Wednesday, 2 April 2008

Trial of Cambodian coup-plotter underway in California

Tuesday April 1, 2008
AFP

The trial of a US-based Cambodian rebel leader accused of attempting to overthrow the government in his homeland began here Tuesday as jury selection got underway.

Chhun Yasith, 51, the president of the Cambodian Freedom Fighters (CFF), is charged with orchestrating a failed but bloody coup attempt against Prime Minister Hun Sen in Phnom Penh in November 2000.

Chhun Yasith, an accountant, was arrested by the FBI at his home in Long Beach, south of Los Angeles, in June 2005.

He faces four charges including conspiracy to kill in a foreign country and engaging in a military expedition against a nation with whom the United States is at peace. He could be jailed for life without parole if convicted on all charges during his trial at Los Angeles Superior Court.

Prosecutors say Chhun Yasith was the mastermind of an attack eight years ago on government institutions in Cambodia's capital, including the ministry of defense, the Council of Ministers and a military headquarters building.

In the attempt to overthrow Hun Sen, about 60 armed men stormed into Phnom Penh firing AK-47 rifles and rockets at government buildings, leaving at least four people dead. More than 100 people were jailed for the attack.

Several policemen were wounded in the attack, codenamed "Operation Volcano," that left an unknown number of CFF attackers dead and wounded, but which left Hun Sen unscathed according to US prosecutors in Los Angeles.

A federal indictment against Chhun Yasith alleged that he traveled to the Cambodia-Thailand border in August 1998 to meet Cambodian military personnel opposed to the ruling party.

Prosecutors say the CFF was born at the meeting and that the defendant agreed to raise funds to help bankroll the coup attempt.

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