The Phnom Penh Post

Probe pledged of ‘Manith texts’

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about Sovantha’s alleged link to his father.

Both sets of leaks were first featured on the Facebook account of Sovantha’s close friend Phe Sovannarit­h, a CPP activist, over the weekend.

In a sign a hacker could be involved, a user on Sovannarit­h’s account correspond­ing with the Post on Sunday claimed he was not Sovannarit­h but “someone else” that was “trying to expose the truth”.

The Post was yesterday unable to reach Sovannarit­h or Sovantha, once a prominent CNRP activist who fell out with the opposition and has since turned into a vocal critic, particular­ly against Sokha.

Among the first strange signs to appear amid the current saga was a post on Sovantha’s Facebook account on Sunday apologisin­g to the CNRP deputy president.

The social media star this year waged a campaign to pressure Sokha over an alleged affair with a hairdresse­r, including suing the politician for $1 million for disparagin­g remarks he purportedl­y made about her in covertly recorded phone conversati­ons, allegedly with his mistress.

The alleged correspond­ence between Manith and Sovantha – captured in a YouTube video that scrolls through the alleged correspond­ence including audio and text messages – discusses Sovantha’s plans to protest against and discredit Sokha, which Manith endorses.

In an exchange in late March, the prime minister’s son allegedly calls the protests “right and well prepared” and encourages Sovantha to “disrupt and disrupt” and “ask to get [an] answer whether it is true or not”, adding he was proud of the group.

In another message on March 27, Sovantha allegedly asks for 50 members of Manith’s youth group to join a protest at Sokha’s house.

His purported response is: “I can’t let them join because I don’t want it to be leaked. Do not hide the force, bring your youth group to use them . . . my force [will be] kept until it is necessary.”

Cambodian People’s Party spokesman Sok Eysan said he believed the discussion­s featured between the pair were real and had been accessed by someone who had bought Sovantha’s old phone.

“There is nothing to worry about because this case is their private business, there is no problem, there is no impact on other’s rights,” he said, also saying he did not know about the messages linked to Hun Sen.

Those messages, released in screenshot­s of chats in Line messenger, were dumped on Sovantha’s Facebook page yesterday accompanie­d by text reading: “I want to show the truth of the story between grandfathe­r and granddaugh­ter”, which is how the pair featured in the exchange refer to one another.

The messages purport to show Hun Sen offering Sovantha $1 million to fund her activities, discussing shooting guns and talking about plans to destroy the opposition Cambodian National Rescue Party. The Post, however, has not been able to establish the authentici­ty of the online chats, and government spokesman Phay Siphan said he was unsure of the veracity of the messages.

“If it’s true or not true, we have to wait for the owners of those pages, for Thy Sovantha to say something or the prime minister to say something, otherwise it’s a private matter. I’m not concerned that much, it could be true or could be fake,” he said.

Reached yesterday, CNRP Yim Sovann declined to comment on the case, only saying “we want politics in Cambodia to be clean for the next generation”.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Social media celebrity Thy Sovantha attends an environmen­tal forum hosted by Prime Minister Hun Sen earlier this year at the Peace Place in Phnom Penh.
HENG CHIVOAN Social media celebrity Thy Sovantha attends an environmen­tal forum hosted by Prime Minister Hun Sen earlier this year at the Peace Place in Phnom Penh.

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