Wong Maye-E/Associated Press
Crowd attending the arrival of the remains of former King Sihanouk
The New York Times
Published: October 17, 2012
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Mourners packed the roadsides here on Wednesday to witness the final return of Norodom Sihanouk, the former Cambodian king and a pivotal figure through much of the country’s troubled recent history.
The body of King Sihanouk, who died in China on Monday, eight years
after ceding the throne to his son, arrived in Phnom Penh, the capital,
on Wednesday aboard an Air China jet from Beijing, and was driven
through the streets under a scorching tropical sun.
“He was the father, and we are the children,” said Pich Ravy, a
vegetable seller who traveled to the Royal Palace, where King Sihanouk’s
body will lie in state for the next three months. “He was one of
Cambodia’s greatest kings.”
Related
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Norodom Sihanouk, Cambodian Leader Through Shifting Allegiances, Dies at 89 (October 15, 2012)
King Sihanouk’s death at 89, after six decades of deep involvement in
Cambodia’s often devastating post-independence politics, signaled the
end of an era for Cambodia that was marked by long years of war and the bloody rule of the Khmer Rouge.
But what the new era, and the monarchy, will look like is a subject of
heated debate in the country. Amid official praise and remembrances
Wednesday, Cambodians discussed competing visions for the future role of
kings.
To some, King Sihanouk’s death relegated to the past an activist
monarchy that blurred the lines between king and politician.
To others, his death created a vacuum of moral authority and highlighted
the highly concentrated and lopsided power of Prime Minister Hun Sen,
who has presided over the Cambodian government for the past 33 years,
making him one of the longest-serving leaders in the world.
“This is a new era for Hun Sen,” said Lao Moung Hay, a former civil
servant and professor of law and economics. “There is no force to
restrain him anymore — there are risks for the country.”
Prince Sisowath Thomico, King Sihanouk’s longtime private secretary and
nephew, said that some Cambodians were worried and afraid after Mr.
Sihanouk’s death.
“He had such charisma,” he said in an interview in the Royal Palace.
“And now there will be a kind of hiatus. The people of Cambodia will
have to wait for the next person who will have that same moral
authority.”
King Sihanouk, crowned in 1941, had gradually withdrawn from public life
in recent years. In his long, colorful and complex rule as king and
politician, he was praised by historians for his role in peacefully
obtaining independence from France
and criticized for providing legitimacy to the Khmer Rouge and
assisting their rise to power. Some 1.7 million people are estimated to
have died under the Khmer Rouge regime in the 1970s.
But among mourners in Phnom Penh on Wednesday, King Sihanouk was
remembered mostly as someone concerned with the plight of the poor and
powerless.
“The king did everything for the people,” said Som Srey Pao, a
49-year-old mother who traveled to the Royal Palace with her three
children on Wednesday. “He sacrificed himself for the people.”
The king’s elaborate coffin, draped in a blue royal flag and festooned
with flowers, was placed on a gilded carriage shaped to represent a
mythical birdlike creature. Mourners clutched incense sticks and lotus
flowers. They remained quiet and reverential, many kneeling, as the
carriage wheeled past.
Trailing it was the black Mercedes of the current king, Norodom Sihamoni,
who reluctantly took the throne when his father abdicated in 2004. King
Sihamoni, 59, is a former ballet instructor who remains under the long
shadow of his father. He is unmarried and seen as unlikely to produce an
heir. Although kings can be chosen from among hundreds of descendants
of prior kings, the lack of an obvious successor to King Sihamoni has
raised anxiety among some royalists.
Son Soubert, a member of the privy council to the current king, spoke of
a “vacuum” following King Sihanouk’s death. He described the current
king as much more reserved on many issues than his father.
“Our present king is so neutral that he doesn’t get involved,” Mr. Son
Soubert said. “He sticks to his role within the Constitution.”
To allies of Mr. Hun Sen, the prime minister, that is exactly the way it should be.
Phay Siphan, secretary of state in the Council of Ministers, which
functions as a cabinet, describes a new era for the monarchy in
Cambodia, enshrined in the country’s 1993 Constitution.
“The king should be away from political activity,” Mr. Phay Siphan said
in an interview. “The king does not rule the people — the king is
respected by the people,” he said.
Mr. Phay Siphan called King Sihanouk a “well-respected politician” and
the “godfather of Cambodia.” But he said the nation had moved on.
Critics of Mr. Hun Sen’s government see an effort to monopolize the political arena and the monarchy.
Unlike the royals in Thailand or Britain, the Cambodian royal family is
not wealthy and does not have vast landholdings. Kings are largely
reliant on the state budget for their activities, giving the government
potential leverage over the monarchy.
Depending on the timing of succession, Mr. Hun Sen and his allies may
also have considerable say about who becomes the next king. The
Constitution puts that power in the hands of a nine-member Throne
Council that includes the prime minister and top officials from the
National Assembly and Senate, both of which are currently controlled by
Mr. Hun Sen’s party.
3 comments:
I’ve never seen in my entire life such a huge number of Khmer people gathering together at the same place, it’s really and really packed of people. If we Khmer unite all together like this event we’ll win our neighbouring countries economically in the near future and like the year of 1955 and 1965.
May God bless his soul and bless Cambodia,long lives Cambodia,may God help democracy to takes root in Cambodia,may God brings peace and prosperity to Cambodia,may God protects and preserves Cambodia,may God bless you all,may peace and loves be with you in difficult's time like this....May loves,peace,prosperity be with all Cambodians people forever...R.I.P your highness, May God bless your soul...
Yobal Khmer.
Time to turn the mourning into a rebellion? If now, Hun Sen dogs will run for their lives.
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