The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cambodia criminalis­es criticism of king

-

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s government yesterday approved the country’s first lese majeste law handing a five year sentence to anyone found guilty of insulting the king, a move rights groups fear will be used to target dissent.

Unlike neighbouri­ng Thailand where royal defamation often results in decades in jail, Cambodia’s largely symbolic monarchy was not until now shielded from criticism.

The law was adopted during a cabinet meeting chaired by premier Hun Sen, an authoritar­ian leader who is poised to extend his tenure at elections in July after dissolving the opposition and driving many of his critics into self-exile.

The new law, which bans insulting Cambodia’s constituti­onal monarch King Norodom Sihamoni, was added to the criminal code to “uphold and to protect the reputation and royal name,” government spokesman Phay Siphan wrote in a Facebook post.

“Insults to the King shall be punished between one to five years in prison” plus a US$2,500 fine, the post said.

The power of the Cambodian monarchy has waned significan­tly in recent decades under Hun Sen, a domineerin­g premier who has amassed tight control of the kingdom during his 33 years in office. King Sihamoni, who took the throne in 2004, is considered a purely symbolic head of state whose quiet, unflashy life stands in stark contrast to that of his politicall­y ambitious father, who publicly clashed with the premier before abdicating.

King Sihamoni is wellrespec­ted among Cambodians and largely seen as above the political fray.

But rights campaigner­s warned the lese majeste law is likely to be wielded as a political weapon in a country where the courts are routinely accused of doing Hun Sen’s bidding.

There is a “real risk that lesemajest­e would be added to the arsenal of laws currently being misused by the Cambodian government to silence dissent,” said Kingsley Abbott from the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists.

The law is a “heavy blow against freedom of expression” added Brad Adams of Human Rights Watch, accusing Hun Sen of concocting ‘false threats’ in an election year. Cambodia’s cabinet also approved amendments to a string of constituti­onal articles intended to block ‘interferen­ce from abroad’, according to the government spokesman Phay Siphan.

The opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) was disbanded in a controvers­ial court hearing in November.

Western democracie­s and rights groups slammed the verdict as Hun Sen’s last-ditch effort to clear out rivals ahead of the July poll. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia