Hun Sen Heads To US for Asean Summit
Cambodia Daily | 15 February 2016
After weeks of build up—including threats of protests in the U.S. and
counterprotests at home—Prime Minister Hun Sen will join regional
leaders today for the U.S.-Asean Summit in Rancho Mirage, California.
Facing government threats of anti-CNRP demonstrations in Cambodia if
the prime minister is met by protesters during his visit, opposition
leader Sam Rainsy has sought to distance his party from activists
organizing rallies against Mr. Hun Sen as the prime minister makes his
first official visit to the U.S.
However, as Mr. Hun Sen left Cambodia Sunday morning bound for the
Sunnylands resort, where U.S. President Barack Obama will preside over a
two-day summit with Asean leaders, a CPP spokesman continued to
maintain that a planned protest against the prime minister was being
sponsored by the CNRP.
“I wish to state that the opposition party has organized the
demonstration to protest against Prime Minister Hun Sen, but they just
used the private names for the demonstration,” said CPP spokesman Chhim
Phal Virun.
The spokesman said Mr. Rainsy and his deputy, Kem Sokha, would invariably deny any role in the planned protests.
Late last month, Mr. Hun Sen warned of counterdemonstrations if he
were to be met by protesters in the U.S.—a threat that was particularly
worrisome to the CNRP because a similar warning from the prime minister
in October presaged the brutal beating of two opposition lawmakers at a
protest outside the National Assembly.
“If you think that demonstrating against me is useful, please follow
your heart, as that’s your expertise,” Mr. Hun Sen wrote in a Facebook
comment on January 25.
“What you have to remember, and to tell your leaders inside and
outside the country…is to recognize the right of my supporters to
demonstrate against your leaders inside the country,” he added.
“So a demonstration inside the country [of Cambodia] has the
possibility of happening against the opposition party leaders,” Mr. Hun
Sen concluded.
Ruling party supporters have since made more explicit threats. One of
them, a soldier and prominent pro-CPP Facebook personality, warned Mr.
Sokha, the deputy opposition leader, to leave the country to avoid the
possibility of being beaten or having his house set on fire.
The last time Mr. Hun Sen warned of anti-CNRP protests in October,
military units staged public protests against Mr. Sokha as CPP lawmakers
summarily stripped him of his leadership position in parliament.
Protesters also surrounded Mr. Sokha’s house for hours, with authorities
failing to intervene.
In response to the latest security threats, Mr. Sokha sent a letter
to Interior Minister Sar Kheng on Friday asking for the ministry to
provide protection to opposition leaders and lawmakers, according to
CNRP spokesman Yem Ponhearith.
Por Phak, spokesman for the Interior Ministry’s general secretariat,
said the letter had been received by the ministry but was still on its
way to Mr. Kheng.
“The request is being processed,” Lieutenant General Phak said.
“What we can be sure of is everyone is protected under the law.”
“The Ministry of Interior is responsible for the safety and security of everyone, not only the CNRP,” he added.
In an interview with Radio France International on Saturday, Mr.
Rainsy said the party could not be held responsible for the activities
of all Cambodian-Americans, and noted that peaceful protest was not a
crime.
“We have to recognize that the USA has tens of thousands of Khmer
people living there, but they have many groups and the groups have
different ideas and opinions and this is the right of those people to do
what they want to do,” he said.
“I think that people have a right to demonstrate,” Mr. Rainsy said,
adding that the opposition party had already told its supporters to
refrain from taking part in the planned protest.
“For the CNRP, we want to harness our feelings to work on the
upcoming elections,” he said. “And we don’t want to do any activity that
is not in the interest of our priority.”
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