"He rules by creating fear, and by making the public believe he has all the power." - Ou Virak
By Sebastian Strangio
Asia Times Online
Apr 25, 2012
PHNOM PENH - Between their anodyne
pageantry and colorless mission statements about
regional economic cooperation, Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) meetings are
rarely known for their excitement. But on the last
day of this month's annual summit in Phnom Penh,
the current chairman of the 10-country bloc,
Cambodia's long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen,
did his best to inject some verve into the
proceedings.
Speaking at an hour-long
press conference at the close of the April 3-4
summit, Hun Sen unleashed a fiery broadside
against his domestic opponents, labeling them
"crazy analysts" and "stupid philosophers". At the
center of the strongman's crosshairs was a
"bald-headed doctor"- a thinly-veiled reference to
Lao Mong Hay, a local rights activist - who has
made critical comments in the media about China's
growing influence in this nation of 15 million.
The ASEAN summit had opened a day after
the four-day visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao,
prompting some to speculate that Hu had pressured
Phnom Penh to keep the sensitive South China Sea
dispute off the formal summit agenda.
Hun
Sen shot down the suggestion, telling his critics
they "should learn more about the processes of
ASEAN". "What I hate and am fed-up with is talk
about Cambodia working for China and must be under
some kind of influence. That is completely wrong,"
he said. "We are a country full of dignity."
That's not how it seemed, however, to some
of the regional correspondents covering the ASEAN
meet. Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Martin
Vaughan noted that Hun Sen "seemed to forget" that
he was speaking as the chair of a major regional
bloc. "Mr Hun Sen's outburst was all the more
surprising, given that this week's summit
represents a powerful opportunity for Cambodia to
burnish its reputation on the international
stage," he added.
But it is less
surprising than it seems. After 30 odd years in
the rough-and-tumble world of Cambodian politics,
Hun Sen, now 59, has learnt to talk the talk - and
talk it well. He first became premier in January
1985 of the government Vietnam installed during
its decade-long occupation following the defeat of
the Khmer Rouge in 1979.
The prime
minister's dramatic public speeches have over the
years become a central part of the political
strategy that has kept him in power for more than
a quarter-century.
At regional talk shops
and overseas trips, Hun Sen is all charm: the very
picture of restraint and diplomatic poise. But
back on his home turf, all bets are off. High
school graduation speeches, ribbon cuttings,
political party meets, even ASEAN summits - no
event is too innocuous or important for Hun Sen to
call out a local critic or deliver a dramatic
verbal lashing.
Hun Sen has many strings
to his rhetorical bow, and has used the podium to
harangue everyone from rival Cambodian politicians
and human-rights activists to corrupt generals and
"meddling" United Nations officials. In recent
years, he has called former Thai Prime Minister
Abhisit Vejjajiva "stupid", and referred to Mu
Sochua, an up-and-coming opposition politician, as
a jeung klang, a derogatory term meaning
"strong legs". Referring to Cambodia's self-exiled
opposition leader Sam Rainsy - one of his favorite
targets - Hun Sen has grown fond of employing
insulting canine metaphors.
"When the dog
bites my leg, I don't bite the dog's leg - I use
my leg to kick the dog," he said in a transparent
reference to Rainsy in September 2010. The
following January, after Rainsy compared Hun Sen
to the teetering autocrats in the Middle East, the
premier shook his finger and scolded him for
making the comparison. "I would like to tell you
that if you want to strike as in Tunisia," he
warned Rainsy in a speech, "I will close the door
and beat the dog this time."
Observers say
the premier's speeches - beamed around the country
on TV and radio - are particularly well-attuned to
the worldviews of Cambodia's mostly rural
population. Peppered with village aphorisms and
earthy turns of phrase, they help reinforce the
political status quo and Hun Sen's own position at
the apex of Cambodia's system of political
patronage.
Ou Virak, president of the
Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR), said the
premier's use of language was gruff and basic, the
sort of language "that the military normally use".
"It's strongman language ... In the Cambodian
political culture we have now, that's basically
what works," he said.
Threats and
broadsides
The premier is especially
intolerant of outside criticism. When former
United Nations human-rights envoy Yash Ghai said
in 2006 that Cambodia's government had become too
personalized around Hun Sen and was not "very
committed to human rights", Hun Sen responded by
calling him "totally deranged" and labelling UN
staff in Cambodia "long-term tourists". The next
year, at a bridge inauguration in Takeo province,
Hun Sen warned Yash Ghai that "if I live 1,000
more years, I still will not meet you".
However, it is Thailand - which many
Cambodians see as a traditional enemy - that has
brought out the best in Hun Sen. In a speech to
the military in February 2010, at the height of
the two countries' heated standoff over Preah
Vihear temple, a uniformed Hun Sen described
Abhisit as a "true power thief" with "no family
honor" and "chicken egg-yolk stars" on his
uniform.
"If you don't tell the truth
about Siem [Thai] troops' invasion in Cambodia on
15 July," Hun Sen said, addressing the
Oxford-educated Abhisit, "let the magic objects
break your neck, may you be shot, be hit by a car,
may you be shocked by electricity or [may you be
shot] by misfired guns." On another occasion he
called Abhisit's foreign minister Kasit Piromya a
"gangster".
Hun Sen also uses the power of
the podium to keep his own house in order,
publicly naming and shaming officials who have
stepped out of line. In a February speech, he
threatened to fire Information Minister Khieu
Kanharith and Fine Arts and Culture Minister Him
Chhem after they suggested "swapping" ministry
buildings situated on valuable Phnom Penh real
estate with new locations on the outskirts of the
capital.
He has also called out military
officials for their involvement in illegal
land-grabs, and senior officials for letting their
"spoiled" children run wild across Phnom Penh.
Critics say Hun Sen's blandishments have done
little to fix a system of political patronage that
feeds off widespread corruption and nepotism, but
the tactic is in some ways Hun Sen's own way of
preserving the stability of the system-and
creating a veneer of strongman-centered
accountability.
"Such speeches represent
his centralization of power," said Lao Mong Hay,
the target of Hun Sen's outburst at the ASEAN
summit. He said the strongman leader uses
"personality-killing phrases" to publicly destroy
his opponents' reputations.
Far from being
a "leadership style" or intended strategy of any
sort, however, CCHR's Virak believes Hun Sen
simply can't help himself. "It's a part of who he
is now," he said of Hun Sen's often blistering
rhetoric. "It's predictable but chaotic. It works.
He rules by creating fear, and by making the
public believe he has all the power."
While this might account for Hun Sen’s headlining performance at the ASEAN summit, Yim Sovann, the spokesman
for the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, said the
high-profile meeting was an inappropriate venue
for settling domestic disputes. "It damages our
image a lot," he said. "Cambodia is like our house
and Mr Hun Sen and Mr Sam Rainsy are members of
the house. They should close the door and solve it
internally."
Responding a few days later
to the criticism, however, Southeast Asia's
longest-serving leader was having none of it. "I
exercised maximum patience, waiting for the ASEAN
summit to be over so that I could respond, but
they say ASEAN is not a place to criticize
others," Hun Sen said in an April 9 speech
broadcast nationwide. "Oh, so when I became prime
minister, they took away my right to talk? When I
became the ASEAN chairman, I lost my right to
speak out? Excuse me!"
Sebastian
Strangio is a journalist based in Phnom Penh,
Cambodia. He may be reached at
sebastian.strangio@gmail.com
3 comments:
No need to wonder any of his educational speeches,(Huncent) he has very little education background,doesn't know how to act among/[speeches] educators,can't separates what is domestic agendas or international's agendas,he show raw emmotion,saying mixued-up topics.
I was wondered did he has any of speech writer that can tell him what to say and what not to say...what's personals should not say in the meeting with Asian's leaders,just say what is the meeting topics all about.
Huncent,address the Asian's leaders by lashing out on his critics at home just like he open his
own dirty closets to the world to see...No leaders wants to hear any if this personal attack to his own critics at home.
The way he express his face,body langauge looks
scary to watch,it remind me of " Reahoo " in Khmer Reahoo chap lork kae si...in English lunar eclipse it happen once each year.
Calling his critics all nasty words,saying out of angerism,trying to make people feel sorry for him by expressing his anger tone voice,its so pathetic to hear...He looks pathetic as well.
Huncent needs anger management.If he wants to be a better speaker/debater...
kla si kla
He's a dumb PM
He is like a frog trapped in a well.
He thought that his world that he perceived was the biggest world.
All of his speeches are the clear photographs of his inside's politics from of how many,how quality people around him as his advisers or how much he have developed himself to be a better human being or to be come a respectful leader since his first day as PM.His horizon seems to be getting smaller and smaller.
Hiding murderers,in front of the public cry for justice and land swapping with Hanoi are the clear indications of deterioration of his mental state.
Hun Sen is probably the right Hanoi's choice, in gambling for Cambodia.
True Khmer
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