| Huh? What did I do? |
Hun Manet, son of Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen, and a West Point-educated lieutenant general in the Royal Cambodian Air Force, meets with the Sun Editorial Board during a visit to Lowell, answering questions about controversy in Lowell about his visit, and rights of Cambodian protesters.
Cambodian leader baffled by protests, city denunciation (Watch video)
Lowell Sun | 16 April 2016
LOWELL -- Hun Manet, a
lieutenant general in the Cambodian military, said Saturday he was
"puzzled" by opposition to his visit to this country, but portrayed the
criticism as coming from a vocal minority [sic!] who closed themselves off to
an exchange of ideas during his stop.
Manet's stop in Lowell comes at the end of a four-state American
trip coinciding with the Cambodian New Year, a trip he said has "not
been a success" due to Cambodian-Americans in Lowell and Long Beach,
Calif., speaking out against him.
Many critics connect Manet, son of Prime Minister Hun Sen, to
human-rights and corruption allegations that have long been made against
the Cambodian government, as well as to the deadly Khmer Rouge regime
that far precedes him but was the reason many sought refuge in the
United States.
Manet, who is soft-spoken and well-polished as a graduate of the U.S.
Military Academy, repeatedly criticized that opposition as
closed-minded and not representative of all Cambodians in the United
States [sic!].
"When you strike, that's when you shut off ideas already," Manet
said of protesters in an hourlong interview with The Sun Editorial
Board.
Manet has been met with protests throughout his visit. In Long
Beach, Cambodian-Americans were urged to not participate in a Cambodian
New Year parade because Manet was scheduled to take part. He withdrew.
In Lowell, hundreds of the city's estimated 30,000
Cambodian-Americans filled City Hall to urge councilors to not
officially recognize Manet's visit.
The City Council voted last month to "denounce" the visit, to not
have officials meet with him at City Hall, and to reject a gift from
the Cambodian government.
"I have no chance of defending myself," Manet said.
Manet appeared stung by the rejection, as well as confused that
the city would not accept a statue of Jayavarmin VII, a king of the
Khmer Empire centuries ago and a beloved figure in Cambodian culture.
Earlier this month, several experts on Cambodia told The Sun they were not surprised by the opposition to Manet's visit in Lowell and Long Beach, the two largest Cambodian communities in the United States. An author of a book on Cambodia under Hun Sun said the ruling party has been "engaging in a charm offensive" in Cambodian communities abroad in recent years.
But Manet said his trip was meant to spread word of strides
Cambodia has made in recent years, specifically that it is among the
fastest-growing economies in the world and among the fastest in
eliminating poverty.
"We have moved from a poor country to a low middle-class country," he said.
Manet traveled with a delegation of a few dozen people, including
top representatives in commerce, education, tourism and other areas
where he hoped to make connections with Cambodians living in America. He
appeared to anticipate questions about human rights and freedom of
speech, even offering photos that he said showed how some government
security officials had been injured at out-of-control protests.
Manet defended the imprisonment of a media director for the
opposition party, the Cambodia National Rescue Party, and of an
opposition lawmaker. The lawmaker, Um San An, had incited potential
violence by posting false maps of a sensitive subject in Cambodia:
border disputes with Vietnam.
Protesting against the government is acceptable in Cambodia, Manet said, as long as it isn't violent.
Manet, who is in his late 30s, bridges two worlds. He has a
Western education but is the oldest son of a prime minister who has been
in office for 30 years and has been sharply criticized by human-rights
watchdogs. He has been speculated by some to be his father's
heir-apparent.
Asked whether he has a future as a potential prime minister,
Manet said he hasn't thought about political office. Instead, he said he
focuses on his obligations now as a lieutenant general.
"To handle that is a daunting task already," he said. He also
deflected a question about whether he gives suggestions to his father.
"He has all the bright minds behind him," Manet said with a smile.
The interview often returned back to the protests at City Hall
several weeks ago that, like those in Long Beach, have marred Manet's
trip.
Manet lamented the latest turn in relations between Cambodia and
its largest communities abroad. He said he would work to show Cambodians
in the United States the good that Cambodia has done to even out what
he called unbalanced news reaching Cambodians abroad.
"I give people the truth, from our perspective, what the
government has done," he said. Referring to the Lowell protests, he
added: "Two hundred people does not represent the opinion of the
people."

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ReplyDeleteSounded just like his father when asked to resign a few years back - "What did I do wrong?"...
ReplyDelete"When you strike, that's when you shut off ideas already," Manet said. That's right Hun Manet, and throwing people in jail for expressing ther opinions is really opening up ideas, doesn't it? And you object to people hurling verbal abuses at you and your supporters? How about the 2 opposition politicians who were beaten up by your thugs? Wasn't that a violent protest? If you want to be balanced then be so, we are tired of your propaganda.
ReplyDeleteBrought up, raised, molded, fostered, trained, and indoctrinated to be nobody but the YUON/Viet's slave: look and listen very carefully to every single word and vocabulary infested with propaganda that Hun Manet has been using in any interview including the most recent one with VOA...Could any ordinary Khmer young boy of his generation do that?
ReplyDeleteHe know what the problem is but act like he was know nothing that why most of Khmer get mad with him and He was scare to tell the truth that is real problem face to Cambodia right now. They try to ignore all about YUON .It like nothing happening at all with YUON than I think the problem will create more and more because of YUON. It doesn't matter how Cambodian government say.
ReplyDeleteHe said that he was not given opportunity to defend himself. Well, hundreds of victims, including legal representatives of Cambodian parliamentarians, were accused and jailed without having opportunities to defend themselves either. So, it hurts when it has happened to him. Let's play fair and the Cambodians will treat him fair, too.
ReplyDeleteHun Manet, LT. General and PhD
ReplyDeleteYou are truly a spin doctor.
You spinned the interviewers of the Sun newspaper who are less informed about Khmer problems and politics with your half thuth and half lies.
You tried to either cover up the root causes of the Khmer problems or you are not educated enough to understand them.
For an example, why did you not tell the interviewers your father 's regime uses Yuon drawn / approved map ?
Dr. and General Hun Manet, if you really want Khmer unity and peace, it is very simple,
just denounce Hanoi.