In  Cambodia, when personal cases become publicized and politicized, no 
lawyer  will come forward to take the case including lawyers in the  SRP.  
Omnipotent power of Premier Hun Sen is enough for most (if not  all) 
lawyers to retreat. Social and political pressures are enormous for both  
individuals—Mme Mu and Premier Hun. Even if Premier Hun Sen is sincere and tell 
 the 
court to be fair, the court itself will not have the guts to rule against  
the Prime Minister. It is not going to happen easily anywhere in Asiatic  
society, especially in Cambodia where fear and respect go together for the 
head  of the government. 
The  best thing to deal with every critical issue is for SRP to clearly 
think  collectively in advance what kind of course of actions it should take in 
order  to get better results for Cambodians and for Cambodia. Is a lawsuit 
against the  Premier the best way to solve Cambodian social issues or will 
it trigger him to  react?  
The  case of Madame Mu has produced great excitement for SRP’s supporters 
as well as  for some NGOs and international organizations; however after the 
excitement is  over, no concrete change will really take place. The CPP have 
been quietly  watching the strength of its opponents and take good notes.   
As  we expected, the international community will continue to support the 
government  of Cambodia via many programs requested by the Hun Sen’s regime. 
The support for  the opposition, on the other hand, will be under pressure 
and weakening.  Although some diehard opposition members would like to stick 
to their  confrontational approaches to stir up Cambodian’s emotions to 
support their  cause, more and more Cambodians are tired of that. 
It  is unfortunate that the majority of Cambodian people do not mind (some 
do not  even think about) how Premier Hun Sen act, speak or run the 
government for they  are too busy to make a living.  Such  a nonchalant manner 
is 
probably resulting from the way they are looking  down on most Cambodian 
politicians. 
In their  mind Cambodian politicians are “all the same.” 
 
=======================
     
Lawyers  Say They Are ‘Free’ To Defend 
By Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer  
Original report from Washington
28 July 2009
Opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua faced the court over her  defamation suit 
with the prime minister on Friday without a lawyer. After her  first attorney 
quit—facing defamation charges himself—she was unable to find  another, she 
said, due to “political pressure.” 
Cambodian lawyers say they are free to represent the clients  they want, 
but Mu Sochua’s case has underscored the entanglement of politics and  the 
court that critics say stops the judiciary from being independent. 
“There is no problem as long as the client approaches us,”  said Cambodian 
attorney Poeung Thida. “We just puck up a client we feel we want  to 
defend. If we don’t want it, we just don’t take the case. This is our free  
will.”
 
In Mu Sochua’s case, her first attorney, Kong Sam Onn, quit  after he was 
countersued by Prime Minister Hun Sen and was put under  investigation by the 
country’s bar association. His case was dropped after he  apologized to Hun 
Sen. (Kong Sam Onn declined to comment, saying he left because  of a “
personal issue.”) 
Mu Sochua defended herself with a brief statement to the  court, in a case 
that is to be decided on Aug. 4. 
Chiv Song Hak, president of the 647-member bar association,  said lawyers 
in the country have “enough freedom” to make their own choices. 
“The law does not restrict them to only representing this  client and not 
the other,” he said. “Our code of conduct only states that a  lawyer has the 
right to decline a client they don’t want to represent.” 
Mu Sochua, a US-Cambodian citizen and deputy  secretary-general for the Sam 
Rainsy Party, said she did not agree. 
“How can a lawyer do his job if they still feel scared?” she  asked. “They 
still feel that they will become a victim like my lawyer, Kong Sam  Onn. I 
see that professional lawyers are vulnerable to political pressure.” 
Mu Sochua had also sought legal counsel from the Cambodian  Defenders 
Project, but the head of the organization, Sok Sam Oeun, said his  group 
defends 
the poor. 
“She has enough money to hire a lawyer,” he said of Mu  Sochua. “And so 
far as I know, there are many lawyers in the Sam Rainsy Party.  To say that 
there is no lawyer willing to represent her is  unreasonable.” 
 
 
**************Hot Deals at Dell on Popular Laptops perfect for Back to 
School 
(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1223106546x1201717234/aol?redir=http:%2F%2Faltfarm.mediaplex.com%2Fad%2Fck%2F12309%2D81939%2D1629%2D8)

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to