Cambodian king pardons former opposition leader


Former Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) leader Kem Sokha leaves his house for the Phnom Penh Municipal Court for the hearing of the verdict in his treason case where he was was sentenced to 27 years in detention under house arrest after being found guilty, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, March 3, 2023. REUTERS/Cindy Liu

PHNOM PENH, May 25 (Reuters) - Cambodia's ⁠king has pardoned formeropposition leader Kem Sokha for a treason conviction, just ⁠weeks after he lost an appeal to overturn that verdict, according to a ‌royal decree released on Monday.

Kem Sokha, 72, co-founder of the defunct Cambodia National Rescue Party, has been held under house arrest since he wasfound guiltyof treason in March 2023. He was accused of conspiring ​with a foreign power to topple then-premierHun Sen.

Last month ⁠a court in Phnom Penh upheld ⁠his 27-year sentence and banned him from leaving the country for five years once ⁠that ‌term ends. The royal decree said the pardon only applied to the original sentence.

A lawyer for Kem Sokha did not immediately answer phone calls seeking ⁠comment on the pardon.

Kem Sokha's case was among the most ​prominent in a sweepingcrackdown ‌on opponents of the Cambodian People's Party, which has ruled Cambodia for more ⁠than four ​decades.

The United States said at the time that his conviction was based on "fabricated conspiracy theories".

He was among only a few remaining opposition figures in the Southeast Asian country, after many others fled ⁠in the wake of a 2017 Supreme Court ​ruling that banned the CNRP.

The Khmer Movement for Democracy, an organisation led by one of those exiled figures, Mu Sochua, said in a statement that the pardon was an attempt ⁠to whitewash the government's campaign against its political opponents.

"The decision to mitigate only the prison sentence while maintaining the ban on political activity and restricting freedom of travel abroad is merely shifting the form of detention from house arrest to political confinement," it ​said.

Cambodia's government, now headed byHun Manet, the U.S.- and ⁠British-educated son of the still influential former premier Hun Sen, denies targeting opponents and says ​those convicted were law-breakers.

Hun Sen, who now serves as ‌senate president, signed the decree on behalf ​of King Norodom Sihamoni, who is undergoing treatment for prostate cancer.

(Reporting by Reuters staff; Writing by Josh Smith; Editing by Stephen CoatesEditing by Gareth Jones)

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