FACEBOOK RUNS INTO LAWSUIT OVER CAMBODIAN POLITICS
Former Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy has filed a legal
case in the United States to get Facebook to release information on Prime
Minister Hun Sen’s use of the social media platform, his legal team said.
Lawyers for Sam Rainsy, who fled Cambodia in 2015 to escape a conviction
for defamation he says was politically motivated, said he sought the
information to help him in his own legal cases in Cambodia.
Supporters of Hun Sen have built a strong presence on Facebook.
Sam Rainsy wants information on allegations of “false likes” on Hun Sen’s
Facebook account, accusations that the platform had been used to make death
threats and the use of state money for advertisements, his legal team said in a
statement on Wednesday.
Government spokesman Phay Siphan said the lawsuit was “not useful”.
The case highlights
the growing global nature of the challenge to Facebook Inc over its role in
political debate after accusations that social media was used for meddling in
votes in Britain, the United States and elsewhere.
Facebook has become
an ever more important platform for political news in Cambodia as some media
outlets critical of Hun Sen have been forced to shut.
Hun Sen, 65, has
been criticized by Western countries over a ban on the main opposition party
and the arrest of its leader less than a year away from a general election on
July 29.
Paris-based Sam
Rainsy sought “critical information in Facebook’s possession regarding Hun
Sen’s misuse of social media to deceive Cambodia’s electorate and to commit
human rights abuses,” according to the statement.
“The petition raises
fundamental questions about how Facebook should deal with human rights abusers
who manipulate elections,” said Sam Rainsy’s attorney, Richard J. Rogers, of
rights group Global Diligence LLP.
Facebook did not
immediately respond to a request for comment on the case, which Sam Rainsy’s
lawyers said had been brought in the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of California.
Hun Sen’s Facebook
profile was private, the Cambodian government spokesman added.
“The Facebook
profile of the Samdech Prime Minister is private, it’s not a terrorist group to
cause any insecurity with any country,” said Phay Siphan, using the official
title for Hun Sen, who has ruled Cambodia for more than 33 years.
Facebook, which has
more than 2 billion users globally, tells advertisers they have the potential
to reach 6.6 million people in Cambodia, from a population of nearly 16
million.
It says more than
5.5 million people have expressed an interest in, or liked, pages related to
Hun Sen, of whom 1.8 million are in Cambodia.
Comparable figures
for Sam Rainsy are 2.2 million people expressing an interest, with 1.7 million
within Cambodia.
Source :Reuters
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