If the opposition wins the 2018 election, Hun Sen would have no choice but to stand aside, he said.
"I think that Hun Sen is intelligent enough to understand that the world has changed, that he cannot try to cling to power forever and at any cost," Rainsy said. "All previous dictators have stepped down at one point of time."
Cambodian opposition leader promises return from exile
Reuters | 29 June 2016
Cambodian
opposition leader Sam Rainsy on Wednesday accused Prime Minister Hun Sen of
using the judiciary to crush the opposition and guarantee his own victory in
2018 elections while the country goes "down the drain" amid rampant
corruption.
Speaking to Reuters in Manila, where he spends some of his time
since he went into his latest period of self-imposed exile, Rainsy said he
still hopes to strike a political deal with his nemesis. He said he will
definitely return home just before local elections in June next year.
"Hun Sen
himself realises that he is losing ground, that the popular support the
opposition enjoys is growing," Rainsy said during a break from a meeting
with nearly 60 key members of his Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), most
of whom had flown into the Philippines' capital overnight.
"So he wants
to disrupt the election process by creating an atmosphere of fear and
intimidation ... This is just intimidation and an attempt to frighten the whole
population not to support the opposition."
Government
spokesman Phay Siphan could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.
The spokesman for
Hun Sen's Cambodian People's Party denied that the government or the party uses
the judiciary for political ends.
"The cases
against people at the CNRP are criminal wrongdoings, and they must be held
responsible before the law," said Sok Eysan, adding that Rainsy should not
hope for a political deal before the 2017 vote.
Rainsy, 67, has
gone into exile four times, the latest coming last November when a warrant for
his arrest was issued. He flew to Paris, where he has lived for considerable
periods of his adult life.
He said that since then Hun Sen, who has led the country for three decades altogether, has used the judiciary to hound opposition politicians to avoid a rerun of the 2013 poll. The CNRP says it won and that the result was fixed to keep it out of power.
"The judiciary
in Cambodia is just a political tool for the ruling party to ensure impunity
for themselves and to crack down on the opposition," said Rainsy, wearing
a garland of jasmine flowers presented to him for the party meeting.
"CULTURE OF VIOLENCE"
Rainsy's deputy,
Kem Sokha, has been holed up in the CNRP's headquarters in Phnom Penh for more
than a month to avoid arrest. Rainsy said that two of his party's lawmakers are
behind bars while others face threats and live in danger.
Hun Sen, who is 63
and has said he will rule Cambodia into his seventies, portrays himself as the
man who saved Cambodia from the terror and chaos of the Khmer Rouge years in
the 1970s and the civil war that followed.
However, his
authoritarian rule and widespread corruption have alienated young people who
did not live through that era. Rainsy said 70 percent of the country's
population are under the age of 30, and for the vast majority of them there are
no jobs.
Kem Sokha told
Reuters at the weekend there must be "national reconciliation" talks
to end a crisis that both he and Hun Sen have warned could nudge the Southeast
Asian nation from political tension into conflict.
Rainsy echoed his
deputy, calling for "a culture of dialogue" to replace a
"culture of violence" that he said was a legacy of the Khmer Rouge.
Nevertheless, he
said he was confident that Hun Sen would allow him to return and lead the
opposition party in the 2017 local communes election and general election the
following year. Otherwise, the polls would not be seen by the international
community as legitimate, Rainsy said.
If the opposition
wins the 2018 election, Hun Sen would have no choice but to stand aside, he
said.
"I think that
Hun Sen is intelligent enough to understand that the world has changed, that he
cannot try to cling to power forever and at any cost," Rainsy said.
"All previous dictators have stepped down at one point of time."
Cette fois-ci, il faudrait vaincre ou mourir...Dans notre cas, nous ne pourrions jamais mourir en vain, mais plutôt mourir pour vaincre, absolument!!!
ReplyDeletepromise to return it mean volunteer go to jail or what? what SR expect from Hun sen or king?
ReplyDelete