How the nation became a graveyard for democracy
May Titthara / Khmer Times Share:
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*In two months, three presidents of political parties in Cambodia have been
arrested and detained. May Titthara speaks to US-based academic Ear Sophal.*

*KT:* Could you please give an overview of the current situation in
Cambodia politics?

*Mr Sophal:* I think we’re back to square one or close to it. Twenty-five
years after UNTAC and it looks like game over. UNTAC lost. The last vestige
of western political liberalism has been extinguished from Cambodia. Rest
in peace, democracy in Cambodia. It was a nice one-generation ride.

*KT:* What do you think about the arrest of Kem Sokha?

*Mr Sophal: *It’s terrible. I guess it means the authorities are going all
the way with respect to destroying Cambodian democracy. For them, 25 years
is enough. One generation. The end. After 2013 and 2017, it became clear
that no matter what was done to the opposition, it only got stronger by
gaining votes, so the answer became let’s just decapitate the opposition.
We’ve exiled its former leader, now we’ll jail its current leader on some
“smoking gun” treason charge. Well, it’s not clear his supporters will
consider that to be credible stuff. They’ve known that tricks like this
have been used since 1995. Back then it was a voice recording about an
attempt on someone with an antique rifle.

*KT:* As you know, the accusation goes back a long time and has just been
revived. What do you think is behind the Kem Sokha arrest?

*Mr Sophal: *It’s like old wine in a new bottle. You can always come up
with some crazy reason. I remember back in 1995, it was Prince Sirivudh and
an antique rifle and alleged murder plot that was audio recorded. It’s
always the same tricks.

*KT:* Why has Mr Sokha been arrested at this time?

*Mr Sophal: *Because someone needs to show Cambodia who is boss. It’s time
to crush the opposition in that person’s view. In Cambodia, might makes
right.

*KT:* Do you think Mr Sokha’s arrest is an application of the law or a
political trick? And why?

*Mr Sophal: *It’s not the rule of law. More precisely it’s the rule of man.

*KT:* If he is found guilty, what is the future of the CNRP?

*Mr Sophal: *Bleak. One leader was exiled and had to resign. The other was
arrested and will no doubt soon be convicted of treason in a show trial.
The CNRP will remain alive, like Funcinpec remained alive after July 1997.
When your leader is exiled or arrested, how can you operate?

*KT:* What does such an arrest mean for the ruling party?

*Mr Sophal: *What it means is getting rid of the ruling party’s biggest
domestic enemy. The charismatic leader of the CNRP has been put away under
lock and key. Hooray, the ruling party can sleep at night. Or can it? Won’t
this infuriate his supporters? They’ve now made a political prisoner out of
him. Will Kem Sokha be Cambodia’s Nelson Mandela? If anything happens to
him, he’ll be the martyr and the Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino of Cambodia.

*KT:* Is it fair enough for opposition parties who have no power to take
revenge?

*Mr Sophal: *Not sure what kind of revenge they can enact. It’s not as if
they have guns. They come to a fight bringing loudspeakers when the other
side has guns. Might makes right in Cambodia. In love and politics all is
fair. The only way to ensure victory for the ruling party is to eliminate
the CNRP completely before the July 2018 election. The opposition party,
even hollowed out, might be able to get votes, and that would be a huge
embarrassment if they somehow won despite being decapitated.

*KT:* How will this affect civil society sentiment?

*Mr Sophal: *Civil society is already in a funk from all the beatings it
has received — metaphorically and sometimes literally — and this is going
to further depress them. Civil society’s main allies, The Cambodia Daily,
Radio Free Asia, Voice of America, Voice of Democracy, National Democratic
Institute, etc., are under assault so they probably feel like someone’s
punched them in the gut. Civil society is the soul of Cambodia. Without
civil society the country is morally bankrupt. It will be like Year Zero
again. In any case, who is next? The Phnom Penh Post allegedly has received
visits from the tax man, and I know for a
fact that Transparency International Cambodia has too. Is Khmer Times too
free-thinking? Time to go to a re-education camp.

*KT:* Do you think the upcoming election will be free and fair?

*Mr Sophal: *No, it will not be free and fair. They’ve never been except
for 1993. They are already the un-freest and un-fairest, if such words even
exist, of all. You cannot have a skating competition where your boyfriend
hires a goon to go and club the ankle of your opponent, as happened in 1994
to figure skater Nancy Kerrigan. It’s just not right, not fair, and not a
free competition.

*KT:* In what way can we rescue such a bad situation in politics right now?

*Mr Sophal: *Release Kem Sokha, permit the return of Sam Rainsy to politics
without conditions, withdraw the $6 million bogus tax bill to the Cambodia
Daily (I mean, why not $60 million or $600 million or for that matter $6
billion?). Who doesn’t know the Daily has run at a loss for years and years
and its foreign reporters get paid $1,000 a month since the 1990s. This is
less than a high official spends on cognac and ladies of the night at an
average dinner these days. Stop harassing NDI, RFA, VOA, VOD, and all the
radio stations broadcasting them. Expelling the messenger does not solve
the problems people face. The problems are still there. They don’t go away
because no one is reporting on them. They will still be there tomorrow,
next week, next month, and next year, when the election takes place, and
even after the elections have come and gone. These are big problems that
will take everyone’s imagination and ingenuity to solve, including the
opposition’s.

*KT:* Will the ruling party follow the example of the Thai junta if the
political situation gets worse?

*Mr Sophal: *Who knows? The Bangkok junta does its thing. Phnom Penh does
its thing. They learn from each other. Democracy is not the problem. It’s
the solution.

*KT:* How do you evaluate democracy in Cambodia now?

*Mr Sophal: *Democracy is dead in Cambodia if things go on like this. Long
live Cambodian democracy.

*KT:* It seems the ruling party has become more and more concerned about
the CNRP as the national election approaches. Why is that?

*Mr Sophal: *They are obviously concerned that despite doing everything
they could to neutralise the CNRP from 2013 to 2017, things only got worse
for the ruling party. It’s like Newton’s third law of motion: For every
action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. And so as civil society is
destroyed, it will fight back.

*KT:* The leaked document accused the US of being behind a CNRP plan to
topple the government, what can you say about that?

*Mr Sophal: *To base this on some anonymous Facebook by “Kon Khmer” or
whoever else is totally insane. It’s clearly the style of fake news
operation the Russians have perfected; but it’s an old communist style of
operations called kompromat. Under the Khmer Rouge, everyone was a spy on
everyone, the better to compromise them and send them to their deaths. Sick
stuff. How is it some lady in Poipet can be hauled into court for
commenting and yet all these anonymous folks out there can do whatever they
want and the authorities just believe whatever? Could it be that it is just
the right hand and the left hand of the same person guiding a false flag
operation?

*KT:* What’s your view on the leaked document recently attacking NGOs
funded by the US?

*Mr Sophal: *The NDI has done great work in Cambodia for years promoting
democracy and not just with the opposition but with the ruling party. The
ruling party just conveniently forgot all about it. The truth is, anyone
can be labelled the enemy these days, and you can create a virtual stoning
that leads to their expulsion from Cambodia. This is not the rule of law,
it’s using the colour of law to do whatever you want.

*KT:* What do you think about the ruling party trying to put pressure on
the opposition party, NGOs and the media?

*Mr Sophal: *I think It’s terrible. Everyone is trying to help Cambodia,
make it a better, more democratic country that respects human rights.
Instead, they’re being kicked out. We may have disagreements on how to get
there, but we could always agree to disagree, until now. There is something
fundamentally wrong when we can’t do this any more.

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