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Cambodia opposition party denounces 'staged' rally against leader

Cambodia’s main opposition party denounced a large demonstration held Sunday against one of their leaders in the capital, a rally they say was staged by supporters of Prime Minister Hun Sen to intimidate rivals ahead of July elections.

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Protestors gather to rally against acting CNRP chief Kem Sokha at Freedom Park in Phnom Penh. Photo: Reuters

Cambodia’s main opposition party denounced a large demonstration held Sunday against one of their leaders in the capital, a rally they say was staged by supporters of Prime Minister Hun Sen to intimidate rivals ahead of July elections.

More than 10,000 protesters gathered in Phnom Penh to lash out against opposition chief Kem Sokha for allegedly saying that exhibits at a Khmer Rouge-era genocide museum in Phnom Penh were faked. Sokha has denied the allegations, and his party says the campaign against him is politically motivated.

On Friday, the Southeast Asian nation’s legislature approved a bill making it a crime to deny atrocities were committed by the country’s genocidal 1970s Khmer Rouge regime. Critics worry the law will be used as a weapon against Hun Sen’s political opponents.

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The bill was passed unanimously in the absence of opposition lawmakers, who were expelled from the legislature this week, ostensibly on grounds they had left their old parties to join a new, merged party to contest the July 28 vote.

The ruling party of Hun Sen, who has been in power since 1985, holds 90 seats in the assembly and is expected to win an overwhelming share of the 123 seats at stake. Sokha is deputy president of the Cambodia National Rescue Party, whose leader Sam Rainsy lives in self-exile to avoid jail on what are widely seen as politically motivated charges.

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