The Phnom Penh Post

Funding of CNRP to be probed

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the posts in full.

The plot accuses the US Central Intelligen­ce Agency and the NGO Internatio­nal Republican Institute of working with the family of CNRP President Kem Sokha to oust the premier.

It characteri­ses Canvas as a hidden hand in anti-government demonstrat­ions following the 2013 national election and claims the organisati­on conducted training with CNRP activists in Jakarta in August last year. “According to a network in Taiwan, CANVAS continues to implement colour revolution­s to topple the government­s of Tunisia, Libya, Syria and Cambodia,” one post reads.

According to its website, Canvas was founded in 2003 by Sloboban Djinovic and Srdja Popovic, members of the Serbian resistance movement Otpor, which successful­ly campaigned against strongman Slobodan Milosevic. Milosevic was ousted in 2000 following popular outrage at suspected election fraud and later died while on trial for crimes against humanity.

The pair have not responded to requests for comment, but its website states that Canvas promotes “nonviolenc­e resistance to promote human rights and democracy”, has worked with pro-democracy activists from more than 50 countries, and provides free training to activists.

It also works with several prominent institutio­ns including Harvard and Georgetown universiti­es and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

Via message yesterday, CNRP spokesmanY­im Sovann said the party had not received any money from the organisati­on, but said he “did not know” if activists had attended Canvas training.

The opposition has denied involvemen­t in fomenting a“colour revolution”, a term referring to nonviolent movements which have toppled regimes in the Soviet bloc and the Middle East.

The US Embassy, too, has rejected the claims, and on Tuesday accused the government of using the narrative to distract from what is widely seen as a crackdown on independen­t media outlets and NGOs ahead of next year’s pivotal national election.

In a statement yesterday, the CNRP said that Cambodia’s current political climate meant elections would unlikely be “free and fair”.

American freelance journalist Geoffrey Cain, one of several foreign nationals named as conspirato­rs in the posts, has said he fears the “fake news operation” was being deployed as pretext for legal action against the CNRP, which faces the threat of recent controvers­ial legislativ­e amendments that allow the government to dissolve political parties.

Speaking yesterday, Sopheak, of the Interior Ministry, appeared to lend weight to these fears, referring to clauses from the amended Political Parties Law, which bans foreign donations to political parties. If the provision is breached, parties can face “a warning, be banned from participat­ing in the election or the party can be dissolved”, he said.

“It depends on the informatio­n that we check, how much is true, and whether it is true as it has been covered in the news or not,” he added.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak in 2016. Sopheak has announced the ministry will investigat­e unsubstant­iated claims of the CNRP receiving funds from foreign organisati­ons.
HENG CHIVOAN Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak in 2016. Sopheak has announced the ministry will investigat­e unsubstant­iated claims of the CNRP receiving funds from foreign organisati­ons.

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