Pseng-Pseng
Hun Sen Summons the Non-Imbecile
“Of
course, Samdech Hun Sen has played a clear role in encouraging the royalists
and Sihanoukists to join forces and not continue to be divided.”
Funcinpec president-to-be Prince Norodom Ranariddh, 3 January
2015, The Cambodia Daily
“My re-entry this time,
there is no payment from the CPP. I received nothing… no blue light, no green
light, no red light; I have not received anything…”
Prince Norodom Ranariddh, 6 January 2015, Radio Free Asia
“Only the imbecile does
not change their mind. [Like my father] I change to suit circumstances. I
change… [because] circumstances change…”
Prince Norodom Ranariddh, 6 January 2015, Radio Free Asia
“I spoke to Samdech Arun
this morning, saying, ‘Samdech, I seem to receive a party without a
headquarters, don’t I?’ Samdech Arun said ‘There is no headquarters because His
Excellency Nhiek Bun Chhay sold it already.’”
Prince Norodom Ranariddh, 6 January 2015, The Cambodia Daily
“If one day they think
of uniting all within the current regime, I will very warmly welcome them.”
Prince Norodom Ranariddh, 6 January 2015, Radio Free Asia
“They [royal families]
are not really concerned about the nation… I want to say that if we speak only
the royal families [for succession plan] we won’t go very far. But we must take
something as a basis for the nation for the monarchy that is the people.”
Prince Norodom Ranariddh, 6 January 2015, Radio Free Asia
It is uncertain
when Prince Ranariddh is lying or telling the truth. He initially claims Hun
Sen brings him into limelight only to refute it three days later that the
latter has no hand in his rebound. Then again, it is quite possible he is not
an imbecile who cannot tell different stories to suit different circumstances.
Whether or
not Ranariddh suffers from temporary amnesia, Hun Sen stands to benefit from
his rebound. Ranariddh can divert the CNRP’s attention, if not the public’s,
away from pounding on major on-going problems the government is unable or unwilling,
to solve: land disputes, logging, corruption, etc… Though it is unlikely to
deliver Hun Sen fatal blows, its relentless pursuit has increasingly become a
source of annoyance beyond Hun Sen’s tolerance level. Furthermore, Funcinpec may
once again become a potential force to split anti-CPP votes, which will require
the CNRP attention and resources.
The benefits
to Hun Sen could be so great that the prince’s re-emergence is anything but by chance.
There are Hun Sen’s fingerprints all over Ranariddh’s defibrillator.
For an effective
diversion, the animated prince, who says he is also mercurial like his father,
can still serenade some opinion leaders. For others, it is difficult to
envisage Ranariddh will return with any substance. After his father won the
1993 elections for him, he has squandered all the 58 seats plus the party’s
headquarters prime property. Then again, he may now change from a loser – as
circumstances now change – unless he is an imbecile.
Resuscitated
Funcinpec will cut into anti-CPP votes unless Hun Sen for some reason pulls the
plug on Ranariddh before the next elections. Ranariddh says he is not going to
break up any party’s votes – but his political mission is to unite everyone under
Hun Sen’s wings. Though Ranariddh is unsure how many seats he will get, he says
he will get some. If Hun Sen believed that the CNRP seats are unaffected, in
the zero sum game the seats would have to come from the CPP. Does Hun Sen
execute a strategy that gives away some of CPP seats to Funcinpec? Unlikely,
especially when Hun Sen has a track record of accurately predicting election
results before vote counting completes.
Also Ranariddh’s
rebound may be just short and sweet; it comes without any succession plan in
place for Funcinpec. In response to a prompt that ageing CPP leaders are
bringing in their grown-up children to takeover, Ranariddh says he has Cambodian
people to succeed him, which is not exactly a vote of concern for an effective long-term
planning. This means the comeback is for personal, not national interest as
claimed.
For such control
and benefit, it must cost Hun Sen something; only he and Ranariddh know exactly
how much. Ranariddh denies rumours that spread like a bushfire that Hun Sen
pays him five million bucks for the stint. As he is not an imbecile who is
unyielding to changing circumstances, it is uncertain if he is now telling the
truth.
Ung Bun Ang
10i15
Parthian Shot
“This may sound a bit
pompous but I would prefer to die standing than to live on my knees.”
Stephane
Charbonnier, editor-in-chief of the satirical French magazine Charlie Hebdo, 2012.
Going by the
pen name “Charb”, he was killed along with three of his colleagues after gunmen
had stormed their offices on 7 January, 2014.
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