2012-10-18
Radio Free Asia
The Cambodian opposition leader hopes to return home to honor his fallen former king.
Exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy (pictured) has requested a special
“intervention” order from Cambodia’s king and prime minister to allow
him to return home to pay his last respects to the country’s former
monarch, who passed away earlier this week.
The 63-year-old
president of the National Rescue Party (NRP) has sent letters to this
effect to King Norodom Sihamoni and Prime Minister Hun Sen as Cambodia
plunged into mourning following the death Monday of former King Norodom
Sihanouk.
Sam Rainsy could be imprisoned on his return following
convictions for various offenses he has said were part of a campaign of
political persecution.
"On the occasion of national mourning, as a
Cambodian citizen, I think it is important for me to strengthen
national reconciliation and unity by helping to resolve Khmer issues
according to the [former] King's wishes when he was alive," Sam Rainsy wrote in the letters dated Oct. 17 and distributed by his aides.
"During
this mourning occasion, I would like Samdech [Hun Sen] to intervene by
showing empathy and allowing me to return to pay my respects to the
[former] King in Phnom Penh," he said, using the honorific title for the
prime minister.
Speaking by telephone from self-exile in France,
Sam Rainsy told RFA’s Khmer service that he would return home as soon
as possible to pay his respects to Sihanouk depending on Sihamoni’s
response.
“In the two letters, I have asked for the King and
Samdech Hun Sen’s interventions to allow me to return to Cambodia to pay
my last respect to the former King—I would like to see his face one
last time,” the opposition leader said.
The Cambodian government has not responded to his letter.
The
government had said previously that Sam Rainsy, who served former King
Norodom Sihanouk as a minister of finance for the royalist Funcinpec
Party in 1993, will be thrown in jail if he returns to Cambodia.
Call for amnesty
Sam
Rainsy faces a total of 11 years in prison. He was sentenced to 10
years in absentia in 2010 for publishing a false map of the border with
neighboring Vietnam, though the punishment was later reduced to seven
years.
He was also handed a two-year sentence for inciting
racial discrimination and uprooting border markings with Vietnam in a
2009 incident.
Last year, he was given another two-year jail
term for accusing Cambodian's foreign minister of having been a member
of the brutal Khmer Rouge regime in the late 1970s.
Prince
Sisowath Thomico, King Sihanouk’s longtime private secretary and nephew,
declined to comment on Sam Rainsy’s request. However, he acknowledged
that the exiled politician had been a loyal servant to the former king.
The
prince called on the Cambodian government to consider an amnesty for
the country’s political prisoners and to allow them to see their former
king’s body, flown back to Cambodia on Wednesday from his “second home”
in Beijing where he succumbed to a heart attack while undergoing
treatment for cancer.
“My personal view during this period of
national mourning is that if we truly respect the former King as a
promoter of national independence, reconciliation and national unity,
all political prisoners should be pardoned,” Prince Thomico said.
Honoring a king
While the ineffectual King Sihamoni has
wielded little power since taking over from his father in 2004, many
Cambodians still revere the country’s monarchy.
Hundreds of
thousands of mourners lined the streets to pay respects to Sihanouk when
his body was flown home Wednesday and escorted through the capital on a
golden float.
Hun Sen has declared a week of mourning and
ordered that Sihanouk’s body lie in state at the Royal Palace in Phnom
Penh for three months during which time the public can pay respects
before it is cremated according to Buddhist ritual.
Chinese
medical experts have been called in to embalm the former king’s body in
order to preserve it to enable three months of public viewing beginning
Friday.
“Chinese doctors are embalming the body to preserve it
for three months. There will be a traditional seven-day funeral,” the
prince said.
A national committee has been established to manage
the lavish state funeral, he said, with one of its primary
responsibilities being to ensure that diplomats, world leaders and
others in mourning will all have a chance to pay their respects.
The prince called on Cambodians to submit their requests to honor the king during the funeral.
Phnom
Penh Municipality Police Chief Chhoun Sovann said authorities will seal
off roads around the Royal Palace starting Thursday for the duration of
the national funeral.
Reported by RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
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