Former opposition leader Kem Sokha appeal date set

Buth Reaksmey Kongkea / Khmer Times Share:
(From L to R) Lawyer Pheng Heng, former CNRP president Kem Sokha, Kem Sokha’s wife and lawyer Meng Sopheary. Khmer Times

The Phnom Penh Appeal Court will hold the appeal hearing of former leader of the court-dissolved Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) Kem Sokha, who last year was sentenced by the lower court to 27 years in prison on the charge of treason, on January 30.

Khun Leangmeng, the judge and also spokesman at the Phnom Penh Appeal Court, said yesterday that some of Sokha’s lawyers have also been summoned by the court to attend Sokha’s hearing.

However, Judge Leangmeng declined to provide further details.

Sokha, 70, was sentenced on March 3 last year by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court to 27 years in prison on the charge of collusion with foreigners committed in Cambodia between 1993 and 2017.

The municipal court also banned him from political activity and meeting anyone apart from family members.

Meng Sopheary, one of Sokha’s co-lawyers, said yesterday that she and her colleagues met once with Sokha last year to prepare and file his appeal.

She added that further contact with Sokha is prohibited due to the third point of the verdict of the Phnom Penh Municipal Court which restricts contact with the defendant to his relatives.

“Kem Sokha’s legal team has not yet received any summons from the Phnom Penh Appeal Court for the hearing,” Sopheary said yesterday.

“In order to defend Kem Sokha, who we defended at the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, we need to have a letter from the defendant requesting legal assistance, so we can perform our duties in accordance with the law,” she said.

“But so far we haven’t received the defendant letter from him,” she said.

“Although Kem Sokha may have other requests for legal assistance, we have difficulties working with him because there is no freedom to communicate with him,” she said.

Ang Udom, another of Sokha’s lawyers, said that no lawyer has yet been appointed to defend Sokha at the Phnom Penh Appeal Court hearing.

He said that the fate of Sokha is now in the hands of the court.

He added that the Phnom Penh Municipal Court sentence handed to Sokha was unjust and violated both Cambodian and international laws because Sokha had not broken any law.

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