Samrang Pring/Reuters, Riot police blocked the street
outside Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Oct. 1, as protesters called for
the release of jailed land-rights activist Mam Sonando.
By
SAM RAINSY
The New York Times and The International Herald Tribune
Published: October 30, 2012
"Hun Sen responded to the recommendations from Mr. Subedi, a Nepalese
professor of law, by telling him to go away and worry about his own
country......If Hun Sen won’t engage with the international community and the Asean
summit isn’t moved, President Obama, the leader of the world’s
standard-bearer of democracy, should take Hun Sen at his word and stay
away." - Sam Rainsy
As the U.S. presidential election approaches, Barack Obama is in danger
of allowing his good offices to be used as part of an attempt to deny
Cambodians the opportunity for self-determination that Americans take
for granted.
President Obama is due to visit Cambodia next month as the country holds
the presidency of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in 2012.
Ahead of Cambodian elections in July 2013, Prime Minister Hun Sen, who
has been in power since 1985, has been engaging in a familiar pattern of
cracking down on the voices of opposition. He knows that it’s an easier
and safer way to win elections than allowing democratic debate.
The summit meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations that
Mr. Obama plans to attend should be moved to another country in order to
deny Hun Sen the legitimacy he is seeking to garner from the event.
Those with a record of opposition to Hun Sen are in dread of the period right after Mr. Obama’s scheduled visit.
The owner of the Cambodia’s Beehive radio station, Mam Sonando, was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Oct. 1
on politically motivated charges that he had been part of a
secessionist movement. The radio station had allowed airtime for such
inconvenient issues as maternal mortality, human trafficking, labor
rights, environmental protection and the need for an independent
judiciary.
Hun Sen had publicly called for Mam Sonando’s arrest on June 26. He was held on July 15, two days after Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton left the country after attending an Asean regional forum.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Cambodia, Surya P. Subedi, in July recommended reform [pdf]
of the country’s electoral system. Among his 18 recommendations was the
key demand for the reform of the National Election Committee to make it
a neutral body. This has been rejected by the Cambodian government.
Hun Sen is counting on donors continuing to turn a blind eye to the fact
that the election committee is dominated by members of the ruling
Cambodian People’s Party, and is even situated inside the Interior
Ministry.
The minimum requirement for proper elections next year is that the
National Election Committee be reformed. Letting it operate in its
current form would allow voter-registration fraud on a massive scale.
This means that election results are a foregone conclusion.
Meanwhile, as leader of the opposition, I remain abroad in forced exile to avoid a 12-year jail sentence on politically motivated charges. The Cambodian National Rescue Party — the united democratic opposition that I lead — won’t validate such a bogus exercise next year by taking part.
There must be meaningful reform in advance or Cambodia will go the way
of Belarus, reduced to international isolation after an opposition
boycott led to a one-horse race in which the dictator Alexander
Lukashenko was the only candidate.
This year, the Cambodian political landscape saw what could prove to be
its biggest change since the extinction of the Khmer Rouge in 1998. The
Human Rights Party, led by Kem Sokha, agreed to merge with the Sam
Rainsy Party to create a united democratic opposition. We believe that
together we have enough support to win a free and fair election. We aim
to carry out a New Deal for Cambodia. Prohibition of land theft will be
at the core of our program. Our government will cancel all land, forest
and mining concessions granted by Hun Sen that were associated with the
eviction of legitimate landowners. Local communities will be given
rights to decide how land, forest and fishing zones are managed.
We will seek to rid the civil service of the corruption that cripples it
and turn it into a meritocracy associated with a sense of public
service. We will introduce a health service that gives Cambodians access
to basic care.
Our government will make it illegal for any organization, including
political parties, to get new members through coercion. We will reform
the National Election Committee to make it independent and introduce an
age limit for prime ministers to avert the specter of Hun Sen, or anyone
else, ruling the country for life.
Hun Sen has been power for even longer than Mr. Lukashenko. He is the
only Cold War communist leader to survive in power today. During the
Cold War, states in Eastern Europe and Asia fell to communism like
dominoes. But a domino can fall in either direction. The free world must
seize the opportunity presented by Cambodia’s elections. Forcing Hun
Sen to play by democratic rules would not only empower the Cambodian
people to determine their own future, it would also give an impetus to
democracy and human rights in countries such as Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar
and North Korea.
Hun Sen responded to the recommendations from Mr. Subedi, a Nepalese
professor of law, by telling him to go away and worry about his own
country. He used similar language
in 2006 and 2007 in response to criticism from the previous U.N. envoy
to Cambodia, the Kenyan constitutional lawyer Yash Ghai. If everyone did
that then the United Nations wouldn’t exist and neither would
international law.
If Hun Sen won’t engage with the international community and the Asean
summit isn’t moved, President Obama, the leader of the world’s
standard-bearer of democracy, should take Hun Sen at his word and stay
away.
Sam Rainsy is an exiled member of the Cambodian Parliament.
A version of this op-ed appeared in print on October 31, 2012, in The International Herald Tribune.
4 comments:
That is good to know that the U.S. President Obama should know the situation in Cambodia under the Communist CPP regime controlled by Vietnamese puppet Hun Sen who was illegally installed as an unrecognized Prime Minister by the Communist Vietnamese bastards in Hanoi (real thieves). Hun Sen was a thief from the jungle who asked Vietnamese to invade Cambodia to get the opportunity to get rich and kill Khmer people who against him as a traitor and other Vietminh Rouges (evil warmonger Ho comrades) and Khmer Vietminh armies were brought to Vietnamese Camp to be brainwashed and taught to fight against French soldiers, their own Khmer people and Khmer soldiers.
It's good that the International Herald Tribune and The New York Times published Rainsy's commentary because these two newspapers have large readership. I know the New York Times has about 10 million readers a day.
Obama or any other leader of a democratic country should not step into Phnom Penh until the senior Khmer Rouge leaders in power are indicted by the KRT. It is a shame that in 2012, a criminal like Hun Sen can still be leading a modern country like Cambodia. 80% of Khmers live in poverty. 80% of businesses are owned by Bun Rany and her Canadia group. 80% of proceeds from Angkor Wat are taken to Takhmao every evening, half of which is shared by Sok An, the deputy PM. Why should the leader of the free world step in Phnom Penh for whatever reason?
No doubt about it. It's very clear and evident that this is the right moment,the best of all time and definitively the only time that USA must step in (I said must and I mean it)or Cambodia which is structurally and systematically ruled by goverment totally "mafia like" and rooted up for more than
3 decades will never be recovered from the KILLING FIELD and will continue to be "another new kind of killing field".
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