PM The Stooge praises VN involvement
In his first public remarks of the year, Prime Minister Hun Sen
yesterday took pains to recount his experience under the Khmer Rouge
and thanked Vietnam for overthrowing the brutal communist regime.
Speaking at the inauguration of a Vietnamese hospital, in the
presence of visiting Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, Hun Sen
said he considers January 7, 1979, as “the second birthday” of the
Cambodian people.
“Thanks for the party, the people and the government especially –
Vietnamese volunteer soldiers – who joined to liberate Cambodians from
the Pol Pot genocidal regime and helped to settle problems allowing
Cambodians to survive,” he said.
[sic!]
“Those who forget January 7, that’s their matter,” he said. But the
day ensured that Phnom Penh could progress from a “deserted place into
the most populous city”.
Hun Sen said yesterday had special meaning to him as it was the
anniversary of the day in 1976 when he and his wife were separated by
the regime. His wife, he claimed, was ultimately taken away to dig a
channel at a worksite – a fate he would not discover until they were
reunited in February 1979.
“At this time and this hour [in 1976], I did not know whether my wife was dead or alive,” he said.
The hospital inauguration was followed later in the day by a closed-door meeting between the two premiers.
Speaking yesterday evening, Hun Sen’s spokesman, Eang Sophalleth,
said the pair agreed to boost transit connections, tourism,
telecommunications and banking, as well as agriculture.
Additionally, Nguyen Tan Dung agreed to help renovate National Road
78 in Ratanakkiri – where Vietnamese companies boast vast holdings – and
sell 200 megawatts of power to Cambodia.
Also yesterday, representatives of the embattled Khmer Kampuchea Krom
community sent a letter to Hun Sen urging him to raise the issue of
mistreatment of Khmers living in Vietnam’s lower Mekong Delta region.
In the letter, they raise the case of two monks and six civilians who
are now in prison after holding protests calling for the construction
of a Khmer school.
No comments:
Post a Comment