A Cambodian court yesterday rejected an opposition senator’s request for bail and opened a trial against him on charges that carry penalties of up to 17 years in prison for comments he posted on Facebook.
Cambodia National Rescue Party Senator Hong Sok Hour appeared in court in an orange prison uniform and opened the day’s proceedings with a plea for bail. He told the court he has high blood pressure and other medical conditions that require medication he was not getting in prison.
“I will not run away if you release me on bail,” said the senator, who has been held in pre-trial detention since his Aug. 15 arrest.
Photo: EPA
Presiding Judge Ros Piseth denied the request without giving a reason and opened the trial.
Human Rights Watch and other international rights groups have called on authorities to drop the case against Hong Sok Hour, saying he had been wrongfully charged and that prosecuting him marked the government’s latest crackdown on the political opposition.
Hong Sok Hour was arrested after Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen accused him of treason for online comments that criticized a 36-year-old border agreement with Vietnam. He was indicted on three charges, including falsifying public documents, using fake documents and inciting chaos. The charges carry penalties of up to 10 years in prison, up to five years and up to two years respectively.
Hong Sok Hour has denied the charges. He says he did not write the comments himself, but downloaded them from a Web site and posted them to his Facebook page, thinking the information was correct, his lawyer said.
The arrest was the latest in a string of attacks on Hun Sen’s political opponents. In recent months, the prime minister has used his public speeches to deliver what amounts to arrest orders, which are generally carried out quickly.
He accused Hong Sok Hour of posting material about the 1979 border agreement that “amounts to treason.” Hun Sen was foreign minister at that time in a government installed by a Vietnamese occupation force that invaded Cambodia to oust the murderous Khmer Rouge regime.
“The prosecution of Hong Sok Hour contravenes Cambodia’s obligations on the rights to freedom of expression and opinion,” Human Rights Watch said in a statement, adding that Hun Sen has used the case as a pretext to “crack down on the political opposition and demonstrate that he can arrest and imprison anybody, anytime.”
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