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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Cambodian premier threatens to sell opposition headquarters

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Phnom Penh: Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen on Tuesday threatened to seize the property of opposition leader Sam Rainsy and sell the party’s headquarters if he wins a defamation case against the exiled politician.


The one-million-dollar lawsuit is the latest in a string of legal cases targeting Cambodian opposition leaders trying to break Hun Sen’s 32-year grip on power.


Rights groups say the strongman is trying to keep his opponents under pressure ahead of local elections this year and a general election in 2018.


Hun Sen filed the latest defamation case against top foe Rainsy after he accused the premier of bribery in a speech several weeks ago.


“I am waiting for the verdict to be finalised. This time, I will take money... I am demanding $1,000,000,” the premier said during a parliamentary session on Tuesday. “I heard the party’s headquarters is registered under the name of Sam Rainsy, so the party’s headquarters will be auctioned,” he told the assembly, adding that the politician’s personal property would also be “frozen... and sold”.


The money would be used to build houses for handicapped people, he added. Rainsy, who currently lives in France and faces several lawsuits, was sentenced to five years in prison in December over a post on his Facebook page, a conviction that makes his return from self-imposed exile unlikely.


On Tuesday Hun Sen also proposed amending a political party law to bar convicts from serving as party leaders — a clear dig at Rainsy and his Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP). The premier’s ruling party also voted to strip the CNRP’s acting head Kem Sokha of his title of minority leader.


Responding on Twitter, Rainsy sought to brand Hun Sen’s threats as signs that he was “panicking” ahead of looming elections.


“Hun Sen can no longer appeal to electorate, so personally hounds me, as symbol of resistance to autocratic, corrupt power,” he wrote.


Hun Sen has amassed extensive control over Cambodia’s government and economy during his three decades in power. He claims to have brought much needed peace and stability to a nation ravaged by civil war and the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime.


Rainsy’s opposition party made huge gains in the 2013 elections and say they only lost because the vote was stolen — a claim Hun Sen has vigorously rejected. — AFP


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