Rainsy S Korea event off-limits for Cambodians, envoy warns
ppp Fri, 13 November 2015
Meas Sokchea
ppp Fri, 13 November 2015
Meas Sokchea
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| CNRP leader Sam Rainsy is greeted by Cambodian workers in Seoul on a previous trip in 2013. Photo supplied |
“I have noted that Khmer ambassadors on missions in foreign countries often don’t use their role for the Khmer nation but mostly for the CPP. It is regretful,”
Chhay Eang
Cambodia's
ambassador to South Korea has again come under fire for telling
Cambodian expatriates they face “arrest and deportation” if they attend
an opposition party event this weekend in Seoul.
In
a Facebook post yesterday, Suth Dina told Cambodian workers and
students in Korea to shun the reception for visiting Cambodia National
Rescue Party leaders Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha, while also appealing for
greater appreciation of the ruling party.
“[Attendees]
can be arrested and sent back to Khmer country immediately,” wrote
Dina, who last year discouraged Cambodians in South Korea from attending
a planned anti-government rally.
“Therefore,
as a royal ambassador to Korea, [I] would like to guide brothers and
sisters, as workers and students and both male and female citizens,
please do not join or go near the place of the political concert or,
what can be called a demonstration, of any opposition party.”
He
then went on to say deportees would be shunned by both governments, and
appealed for them to appreciate the efforts of the ruling party to
provide jobs and support. “It is only the Cambodian People’s Party that
offers this money to brothers and sisters, actually this money comes
from the efforts of Samdech Techo Hun Sen.”
According
to Dina’s post, joining the event could violate people’s employment
contract obligations and lead them to commit offences against Korean
law, which he did not specify, only saying such activities were
“contrary to the diplomatic relationship” between Cambodia and South
Korea.
Further,
he said, as the opposition was hostile to the Cambodian government, the
Korean authorities should not allow the event to take place and could
arrest the organisers, who he accused of stirring up racial
discrimination.
Responding
yesterday, CNRP lawmaker Eng Chhay Eang slammed Dith’s threat and said
it was disappointing to see Cambodia’s ambassadors work as partisan
activists.
“I
have noted that Khmer ambassadors on missions in foreign countries
often don’t use their role for the Khmer nation but mostly for the CPP.
It is regretful,” Chhay Eang said.
“If Mr Suth Dina uses messages as intimidation like this, he does not deserve to be a Khmer ambassador.”
But
government spokesman Phay Siphan said that ambassadors, as CPP members,
were free to promote the party in their private capacity.
CPP
spokesman Sous Yara said Dina was merely warning Cambodians in Korea
without work permits not to approach the opposition for help, which
could lead to their arrest.
Yara
said the embassy represented all of the more than 10,000 Cambodians in
the country and was the only place to go for help with documentation.
Speaking
by phone yesterday, Chung Sophal and Yon Samnang, labourers working in
Korea, said they weren’t discouraged by the threat.
“I do not have any concerns; I will join [the event] as is my right. I will not do anything illegal,” Samnang said.
The South Korean Embassy did not respond to a request for comment as of press time.

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