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| Journalists film Kem Sokha (centre) at the CNRP headquarters in Meanchey district on Saturday where he gave an interview. Facebook |
Sam Rainsy urged to return from self-imposed exile
Phnom Penh Post | 12 October 2016
Deputy opposition leader Kem Sokha
said in an interview aired yesterday that it would be better if opposition
leader Sam Rainsy ended his self-imposed exile and returned to Cambodia so they
could stare down arrest threats from the government together.
Sokha’s refusal to flee the country after police attempted to arrest him on May 26 has contrasted sharply with Rainsy’s decision to flee to France last year after an arrest warrant was issued, and observers have criticised the CNRP leader for his perceived timidity.
Speaking with the
Singapore-based Channel News Asia in an interview recorded on Saturday, the
CNRP deputy president said fleeing would have sent the wrong message to
supporters and that his decision to remain in the country had proved the
correct one.
“It actually
encourages my supporters, and it’s better than if I escaped or ran away to hide
out abroad,” Sokha said of his situation. “Throughout my stay here, I can see
that people still stand strong with me. If I were to leave, people would be
discouraged.”
“If Sam Rainsy came
to be with me, it would be better than me being alone. But if he does not
decide to come back, we can still run the party without him,” he added. “We can
contact each other through electronic means like Facebook, Messenger and
WhatsApp.”
Sokha was last
month sentenced to five months in
prison for failing to
appear in court over a “prostitution” case, but last week he briefly left his hideout for the first time since May with
assurances he would not be imprisoned until his appeals are exhausted.
Those assurances
followed the CNRP threat of mass protests if Sokha is ever arrested, and in his
interview, the deputy leader said he did not believe the government would be
able to arrest him while those threats remained.
“If they arrest me,
the Cambodian people would protest,” he said. “If there was an arrest, I
believe that Cambodia would have problems and difficulties, as the people would
not accept it.
“Even if the
government wanted to suppress it, the people would still protest. It’s too
serious.”
Rainsy, who is
travelling in the US, did not respond to a request for comment yesterday.
Sokha’s comments
are the first time he has spoken publicly in favour of Rainsy returning from
his self-imposed exile. However, Kem Monovithya, his daughter and the CNRP’s
deputy public affairs head, said they were not a criticism of the CNRP leader.
“It is absolutely
not a rebuke to Sam Rainsy,” Monovithya said. “It is simply the reality: the
struggle is here, the more people we have here, the better.”
Others were less
convinced.
“Looks like Kem
Sokha has finally decided to say some unpleasant truths,” said Sophal Ear,
author of Aid Dependence
in Cambodia: How Foreign Assistance Undermines Democracy and an associate professor at
Occidental College in Los Angeles.
Ear said the recent
spate of repression against the CNRP had made Rainsy’s absence conspicuous.
“I think that Sam
Rainsy’s got a limited shelf-life. His party’s MPs are getting jailed daily,”
he said, calling on Rainsy to return. “There aren’t too many game-changers, but
one thing’s for sure, if he returned now, or before too long, it would be a
game-changer.”
But Buntenh, a
dissident monk who heads the Independent Monk Network for Social Justice, said
that he believed Sokha alone could not prove to the Cambodian people that the
CNRP had the courage and the commitment to compete with the CPP.
“If Kem Sokha is
alone, he is a bicycle with one wheel, and you need two wheels for a bicycle,
otherwise it will seem like it is broken,” he said. “Sam Rainsy should not stay
up in the sky. It’s not possible to live as a God and work for the human beings.”
“Be in the country,
be with your supporters, and work with them to help defeat the government.”
However, Koul
Panha, head of the elections monitor Comfrel, said he understood Rainsy’s fears
of maltreatment if he were arrested, given past experiences like the 1997
grenade attack, but noted that many of his supporters were of a more dauntless
mindset.
“The situation is
changing, and young people are thinking differently,” Panha said. “They’re not
like the old people, who are still traumatised. The young people want something
different and want to see leadership that manages risk and has confidence.
“I see it a lot:
young people telling him to come back and face the risk. This is the pressure
on him.”
One of those young
people, Bong Chansambath, a 21-year-old international relations student at the
Pannasastra University and a writer for the “Politikoffee” group, said time was
dwindling for Rainsy to prove his continued relevance amid Sokha’s stand.
“To me, Kem Sokha
is far braver than his leader, Sam Rainsy,” Chansambath said. “Sokha has proved
to his supporters that he dares to confront the CPP.”
“Rainsy always
fails to confront the test of bravery with Prime Minister Hun Sen,” the student
continued. “For the premier, Rainsy is no longer a competitive opponent to
compete with. Sokha is.”

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