Bangkok Post

Cambodian opposition boss arrested

-

BANGKOK/PHNOM PENH: Thai immigratio­n police have detained the leader of a Cambodian opposition group based in Denmark, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said yesterday. Meanwhile, a Cambodian official said the government was in discussion with Thailand on the man’s extraditio­n.

The detention comes ahead of a July general election that Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) looks set to win after the main opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) was dissolved by the Supreme Court last year.

Sam Serey, head of the opposition Khmer National Liberation Front (KNLF), was arrested at an immigratio­n centre north of Bangkok, while he was trying to get his Thai visa extended, the New York-based rights group said.

“Our main concern is the safety of Sam Serey if he is deported to Cambodia,” Sunai Phasuk, a senior Thailand researcher at Human Rights Watch, said.

“Prior to this we have seen members of the KNLF being mistreated by the Cambodian authoritie­s when detained. The Thai government must consider internatio­nal law as it proceeds.”

A source at the Thai Immigratio­n Bureau said yesterday it was possible that the arrest of the Cambodian opposition leader was conducted secretly.

In 2016, a Cambodian court sentenced Sam Serey in absentia to nine years in prison for plotting an attack. This month, Hun Sen accused Sam Serey and his group of plotting attacks, calling him a “traitor”.

Mr Sunai said Sam Serey was arrested by Thai police because he had been “blackliste­d” by Cambodia over the bomb plots.

A spokesman for Cambodia’s Interior Ministry, Khieu Sopheak, said the government had been in touch with Thailand to discuss Sam Serey’s extraditio­n.

“We asked that he be deported to Cambodia,” he said.

Thailand has frequently acquiesced when Cambodia has asked it to repatriate citizens with criminal conviction­s or those it considers a threat to national security.

In February, a woman who threw a shoe at a billboard depicting Hun Sen was forcibly sent from Thailand back to Cambodia, where she is now serving a two-year prison sentence.

The opposition CNRP was dissolved after it was found guilty of plotting to overthrow the government with the help of the US, an accusation denied by both.

Ahead of the July vote, the CPP has stepped up prosecutio­n of critics and political opponents.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand