Cheam Channy Biography
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]
Cheam Channy (born 15 February 1961) is a Cambodian
politician and member of
parliament for the opposition
Sam Rainsy Party
(SRP). He was elected as a representative for Battambang province
in the 1998
National Elections, then again for Kompong Cham
province in 2003.
On 3 February 2005, a vote
in the Cambodian National Assembly removed the parliamentary
immunity from Channy, fellow MP Chea Poch and party leader Sam
Rainsy. Rainsy and Poch, both facing possible charges of criminal
defamation, left the country. Channy did not leave, and was
arrested later the same day by military police.
He was charged by the Cambodian Military Court
with the criminal offences
of Organised Crime and Fraud, as well as a military charge
of disobeying orders. These charges relate to accusations that Channy
had created an illegal army for the SRP.
The arrest and detention of Channy met with widespread
international condemnation, including from the U.S. State
Department, Human Rights
Watch and the Special Representative of the United
Nations Secretary-General for Human Rights in
Cambodia. On 10 March 2005, the European
Parliament adopted a resolution calling on the Cambodian government
to "immediately and unconditionally" release him. Critics have claimed
that the arrest is politically-motivated, and that under Cambodian law
the Military Court has no jurisdiction over
civilians
such as Channy. The Cambodian government denies these accusations.
Cheam Channy was brought to trial on August 8,
after courts exhausted the maximum six months allowed by Cambodian law
for pre-trial detention. At trial, Military Court Judge and President Ney
Thol, seriously obstructed the ability of Channy's defense lawyers to
defend their client according to Cambodian legal procedure by
interrupting lawyers for the
defense while questioning their client and during cross-examination of
the prosecution witnesses.
On August
9, the Military Court sentenced Cheam Channy to 7 years
imprisonment, concluding what has been referred to as a show
trial by the local media and international community. Following his
conviction, Channy was declared to be a "Prisoner of
conscience" by Amnesty
International. He presently remains in solitary
confinement in the Phnom Penh military prison. |