With warnings of civil war and one-sided legislation, strongman for 28
years indicates he won’t go easily

By Jonathan Manthorpe, Vancouver Sun columnist June 11, 2013 1:46 PM

[image: Jonathan Manthorpe: Cambodia’s Hun Sen makes pre-election bid
to stifle opposition]

Opponents of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen have the tendency to show up
dead.*Photograph by: *PORNCHAI KITTIWONGSAKUL , AFP/Getty Images

















Hun Sen has ruled Cambodia since 1985 and one of his favourite campaign
tactics is to warn voters there will be civil war if they are foolish
enough to defeat him.

His threats are not to be taken lightly.

When his Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) lost the country’s first democratic
elections in 1993 to the royalist FUNCINPEC party, the leader Prince
Norodom Ranariddh found it advisable to make Hun Sen co-prime minister.

Hun Sen repaid the prince by launching a coup in 1997 and regaining what he
considers his rightful place as Cambodia’s sole leader.

With elections slated for July 28 and Hun Sen facing the most serious
challenge for many years from a newly revived opposition, he is again
pulling out all the stops to ensure he remains in power.

In this campaign, Hun Sen’s warning of civil war and war with neighbouring
Vietnam if the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) wins was
merely an opening gambit uttered as far back as April.

Since then Hun Sen has got really serious about undermining the CNRP’s
campaign.

Last week, Hun Sen’s CPP used its majority in the National Assembly, the
lower house of parliament, to expel 28 CNRP members.

The CPP also passed legislation making it illegal to question the official
history of the “Killing Fields” genocide of the Khmer Rouge regime from
1975 to 1979.

The move appears to be aimed at intimidating or even imprisoning the CNRP
deputy head Kem Sokha, who is widely regarded as the most effective
opposition leader Hun Sen has ever confronted.

And, as usual throughout his political career, Hun Sen’s adversaries have a
habit of turning up dead.

On several occasions, opposition politicians and journalists have had
deadly encounters with pistol-wielding assassins on motorcycles.

This time the victim was a senior Buddhist monk, Keo Touch, who had strong
family links to senior CNRP figures. The monk was found beaten to death at
the end of May.

Cambodian elections always echo to the grim memories of the Khmer Rouge
genocide in which about two million people were murdered.

As a young man, Hun Sen abandoned plans to become a monk and in the early
1970s joined the Khmer Rouge in its bid to oust the military regime of
United States-back Gen. Lon Nol.

When the Khmer Rouge swept to power in 1975, Hun Sen was a battalion
commander in eastern Cambodia, but in 1977 he led his men into Vietnam to
avoid an anticipated purge.

In 1979, the Vietnamese invaded Cambodia, overthrew the Khmer Rouge and in
1985 installed Hun Sen as prime minister.

Thus Hun Sen straddles two key fault lines in Cambodian politics:
association with the Khmer Rouge, and also with the feared and mistrusted
neighbour Vietnam.

CNRP leader Kem Sokha, who is deputy to the party’s self-exiled president
Sam Rainsy, has tried to capitalize on both these chinks in Hun Sen’s
armour.

It was Kem Sokha’s threat at the start of the campaign to bring several
former Khmer Rouge members of the CPP government to justice that prompted
Hun Sen to warn of civil war if the CNRP wins the election next month.

But when late last month Kem Sokha made a roundabout attack on Hun Sen’s
Vietnamese links, the opposition leader appears to have played into the
prime minister’s hands.

In a couple of speeches delivered to rallies in provincial cities, Kem
Sokha said he found it hard to believe that the Khmer Rouge’s most
notorious torture and killing centre, Tuol Sleng, which is now a museum,
was in fact a relic of the genocide.

He said that surely the Khmer Rouge would have destroyed evidence of their
atrocities before retreating.

Kem Sokha said he thinks Tuol Sleng was staged by the invading Vietnamese
after 1979.

Hun Sen’s response was to have his CPP followers, who hold 90 seats in the
123-seat National Assembly, rush through legislation last week making it
illegal to deny crimes committed by the Khmer Rouge.

And last weekend survivors of Tuol Sleng, where an estimated 12,000 men,
women and children were killed, organized rallies against Kem Sokha in the
capital Phnom Penh and several other cities around the country.

However, civil society groups which monitored the rallies claim they were
organized by the Hun Sun government. Government officials are said to have
paid people the equivalent of about $10 to attend and used government
vehicles to ferry people to and from the meeting sites.

Also pushed through the National Assembly last Friday was a motion
expelling the 28 opposition CNRP members.

The justification was that this is a new party formed by the amalgamation
last year of the Human Rights Party and the Sam Rainsy Party. The CPP
members claimed it is unconstitutional for them to sit as CNRP members when
they were elected under their old banners.

[email protected]


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