The Phnom Penh Post

Security beefed up at Sokha’s jail

-

the commanding unit decided to add 75 people from different units to help protect CC3,”Tbong Khmum police announced yesterday on Facebook.

Mu Sochua, deputy CNRP chief, said she expected about 30 parliament­arians and senators to gather at the prison in Trapaing Phlong commune to read a statement, despite a request to visit Sokha today being rejected last week.

Son Chhay, the CNRP’s acting spokespers­on, said the reinforcem­ents could stem from a fear of protests. “The authoritie­s are probably afraid that people might go to prison to demand the release of Kem Sokha,” he said.

But Pen Rot said in an interview he had simply followed a request from the prison. “I sent them there as per the request from the prison to help security during Pchum Ben days,” he said, referring to the local holiday, and adding that the officers would stay for about 10 days.

Rot could not be reached again later in the day to confirm the reports that he would deploy 300 more police and soldiers.

Yet prison chief PinYan said he had “no idea” about the reinforcem­ents, and hadn’t requested additional personnel.

Sochua doubted their motives. “They say they will protect security. Let’s see tomorrow.”

She then questioned why soldiers were reportedly being deployed to the prison. “Why the army? Is Cambodia at war?”

Naly Pilorge, deputy advocacy director at rights group Licadho, agreed the deployment was inappropri­ate. “Military should only be used to protect the borders or for natural disaster,” she said.

Meanwhile, Sokha’s wife Te Chanmono was permitted to visit him yesterday and said his “spirit [is] very high”, according to Sochua.

But CNRP lawmaker Suon Rida, who has been tasked with reporting on prison visits and Sokha’s health, said the party president was experienci­ng some health problems.“He is feeling so sad and unhappy,” he added.

Aside from his imprisonme­nt taking a mental toll, Rida said Chanmono had told him that Sokha’s “face looks swollen and . . . when he walks around her, his legs are weak”.

He claimed the prison’s health official had not yet checked on the opposition leader’s condition. According to his daughter Kem Monovithya, who is also the CNRP public affairs deputy director, Sokha suffered from high blood sugar “at the level that’s close to diabetes”.

Monovithya on Friday said her father’s lawyers had requested the authoritie­s to move him to Phnom Penh.

Meanwhile, the National Assembly is meeting today to decide on whether the court can continue action against him, bypassing his parliament­ary immunity because of the alleged red-handed nature of his crime – a designatio­n that has been disputed by experts.

The CNRP will boycott the meeting, according to a statement released yesterday, in which it claims that the meeting is “illegal” since the ruling party did not have the votes to permit the court to pursue the case.

Article 80 of the Cambodian Constituti­on requires a twothirds majority to continue an in flagrante delicto – or “red-handed” – case against a parliament­arian, or a three-quarter vote to halt it. The CPP holds just 68 of the 123 seats, well under the twothirds threshold.

National Assembly spokespers­on Leng Peng Long, however, seemed unconcerne­d.

“The boycott will not affect the meeting,” he said.“If we want the court to pause the charge, there needs to be the vote of threequart­ers, equalling 93 votes.”

“If they want to demand a release, and to drop the charge, they should join to defend Kem Sokha,” he said, adding that the court proceeding­s would only stop if enough votes were collected to halt the case.

Last week, Interior Ministry spokespers­on Khieu Sopheak said the CNRP would be dissolved under controvers­ial new changes to the Political Parties Law if it defended its leader.

CNRP official Prince Sisowath Thomico, however, expressed his support for Sokha on Saturday on Facebook, saying that if the opposition leader was a traitor, then he was a traitor too. “I and all the activists and supporters are also traitors, because all of us are together on a journey with Mr President Kem Sokha, and I myself offer to join fates with him, with no fear at all,” he said.

Internatio­nal condemnati­on of Sokha’s arrest has poured in over the last week, with Cambodians overseas lending their voices to the choir over the weekend, staging protests in South Korea, Australia, Canada, France and the US. The protests are slated to continue this week in the US and New Zealand.

The protests provoked government mouthpiece Fresh News to go on the defensive, posting a letter from a coalition of littleknow­n Cambodian-Australian organisati­ons, claiming the protests “intentiona­lly confuse the public” and did not reflect the will of the entire diaspora.

Meanwhile, two “reader letters” by the contributo­r known as Chaksmok Chao – whose past letters justified the expulsion of National Democratic Institute and urged the CNRP to elect Pol Ham president – warned against protests in Cambodia.

The first letter repeated a claim from Hun Sen last week blaming the CNRP for the “cruel violence” that occurred during the 2014 garment worker wage protests, which were brutally quelled when authoritie­s fired into an unruly crowd, killing five.

“Some Cambodian people who are protesting abroad . . . are supporting foreigners to destroy their country,” the letter reads.

The other letter accused the CNRP and former party President Sam Rainsy of being directly involved in the internatio­nal protests. “Although Son Chhay, a senior official at the CNRP, declared that the protests abroad are not related to his party, this is just a strategy to hide the truth,” the letter reads.

Under the newly revised Political Parties Law, convicted criminals, like Rainsy, are barred from associatin­g with political parties. Rainsy himself strongly denied participat­ing in the protests, adding there was no evidence to support the accusation. “Cambodians abroad are intelligen­t enough and mature enough to make their own decisions and conduct their own activities,” he said.

CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said yesterday that any demonstrat­ions in Cambodia that were deemed illegal would face “crackdowns”. “The ones who want to have him [Kem Sokha] released are wrong because he has been charged already,” he said. “When doing legal protests, there is no problem . . . but when doing illegal protests, legal measures will be taken.”

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? People gather on Saturday in California to protest against opposition leader Kem Sokha’s arrest.
FACEBOOK People gather on Saturday in California to protest against opposition leader Kem Sokha’s arrest.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia