“I
don’t have any words to express the sorrow and suffering I feel when
knowing his body will soon disappear,” said a weeping, 79-year-old
woman, Hin Mal, from the southern province of Takeo. “I love and respect
King Sihanouk like my own father.”
His body had been lying in state since he died of a heart attack in Beijing on October 15 at the age of 89.
Following a procession through the streets of Phnom Penh on Friday,
his body was placed inside a temple-like, 15-storey crematorium where
his son King Norodom Sihamoni and Queen Mother Norodom Monineath will
light the funeral pyre.
The evening cremation will end seven days of official mourning for
Sihanouk, who was placed on the throne by the French as a teenager.
Instead of proving the puppet the colonials had hoped for, Sihanouk went
on to win independence, then rule the country both as monarch and head
of state until he was ousted in a 1970 coup.
A charismatic figure regarded as a “God-King” by many of his
subjects, a prideful Sihanouk sided with the Khmer Rouge against the
US-backed government, but after the victory of the ultra-communists in
1975, he and his wife were held prisoners in the palace. Five of his
children died during the reign of terror.
A consummate survivor, Sihanouk emerged as a leader of an insurgency
fighting a Phnom Penh government installed by the Vietnamese and went on
to broker a peace accord that enabled his return to the throne in 1993.
He abdicated 11 years later in favour of Sihamoni, a former ballet
dancer who had spent most of his life in European artistic circles and
has proven a low-keyed constitutional monarch overshadowed by strongman
Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Sihanouk’s dark side, particularly his co-operation with the Khmer
Rouge and his often brutal suppression of dissent, has been publicly
ignored as loudspeakers broadcast eulogies and television stations show
old clips of Sihanouk’s triumphs and ebullient personality.
A larger-than-life character, Sihanouk directed films, composed music
and led his own jazz band and palace soccer team. His appetite extended
to fast cars, food and women, marrying at least five times, some say
six, and fathering 14 children.
In the coming days, some of Sihanouk’s ashes will be scattered near
the confluence of the four rivers in Phnom Penh, while others will be
put in an urn which, according to his wishes, will be placed on the
grounds of the Royal Palace near those of his favourite daughter,
Kunthea Buppha, who died at the age of three.
The funeral is being attended by French Prime Minister Jean-Marc
Ayrault, Prince Akishino of Japan, leaders of neighbouring countries and
China’s Jia Qinglin, a senior government adviser and former
high-ranking politburo member.
Representing the US is Ambassador William E Todd. The US Embassy did
not directly respond to explain such a relatively low-level
representation given the long US involvement in Cambodia.
Many Cambodians were upset when US President Barack Obama was one of
the only leaders attending a regional summit here in November not to pay
his respects before Sihanouk’s body. The president had a reportedly tense meeting with Hun Sen at the time, with Mr Obama pressing him on Cambodia’s worsening human rights record.
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