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From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, Jan 28, 2010 10:51 pm
Subject: HRW-Sam Rainsy's Trial a Farce




For Immediate Release
 
Cambodia: Opposition Leader Sam Rainsy's Trial a Farce
Conviction Demonstrates Continuing Persecution of Critics, Political Control of 
Judiciary
 
(New York, January 29, 2009) - A Cambodian court's closed-door conviction and 
sentencing of the opposition leader Sam Rainsy and two others takes Prime 
Minister Hun Sen's campaign of persecution of critics to a new extreme and 
highlights government control over the judiciary, Human Rights Watch said today.
 
On January 27, 2010, the Svay Rieng provincial court convicted Rainsy and two 
villagers, Meas Srey and Prom Chea, on charges of racial incitement and 
destroying demarcation posts on Cambodia's border with Vietnam. Rainsy, who was 
in Paris, was tried in absentia and sentenced to two years in prison and fined 
8 million riels (approximately US$2,000). Meas Srey and Prom Chea were each 
sentenced to one year in prison for destroying public property. The court also 
ordered the three to pay 55 million riels (approximately US$13,000) in 
compensation for the removal of border markers with Vietnam.
 
"The Cambodian government's relentless crackdown on critics continues apace in 
2010," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "Hun Sen seems 
intent on reversing the political pluralism that has been created over the past 
two decades."
 
The cases were brought after Rainsy and local villagers pulled six temporary 
border markers from the ground in Chantrea district of Svay Rieng. Local 
villagers alleged that the border markers represented an attempt by Vietnam to 
encroach on Cambodian land, a longstanding claim of Rainsy and his party.
 
The trial did not meet international standards for a fair trial, Human Rights 
Watch said. The lawyer for Meas Srey and Prom Chea said the court refused to 
consider defense evidence. By trying Rainsy in absentia, the court denied him 
his rights to defend himself and to examine the evidence against him. The trial 
was closed to journalists, human rights organizations, and the general public.
 
The court was surrounded by a heavy police presence, which observers say was 
intended to intimidate defense counsel and influence the court's ruling - a 
common feature of political trials in Cambodia. Svay Rieng provincial court has 
a long history of politically motivated rulings.
 
On January 6, Hun Sen, who has long exercised an iron grip over the courts, 
made the outcome of the trial clear. He announced that he would not request a 
pardon for Rainsy if he was found guilty. "This time I would like to declare . 
there is no [pardon]; after the court convicts, let it be," Hun Sen said during 
an inauguration ceremony for a stretch of National Road 1 in Kandal province.
 
"Any hopes of slowing Hun Sen's assault on the political opposition now depends 
on the donor community, which props up the government financially," Adams said. 
"This political trial should make donors recognize the gravity of the 
situation."
 
Senior government officials have repeatedly brought politically motivated cases 
against Rainsy in recent years. His immunity as a member of parliament was 
lifted in February 2009 after Hun Sen filed a criminal defamation complaint 
against him for accusing Hun Sen of corruption. Rainsy's immunity was restored 
after his party paid a US$2,500 fine. On November 19, his immunity was lifted 
again for the border markers case.
 
Rainsy still faces a defamation complaint filed in 2009 by the Phnom Penh 
municipal governor, Kep Chuktema, after Rainsy allegedly said in a speech in 
May that Kep Chuktema was involved in vote-buying.
 
The most recent attempt to jail Sam Rainsy came in December 2005, when he was 
sentenced to 18 months in prison on transparently political charges. Rainsy was 
out of the country at the time. Under international pressure, Hun Sen agreed to 
a royal pardon in February 2006.
 
>From the time he created his political party in 1995, Rainsy has been subject 
>to assassination attempts, threats, intimidation, criminal cases, and civil 
>court cases. On March 30, 1997, a grenade attack on a political rally he was 
>addressing killed at least 16 people and wounded 150. Rainsy's life was saved 
>when the full force of the blast hit one of his bodyguards. Hun Sen's 
>bodyguard unit has been implicated in the attack.
 
At least 10 government critics were prosecuted for criminal defamation and 
disinformation based on complaints by government and military officials during 
2009. Criminal defamation, disinformation, and incitement lawsuits were also 
filed against two members of Parliament from the opposition Rainsy Party, Mu 
Sochua and Ho Vann, and a youth activist, Soung Sophorn.
 
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Cambodia, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/en/asia/cambodia
 
For more information, please contact:
In London, Brad Adams (English): +44-20-7713-2767; or +44-7908-728-333 (mobile)
In Washington, DC, Sophie Richardson (English, Mandarin): +1-202-612-4341; or 
+1-917-721-7473 (mobile)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

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