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Ex-soldier called ‘Meet to Kill’ jailed for life for shooting dead Cambodian government critic Kem Ley

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Cambodian Oeuth Ang is guarded by a police officer in a truck as he arrives at the Municipal Court in Phnom Penh. Photo: EPA
Agence France-Presse

A Cambodian court on Thursday jailed a former soldier for life for the brazen daytime shooting of a strident government critic, a killing that stunned the kingdom’s hemmed in rights community.

Oeuth Ang, an unemployed ex-soldier who calls himself “Meet to Kill”, shot Kem Ley in the head while his victim was having a morning coffee at a Phnom Penh petrol station in July.

He had told the court he shot Kem Ley over a property deal that went bad which saw him hand the activist $3,000 - more than double Cambodia’s average annual wage.
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Supporters of Kem Ley have cast doubt over the apparent motive, in a country where assassinations of government opponents and land and environmental activists are all too common.

Delivering the ruling, Judge Leang Samnath said Oeuth Ang, 44, was “sentenced to life imprisonment for premeditated murder and possession of a gun without permission”.

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The killer, who throughout has insisted the court address him by his nickname Chuob Samlab, which in Khmer means “meet to kill” - a moniker given to him during his years as a soldier - was calm as he heard his sentence.

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