed the government offering to “dissolve” its border with Vietnam. The government accused him of forgery and incitement, saying the real document used the word “redefine”.

Rainsy and admins Sambath Satya, 25, and Chong Leang Ueng, 20, were named as co-conspirators because the remarks were posted on Rainsy’s Facebook page. The two admins have reportedly received asylum in France.

On Facebook yesterday, Rainsy denied involvement, and called Sok Hour’s conviction “ridiculous”, saying the offending document was simply a mistranslation.

CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said yesterday the party hoped to negotiate Rainsy’s outstanding cases. But the CPP’s Sok Eysan said Rainsy’s case was “very tough”, calling him a “dishonest dialogue partner”.

Mondulkiri court questions Dutch man over abuse

Nguyen Tangdun was arrested in Ho Chi Minh city on Wednesday night for allegedly abusing a young boy. Photo supplied.


Prosecutors in Mondulkiri province yesterday began questioning the Dutch boyfriend of Nguyen Tangdung, a Vietnamese national accused of videoing himself torturing a young boy.

Stefan Struik, 53, was arrested in Kampong Cham province on Tuesday shortly after Tangdung fled to Vietnam, and has since been held by police in Mondulkiri. Provincial court spokesman Meas Bros said prosecutors had begun questioning Struik but had returned him to police custody in the evening.
Prosecutor San Sopheak said he had not settled on a charge for Struik, but expected to decide today. “Tomorrow we will know about that, but at this stage we don’t know yet,” Sopheak said.

Tangdung continues to be held by Vietnamese authorities in Saigon, where he was apprehended by plainclothes detectives on Wednesday. Justice Ministry spokesman Chin Malin said he was unaware of what progress had been made in talks for Tangdung to return and face justice.
Child Protection Unit director James McCabe said the abused boy and his family had been sent to a Phnom Penh hospital for a check-up yesterday, and that all were in good health.

Wednesday 7 December 2016

Opposition Leader, Pardoned, Speaks of Shared Vision With Hun Sen

On December 2, King Sihamoni issued a decree pardoning Sokha, who was sentenced to five months in prison for missing a court appearance earlier in the year.
 PHNOM PENH —

Kem Sokha, the deputy leader of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, who was granted amnesty by King Norodom Sihamoni late last week on the request of Prime Minister Hun Sen, has said that he shares the same vision of a united Cambodia as his adversary.

On December 2, King Sihamoni issued a decree pardoning Sokha, who was sentenced to five months in prison for missing a court appearance earlier in the year.

Two days later, at a party meeting, Sokha said the pardon had been granted without condition and no deal had been struck.

Harsh Regime of Child Labor, Debt Bondage Exposed in Cambodian Brick Factories



PHNOM PENH — The use of debt bondage to retain workers in “contemporary forms of slavery” and child labor is widespread in Cambodia’s brick factories and authorities are making no efforts to eradicate the crimes, according to a new report by rights group Licadho.

On Friday December 2, the International Day for the Abolition of Slavery, Licadho published the report “Built on Slavery: Debt Bondage and Child Labor in Cambodia’s Brick Factories”.

The report was based on a study of Cambodia’s main brick production center to the north of Phnom Penh, Kandal and Tbong Khmom provinces. Eleven sites were identified, containing over 100 factories that employed thousands of workers. Around 50 workers, including adults and children, were interviewed between June and August 2016.

Child Torture Videos Lead to Three Arrests

Stefan Struik, left, and a man he identifies as his boyfriend, Nguyen Dung, appear in a video posted to YouTube in January. Mr. Struik was arrested along with two Cambodians on Tuesday, while Mr. Nguyen is believed to have fled to Vietnam, according to police.
A Dutch national and two Cambodians were taken into police custody in Kompong Cham province on Tuesday over videos circulated on Facebook showing the physical abuse of a naked toddler, including torture with an electric prod, officials said.
Deputy Kompong Cham police chief Heng Sambath said the men were suspected of involvement in the torture and rape of a child. He said the Cambodians—Ret Sothy, 28, and Oeu Nat, 25—worked for the Dutch man, who owns a plantation in Mondolkiri province.

KNLF Suspects Sing CPP’s Praises in Court

Defendants on trial over a 2014 incitement case leave Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Monday. (Siv Channa/The Cambodia Daily)
Ten members of a government-branded terrorist group, Khmer National Liberation Front (KNLF), who are on trial for incitement, renounced their affiliations and praised the government on Monday, crediting a jailed former ambassador to South Korea for their change of heart.
The men were arrested in October 2014 and accused of planning to “incite and cause violence in Phnom Penh,” though KNLF president Sam Serey claimed they were merely planning a peaceful demonstration in front of the Vietnamese Embassy.

CPP Praise Doesn’t Save KNLF Members From Guilty Verdict


Eleven members of the government-branded terrorist group Khmer National Liberation Front were handed five- to nine-year jail sentences on Wednesday morning over 2014 plotting charges, even after most renounced their ties to the group in court.

The men were arrested in October 2014 over plans for what they said would be a peaceful demonstration in front of the Vietnamese Embassy, but authorities claimed the protest was intended to sow violence and disorder.