The Diplomat’s Stephen Finch spoke
with Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy about Thailand’s recent
decision to deny him entry and his calls for more democracy ahead of
Cambodia’s July 28 election.
Sam Rainsy
On
Tuesday, Thai immigration prevented you from entering the country in
Bangkok, where you were scheduled to speak to reporters at the Foreign
Correspondents Club of Thailand. What happened exactly?
It was apparently a very high-ranking officer and he told me that
Thailand would not let me in, on instruction from the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. He said I would be welcome back after the end of July,
these were his words. I understood very well: After the end of July
means after Cambodia’s election on July 28. So I didn’t need further
explanation. They were very polite, they took me to the first-class
lounge of Thai Airways, they accompanied me and helped carry my luggage.
So I have nothing to complain about with the personal treatment. But I
was a little bit surprised about my being deported.
Observers note that Thailand’s exiled former Prime Minister
Thaksin Shinawatra – whose sister Yingluck is the current premier – has
been very close to Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen for a long time.
Indeed, Thaksin was previously an economic advisor to Hun Sen. Does this
explain why you were not permitted into Thailand?
What I can say, at least, is that there is a double standard because
on the one hand, Thaksin Shinawatra came to Cambodia as an official and
personal guest of Prime Minister Hun Sen and he has visited many times,
including during a period around the election in Thailand. But on the
other hand, I am the leader of the opposition now – a united, democratic
opposition – and I’m not allowed to set foot in Thailand. So this is
really a double standard.
Last year, your Sam Rainsy Party merged with the Human Rights
Party. Is this the most united Cambodia’s opposition has ever been
going into an election?
Yes, definitely. This is the first time ever that Cambodia has had a
united, democratic opposition and this has changed dramatically not only
the country’s political landscape but also the balance of power. The
ruling party is now very afraid and they are doing whatever they can to
stop this growing support for the united opposition because after 30
years of the same prime minister, everybody can understand the need for
change. Remember that the ruling party has been in power for 34 years
and Hun Sen is the longest-serving political leader in Asia.
Disagreements between yourself and Kem Sokha, the head of the
other main opposition party formerly known as the Human Rights Party,
have been widely reported. What have been your key differences and to
what extent have these been resolved now that you are both operating
under the same political banner – the Cambodia National Rescue Party?
Have you ever seen political leaders with exactly the same views all
the time? There are always divergences. But what is important is the
fact that we have succeeded in overcoming some divergences that appear
minor – very, very small – compared with what is at stake: the very
survival of the nation. This is why our party is called the Cambodia
National Rescue Party. Whatever divergences we might have had in the
past are nothing. We are determined to rescue our country.
You have said many times that you believe Cambodia is in
grave danger under the current government. What do you plan to do to
take on Hun Sen’s administration and do you and Kem Sokha agree in terms
of strategy?
We are pushing for free and fair elections, as enshrined in the 1991
Paris Peace Agreements on Cambodia. They call for a free society, and a
democratic government chosen by the people through free and fair
elections and following a democratization process. It is not only a
right, but also an obligation for all signatories to ensure that
Cambodia moves along a democratic path. But the democratization process
has been derailed and what we are asking for is the intervention of the
international community under the Paris Peace Agreements to put this
democratization process back on track. We want democratic change through
free and fair elections: It’s peaceful; it’s legal; it’s in line with
an international treaty. This is the path we have chosen to follow.
You’ve criticized the forthcoming election on numerous counts. What exactly is wrong with it?
I think the relevant points have been raised by the United Nations.
The position of the UN special envoy to Cambodia, Professor Surya
Subedi, is also in line with the Paris Peace Agreements. His latest
report on the human rights situation in Cambodia drew attention to the
fact that the election system in Cambodia is not credible and it cannot
lead to a free and fair election. He made 18 recommendations but I will
just point to the two most important.
The first is reform of the electoral commission, which is now
controlled by the ruling party, and has no credibility whatsoever. The
second is the UN call for my return to Cambodia as leader of the
opposition. Since we follow the Westminster system, any election in
Cambodia is meaningless without the presence of the leader of the
opposition and I am the only serious challenger to Prime Minister Hun
Sen. So what we ask for is just respect for the UN recommendations.
Given the problems you describe, what can we expect from next month’s election?
I think again, the will of the people will be distorted and denied,
and I urge the international community to warn Hun Sen that the way the
election is organized now cannot be viewed as legitimate. Any government
arising from the election must therefore be considered illegitimate.
The UN has consistently called for deep reforms but since those reforms
have not been addressed any subsequent elections are a farce. I ask the
international community to be consistent in ceasing to recognize the Hun
Sen government and to start to isolate this illegitimate government to
help the Cambodian people to express their will in a different way.
The acting head of your party in your absence, Kem Sokha, has
recently faced a backlash in Cambodia after he reportedly said that the
Khmer Rouge’s main torture and extermination facility, Tuol Sleng, was
“staged” by the invading Vietnamese for propaganda purposes. What do you
make of these comments?
I am with Kem Sokha right now in Singapore. We have been meeting over
the past 24 hours. Basically, his words have been distorted – he was
quoted out of context – and I share his opinion. Like everybody, we
acknowledge that Tuol Sleng was a torture and execution center for the
Khmer Rouge, who committed crimes against humanity. So there is no
discussion whatsoever on that point.
But what we agree is that following the Vietnamese invasion (in
January 1979) the Vietnamese arranged Tuol Sleng for propaganda purposes
and they filled the place with skulls. That is not Cambodian at all; it
is very un-Cambodian. It was arranged by the Stasi, by the Eastern
bloc. King Sihanouk recommended that the bones, the skeletons, the
remains of the people dead there should be incinerated according to
Buddhist rites and a ceremony.
The Hun Sen government didn’t want to follow King Sihanouk’s
recommendation because they wanted to use it for propaganda. They wanted
to use the remains of the dead and arrange them for political purposes.
So this we condemn and also we condemn the fact that the Hun Sen
government, out of fear of the judicial process, has blocked the Khmer
Rouge Tribunal and has prevented the due prosecution of the Khmer Rouge
leaders who are responsible for the crimes against humanity.
This is again a double standard on the part of Hun Sen. International
judges at the tribunal appointed by the UN have summoned the minister
of Finance, Keat Chhon, the minister of Foreign Affairs, Hor Namhong,
the president of the Senate, Chea Sim, and the president of the National
Assembly, Heng Samrin, to respond to questions at the court but Hun Sen
has prevented them from appearing. This is obstructing justice.
Why do they look at Kem Sokha’s comments, which have been distorted,
and not look at the people who have obstructed justice for the Cambodian
people?
You were due to launch – in person – your new book We Didn’t Start the Fire: My Struggle for Democracy in Cambodia on
Wednesday in Bangkok before you were barred from Thailand. It’s a look
back at your life as the former Cambodian finance minister and as the
leader of the opposition. Looking to the future, do you think your own
personal story, and the story of Cambodia, will have a happy ending?
Every day that passes is a victory. Under the present circumstances,
staying alive is quite an achievement. Since I founded my party 15 years
or so ago, at least eight colleagues and supporters have been
assassinated. No convictions have ever been made, and no investigations
have ever been started. There is total impunity in Cambodia. I have
counted the colleagues and supporters who have been arrested, tortured,
beaten – those that have had their lives taken away.
Under those circumstances, just being alive is already an achievement.
Under those circumstances, just being alive is already an achievement.
However, we are gaining more and more support every day, as evidenced
by the results of the elections, despite rigging. We have managed to
increase our share of the vote from one election to another. This is
quite an achievement, as is keeping hope alive. I think history is on
our side: Democracy is making progress everywhere, including in Burma
recently, so I’m really confident that while it’s an uphill battle, we
will reach the top of the hill in the not-too-distant future.
2 comments:
កាលនៅក្នុងការតស៊ួរេបស់ ពល់ ពត ជាមួយយួន
ក្នុងឆ្នាំ ១៩៧២ យួនវាប្រាប់ ពុល ពត ថាចាំវារំដោះ
ទឹកដីខ្មែរអោយ???៊
តែដល់ជំនាន់ហ៊ុន សែន នេះគឺយួនកាន់កាប់
ប្រទេសកម្ពុជាទាំងមូលតែម្ដង។
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