CPP spokesman Sok Eysan speaks to the press outside the National Assembly in Phnom Penh last year. Heng Chivoan |
CPP calls for action over speech
Phnom Penh Post | 28 February 2017
The Cambodian People’s Party has demanded authorities take
action against two more CNRP figures, including a lawmaker, over a
speech in France that referred to the ruling party regime as a “beast”
and “puppets of Vietnam”.
Sending yet another chill down the spines of government opponents and
critics, the letter by the CPP singled out French-based activist Ly
Poeung and lawmaker for Prey Veng province Tout Khoeut. It demands
action against the two men, but acknowledges that Khoeut was simply in
attendance at an event in Lyon, France, on February 25, where Poeung
made remarks the party characterised as “defamatory”.
Poeung’s speech, it says, was a “public insult” levelled at “the
government led by the CPP and its leaders” aimed at “inciting to cause
discrimination, hatred between Khmer and Khmer”, which caused “serious
chaos to social security” and “threatened peace in Cambodia”.
“The appeal used insulting words and is baseless. [It used] words
such as beast regime gangster, foolish, Vietnamese puppets, [and accused
the government of] killing Khmer people worse than the Khmer Rouge
regime, electoral fraud, robbing and threatening to shoot people,” the
letter reads. “The CPP would like to appeal to the leaders of the CNRP
to 1) clearly explain about this unfortunate appeal 2) apologise to the
government led by the CPP [and its leaders] in public 3) take
disciplinary measures against Ly Poeung and Tout Khoeut.
“The CPP would also like to appeal to authorities to take immediate
measures to investigate the case and take action following legal
procedures.”
Reached yesterday evening by phone, Poeung, a worker in an auto parts
store and a regional leader for the opposition party network in Lyon,
said he was “disappointed by the CPP’s reaction but not surprised”.
He stood by his comments.
“I have followed the situation in Cambodia since the Vietnamese
occupation. We have many problems in the country, people are still poor,
and [the leaders] are stealing things from our country to get rich,” he
said. “But nobody can criticise Hun Sen ... if you criticise him, you
go to jail.”
Poeung, who has lived in France since 1985, said he had returned to
Cambodia three times, the last trip in 2005, but didn’t plan to return
until Prime Minister Hun Sen was no longer in power.
Khoeut was unreachable yesterday.
Reached by phone, CPP spokesman Sok Eysan took umbrage at the speech
and demanded an apology. He said, presently, the CPP would not seek to
arrest the men because they were in France.
“We demand them to make a public apology because they insulted the
legal government,” Eysan said. “Their activities are not only in France,
they also do this in Lowell, Massachusetts, and Los Angeles in the USA
and other places where there are Cambodian communities living.”
As well launching a slew of lawsuits against opposition figures in
Cambodia, which many consider political attacks, the CPP has also turned
its attention to critics abroad. Last year, the Foreign Ministry banned
Cambodian-Australian politician Hong Lim from entering the country
after he called the government a “beast” following the murder of
political analyst Kem Ley.
Official spokespeople for the CNRP were not reachable last night, but
a senior lawmaker, who requested anonymity, said his colleagues were
now “very careful” about speaking out publicly. “It does not matter who
you are, everybody is a target.”
If you don't want people to call you a beast, then try not to being a beast. By stopping people from calling you a beast is not going to change a thing. Even without saying it, most khmers know deep down in their hearts that the CPP is a beast regime, with a leader who is so paranoia and scared of losing power that he would do anything to stay on in power by killing and imprisonment of people who he sees as a threat to him.
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