Friday, January 29, 2010

Rainsy's trial 'a farce'

Sam Rainsy was convicted and sentenced in absentia on Wednesday to two years in prison for uprooting border markings with neighbouring Vietnam and for inciting racial discrimination. -- PHOTO: AP
Jan 29, 2010
AFP

PHNOM PENH - A HUMAN rights group accused Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen on Friday of trying to reverse political pluralism after the nation's main opposition leader was sentenced to jail this week.
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy, who is now in France, was convicted and sentenced in absentia on Wednesday to two years in prison for uprooting border markings with neighbouring Vietnam and for inciting racial discrimination.
Two villagers were also found guilty of intentionally damaging temporary border posts during the incident in October and each were jailed for a year.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said the court's closed-door trial was 'a farce' that took Hun Sen's campaign of 'persecution of critics to a new extreme and highlights government control over the judiciary'.
'The Cambodian government's relentless crackdown on critics continues apace in 2010,' said Brad Adams, HRW Asia director, in a statement. 'Hun Sen seems intent on reversing the political pluralism that has been created over the past two decades.'
The Cambodian Centre for Human Rights, a local rights group, said this week that Sam Rainsy's conviction 'reflects Cambodia's rotten democracy'. Cambodia and Vietnam officially began demarcating their contentious border in September 2006 in a bid to end decades of territorial disputes.

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