The Long Beach Post
Thursday, 30 August 2012
Kem Sokha (left) and Sam Rainsy in Canada earlier this month.
When Kem Sokha last visited Long Beach in 2002, he was a human rights
activist in his war-torn, dictator-ruled homeland of Cambodia. Today,
he returns as an even brighter beacon of hope in the country's quest for
democracy and will be meeting with local supporters and residents at a
community event similar to the ones he is famous for having started in
Cambodia.
"I try any which way I can to promote democracy in our country," says
Tippana Tith, a Cambodian-American activist who organized the event.
"Right now the government is still using the system to suppress
people. The world is changing, people are standing up and there is not
that much dictatorship anymore. Why does our Cambodian country still
have a dictatorship?"
Sokha represents the future of what Tith and many others hope will a
political power shift in Cambodia come next July's elections. Not only
is Sokha the founder and president of Cambodia's Human Rights Party, but
as of July of 2012, he is also the vice president of the Cambodia
Democratic Movement for National Rescue—a movement formed by the
consolidation of Sokha's party with the Sam Rainsy Party, the country's
other oppositional party.
Rainsy and Sokha submitted an application to the Ministry of Interior
to merge the two parties into one called the Cambodia National Rescue
Party in order to compete in the general election next year. But with
Rainsy in exile and facing an arrest warrant after he was charged for
his involvement with a protest on the Vietnamese border, Sokha has
become the in-country face of the new party.
"It is a big deal that this merge happening," says Tith, who has
lived in Long Beach since 1975. "Sam has participated in elections for
past three times and nothing’s changed. But with the two parties
together we hope it can help get rid of the current government. Kem is
coming here to let the people in Long Beach know what's going on and the
dangers that are ahead of us in 2013."
Sokha is a well-known detractor of Cambodian Prime Miniuster Hun Sen,
who has been in power since 1985, a few years after the Vietnamese
defeated the Khmer Rouge Regime and installed a new Cambodian
government. A freely elected Royal Government of Cambodia was formed in
1993, but those in opposition to Sen say he continues to wield total
control over the country and criticize his increased infringement on
citizen freedoms.
"I've lived here more than half of my life. I love democracy here and
I enjoy it and I am grateful to the U.S. government for promoting
democracy throughout the world," says Tith. "We don’t want our country
to become communist. We want our country to be free and fair. We as
Cambodian people are fed up."
Kem Sokha will be speaking to supporters and interested residents
Thursday, Aug. 30 at 6PM at La Lune Restaurant, 2801 E. Spring St. A
$15 donation is requested.
2 comments:
Sam Rancy is never afraid of dying. He is a Khmer hero. He knows Long Beach is full of CPP supporters, yet he will enter for the sake of the Khmer nation.
Hun Sen is a coward. He is banned from entering the US soil. He travels with thousands of bodyguards, including bomb squads, Vietnamese force, military guards.
Who is a Khmer hero?
Post a Comment