Hun Manet (centre) talks with reporters yesterday morning at the Phnom Penh International Airport after returning from a trip to Australia. Pha Lina |
Manet upset over Australia protests
Phnom Penh Post | 20 October 2016
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s eldest son
Hun Manet returned yesterday from an almost two-week trip to Australia,
complaining about protests that met him there and suggesting that the ruling
party had the capacity to stage protests of its own.
The CNRP has
insisted it was not behind the protests that met Manet in
the cities of Melbourne, Adelaide and Sydney, but upon his return to Phnom Penh
yesterday, Manet told reporters he still believed leaders of the party in
Australia were the organisers.
The protesters, he
continued, had crudely cursed him as “a ghost and an evil spirit that eats
religious offerings”, instead of offering constructive criticism, and left him
confused about their intent.
“What was the
benefit?” Manet asked.
“I just came to
hear about [what Cambodian-Australians think about] our country. So why are
they looking down on me, causing divisions and conflicts? Is this the benefit
of the demonstrations?
“Wherever I go,
there is always hate. It was not different from the US,” he added. “But do not
forget that there was a lot of people joining in and supporting [my visit].”
Manet reiterated
that he still believed the CNRP in Cambodia was behind the protests, and
brought up CNRP lawmaker Nhay Chamroeun, who has also been known to make trips
abroad.
“If the CNRP really
did hold [the protests], what does that mean?” Manet asked. “Don’t forget that
the CPP has forces – but we don’t use them. Nhay Chamroeun goes everywhere and
there is no one from the CPP rallying and shouting with banners.
“In Phnom Penh, we
haven’t done that.”
Manet, however,
failed to acknowledge that Chamroeun and fellow CNRP lawmaker Kong Saphea were savagely beaten outside the National Assembly last year by a mob that included three
of Hun Sen’s bodyguards following a protest promoted by the premier.
Hun Sen had
foreshadowed the protest from abroad, after being similarly angered by
protesters on a trip to France.
The diaspora has
long been a stronghold of the opposition, and Manet was last year put in charge
of leading the CPP’s first counter-efforts at outreach in countries like
Australia, the US and France. However, he yesterday denied that was his intent
on the trip.
“With my presence
abroad, I am not breaking anyone’s rice pot. I am not forcing [anyone] and not
stealing anyone’s rice pot. I am abroad to meet with people voluntarily,” Manet
said. “I do not go overseas to gain financial support to help the CPP.
“Don’t accuse me of
breaking the rice pot. If the rice is good, there would be no one running from
it.”
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