A Change of Guard

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Monday, 2 January 2012

Hun Sen’s Next Election

Cambodian PM Hun Sen: Image credit: World Economic Forum

By Luke Hunt
The Diplomat
January 2, 2012

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has put his country firmly on election footing. Six months ahead of commune elections, and more than 18 months before the next national poll is due, the Cambodian leader launched an unexpected broadside that has significantly upped the political ante.

He pulled no punches as he stepped into opposition heartland recently and stunned an audience of 3,000 graduating students by likening the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) to Pol Pot, who’s brutal Khmer Rouge led this country between 1975 and 1979, when as many as 2.2 million people perished.

He told students that the SRP was violating human rights by forcing its members to swear they will vote for the party and to hand over their mobile phones the night before commune elections, scheduled for June, because SRP officials feared last minute defections.

“These issues are a serious violation of universal human rights and it looks like detaining people in the same way they did during the Pol Pot regime,” he reportedly said.

Sam Rainsy, who heads the SRP, is in self-imposed exile in France following a conviction for encouraging villagers living along the Cambodia-Vietnam border to uproot border markers.

The attack on the SRP came as 149 non-governmental organizations, unions and associations issued a joint statement rebuking SRP and the phone confiscation order, saying “forceful threats and warning by SRP” were “in full contradiction with the democratic principle.”

The speech was classic Hun Sen. The prime minister likes to talk in the third person. Many years ago he said in a rather menacing tone: “Do not call Hun Sen Pol Pot, because he will sue you.”

It was also timely.

Tensions at the border around the Preah Vihear temple where Cambodia and Thailand have fought numerous deadly skirmishes have eased, with both sides pulling back and Bangkok about to be handed a bill for damages at the Cambodian site.

Hun Sen had reveled in the diplomatic brawling with Thailand, which had also handed the prime minister a fantastic issue he used to whip up nationalist sentiment and political support at home. He has also appeared to settle another antagonizing issue over pending legislation governing NGOs, which has split the NGO community and led to accusations of government bullying.

He now says the legislation won’t be passed until an agreement was reached, effectively defusing the debate with NGOs, which represent a large section of Cambodian life through an extensive reach into the Cambodian countryside.

The courts have been active too. Although Cambodia has a long way to go before ending its atrocious reputation of impunity, locals have been riveted by the latest legal shenanigans.

This obviously includes the trial of former Khmer Rouge leaders. But also in the dock are corrupt government officials linked to Chea Sim, President of Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP), and anti-drugs czar Moek Dara and former Minister of Interior anti-drug chief Cheng Leng.

The idea that such people could be charged with corruption was previously unheard of.

Hun Sen is dealing with his critics, and with Preah Vihear missing from the domestic political agenda – and probably too much time on his hands – the prime minister has re-focused his efforts on Cambodia’s rapidly changing demographics.

A generation of children who never knew war are growing-up and are about to vote. Traditionally, the youth vote has lent towards the SRP. Hun Sen’s front foot election strategy took him straight into the classroom, where Sam Rainsy can longer tread for what he says are politically motivated charges.

Either way, the region’s longest serving leader is now well poised for the upcoming polls.

And in a sign of how things have changed in Cambodia, one long term observer quipped after Hun Sen’s attack on the SRP: “Well, at least they’re not calling the kick-off to the elections ‘the beginning of the killing season,’ like in the 1998 and 2003 elections.”

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

My 2 cents worth of advice for PM Hun Sen.

Dear PM Hun Sen,you have done a decent job of providing peace and stability for Cambodia for the last decade or so.
You are at the helm for Cambodians longer than Sihanouk of Sangkum Reastr Niyum, Lon Nol of Khmer Republican,Pol Pot of Kampuchea Democratic and Ranarith of Khmer Funcinpec. So,which one of the 3 following statements is best fit for your life ?
1-You are a Khmer Anak Mean Bunn
who destined by our nation fate to come and help Khmers during the tough and rough time.
2- you are an astute politician who know how to weather political storm by your own ability with or without some help from CPP.
3-you are nothing but a Viet puppet who could not even decide when to retire to enjoy good private citizen life if the Viet your master will not allow you to do so.

I know you and I hate the 3rd statement for good reason. Now you can make a silent reply for yourself and for the benefit of our nation.
My advice to you is allow and encourage your son, Hun Manet to create a new political party to distance himself from any Viet affiliations that you and CPP might have entangled with.
Have faith in your son and in Khmer whole population. You and CPP name should retire after next election, and for now you should tone down the importance of the "7th January Victorious day" because no Khmer government before yours ever conceded Koh Tral to the Viets.

I'm a realistic person who rather smirk at the extremist Khmer who wanted to have Khmers killed in the war with Viet/Thai in a bid to gain back Khmer lost land for even a fewer Khmer to live on a bigger land!? What an awsome beefy brain! I don't think Khmer who went to work in Thailand want to swallow Thai territory and by the same token I don't think Viet immigrants wants to swallow ours,it's just the damn economy which drive the needs. But Khmer should not be so careless of the threat that the bigger fishes eat the smaller one.
To the elite mind,I'd like to say develop the country to getting stronger,maintain your good position as an opposition because it is beneficial that way rather than off-position.Do not fight each other because you hate Khmer enemies,it's better to have no internal fight and try to have none of enemy around Cambodia.