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លោក ហ៊ុន សែន ថា មិនអត់ឱន ដល់បក្សប្រឆាំង ដែលថា កូនច្បងលោក ជាកូន របស់ ថ្នាក់ដឹកនាំ វៀតណាម | Hun Sen says he will not forgive opposition party for saying his first born son is really son of Vietnamese leader
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Cambodian Opposition Leader Expresses 'Deep Regret' Over Renegade Facebook Post
RFA | 14 June 2016
Cambodian opposition party chief Sam Rainsy expressed regret to
Prime Minister Hun Sen for an incident involving a former Cambodia
National Rescue Party member who posted salacious accusations about the
prime minister’s family on Facebook.
“In the name of the
Cambodian National Rescue Party and in my own name, we would like to
express deep regret over the action of those who had used indignity,
humiliation and allegation against Samdech [Hun Sen] and the son of [Hun
Sen's wife] Samdech Kittipritbandit Bun Rany Hun Sen, causing Samdech
and family pain,” Sam Rainsy wrote in a June 14 letter obtained by RFA’s
Khmer Service.
Samdech and Kittipritbandit are honorary titles
in Cambodia that confer respect. Roughly translated, Samdech means
“lord,” and Kittipritbandit is equivalent to an honorary doctorate.
Brady
Young, a Cambodian-American living in United States, posted consecutive
video clips on his Facebook page in April that included accusations
that Hun Sen’s elder son, Hun Manet, is actually the child of former
Vietnamese Communist leader Le Duc Tho and Bun Rany Hun Sen. Brady also
called on Hun Sen to have his elder son’s DNA checked to confirm his
paternity.
After the posts appeared, Hun Sen accused the CNRP of
secretly engineering the effort and warned that he would not let the
CNRP rest in peace, despite an immediate statement from the opposition
party disowning the comments. On May 16, the CNRP dismissed Brady from
the party.
“When you hit my head and
then ask me to fetch the water for you to drink, do not expect that is
going to happen,” he said. “You must have enormous compensation for Hun
Sen and for Hun Sen’s family. You must listen to this clearly.”
High tension
Sam Rainsy’s note comes as tensions between Hun Sen and the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) and the CNRP are running high.
Authorities
have arrested CNRP lawmakers and rights workers, and the CPP has sued a
prominent NGO leader and critic of the government as prosecutors pursue
a high-profile case involving CNRP deputy leader Kem Sokha’s alleged
affair with a young hairdresser.
CNRP President Sam Rainsy has
been staying in France or traveling since an arrest warrant was issued
for him in November for a 2008 defamation case. At the time, he was
removed from his office and stripped of his parliamentary immunity.
After Sam Rainsy left the country, the CNRP named Kem Sokha its acting
president.
Authorities are also making it difficult for CNRP
supporters to travel and collect thumbprints on petitions asking King
Norodom Sihamoni to intervene in the political crises that has also seen
heavily armed police attempt to arrest Kem Sokha at CNRP headquarters
in Phnom Penh..
CNRP supporters in the Me Sang district, Prey
Veng province, were banned by authorities from traveling to join a
gathering at the party headquarters in Phnom Penh on Tuesday, RFA has
learned. Thumbprints often serve as signatures in Cambodia.
Chharn
Sophate, the CNRP’s commune council member of the Prey Khneas commune,
told RFA that six authorities stopped his group from going to Phnom Penh
on Wednesday.
'They stopped us'
“They stopped us, and then they sent us to the police station to sign
an agreement, but I said: ‘What is the issue that requires me to go
there?’ So I refused to go,’” he said. "If they want to arrest me, let
them do so because I did nothing wrong."
Prey Khneas commune chief Em Seab told RFA that he was implementing the plans of his superiors.
“This plan was issued by the higher-ups to ban them from going,” he said.
Prey
Veng provincial commissioner Sreng Chea denied that he had issued any
orders that would prevent locals from traveling to Phnom Penh.
“I did not place the order to stop them,” he said.
In
Stung Treng province, CNRP province chief Puy Chanthala told RFA that
provincial authorities have detained seven party activists since June 7.
Authorities forced them to stop collecting thumbprints and made them
sign an agreement to end their activities, he said.
“They said that we must get their permission to collect thumbprints,” he told RFA. “This is wrong.”
On
June 12, authorities in Stung Treng province threatened CNRP supporters
for providing thumbprints, according to an opposition party official
who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The official told RFA that
100 villagers were called in for a meeting by Kbal Rmeas commune
authorities in Se San district and were threatened with jail time unless
they withdrew their thumbprints.
Voeun Sambath, Kbal Romeas
commune chief and CPP member, admitted that there was a meeting to
educate villagers about the thumbprint issue, but he denied any issuing
any threats against locals.
Suon Bunsak, executive director of
the Cambodian Human Rights Action Coalition (CHRAC), told RFA that
shifting the blame from one set or authorities to another is a pretext
to avoid accountability.
Stopping people from going to Phnom Penh is clearly violation of the citizen’s rights stated in the constitution.
“The
government has an important duty to facilitate every citizen’s ability
to exercise their rights,” he said. “I would like to appeal to the
government to kindly implement its duty though mediation so every
Cambodian can exercise his rights freely in accordance with Cambodia’s
legal framework.”
CNRP supporters gather
While authorities were
attempting to keep CNRP supporters bottled up, about 2,000 supporters
from dozens of cities and provinces still managed to gather at the
party’s headquarters.
A line of supporters stretched for about
one kilometer (0.62 mile) along Highway No. 2 where security forces
packing firearms, electronic wands and shields were deployed, and iron
barricades were blocking the road.
CNRP officials said they are
not preparing for a demonstration, but wanted to monitor the political
situation related to the court cases surrounding Kem Sokha as the
embattled CNRP leader declined to appear in court once again.
Police
attempted to arrest Kem Sokha on May 26 for failing to appear for
questioning about the sex scandal the government has been prosecuting
against him since March. He has since been hiding out in the CNRP’s
headquarters in Phnom Penh.
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