See Honorable Exit Strategy for Hun Sen, Commentary by Theary C. Seng, 17 Sept. 2013
Promising Culture of Dialogue
to usher in reconciliation
to usher in reconciliation
Theary C. Seng
(Kirirom, 27 April 2015 PM, edited and expanded 29 April 2015 PM)
(Kirirom, 27 April 2015 PM, edited and expanded 29 April 2015 PM)
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COMMENTARY
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This is a companion piece to the commentary Honorable
Exit Strategy for Hun Sen that I wrote on 17
Sept. 2013, almost two months after the July 2013 elections during a period of
high hopes for regime change, what I called the “Season of Cambodia Flourishing”.
That September
commentary has received 1.9 million hits, a reflection of the desire for and
curiosity at the possibility.
When the Cambodia
Spring turned autumnal crimson in the spilled blood of the January crackdown, I
really believed Hun Sen had missed his final opportunity to redeem his past by
stepping down peacefully.
However, Sam Rainsy is
adept in reading the political environment, understanding fundamentally the firm
anti-Hun Sen sentiments across social and political classes, across the
village-city divides. He knows that Hun
Sen knows this as well, despite the posturing and the accelerated difficulty in
political negotiation and the growing public impatience.
In December 2013, Hun
Sen reached his political nadir and must have seriously contemplated stepping
down had he not been summoned to Vietnam by Big Brother for “political
encouragement”. He returned home
politically armored and militarily confident, ready to shed blood. In early January 2014, blood did flow.
On 22 July 2014, the Parties
reached a political agreement, a tentative deal providing the platform for the culture
of dialogue then yet a formless embryo to be given substance. Serious questions were raised regarding the
wisdom of Sam Rainsy’s appeasement of Hun Sen’s signature blustering and
arrests of activists and CNRP members, whether it will not be politics as
usual, as the technical groups worked to insert the National Election Committee
into the Constitution.
Serious questions were
also raised in certain quarters regarding Sam Rainsy’s wisdom at his
self-effacement in giving in to the demand of Kem Sokha to be the
Vice-President of the National Assembly, a position that comes with a
substantial annual budget and other perquisites, while he, the party leader, remains
only a parliamentarian. In a country
where positional power and titles are still admired, even if quietly and
emptied of substance, and humility scoffed at, it was an untenable
situation. After some time, he realized
he will need a stronger formal position, outside the Government, in the
National Assembly, if he is to implement the culture of dialogue with Hun Sen,
and retain his authority vis-à-vis his still-yet fragile CNRP partner Kem Sokha
and party members, particularly in the unknown terrain of implementing the
culture of dialogue. Thus, we saw the
adept creation of the Minority Leader post where he and Hun Sen in theory could
negotiate on equal footing.
Through it all, what is
noteworthy was Sam Rainsy’s adamant adherence to the culture of dialogue in
spite of the mounting criticisms from otherwise friendly voices, the tepid
reception from his CNRP deputy and other members, and the testing by Hun Sen’s gamesmanship. At the end (which is really only the
beginning), however, his patience and self-effacement paid off. He got the NEC, and as of a few days ago, Hun
Sen’s admission that he could lose and Sam Rainsy could be Prime Minister, a
first for Hun Sen and not something to sneeze at.
Hun Sen is now given
another rare and FINAL opportunity by and only with Sam Rainsy. I am hopeful of and support this
"Culture of Dialogue", as the offer of reconciliation by Sam Rainy is
genuine and I believe Hun Sen knows it's genuine (which is important and needed
for it to be long-lasting).
This offer is genuine and
Hun Sen knows it’s genuine for the following reasons combined:
First, these former
political foes know each other well and intimately during these past
twenty-five years.
Second, the offer is
genuine because it is personally and politically costly. Sam Rainsy is extending a fig leaf of peace
to a man who has repeatedly tried to kill him and in March 1997 almost
succeeded. Sam Rainsy has to convince
continually his CNRP partner and other members and the general public that it’s
worth the risk.
But mainly, the offer
is genuine and Hun Sen believes it because Sam Rainsy has been consistent and
insistent on this culture of dialogue and has willingly, without
qualifications, shared the credit Hun Sen for its inception.
Moreover, Sam Rainsy
has time and again showed that he is a man for reconciliation and not revenge,
first with King Sihanouk, then the enfolding of HRP (comprising of disgruntled
former SRP members) into the CNRP (and those former disgruntled SRP-turned-HRP
members now holding senior CNRP positions), and most recently his public photo
with former legal nemesis Hor Namhong.
And during the recent political negotiation process, there were many
moments when the CPP greatly tested the strength of Sam Rainsy’s conviction for
this culture of dialogue, some identified above. But rather than going with the expediency of
the moment by breaking the dialogue, Sam Rainsy ironed out the differences
behind the scenes with Hun Sen, oftentimes via Sar Kheng, even as he also
appeased his CNRP members internally, all this time absorbing the public
misunderstanding.
However, we still need
Kem Sokha and civil society individuals like Brad Adams and myself to put
pressure on Hun Sen to know deeply what is at stake for him and his family by
reminding him of his bloody legacy which are documented and potentially part of
a legal brief.
Yes, the stakes are also
high for Sam Rainsy and the CNRP, but not as high as for Hun Sen.
What is at stake for
Hun Sen and his clan?
First and foremost, the
fear of reprisals.
The main reprisal is
international law catching up with him. What
appears inconceivable, say, five years ago, are conceivable—lawsuits in the
international arena, and with regime change, in the domestic courts. The shift came dramatically with the Human
Rights Watch report documenting 30 years of Hun Sen. The most unknown and notorious of his crimes
are those of the K-5 genocide. The
report helps substantially to inform the international press and Cambodia
watchers in bolstering what I and a few others have been saying publicly and
what Cambodians know experientially regarding the Vietnamization of Cambodia
and the crimes under occupation overshadowed by the crimes of the Khmer Rouge. Additionally, the report gives further
strength to the possibility of lawsuits at the International Criminal Court
represented by Morton Sklar and Richard Rogers.
In one masterstroke,
Hun Sen could make all serious reprisals obsolete by accepting Sam Rainsy’s
offer of reconciliation by genuinely reforming and making way to step down
peacefully. Any lawsuit will be greatly
deflated with a genuine reconciliation.
Second, Hun Sen’s bloody legacy of the past 30
years can be redeemed; his children’s future is given a cleaner start. And this can only happened with reconciliation
and the peaceful transfer of power.
Even if hopeful, the
situation is still new and premature to ascertain whether it will be a South
Africa-like transformative moment, whether Hun Sen and Sam Rainsy could be
Cambodia's Nelson Mandela and Frederik Willem De Klerk. The question is for Hun Sen. The redemption is for Hun Sen alone, even if
the fruits will flow to the larger Khmer society. There is no one in the present or the foreseeable
future besides Sam Rainsy who could make it happen. It could be Hun Sen’s masterstroke of redemption
or the final nail in his coffin of national betrayal with possible legal
consequences. The choice is his alone,
even if Sam Rainsy is doing all he can to facilitate and ease the making of
this choice.
In December 2013, Hun Sen reached his political nadir and must have seriously contemplated stepping down had he not been summoned to Vietnam by Big Brother for “political encouragement”.
ReplyDelete---------------
How did Ms. Theary Seng knew Vietnam summoned Mr. Hun Sen? Perhaps he requested to meet for support? I viewed it as a political assurance, "If I make a move against the opposition, you [Vietnam] will not flip and use this as an excuse to back the opposition for new and more favors."
Mr. Hun Sen is very smart and that why he always wins. I am smart too and that's how I figured how his past moves. You folks really need to stop being infantile or you will always lose.
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Moreover, Sam Rainsy has time and again showed that he is a man for reconciliation and not revenge, first with King Sihanouk, then the enfolding of HRP (comprising of disgruntled former SRP members) into the CNRP (and those former disgruntled SRP-turned-HRP members now holding senior CNRP positions)
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Wrong analysis. Former HRP members holding senior CNRP position were part of the merge deal or no merge. Both parties were weak and desperate. Further more, I bet these very same members help Kem Sokha to seize the CNRP presidency from Scam Rainsy for Kem Sokha.