US envoy to Cambodia denies plotting to oust government

U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia William Heidt gives a press conference at the U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2017. Heidt has delivered sharp response to allegations by Prime Minister Hun Sen that Washington is seeking to dislodge his government, denying the allegations and warning that Cambodia is doing itself damage international with its anti-American campaign. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

PHNOM PENH — The US ambassador to Cambodia on yesterday denied allegations by Prime Minister Hun Sen that Washington is seeking to oust his government, and warned that Cambodia is doing itself damage internationally with its anti-America campaign.

Hun Sen and his ruling Cambodian People's Party have in the past month accelerated the use of legal and administrative measures to undermine critics and political foes, culminating in the Sept. 3 arrest of opposition leader Kem Sokha on a treason charge.

The charge was based on videos from several years ago that showed him at a seminar where he spoke about receiving advice from US pro-democracy groups. He could face up to 30 years in prison.

Ambassador William Heidt said the accusations were false, and called for Kem Sokha's release.

An English-language newspaper, The Cambodia Daily, was shut down last week by Cambodian authorities, and more than a dozen radio stations that broadcast dissident voices or used programing from US government-funded Voice of America and Radio Free Asia were forced to stop broadcasting for alleged breach of regulations.

The local office of the National Democratic Institute, a US-based democracy promotion organization, was ordered closed and its foreign employees told to leave the country.

The actions, along with Kem Sokha's arrest, are widely seen as a partisan government effort to hinder the opposition before next year's general election.

Hun Sen has suggested that the United States conspired with Kem Sokha to try to overthrow his government. He said he wanted to keep history from repeating itself, referring to Cambodia's 1970 military coup — purportedly backed by Washington — that plunged the country into civil war and eventually four years of brutal rule by the Khmer Rouge.

The theme that the United States has been trying to undermine the government, promoting a "revolution" that would again plunge Cambodia into chaos, has been echoed by pro-government media.

Heidt, speaking to journalists, said "the United States has been subject to intentionally inaccurate, misleading and baseless accusations."

He said the allegations were hurting Cambodia, not the United States.

"They are, step by step, isolating Cambodia from the international community at the very moment Cambodia needs international support to raise its economy to the next level and compete with its neighbors," he said.

Heidt said he believes "there is still time to salvage Cambodia's 2018 elections, continue Cambodia's democratic development, and restore our bilateral relationship."

Radio Free Asia, which like The Cambodia Daily and Voice of America was accused by the authorities of being delinquent in paying taxes, announced yesterday in Washington that it was closing its operations inside Cambodia, though it would continue broadcasting and reporting from outside the country.

"The government's relentless crackdown on independent voices in recent weeks has made it impossible to keep the bureau open while guaranteeing the integrity of RFA's journalistic mission," the broadcaster's president, Libby Liu, said in a statement. "It has become increasingly apparent that Prime Minister Hun Sun has no intention of allowing free media to continue operating inside the country ahead of the 2018 elections."

Earlier yesterday, Cambodia's main opposition party said it is determined to participate in next year's general election despite its leader's arrest.

The comments by Son Chhay, a senior member of the Cambodia National Rescue Party, came during the party's first news conference since Kem Sokha's arrest.

Hun Sen, who has been in power for more than three decades, has threatened to dissolve the party if it gets involved in the legal proceedings against Kem Sokha.

Although the party has called for Kem Sokha's release, Son Chhay said there were no plans to organize protests.

"I do hope that before the election in 2018, there will be a (political) solution between all of us to provide a good environment and ensure that the election will be conducted freely and fairly," he said.
 

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