The Phnom Penh Post

Hun Sen ‘mulling fake news bill’

- Mech Dara and Ananth Baliga

A RULING party spokesman on Thursday said the Cambodian government is looking to draft a “fake news” law, the same week similar legislatio­n was introduced in Malaysia.

The announceme­nt, made by Cambodian People’s Party spokesman Sok Eysan, followed a meeting between Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Xuan Phuc in Siem Reap on the sidelines of Mekong River Commission Summit on Wednesday during which Phuc expressed concerns about so-called fake news coverage.

The premier’s personal assistant, Eang Sophallet, told media that Phuc suggested an exchange of informatio­n between the two countries to cooperate on supposedly inaccurate news, which he said could cause misunderst­andings between the two neighbours.

“It refers to some media in which they use the wrong informatio­n or fake news,” Sophallet said. “Samdech [Hun Sen] has agreed with him.”

CPP spokesman Eysan said the Cambodian premier’s approval of Phuc’s suggestion meant that a technical working group will now look into drafting a law to regulate “fake news”, though it was unclear what exactly would fall under such a term, which has often been used by politician­s to call into question criticism of themselves.

“For preventing it, first is to make a law to prevent people from saying wrong things and secondly i t is the

electronic and technical part to prevent it,” he said.

Earlier this week, Malaysia’s parliament pushed through a controvers­ial law widely criticised for including hefty punitive measures – up to six years in prison – and vague definition­s of what constitute­s “fake” news.

The bill is expected to clear the Senate and has been seen by rights activists as a way for corruption-tainted Prime Minister Najib Razak to silence critics ahead of scheduled national elections in August.

The prospect of such a law in Cambodia would raise eyebrows amid a crackdown on media organisati­ons, which has coincided with a broader push to clamp down on the opposition and civil society organisati­ons.

Independen­t newspaper the Cambodia Daily closed in the face of a $6.3 million tax bill, more than a dozen radio stations closed for allegedly violating their contractua­l obligation­s and widely popular Radio Free Asia ceased in-country operations over tax and regis- tration issues.

Meanwhile, Cambodian citizens have frequently been in the sights of authoritie­s over political speech on Facebook critical of the ruling party.

While it was not immediatel­y clear what news Nguyen Xuan Phuc was taking exception to, Eysan said that an analyst had written a story using informatio­n supposedly gleaned from secret and closed-door meetings – which he insisted showed that it was fake.

Eysan seemed to be referring to an article from the online publicatio­n Asia Times from March that quotes unnamed government sources alleging that senior Vietnamese politburo members had expressed displeasur­e “behind closed doors” at Hun Sen’s crackdown on the opposition.

It also asserts that Cambodia’s geopolitic­al and economic sway towards China was causing friction between the two neighbouri­ng countries.

While Phuc made clear that the two countries’ relationsh­ip remained solid, Hun Sen himself uncharacte­ristically lashed out at Vietnam last month, saying: “I will question our friend Vietnam, whether they are actually loyal to me and Cambodia.”

Justice Ministry spokesman Chin Malin said he was unaware about efforts to draft such a law, but noted that the Interior Ministry had completed a draft of a cybercrime law that would look at other online crimes.

Ed Legaspi, executive director for the Southeast Asian Press Alliance, said if Cambodia followed Malaysia’s example by drafting a vague and far reaching law, it would further erode an already shrinking media landscape.

The Kingdom has already witnessed a troubling number of prosecutio­ns for online speech in the past year, noted rights advocate Chak Sopheap, who also conceded that a genuine effort of some sort is needed to be made to tackle fake news.

“However, the term ‘fake news’ – in the US, Cambodia, and elsewhere – is routinely manipulate­d by politician­s with nefarious intentions, particular­ly the desire to stifle criticism of their own wrongdoing­s and shortcomin­gs,” she said.

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 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Prime Minster Hun Sen met with Vietnamese premier Nguyen Xuan Phuc on Wednesday on the sidelines of the Mekong River Commission Summit.
FACEBOOK Prime Minster Hun Sen met with Vietnamese premier Nguyen Xuan Phuc on Wednesday on the sidelines of the Mekong River Commission Summit.

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