FILE - In this April 23, 1997 file photo, Pen Sovann arrives at a news conference in Phnom Penh. Former Cambodian Prime Minister Pen Sovann, who was installed then imprisoned by the Vietnamese after they defeated the brutal Khmer Rouge regime, has died. He was 80. Pen Sovann was the country’s first post-Khmer Rouge prime minister, holding the office from June to December 1981, when it was known as the People’s Republic of Kampuchea. He died Saturday night, Oct. 29, 2016, from an illness in his hometown in southern Takeo province. (Charles Dharapak, File/Associated Press) |
Cambodia’s first post-Khmer Rouge prime minister dies at 80
AP / Washington Post | 30 October 2016
PHNOM PEHN, Cambodia — Former
Cambodian Prime Minister Pen Sovann, who was installed then imprisoned
by the Vietnamese after they defeated the brutal Khmer Rouge regime, has
died. He was 80.
Pen Sovann was the country’s first post-Khmer
Rouge prime minister, holding the office from June to December 1981,
when it was known as the People’s Republic of Kampuchea. He died
Saturday night from an illness in his hometown in southern Takeo
province.
In late 1981, Pen Sovann was removed from power by the
Vietnamese in an ouster triggered by his calls for the withdrawal of
Vietnam’s forces from Cambodia. He was imprisoned for 10 years in Hanoi.
Pen
Sovann founded the Cambodian National Sustaining Party, which took part
in the 1998 election but did not win a seat in parliament. In 2012, he
joined the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party and won a
parliamentary seat in the last general election in 2013.
Pen
Sovann was part of a group of self-exiled former Cambodian communists
who fled Cambodia after becoming disenchanted with the Khmer Rouge. He
later returned amid the Vietnamese military invasion that toppled the
Khmer Rouge.
He was also the bitter rival of current longtime Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.
In
a statement Sunday, the Cambodia National Rescue Party said it was
joining Pen Sovann’s family in organizing a funeral for Pen Sovann.
The
party’s self-exiled leader, Sam Rainsy, said on his Facebook page
Sunday that Sovann had dedicated his life to the Cambodian people.
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