Charting an uncertain path

 
Friday, 04 December 2009 15:03 Sebastian Strangio 


 


After a tumultuous year, the  Sam Rainsy Party finds itself at a 
crossroads, but observers are divided on its  future prospects in a shifting 
political 
climate.

 
Photo by: AFP 
SRP President Sam Rainsy  leads a protest against rising food prices along 
a street in Phnom Penh on April  6, 2008.


STRIPPED of his parliamentary  immunity for the second time this year, 
opposition leader Sam Rainsy has, once  again, found himself at the centre of 
the debate over Cambodia’s democratic  reform. But the lifting of his 
parliamentary immunity and the actions that led  to it – the uprooting of 
several 
wooden border markers in a rice field at the  Vietnamese border – have raised 
questions of another kind, about the relevance  of Sam Rainsy and his 
eponymous party in a shifting political  landscape.

Though the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) remains the Kingdom’s  biggest proponent 
of Western-style democracy, some observers fear that the  party, and its 
president, have reached the outer limits of their influence and  have turned 
away from the grassroots campaigning that marked the SRP’s heyday in  favour 
of politically charged but somewhat hollow political gestures.  

This has been a tumultuous year for the SRP. Sam Rainsy and SRP  lawmakers 
Mu Sochua and Ho Vann have each lost parliamentary immunity at one  point or 
another in tense legal tussles with senior government officials.

IN DATES
The growth of a movement  
  
____________________________________
 June 1992
Sam Rainsy returns to Cambodia from Europe,  becoming a member of the 
interim Supreme National Council.

May  23, 1993
Sam Rainsy is elected as a Funcinpec lawmaker for Siem Reap  in UN-backed 
polls that see a stunning royalist victory.

July  1993
Sam Rainsy is appointed minister for economics and finance in  the 
CPP-Funcinpec coalition government.

October 20,  1994
Sam Rainsy is expelled from the cabinet following a major  reshuffle.

May 13, 1995
Sam Rainsy is expelled from  both Funcinpec and the National Assembly, and 
forms the Khmer Nation Party (KNP)  later in the year.

March 30, 1997
Assassins throw  grenades into a KNP rally outside the National Assembly in 
Phnom Penh, killing  more than 16 and injuring scores of others. FBI 
investigators allege government  involvement in the attack.

July 26, 1998
The KNP –  now renamed the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) – performs well in the 
national  elections, gaining 15 seats and winning 14.3 percent of the  vote.

July 27, 2003
The SRP wins 24 National Assembly  seats, or 21.9 percent of the vote, in 
national elections.  

February 3, 2005
Sam Rainsy goes into self-exile  after being accused of defamation and 
losing his parliamentary immunity at the  hands of the National Assembly, along 
with fellow SRP lawmakers Chea Poch and  Cheam Channy. Cheam Channy is 
arrested in February and tried in August 2005 for  creating an illegal armed 
force. He is sentenced to seven years in prison, but  is granted a royal pardon 
in February 2006.

December 22,  2005
Phnom Penh Municipal Court tries Sam Rainsy in absentia for  defamation and 
sentences him to 18 months in prison and orders him to pay  US$14,000 in 
fines and compensation.

February 5,  2006
Sam Rainsy receives a royal pardon at Prime Minister Hun Sen’s  request, 
and returns to the country on February 10. 

July 27,  2008
The SRP again wins 21.9 percent of the popular vote, but  increases its 
share of National Assembly seats to 26.

February  26, 2009
The National Assembly votes to suspend Sam Rainsy’s  immunity to force him 
to pay a fine levied against him by the National Election  Committee. His 
immunity is restored on March 10.

June 22,  2009
The National Assembly votes to suspend the immunity of SRP  lawmaker Mu 
Sochua after she filed a lawsuit accusing Prime Minister Hun Sen of  
defamation. Lawmaker Ho Vann is also stripped of his immunity for allegedly  
belittling the educational credentials of senior military officers.  

November 16, 2009
Parliament again lifts Rainsy’s  immunity, following an incident in which 
he uprooted wooden markers at the  border with Vietnam.


Despite the international media coverage of  its recent theatrics, and 
attention in the chambers of the US congress and the  European parliament in 
Brussels, it is unclear whether the opposition’s  strategies have maximised its 
chances of leveraging demographic changes into  long-term political gains. 

Some observers say the party has declined  since its peak in the mid-2000s, 
a trend illustrated by its failure to capture  the tens of thousands of 
Funcinpec voters who withdrew their support from the  party after the royalist 
split in 2006. 

“All those votes should have  gone to the SRP, and they didn’t,” said Ou 
Virak, president of the Cambodian  Centre for Human Rights. He said the SRP’s 
lack of a concrete policy platform  causes its political spats with the 
government to become quickly personalised  and drags the party into unwinnable 
battles with the ruling Cambodian People’s  Party (CPP). “There’s no proper 
analysis or real policy,” he added. “If you’re  going to oppose something, 
are you in a position to offer anything that’s  different?”

 
____________________________________
  
 
If it was a one-man show, the show would have stopped a long time  ago, 
given all the problems we've been facing.

 
____________________________________


Another observer, who declined to be named, said that despite having  won 
the SRP international attention, the recent strategy of waging legal battles  
with government officials had “steered the party way off message”.

“They  talk about party leaders being persecuted on the basis of esoteric 
rights that  many Cambodian people have very little ownership of. They’ve 
adapted to appeal  to outside constituencies rather than Cambodian voters,” he 
said, describing the  loss of the Funcinpec vote as a “huge missed 
opportunity”.

Sorpong Peou,  a professor of political science at Sophia University in 
Tokyo, said that as the  country’s main opposition leader, Sam Rainsy must 
maintain a degree of  assertiveness, but that appeals to distant international 
organisations have  achieved little for the party. 

“At the end of the day, the opposition is  at the mercy of the CPP, which 
is willing to allow a degree of opposition in  order to legitimise its 
domination and uses this type of legitimacy to gain  international support,” 
she 
said. “In this sense, the opposition’s appeals have  little real impact on 
domestic politics.”

The ‘donors’  darling’
Sam Rainsy returned to Cambodia from France in 1992, he was  a rising star 
in the royalist political firmament. A founding member of  then-Prince 
Norodom Sihanouk’s Funcinpec party in 1981, Rainsy had advanced  through the 
ranks to become an elected parliamentarian during Funcinpec’s  stunning win in 
the UN-backed elections of May 1993 and was appointed minister  of finance in 
the CPP-Funcinpec coalition government in July. 

But his  ascent was short lived, and the fall that followed set the tone 
for a political  career marked by bitter clashes with the government.

In October 1994 –  just over a year after his appointment – Sam Rainsy was 
dismissed from his post  in a major cabinet reshuffle, following his clear 
criticism of the corruption  and nepotism that plagued the coalition. The 
following May, he was dumped from  the party altogether and lost his National 
Assembly seat a month later.  

At the time of its founding in 1995, the Khmer Nation Party (KNP) – the  SRP
’s predecessor – was a new feature on the Cambodian political landscape.  
Unlike the CPP – which secured its support through a patronage system  
established in the 1980s – and Funcinpec, which traded heavily on the prestige  
of the monarchy, Sam Rainsy’s new party put liberal democratic principles 
front  and centre. At the time, Sam Rainsy said his expulsion from Funcinpec 
would give  him the opportunity “to mobilise millions of people” sharing the 
same  ideals.

In spite of the SRP’s idealistic bent, however, the party’s  constituency 
remains overwhelmingly urban: In 2008, it won six of its 26 seats  in Phnom 
Penh and five in Kampong Cham, as well as three each in heavily  populated 
Kandal and Prey Veng provinces, both close to the capital. In 12 of  Cambodia’
s 24 provinces and municipalities – among them the most remote and  least 
populated – the party did not score a single seat. 

Caroline  Hughes, an associate professor of governance studies at Murdoch 
University in  Perth, said the SRP was not to blame for its difficulties in 
rural areas, in  large part because of political intimidation by the CPP and 
the presence of its  well-oiled machinery of patronage. Sam Rainsy – a “
donors’ darling” in the early  1990s – has gradually become a more “marginal” 
figure as a result of waning  international support, a rift with the 
Cambodian union movement and a concerted  campaign of violence and intimidation 
that reached its apotheosis in a bloody  grenade attack on a KNP protest in 
March 1997, she said. “Sam Rainsy did attempt  to organise his supporters 
around a whole range of more concrete issues, but he  was consistently 
blocked,” 
she said. “He organised a demonstration against  corruption, and a grenade 
was thrown at it. He organised strikes in pursuit of a  minimum-wage raise 
and was criticised by international organisations who said he  shouldn’t 
interfere with unions.” 

She added: “I don’t think we can blame  the SRP for the weakness of the 
Cambodian political opposition when the  government has worked consistently to 
reduce the political space for any kind of  organised activism on any issue.
”

A one-man  show?
Others, however, said the party’s apparent difficulties stem  from the 
erosion of its own internal democratic processes under the constant  threat of 
defections and government intimidation. 

The SRP organisation,  Ou Virak said, is “like a scared child – the more 
things happen to them, the  more they start to pull back. They refrain from 
meeting people and they refrain  from opening up because of bad experiences”. 

“There are some good people  in the party that I know that cannot move up 
in the ranks,” he said. “There are  some very good people who were left out.”

Ken Virak was a member of the  SRP’s Steering Committee who left to form 
his own party – the People’s Power  Party – in 2007, after becoming 
disillusioned with the SRP’s internal workings.  He said the party had given up 
its 
role as a democratic opposition party “step  by step”, and that the Steering 
Committee – nominally in charge of party  decision-making – no longer had 
any real power. 

“There is no democracy  inside the party. Most of the decisions are made 
only by a minority of members  who are powerful in the party and associated 
with Sam Rainsy,” he said.  

Political decisions, originally made by a two-thirds majority vote of  the 
Steering Committee, were watered down to a simple 50-percent-plus-one  
majority system and then to a system where the party president can in effect  
make every decision himself. 

“I found that before every election,  members of the party always broke 
away because of the political decision-making  and partisanship,” he said.

Ou Virak said major decisions are now made by  the party’s eight-member 
Permanent Committee, over which Sam Rainsy has final  veto power. 

Ken Virak still has faith in the opposition – refusing to  run his new 
party in any elections in order not to cannibalise opposition votes  – but said 
that all opposition groups, including the Human Rights Party and NRP,  must 
unite if they want to have any chance at eating into the CPP’s majority in  
the 2013 polls. 

Anti-communist roots
Born in Phnom  Penh in 1949, Sam Rainsy grew up at a time of change and 
regeneration. His  father, Sam Sary, was a key member of Sihanouk’s Sangkum 
Reastr Niyum  government, but fell victim to the Prince’s security police after 
he was  implicated in the so-called Bangkok Plot, an attempt to topple the 
government  with the support of Thailand’s right-wing Marshal Sarit 
Thanarat. Sam Sary  disappeared in 1962 and was presumed killed, possibly by 
the 
government. Shortly  afterwards, Sam Rainsy’s mother, In Em, took the remaining 
family members to  live in France, where he remained for the next three 
decades. 

In a  recent interview with the Post, Sam Rainsy described his father’s 
death as a  “traumatising” experience, but said that Sam Sary’s political 
views permeated  the family and set the trajectory of his own political 
development.  

Certain pivotal events in Europe – notably, the Soviet invasion of  Hungary 
in 1956 – were daily topics of conversation in the Sam household and  went 
some way to forming the ideals that would grow into the SRP’s own brand of  
nationalism.

“When it came to Southeast Asia, my father was in favour of  a strict 
neutrality – that Cambodia should not move closer to the communist  world,” he 
said. “This has marked my background and my conviction that communism  is 
oppressive – that freedom is essential and that we have to fight for  [it],”

Sam Rainsy said that despite having been founded largely on his  initiative 
in 1995, the KNP – renamed the SRP in 1998 because of legal disputes  over 
the KNP name – had grown into an “organisation of its own”, linking  
Cambodia with Khmer communities abroad. He also downplayed his role as the  
party’
s figurehead, referring to it as an “anachronistic” notion.

“If it  was a one-man show, the show would have stopped a long time ago, 
given all the  problems that we’ve been facing,” he said. 

Speeding  forward
Sam Rainsy said the SRP was the only party in Cambodia that  holds 
organised elections from the grassroots, a system that is “just the  opposite” 
of 
the CPP’s centrally controlled networks.

“They appoint their  cadres – their apparatchiks – at the grassroots, but 
we are the only party that  has organised elections,” he said.

Kimsour Phirith, a member of the SRP’s  Permanent Committee, acknowledged 
that “internal disputes and  misunderstandings”, as well as “competition at 
the leadership level”, had hurt  the party at recent elections, but said the 
party is well aware of the problem  and has worked to resolve it.

Similarly, the “loss” of the former  Funcinpec vote was largely “due to 
intimidation and vote-buying in  non-transparent elections”, Sam Rainsy said –
 a claim the opposition has made  consistently since the July 2008 poll. “
All of the over 13,000 powerful village  chiefs are appointed by the ruling 
CPP, which is a heavily oppressive factor in  a rural country like Cambodia. 
In the face of such pressure, virtually all  Funcinpec leaders have sold out 
to the CPP,” he said.


When asked how the party might hope to erode the CPP’s  entrenched network 
of patronage and make headway in rural areas, Sam Rainsy said  current and 
future demographic changes were swinging the SRP’s way, a factor  reflected 
in the party’s recent formation of a youth congress. 

“In a  typical family, you have the grandfather, who votes for Funcinpec; 
you have the  father, who votes for the CPP; and you have the children, who 
when they reach  voting age will vote for the SRP,” he said. “It will take 
less time than one  might imagine now, because of the progress of technology, 
information,  communication and education. History is accelerating.”

Sam Rainsy said  that unlike CPP support – “bought” with party patronage 
benefits – each SRP  ballot was a “politically conscious vote”, bringing 
with it a host of risks.  

“The progressive concept of social justice is eroding the leniency  towards 
the regressive patronage system. The younger generations will be the  
spearhead for this democratic trend moving Cambodia out of the Middle Ages,” he 
 
said.

Koul Panha, executive director of election monitor Comfrel, said  Sam 
Rainsy retains a lot of political capital for taking such a principled  stance 
against corruption in the 1990s and maintaining it consistently over the  
years since, but that fresh challenges are on the horizon. 

“I think he  still has that credibility. He resigned from a key position in 
government and  showed he is that kind of politician,” he said. “The 
problem is how to  communicate that credibility to the people.”  
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY VONG SOKHENG AND SAM  RITH 
 
 
 
Photo by: AFP 
Then-Second Prime Minister  Hun Sen shakes hands with Sam Rainsy after a 
three-hour meeting at Hun Sen’s  residence on December 8, 1997.

  
 
Photo by: AFP 
Sam Rainsy is carried away  in state of shock after a grenade attack on a 
KNP demonstration outside the  National Assembly building on March 30, 1997. 
The attack, which marked a turning  point in Sam Rainsy’s role as opposition 
leader, left at least 16 people dead  and 119 injured.






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