Showing posts with label Alleged bribery taking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alleged bribery taking. Show all posts

Monday, January 23, 2012

Monday, 23 January 2012
Mom Kunthear and Khouth Sophak Chakrya
The Phnom Penh Post

A judge from Kandal province was charged with bribery and detained in the capital’s Prey Sar prison late yesterday.

Another judge was released after both appeared in court for questioning for allegedly attempting to extort money from a provincial cadastral land official.

Provincial prosecutor Uk Kimsith told the Post yesterday one of two provincial judges had been charged with bribery and sent to the prison after testifying in court.

The judge Hout Heang was charged with bribery and sent to Prey Sar, but female judge Khov Chan Pho was not charged,” he said.

Anti Corruption Unit spokesperson Keo Remy said yesterday the provincial prosecutor had charged Hout Heang with bribery under Article 517 of the criminal code.

Friday, December 02, 2011

Bribe ‘secured trafficker’s release’ [-Peal Si Peal case]

Former anti-drug czar Moek Dara, centre, is escorted by police at Banteay Meanchey provincial court last month. (Photo by: May Titthara)

Friday, 02 December 2011
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

In the expected second to last day of the corruption trial against former anti-drug czar Moek Dara, Banteay Meanchey Provincial Court heard allegations yesterday that he and his subordinates elicited bribes totalling more than US$250,000 from drug dealers in five different cases.

Deputy provincial prosecutor Phann Vanarath said yesterday a $140,000 bribe was paid to Moek Dara and his underlings to secure the release of a drug trafficker, his cache of drugs and property after a raid on the Hollywood Club in Banteay Meanchey’s Poipet town on October 9, 2009.

Banteay Meanchey province’s former police and deputy police chiefs Hun Hean and Cheang Son as well as former anti-drug police official Morn Doeun were alleged to have all profited from the bribe.

All three have already been sentenced to jail terms ranging from three to four years, though Morn Doeun remains free after escaping from detention.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Business as usual in Deum Ampil: Soy Sopheap accused of accepting bribes from businesses in exchange for favourable coverage

Information Minister Khieu Kanharith (centre), businessman Kith Meng (right) and others walk through the audio recording suite at the Nokor Wat Media Centre after its inauguration on Friday. (Photo by: Sovan Philong)

Deum Ampil ex-backer speaks

Monday, 12 July 2010
Chhay Channyda
The Phnom Penh Post


THE former financial backer of the Deum Ampil Media Centre has presented her version of the events that led to its abrupt scale-back earlier this month.

Speaking after the official launch of the new Nokor Wat Media Centre, Sieng Chanheng accused Deum Ampil’s former director general, Soy Sopheap, of managing the company’s finances in a reckless manner and accepting bribes from businesses in exchange for favourable coverage.

“Soy Sopheap was not faithful to my company, which was the financial supporter of DAP,” said Sieng Chanheng, also the owner of the Heng Development Company.

On July 1, Soy Sopheap announced that Deum Ampil would suspend operations for Deum Ampil newspaper, Radio FM 93.75 and Morokot magazine, citing a lack of funds. The media centre’s website is still being updated.

He said at the time that he decided to go ahead with the suspension after he was asked by Sieng Chanheng to cut the total expenses of the operations in half, in part by laying off many of his 110 staff members.

Sieng Chanheng has denied asking Soy Sopheap to cut expenses, though she has acknowledged losing tens of thousands of dollars each month on her Deum Ampil investment.

At the launch of the Nokor Wat Media Centre on Friday, she said Deum Ampil’s finances were in order until Soy Sopheap assumed control of them from her daughter, former deputy director general Dim Sopheavy.

At that point, she said, Soy Sopheap began increasing salaries for his preferred employees and entering into arrangements with companies that allowed him to pocket tens of thousands of dollars.

I always heard rumours that there were some companies or individuals paying money to DAP every month,” she said. “I never wanted a situation where when people paid you money, you wouldn’t write bad things about them.”

Last month, she said, she came across a list of 15 “groups” that had paid Soy Sopheap US$60,000. “I tried to correct him then, but he did not listen to me,” she said.

Soy Sopheap declined to answer questions for this article.

Sieng Chanheng went on to express regret that the two had parted on bad terms. “I like Soy Sopheap, who is brave and has courage,” she said. “That is why I invested in this media organisation with him – he had the knowledge, and I had the money to open DAP.”

Information Minister Khieu Kanharith said Friday that Prime Minister Hun Sen had requested that his ministry support the Nokor Wat Media Centre as it begins operations. He said this was evidence of the government’s interest in promoting “breaking news that the readers will like to read”.

Sieng Chanheng said Dim Sopheavy would assume the role of editor in chief of the new media centre, but that other top positions had yet to be filled.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Former South Korean President Roh Commits Suicide

Former S. Korean President Roh Moo-hyun toasting with Hun Sen

23 May 2009
By VOA News

A top aide told to former South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun says he appears to have committed suicide.

Moon Jae-in told reporters Mr. Roh left a suicide note before he hiked up a mountain near his home Saturday morning and jumped to his death.

Police say Mr. Roh suffered severe head injuries in the fall and died after being transported from his home town of Gimhae to a hospital in Busan in the southern part of the country.

Authorities say they are investigating the circumstances behind the death.

Mr. Roh, who was 63 years old, served as president from 2003 to 2008 and was elected on a platform of anti-corruption.

Earlier this month, he was questioned about allegations that he took more than $6 million in bribes from a businessman while in office. He admitted that his wife took an unspecified amount of money as a loan to pay off debts, but denied that he was aware of it in advance.

Mr. Roh rose to prominence as a human rights lawyer, defending students accused of treason during South Korea's military rule in the 1980s.

He built a reputation for challenging the authority of then-military dictator Chun Doo-hwan. In 1987, he was arrested and suspended from his law practice on charges of supporting a strike by workers at a shipyard.

Mr. Roh was the youngest son of a peasant family from the southeastern part of the country. He had no formal education beyond high school and studied law on his own.

Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.