Facebook trial begins
Sat, 3 October 2015 ppp
Buth Reaksmey Kongkea
Senator Hong Sok Hour smiled for the cameras at court yesterday. Heng Chivoan |
The
trial of Sam Rainsy Party Senator Hong Sok Hour over a Facebook post
deemed treasonous by Prime Minister Hun Sen began yesterday at Phnom
Penh Municipal Court, after another bail application for the lawmaker
was rejected.
As
some 50 opposition supporters protested outside, Sok Hour, clad in
orange prison garb, listened as presiding judge Ros Piseth detailed the
three charges in the case, which rights groups have slammed as
politically motivated.
According
to Piseth, Sok Hour allegedly forged a public document, used a forged
public document and incited social unrest, charges that carry a
potential combined sentence of 17 years in prison.
The
charges stem from a fake version of a 1979 border treaty between
Cambodia and Vietnam in a video posted to Cambodia National Rescue Party
president Sam Rainsy’s Facebook page on August 12.
In
the video, played to the court, Sok Hour highlights Article 4 of the
treaty, purporting to show Heng Samrin, then head of state, agreeing to
dissolve the country’s national borders. However, Piseth said that was
“totally opposite” to the real article, which states the two countries
would respect the border line and solve disputes peacefully.
Noting
the post was shared across Facebook and other social media, Piseth said
Sok Hour had “broken Cambodia’s laws”. He said the post aimed to incite
serious unrest, which threatened social security, stability and public
order.
Yesterday,
the senator, a dual Cambodian-French citizen, admitted filming and
posting the clip, further saying he chose to use Rainsy’s Facebook page
because it had more followers.
However,
he denied creating the treaty and said he was unaware it was fake,
saying he downloaded it through a Google search between 2006 and 2007.
He explained his “main purpose” was to share information about the
Vietnam border issue.
“I
did not write or fake or redraw the document. I just cut it and
inserted it into the video clip … the documents were forged already, but
I did not know that they were fake because I did not find the original.
If I had [the original] I would have posted it on Facebook.”
Sok
Hour declined to answer questions about his assistants who helped post
the video, three of whom have fled the country and are applying for
asylum in the West, the Post revealed last month.
He
also accused prison staff of political discrimination for refusing to
let him see an outside doctor for high blood pressure and other medical
conditions.
Sok
Hour’s lawyer, Choung Choungy, added that no witnesses had testified
that Sok Hour had produced the fake document and rejected the charge of
incitement.
The
case is seen by the opposition and rights groups as a part of a
political crackdown by the government against the CNRP’s politicking on
the Vietnam border, including allegations the government was complicit
in allowing territorial encroachment.
Sok
Hour was detained by military police on August 15 despite his
senatorial immunity just days after Prime Minister Hun Sen called for
his arrest, labelling the post treasonous. The trial resumes on
Wednesday.
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