The Phnom Penh Post

Ex-Funcinpec official guilty of ‘defamation’

- Niem Chheng and Andrew Nachemson

FORMER Funcinpec official and ex-Deputy Prime Minister Lu Lay Sreng was found guilty in absentia of defaming Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday for comments made in a private phone conversati­on that was secretly recorded and disseminat­ed without his knowledge.

In the leaked phone call, Lay Sreng alleged that Prime Minister Hun Sen had paid the royalist Funcinpec party to take vacant National Assembly seats following the widely decried dissolutio­n of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party. Despite defamation being defined as public speech, and the fact that Lay Sreng’s remarks were private and surreptiti­ously recorded, the 77-year-old was ordered to pay 500 million riel (about $125,000) to Hun Sen.

Lay Sreng, who fled to the US in October, also called King Norodom Sihamoni a “castrated chicken” during the call for remaining silent on the political crackdown.

The conversati­on was leaked online by the anonymous progovernm­ent social media personalit­y “Seiha”, who has been behind numerous other highprofil­e leaks seen as damaging to ruling party opponents.

“What Lu Lay Sreng said was done with ill intentions to harm the reputation of Samdech Hun Sen,” Hun Sen’s lawyer, Ky Tech, said yesterday. “The conversati­on was private, but when it was posted to Facebook by Seiha, the public could hear it.”

Judge Y Thavrak delivered the verdict, ordering Lay Sreng to pay not only the 500 million riel in damages, but also an additional fine of 8 million riel (about $2,000).

Chak Sopheap, director of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, said the Criminal Code is “unequivoca­l” in defining defamation as comments “intended for the public”.

“The use of defamation charges is a tool commonly used throughout the world to silence critics, be they journalist­s, political opponents, analysts or human rights defenders. Sadly, Cambodia is no exception.”

Phil Robertson, of Human Rights Watch, said the verdict “will set yet another chilling precedent that threatens free speech across the country”.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Former Funcinpec Deputy Prime Minister Lu Lay Sreng.
FACEBOOK Former Funcinpec Deputy Prime Minister Lu Lay Sreng.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia