Also posted at www.modernprogressivekhmer.blogspot.com
By Jayakhmer

The dispute between our elected officials namely between the most
powerful man in Cambodia and a helpless member of parliamentarian
takes on new twists and turns.  The battle is being fought
internationally.  Mu Sochua has been attracting a lot of international
attentions especially from the US Congress.  This proves yet again
that Samdech Prime Minister Hun Sen and his advisors have
miscalculated the impact.

In the afternoon of September 14th, I attended the meeting at
Berkeley.  The Goldberg Room at Boalt Hall Law School where Mu Sochua
gave a talk was a small room and was packed with about less than 200
people. All the seats were taken; I stood against the wall listening
to a courageous woman telling her struggles in her motherland to a
friendly and sympathetic audience.

“I will not compromise,” Mu Sochua repeated several times as she
described the human rights situation in Cambodia.

Listening to Mu Sochua, I could not help but wonder how we came to
this point politically.

I certainly understand her position as an elected Cambodian woman
fighting against the most powerful man in the country with the
circumstance within which her parliamentary immunity was stripped; her
lawyer was threatened to be disbarred and consequently withdrew
himself from the case; and the Phnom Penh Municipal Court rejected her
lawsuit against the Prime Minister but honored the counter lawsuit by
the Prime Minister that everyone including herself knew from the start
she had no chance.

On July 24, 2009, of course, the court rendered a verdict of guilty
for defaming the Prime Minister and sentenced Mu Sochua to a fine of
10 million riels ($2,500).

As I looked around the room full of concerned and interested students
and scholars, I was a bit embarrassed.  Cambodia is such a small
country about the size of the state of Missouri with a minuscule
national budget if we compare to that of California’s and other
states’ in the union, and yet it manages to have so many problems.
“Why can’t we get our act together or why can’t we get along,” I
wonder quietly.

It would be simplistic and a gross generalization to say that “we
fight each other like dogs and cats.”  There are reasons why we
fight.  When we fight, each side wants to win.

If any one thinks that Mu Sochua has been a recalcitrant and an
unweaving politician in this fight, one should equally, if not more,
blame the Prime Minister for creating this political atmosphere.  The
Prime Minister should have been advised to say, “I am very sorry.”  As
strong willed and as determined as Mu Sochua, she would have accepted
the apology.

The case would have been closed.

Although this is just my conjecture, the Prime Minister should fire
all of those advisors if he was advised to pursuit this case with Mu
Sochua or and the case with Professor Yash Ghai, the UN Special Envoy
on Human Rights in Cambodia in the recent past.  Those advisors or the
ideas of fighting Mu Sochua and  the special envoy on human rights
were short-sighted and incompetent for they failed to think through
some of the most important issues that make Cambodia appears to be
worst than the bad situation the country is already in.

Why CPP chooses to treat member(s) of the minority party this way is
beyond me for CPP and its leadership already controls every powerful
position in the country.  CPP, as a major political party, should be
magnanimously working with minority parties to truly fine solutions to
improve the country together. That includes the Human Rights issues.

As long as we have a political system with multiple-party structure,
it is common and expected to have political fighting.

Political fighting is healthy as long as we remember that winning a
political opponent by loosing the respect of the world is not worth
winning.  And winning the respect of the world but loosing oneself in
the process is also worthless.

A true patriot respects and even loves his/her political opponent.
After all we are members of the same human race of small nation that
barely can sustain itself without the outside’s supports. Our dignity
as a human race and as a nation lays on the question of how well we
can build each other up and not on how effectively we can destroy each
other.

Political common sense requires that a politician always gives his/her
opponent a way out with dignity.

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