Touch Vibol, president of the Cambodia National Rescue Foundation, which opposes the visit, said Mr. Hun Sen’s son had no business preaching unity.“He is the wrong person to preach about working together when his ruling party has continuously harassed and intimidated any opposition to them,” he said in an online message.
Hun Manet Pulls Out of US Parade Amid Protest
Cambodia Daily | 28 March 2016
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s eldest son, Hun Manet, announced on Sunday
that he would not be attending a Khmer New Year parade he was invited to
in Long Beach, California, in the face of vocal opposition from some of
the community’s Cambodian-Americans.
According to the Long Beach Press-Telegram, Lieutenant General Manet
was invited to join next month’s parade by the Cambodian Coordinating
Council, a local group that organizes community events, following a
request from the city’s Cambodian Consulate.
But on Tuesday, the paper reported, some 200 protesters demonstrated
outside the Long Beach City Council building to have it denounce Lt.
Gen. Manet’s visit and to get the premier’s son disinvited.
The protesters threatened to boycott the planned festivities if Lt. Gen. Manet showed up.
The pushback against the prime minister’s son followed a protest staged by some Cambodian-Americans against Mr. Hun Sen himself during a meeting between U.S. President Barack Obama and Asean leaders in California last month. Members of the local Cambodian community—the largest outside of Cambodia—accuse Mr. Hun Sen and his family of running a kleptocracy rife with human rights abuses.
On Sunday, Mr. Manet took to his Facebook page to announce that he
would not be joining the parade in order to avoid a confrontation
between local factions for and against him.
“I and my working group have decided not to participate in the parade
because we don’t want to see a conflict break out between Khmer and
Khmer, and especially to avoid any violence between supporters and
non-supporters during the event, which would cause our race to lose
advantage,” he said in his post.
“Khmer New Year is a special occasion for our Khmer people and should
unite us in a desire to support our race by working together to show
the Khmer culture and civilization to the American people and other
citizens,” he added. “It is not the time for supporters and
non-supporters to show off their muscles, because it shows a break
between Khmer and Khmer and gives our race a bad reputation.”
In an interview with local media later in the day, Lt. Gen. Manet,
who has been put in charge of the CPP’s international outreach efforts,
clarified that he was not calling off his trip to the U.S. altogether.
“I will travel to the United States of America during the upcoming
Khmer New Year as scheduled, but I will not join the parade,” he said.
Lt. Gen. Manet added that he would be attending other programs, but did not elaborate.
Touch Vibol, president of the Cambodia National Rescue Foundation,
which opposes the visit, said Mr. Hun Sen’s son had no business
preaching unity.
“He is the wrong person to preach about working together when his
ruling party has continuously harassed and intimidated any opposition to
them,” he said in an online message.
“They don’t work together to solve the border issues, illegal land
grabs, forced homelessness, institutionalized corruption and other human
rights violations. He represents a party that has proven to only care
about self-enrichment and preservation.”
Mr. Vibol said Mr. Manet was also wrong to suggest that there was a
major split within Long Beach’s Cambodian community, claiming that the
CPP’s supporters were in the clear minority.
“He seems to think we’re divided and fighting amongst ourselves when that is very far from the truth,” he said.
“The super-majority are united against him and his father’s rule. We
will continue to fight, argue and resist him and his father. Our
communities here are doing just fine without the ruling party attempting
to meddle in our daily lives.”
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