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US ‘Troubled’ by Cambodian Court Decision to Uphold Defunct Opposition Leader’s Conviction

WASHINGTON, May 1 (Reuters) – The ⁠U.S. ⁠State Department said on ⁠Friday that Washington was “troubled” by a Cambodian appeals court’s ​decision that upheld a 27-year sentence for former opposition leader Kem Sokha ‌for his treason conviction.

Here are ‌some details:

• The appeals court decision on Thursday was another ⁠blow to ⁠an opposition decimated by the ruling party’s long-running crackdown.

• Kem ​Sokha, 72, co-founder of the defunct Cambodia National Rescue Party, has been held under house arrest since he was found guilty of treason in ​March 2023.

• He was accused of conspiring with a foreign power ⁠to topple ⁠then-premier Hun Sen.

• The ⁠United ​States has previously said his conviction was based on “fabricated conspiracy theories.”

• Kem ​Sokha’s case was among ⁠the most prominent in a sweeping crackdown on opponents of the CPP, which has ruled Cambodia for decades.

• “The United States is troubled by the decision to uphold activist and opposition leader Kem Sokha’s ⁠conviction of treason,” the State Department said in a statement on Friday.

• “Claims ⁠of U.S. involvement are patently false and irresponsible,” it said.

• Activists and Western countries have condemned mass trials in Cambodia involving more than 100 opposition figures, with many jailed in absentia on treason and incitement charges.

• “Limiting the exercise of freedom of expression and association hinders Cambodia’s international standing,” the State Department said.

• Washington itself has also faced criticism from human rights ⁠experts and advocates over what they see as due process and free speech violations in President Donald Trump’s crackdown on universities, immigration and political opponents.

• They also cast his foreign ​policy approach as imperialist and abusive.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh ​in Washington; Editing by Tom Hogue)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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