Nov 7, 2009
Hun Sen a strong leader 
Hun Sen's earthy style goes down well with the rural masses   By Nirmal 
Ghosh,  Thailand Correspondent  


  

No two leaders have been as poles apart as Thai Premier  Abhisit Vejjajiva 
and his Cambodian counterpart Hun Sen. -- PHOTO:  AFP




 
BANGKOK - NO TWO leaders at the opening on Friday of the Japan-Mekong 
Leaders  summit in Tokyo would have been as poles apart as Thai Premier Abhisit 
Vejjajiva  and his Cambodian counterpart Hun Sen. 
Prime Minister Hun Sen, 57, started his adult life as a teenage soldier 
with  the notorious Khmer Rouge in the jungles of Cambodia, and through grit,  
opportunism and charisma clawed his way to the top of a fractured and 
bleeding  country and has remained there for almost 30 years. 
Thai Prime Minister Abhisit, 45, was born into privilege and educated in  
salubrious Eton and Oxford, excelled in polished intellectual debate, and 
became  prime minister last December not through a popular election but through 
a  parliamentary vote. 
The blunt-speaking Hun Sen's easy, earthy style goes down well with  
Cambodia's rural masses. At the same time, the Premier is able to rub shoulders 
 
with the rich and famous in palaces and on golf courses. 
In recent years, it may be argued that Mr Hun Sen has become more feared 
than  loved. What is certain is that he is a strong leader. In that he has 
something  in common with Thailand's former premier, Thaksin Shinawatra, who 
also has wide  support among the rural masses, and once said he would be in 
power for 20  years. 
Mr Hun Sen has spoken of his friendship with Thaksin, with whom he plays 
golf  regularly. The Cambodian leader recently said that his wife Bun Rany had 
wept  over Thaksin's political 'misfortunes'. 
Read the full story in Saturday's edition of The Straits Times 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) 


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