Rainsy, premier to ring in KNY
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy is set to join Prime Minister Hun
Sen at the Angkor Archaelogical Park to attend Khmer New Year
festivities together for the first time after being invited by the prime
minister’s son, Hun Many.
The invitation from Many – who heads the Union of Youth Federations
of Cambodia, which organises the annual event – came just a day after
Cambodia National Rescue Party deputy president Kem Sokha was brought
before a judge for questioning over alleged incitement of demonstrators
following the 2013 election.
While analysts said the move was a display of unity in tense times,
Sokha, perhaps unsurprisingly, received no invitation to attend,
according to one party official who requested anonymity.
“The proceedings of the court are a separate issue and not related to
the culture of dialogue,” Hun Sen, who has publicly called on the court
to take action against Sokha, said.
He added, however, that the two leaders had in fact discussed Sokha’s
case and that a “package of law and politics” had been proposed, though
he did not elaborate.
“I would like to praise the [court’s] effort to enforce procedure
according to the rule of law. We cannot interfere with the power of the
court,” he said. “This affair is a story about the court and Kem Sokha,
not a story about Hun Sen and His Excellency Sam Rainsy.”
Sokha’s lawyer, Meng Sopheary, said yesterday that she was not sure if the court would drop its case against him.
“We have not yet received a letter from the court, so we don’t know
whether or not the court has ended the case. The court has just said
that it finished its questioning,” he added.
Ly Sophana, deputy prosecutor of Phnom Penh Municipal Court, who
summonsed Sokha for a seven-hour questioning session on Wednesday,
declined to comment.
In an email, Rainsy said his and Hun Sen’s Siem Reap trip was “a
message of Khmer unity to the nation on the occasion of the Cambodian
New Year”.
Ou Virak, president of the Future Forum think-tank, said that whether
Sokha was invited to accompany Rainsy and Hun Sen was irrelevant
compared with the so-called culture of dialogue, which he said was
“undemocratic”.
“In democratic countries, a ‘culture of dialogue’ means a culture of
competition. It’s not supposed to be sweet-talking,” he said, adding
that the court had acted as a political tool of Hun Sen over Sokha’s
questioning.
Ouk Serei Sopheak, a freelance consultant on governance issues, said
the court case “could be a warning shot” from Hun Sen to pressure Sokha
to “soften his stance” on the negotiations between the two parties.
Attending the Khmer New Year celebrations together could provide a good platform to smooth relations, he added.
“It is a high-profile meeting in the eyes of hundreds of thousands of
people . . . to send a strong message of unity, of national solidarity,
and perhaps also to smooth out the Kem Sokha issue . . . For me, I
think it is good that the two leaders have such a popular time to talk
about serious issues.”
Hun Sen was not attempting to exacerbate any existing divisions
within the CNRP, as the premier realises that outside interference would
only draw the two opposition leaders closer together, he said.
“I think that [the ruling Cambodian People’s Party] and the prime
minister have already realised that the unity between Sam Rainsy and Kem
Sokha is a political unity, so it’s very difficult to destroy.
“If there is any disunity, this will come from inside the CNRP itself . . . which I don’t see now.”
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