Cambodia's opposition leader Sam Rainsy faces arrest
November 15, 2015
Lindsay Murdoch
South-East Asia correspondent for Fairfax Media
Cambodia's opposition leader Sam Rainsy, centre, faces arrest if he returns to his country as early as Monday Photo: AP
Cambodia's
opposition leader Sam Rainsy faces arrest if he returns to his country
as early as Monday, plunging the impoverished south-east Asia country
back into political conflict.
The
regime of strongman prime minister Hun Sen has forced Mr Sam Rainsy to
choose whether to stay abroad or return and be jailed for two years on a
seven-year-old politically motivated defamation charge.
Tens
of thousands of supporters packed the streets of the capital Phnom Penh
in 2013 when Mr Sam Rainsy returned from exile to fight an election
campaign that his party claimed was marred by widespread vote rigging.
Analysts
say his arrest now would likely spark anti-government protests as the
United States warned at the weekend of a "deteriorating political
climate" in the country.
A
Cambodian court on Friday issued an arrest warrant for Mr Sam Rainsy
over an unserved defamation sentence from 2011, a day after Mr Hun Sen
threatened him with legal action after comments made by the opposition
leader in Japan.
Mr Sam Rainsy had urged Mr Hun Sen, Asia's longest-ruling leader, to move towards a peaceful exit from power.
In
a Facebook posting on Saturday, a defiant Mr Sam Rainsy wrote that the
"wind of freedom that is blowing throughout the world will also reach
Cambodia in the very near future," a reference to last Sunday's
landslide election victory by opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in
neighbouring Myanmar.
Mr Rainsy said on his Facebook page on Sunday he plans to return to Phnom Penh this week.
"I have to return to save the nation," he said.
Mr
Hun Sen, a former commander of the murderous Khmer Rouge in the 1970s,
has often brutally crushed political rivals during three decades in
power.
Eng
Chhay Eang, a spokesman for Mr Sam Rainsy's Cambodian National Rescue
Party (CNRP), criticised the arrest warrant as a "joke" and said his
leader "could return."
"The
ruling party leader is again and again cracking down on our party but,
in return, it makes our party gain more support, grow stronger and sees
our members unite more and more," Mr Chhay Eang said.
Mr
Hun Sen, who is due to feted by Australia during an official visit
early next year, has repeatedly denounced Mr Sam Rainsy, and threatened
to have him prosecuted, as the strongman stepped up attacks on the CNRP
during the past several weeks.
In
late October two opposition MPs were viciously attacked outside
parliament and days later deputy opposition leader Kem Sokha was removed
from his post on what observers described as dubious legal grounds.
Mr Hun Sen condemned the attacks but the culprits have not been arrested despite video footage showing some of their faces.
Since
a truce reached in June between Mr Hun Sen and Mr Sam Rainsy recently
collapsed, the strongman has been warning that victory for the
opposition at elections scheduled for 2018 would see a return to civil
war in the country.
Human
Rights Watch has called on Cambodia's donor countries, including
Australia, to press authorities in Phnom Penh drop the case against Mr
Sam Rainsy and for Mr Hun Sen to end his repeated use of criminal laws
against political opponents.
Australia
has moved closer to Cambodia since last year's controversial $55
million agreement to bring refugees from Nauru to settle permanently in
the country.
The
agreement has faltered with only four refugees agreeing to make the
move, despite promises of thousands of dollars, luxury accommodation and
other benefits.
The
defamation case relates to comments Mr Sam Rainsy made in 2008 alleging
that foreign minister Hor Namhong was implicated in crimes at a Khmer
Rouge camp in the late 1970s.
Mr Hor Namhong denied the claims, saying he was a prisoner and victim of the Khmer Rouge.
Cambodia's
King Norodom Sihamoni pardoned Mr Sam Rainsy on what he described as
other trumped-up charges in 2013, allowing him to return from exile
weeks later.
However, the pardon did not mention the Hor Namhong case.
Phay
Sipan, a government spokesman, denied that politics was behind the
warrant, which officials said they would serve on Mr Sam Rainsy if he
arrives in the country.
"It's
a personal problem between Sam Rainsy and Hor Namhong ... it has
nothing to do with politics, Hun Sen or the government," Mr Phay Sipan
said.
Brad
Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said the actions against Mr
Sam Rainsy expose the absurdity of Cambodia's legal system which "seems
to serve little more than Hun Sen's tool to maintain power."
"He will fool no-one by dredging up this case now," he said.
- with agencies

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