Cambodians face rare royal insult charge

Cambodians face rare royal insult charge

Two opposition figures deny defaming monarch in Facebook posts

King Norodom Sihamoni lights the SEA Games torch with a candle lit from the sun’s rays as Prime Minister Hun Sen looks on during a ceremony at Angkor Wat in Siem Reap on March 21. The Southeast Asian Games will be held from May 5 to 17 in Cambodia. (Photo: AFP)
King Norodom Sihamoni lights the SEA Games torch with a candle lit from the sun’s rays as Prime Minister Hun Sen looks on during a ceremony at Angkor Wat in Siem Reap on March 21. The Southeast Asian Games will be held from May 5 to 17 in Cambodia. (Photo: AFP)

PHNOM PENH: Two Cambodian opposition figures have been charged under the country’s rarely used lese-majeste law with insulting King Norodom Sihamoni for posts made on Facebook about a photograph of the king and Prime Minister Hun Sen.

A judge at the Phnom Penh Municipal Court also charged Yim Sinorn and Hun Kosal with incitement to cause serious social unrest, a court document showed.

The men, once members of the now-dissolved opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), could face a jail term of up to five years and fines of up to $2,500 if found guilty.

They were arrested on Tuesday over their posts about a photograph of King Sihamoni and Hun Sen standing together at a torch relay ceremony for the upcoming Southeast Asian Games.

The court did not specify what the posts said.

Neither Yim Sinorn or Hun Kosal nor their legal representatives could immediately be reached for comment.

Yim Sinorn later posted on Facebook that he had deleted what he wrote about the king and Hun Kosal said he respected the king and would promote the royal family.

Hun Sen in comments on his official Facebook page about the arrests and before the men were charged said: “This is an insulting act that cannot be tolerated or excused.”

He said the men should never be forgiven, while denying that his remarks were aimed at pressuring the court.

Cambodia’s lese-majeste law was unanimously adopted by parliament in 2018. Rights groups expressed concerns at the time that the law, which is similar to legislation in neighbouring Thailand, could be used to silence government critics.

More than 200 people in Thailand have been charged with lese-majeste since youth-led pro-democracy protests began in mid-2020. Earlier this month, a man was sentenced to two years in jail for distributing a calendar featuring images of rubber ducks that were deemed as insulting.

The CNRP was banned ahead of the 2018 election that was swept by Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP).

The opposition party has since been decimated, with many of its members arrested or fleeing into exile in what activists say is a sweeping crackdown designed to thwart challenges to the CPP’s power monopoly.

Kem Sokha, who once headed the CNRP, was sentenced on March 3 to 27 years of house arrest after being found guilty of treason, in a case condemned by the United States as politically motivated.

He had denied the charges he was conspiring with the United States to overthrow Hun Sen, who has ruled Cambodia for nearly four decades.

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