Tith Sothea, a member of the Press and Quick Reaction Unit of the Office of the Council of Ministers, said Sam Rainsy had personal issues to resolve.
He added that Sam Rainsy had not been barred from returning home but had to serve his prison sentence for uprooting border markers, falsifying public documents and destroying national property.
"He's forgotten that the government has no power to interfere in the execution of the law," Tith Sothea said Sunday. "You should better understand aspects of the law rather than just using emotional connections to call for negotiations ... Democracy is not in the pocket of the exiled Sam Rainsy."
His remarks followed comments by Cambodian Center for Human Rights President Ou Virak who accused the government of being stubborn.
"The ball is now the government's court. The 2011 case in which Sam Rainsy uprooted border markers -- which Hun Sen conceded as temporary border markers -- was just the freedom of expression of a politician," he said. "Others are political issues ... Only the ruling party can find a possible way for talks."
Information Minister Khieu Kanharith reiterated last week that Sam Rainsy and another opposition figure were given prison sentences for criminal offenses and not for opposing the ruling party.
Sam Rainsy is believed to be living in France.
1 comment:
Wrong its personal hatred from Hun sen to Sam Rainsy is deeper than the uprooted if border post-marked.Hun sen pleased Yuons,Rainsy pleased Khmers,its just like water and oil will never mixes together,Rainsy didn't owes Yuon anything but Hun sen on the other hand owed Yuon his gratitude for not killing his sorry's Ass in 1978 defected from K.R.This old dog [Hun]will be dead by the hand his savior[Yuon] if he loss an election in 2013 that why he uses his jungle's law to stop Rainsy from come back home and wins his position.
Yobal Khmer
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