Exiled Cambodian Leader Sentenced to 10 Years in Jail 

Exiled Cambodian opposition party leader Sam Rainsy who has been convicted by a 
court for falsifying documents related to a contentious border dispute with 
Vietnam.


Robert Carmichael, VOA
Phnom Penh 23 September 2010 


The leader of Cambodia's main opposition party, Sam Rainsy, was sentenced to 
prison in a dispute about the border with neighboring Vietnam. But his 
supporters claim the case is politically motivated.

The municipal court in Phnom Penh on Thursday handed down a 10-year prison 
sentence to Rainsy because he displayed a map that had a different border 
between Cambodia and Vietnam than the one the government uses. During his trial 
earlier this month, the government's lawyer told the court that Sam Rainsy's 
action amounted to disinformation and falsifying of public documents.

The judges agreed, and handed down the prison term and a $16,000 fine. They 
also issued an arrest warrant for Sam Rainsy, who lives in exile in France.

The opposition leader had no chance for a fair trial, says his party's 
spokesman Yim Sovann, because the courts answer to the ruling party.

"Based on the verdict, not only one verdict, but the previous one, to my 
understanding and to the understanding of the people of Cambodia and the 
international community, this court is not independent," he said. "This court 
is used as a political tool to muzzle the opposition party."

The dispute dates back a year when Sam Rainsy and two villagers removed wooden 
posts marking the border between Cambodia and Vietnam. He received a two-year 
jail term for that and the villagers were each jailed for a year.

The two nations are in the middle of a six-year exercise to map their 
1,270-kilometer border. Sam Rainsy has said Cambodia is losing land to Vietnam 
in the process.

The issue is a sensitive one for the government. Prime Minister Hun Sen 
maintains close relations with Vietnam, although many Cambodians are 
distrustful of their neighbor. In addition, Cambodia is involved in a tense 
border dispute with Thailand, which at times has turned violent.

Spokesman Yim Sovann says the government is growing less tolerant because it 
fears the opposition as the country heads toward the 2013 general election. He 
calls Thursday's verdict a "step backward for democracy" and he is calling for 
international help to prevent what he terms a slide toward authoritarianism.

"The international community has spent a lot of money to build democracy in 
Cambodia, to promote human rights, to help to build the rule of law," says Yim 
Sovann. "So if the leader of the biggest opposition party is in exile or facing 
jail term of more than 10 years, we can not say that Cambodia is democratic."

Mr. Hun Sen's government has long been accused of using lawsuits to silence 
critics. This month, the United Nations special rapporteur on human rights in 
Cambodia, Surya Subedi, issued a report saying the courts are corrupt and often 
beholden to the ruling party. Among other things, he recommended that public 
figures become more tolerant of criticism and stop using the courts against 
their critics.

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