Toronto Star

Cambodia grants bail to ‘dirty dancers’

Three of 10 jailed remain in custody for villa party near Angkor Wat temple

- SOPHENG CHEANG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA— A court in Cambodia has allowed the release on bail of seven Westerners who were arrested last month for allegedly posting photos on social media of themselves engaged in sexually suggestive dancing, a court official said Thursday.

Yim Srang, a court spokespers­on in the northweste­rn province of Siem Reap, said the investigat­ion of the case has been completed and the seven people were freed Wednesday, but no trial date has been set. He said three other people remained in detention but he didn’t know their names or nationalit­ies.

The 10 arrested people — five from the United Kingdom, two from Canada and one each from Norway, the Netherland­s and New Zealand — were detained when police raided a commercial­ly organized party at a rented villa in Siem Reap and found people dancing at an event described as a pub crawl. Siem Reap is near the famous Angkor Wat temple complex.

Police who conducted the raid originally detained close to 90 people, but it was unclear why they singled out 10 to remain in custody and be charged. Police said those caught in the raid had been “dancing pornograph­ically” and offended Cambodian standards of morality. They face up to a year in jail if convicted.

One of the detainees’ lawyers, Sourng Sophea, said last week that some of the photos posted by his clients showed them at a party, some drinking by a swimming pool and some of the women in bikinis, but none showed them having sex or exposing themselves. According to the law, he said, they should be deported or have their visas cancelled, but should not be held in pretrial detention.

In a brief video made last week of the detainees, one unidentifi­ed man apologized for any offence he might have caused. Declaring that he had lived in Cambodia for two years, he said, “I respect the culture, I help Cambodian children, I help Cambodian families.”

“I don’t want to make any problems with Cambodia,” he said. “It’s just one mistake . . . I’m sorry.”

Asked by an off-camera interviewe­r if they wanted to go back to their own countries, several replied “yes” while all nodded their heads.

A journalist for the newspaper the Phnom Penh Post, whose website was first to report the release, said on Twitter that the three still detained were from the United Kingdom, the Netherland­s and Norway. Ananth Baliga did not identify them by name, but said they were considered the organizers of the event.

Ouch Sopheaktra, another one of the group’s lawyers, said he filed for bail on Monday for the seven who were released, judging that their alleged offences were minor.

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