Deputy Prime Minister Sar Kheng, left, and deputy opposition leader Kem Sokha, right, at a meeting in Phnom Penh in 2015. Heng Chivoan |
CNRP rejects deal ‘proviso’
Phnom Penh Post | 9 January 2017
Prime Minister Hun Sen is using prisoners as bargaining chips
to try and force Cambodia National Rescue Party deputy leader Kem Sokha
to sign a declaration that would be used to kick opposition president
Sam Rainsy out of the party, the latter claimed yesterday.
Via email, Rainsy said Sokha had been presented with a statement to
sign pledging to expel any member of the CNRP who had insulted the
premier’s family by alleging his eldest son Hun Manet was fathered by
Vietnamese revolutionary general Le Duc Tho.
Rainsy said signing the letter was a condition for releasing four
employees from rights group Adhoc and an election official charged with
bribing the purported mistress of Sokha, a case widely believed to be
politically motivated.
He claimed the CPP had “bought” one or two members of the CNRP, who
would be called upon to accuse him of insulting the premier’s family, at
which time Sokha would be leaned on to make good on the conditions of
the statement.
Rainsy, who said any suggestion he had insulted the premier’s family
were “groundless”, did not provide the names of the supposed plants
within the opposition. “Kem Sokha adamantly refuses to write such a
tricky letter,” Rainsy said, saying a draft version of a statement had
been sent to Sokha via media mogul Soy Sopheap, who declined to comment
yesterday.
“Hun Sen says then the prisoners will remain in jail. He says he will
not do anything to help their release the prisoners are just Hun Sen’s
hostages who are being used to blackmail the CNRP,” Rainsy added.
The five detainees were arrested in April after being ensnared in an
investigation into Sokha’s alleged affair, which also saw an opposition
commune chief jailed and Sokha sentenced to five months in prison for
refusing to appear at court in a related case. Recent royal pardons
granted to Sokha and the commune chief raised hopes that the group would
also be released.
However, the alleged leveraging of their freedom adds further weight
to suggestions by observers that the pardons were part of a ploy to try
to split Sokha and Rainsy, who fled abroad in 2015 to avoid arrest and
has since been officially barred from the country.
Following his pardon, Sokha left his refuge at the CNRP headquarters,
and pledged to secure the release of the remaining prisoners before the
end of the year, though they remain in limbo. Sokha is set to soon meet
Interior Minister Sar Kheng and they are expected to discuss the
matter. According to a letter exchange, Kheng has agreed to meet, but
has not yet set a date, citing a busy schedule.
Reached yesterday, CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said the case of those
imprisoned for bribing Sokha’s mistress was “in the hands of the court”
and the party couldn’t intervene. As for the demand that Sokha expel
CNRP members who insulted the premier’s family being a condition of
their release, Eysan said it was simply an invention of Rainsy’s.
“Sam Rainsy is good at using tricks,” he said. A purported version of
the draft letter for Sokha to sign included in Rainsy’s email calls any
suggestion that the premier’s wife was the mistress of Duc Tho, a
Vietnamese revolutionary leader, “unacceptable” and says the party will
expel any “ignorant individuals” who make the claims from the party.
It is not the first time rumours about Manet’s birth have caused
trouble for the CNRP. In May, the party terminated the membership of US
activist Brady Young after he spread the rumour in online videos to the
premier’s chagrin. Rainsy then sent a letter to Hun Sen condemning the
claim.
In a public speech yesterday, Hun Sen warned the opposition against
criticising his party. “Dishonest and insulting works to attack each
other, and incitement which provokes hatred and anger, will not sustain
the culture of dialogue and it will destroy out national unity.”
Scam Rainsy is not needed, he does not get to sign anything. Kem Sokha alone can kick anyone out of CNRP if the person commits a banal crime.
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