The Wall Street Journal
January 31, 2013,
Associated Press
In an April 2011 photo, former King Norodom Sihanouk, right, is greeted by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.
PHNOM PENH—Ahead of Monday's cremation of Norodom
Sihanouk, Cambodians are expected to flood the streets this weekend to
mourn their two-time king. But many Cambodians say the former monarch's
death last year only underscores that control of this Southeast Asian
nation lies elsewhere—with its longtime prime minister, Hun Sen.
"The king has some power," Seourn Sok, a 25-year-old construction
worker in Phnom Penh, said of the ex-monarch, who gave up his throne to
his son Sihamoni in 2004 and died in October at the age of 89. "But far
less than Hun Sen."
Only 60 years old, Mr. Hun Sen already
ranks among the world's longest-serving leaders. Since taking office in
1985, he has become known by rivals and supporters alike as a
Machiavellian operator who presided over Cambodia's recovery from civil
war and genocide but who also quashed dissent and outmaneuvered
opponents. He has done so, rights groups say, using cronyism, violence
and intimidation.
"Hun Sen's leadership is very much a one-man show, and he decides on
almost everything," said Lao Mong Hay, a Cambodian academic and
political analyst. "His administration is like a cluster of fiefdoms"
run by his cronies, Mr. Mong Hay said.
Mr. Hun Sen didn't respond to requests for an interview.
The prime minister and his Cambodian People's Party are the only
power that most of Cambodia's 14.5 million people have known. Along city
streets and rural lanes, his portrait is splashed on royal blue
billboards. Mr. Hun Sen appears almost certain to receive another
five-year mandate in a national election set for July: The CPP handily
won senate and local elections last year, while a late-2011 poll by the
U.S. government-funded International Republican Institute found that 81%
of 2,000 Cambodians surveyed felt the country was on the right path.
Mr. Hun Sen's political dominance is
welcomed by many local tycoons and even some foreign investors who
credit him for restoring stability and enabling economic growth that has
ranked among Asia's fastest in the past decade.
"What there has been over the years is tremendous continuity in the
government. In a place like Cambodia, it's probably a good thing to have
that stability," particularly because state institutions are weak, said
Brett Sciaroni, a Phnom Penh-based American lawyer who advises Mr. Hun
Sen's government on business and investment issues.
Cambodia ranks among the world's least developed countries, with
about 30% of the population living below the poverty line and
international aid providing roughly half the annual budget.
Development has been marred by allegations of abuse of power. In a
November report, Human Rights Watch blamed Mr. Hun Sen and his
supporters for more than 300 politically motivated killings since 1991,
when a United Nations-brokered agreement ended a civil war. The rights
group also accused the government of manipulating the judiciary and
police.
Activists and Western aid donors accuse the government of neglecting
development goals and pursuing environmentally destructive policies,
such as granting concessions to local and foreign companies seeking
timber, cash-crop and mineral resources.
Mr. Hun Sen has dismissed such claims. He defended his rights record
during a meeting with President Barack Obama in Phnom Penh last year,
saying Cambodia has unique circumstances that drive domestic policies,
according to the White House. The prime minister has also played down
the impact of the controversial land leases, although in May he
suspended grants of new leases and said authorities would confiscate
concessions that involved illegal land grabs.
The son of peasants, Mr. Hun Sen joined the Khmer Rouge in 1970 and
lost an eye while fighting Cambodia's then pro-U.S. government. He
defected to Vietnam in 1977 to escape internal Khmer Rouge purges,
returning two years later as part of a Vietnamese invasion that toppled
Pol Pot's genocidal regime. He served as foreign minister in the new
Hanoi-backed government before becoming premier.
Mr. Hun Sen faced few serious challengers until U.N.-backed elections
in 1993 forced his CPP, which placed second, into a coalition with a
royalist party. Mr. Hun Sen wrested full power four years later in a
brief but bloody skirmish. The CPP won the next three elections—most
recently in 2008, when it took 90 seats in the 123-member legislature.
The formerly Communist CPP boasts branches across Cambodia's vast
rural districts and in urban centers. The party appears to have handily
outspent the opposition on campaigns, and it enjoys the support of
tycoon-controlled broadcasters whose stations dominate the country's
television and radio waves. One broadcaster is headed by Hun Mana, a
daughter of the prime minister.
In recent years, China's generous support for the government—mainly
through aid loans and infrastructural investment—has also bolstered the
ruling CPP's development agenda.
A chess player and a heavy smoker, Mr. Hun Sen has said he plans to
rule until he is 90. Many Cambodians think he will eventually try to
hand power to his children. Eldest son Hun Manet, 35, is a graduate of
the U.S. Military Academy at West Point—which admits some international
cadets—with an economics doctorate from the University of Bristol. Mr.
Hun Manet heads the Cambodian military's counterterrorism arm and is
deputy chief of his father's personal bodyguard unit.
Still, Mr. Hun Sen's challengers remain hopeful. Rural discontent has
grown over alleged land grabs by private corporations. With steady
economic growth producing an increasingly urban and better-educated
population, the electorate could demand greater accountability and
transparency.
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy, a former finance minister, led a merger
of the country's two main opposition groups last year to form the
Cambodia National Rescue Party. Mr. Rainsy is exiled in Paris due to
what he and rights observers have called a politically motivated
conviction in 2010 for spreading disinformation and falsifying the
Cambodia-Vietnam border on a map. Mr. Rainsy said in an interview that
the opposition enjoys "strong popular support."
But analysts aren't convinced the French-educated former fund manager
can win sufficient backing from Cambodia's rural poor. In the 2008
parliamentary election, the Sam Rainsy Party received 21.9% of valid
ballots while the Human Rights Party took 6.6%, combining for just 29
seats.
— Sun Narin contributed to this article.
Write to Chun Han Wong at chunhan.wong@dowjones.com
1 comment:
Only the peoples and a new generation kids in Cambodia tribute! Because they don't know who is the real killer is. Many of new generation kids today don't know who kill their grandparents. Because Cambodia today don't teach history. They just start to educate from Year Zero forward.
You tell them the real Killer is Sihanouk they will piss off at you, they think Sihanouk was their beloved King.
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