Cambodia National Rescue Party President Sam Rainsy at RFA's studio, Dec. 15, 2016. |
Sam Rainsy to Sue Cambodia’s Prime Minister in The International Criminal Court
RFA | 8 February 2017
The
leader of Cambodia’s opposition party plans to sue the country’s prime minister
in the International Criminal Court over a failed plan to militarize the
country’s border after the fall of the Khmer Rouge in the late 1970s.
“I will
not file a complaint to get money for myself,” Cambodia National Rescue Party
(CNRP) leader Sam Rainsy told RFA’s Khmer Service on Wednesday. “I will file
the complaint to seek justice for the entire population of Cambodia.”
Known as
K5, the plan has been described as an attempt to build a kind of “Berlin Wall”
on the Thai border in an effort to prevent the Pol Pot-led Khmer Rouge and
other guerillas from reestablishing their bases and infiltrating Cambodia after
their defeat by the Vietnamese in 1979.
While K5
was never completed, it’s estimated that up to a million Cambodian workers were
pressed into duty as slave laborers to clear the land for the proposed
fortifications.
Thousands
of Cambodians and ethnic Chinese died from disease or were killed or disabled
by land mines as they labored on the ill-conceived project, which was bedeviled
by corruption and mismanagement.
Sam
Rainsy wrote on his Facebook on Feb. 7, that hundreds of thousands of
Cambodians were forcibly sent to help build the "strategic" K5 Wall
along the border with Thailand.
Many
never returned, and only their ashes were returned to their families, he wrote
in the post, adding that he is in the process of collecting more evidence and
witness testimonies.
After his
investigation is complete, he then plans to file a case with the ICC.
The ICC
has convicted only 39 individuals since it was established in 1998, and Sam
Rainsy’s case appears to be a long shot. But the attempt reflects the rising
tensions between Hun Sen and his ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) and Sam
Rainsy and the Cambodia National Rescue Party.
‘Sam
Rainsy has been cornered’
Hun Sen’s
own previous involvement with the Khmer Rouge is clouded in secrecy, and his
relationship with Vietnam has become a potent political issue as the opposition
has attempted to paint him as Hanoi’s stooge.
Sam
Rainsy has been living in France since 2015 to avoid arrest for a defamation
case brought by former Foreign Minister Hor Namhong in 2008, and he has been
convicted in several court cases brought by members of the CPP.
In
October, Hun Sen ordered police, immigration, and aviation authorities to
"use all ways and means" to prevent the opposition leader from
returning to the country, as Sam Rainsy has pledged to do before the country’s
elections.
In
January, Hun Sen filed a defamation suit against Sam Rainsy for remarks made
during a Jan. 14 speech in Paris in which the opposition leader accused the
Cambodian strongman of giving a $1 million bribe to rising opposition social
media star Thy Sovantha to persuade her to switch loyalties to the ruling
party.
Despite
the legal battles, Sam Rainsy told RFA he still holds out hope for a
reconciliation.
“We need
to remind ourselves that our country has lost some land to foreigners,” he
said. “We have been taken advantage of, looked down on, and exploited by
foreigners. We must not fight or kill each other.”
CPP
spokesman Sok Eysan threw cold water on the reconciliation notion.
“Sam
Rainsy has been cornered," he told RFA. "His political life is
numbered now.”
To build
K5, the Vietnamese military command in Cambodia began hacking a path through
the jungle along the border with the intent to mine and fortify the border in
1984.
At the
time, Hun Sen was a rising figure in the Vietnamese-installed government that ruled
the country. In early 1985 he was elevated to the post of prime minister.
The late
Sin Sen, who was deputy Interior Minister for the People’s Republic of
Kampuchea—as the country was known at the time—has said that Hun Sen ran the
operation.
“K5 was led
by Hun Sen. He was assigned the responsibility by Vietnam,” Sin Sen said
according to the 2015 report “30 Years of Hun Sen” written by the New
York-based investigative nongovernmental organization Human Rights Watch.
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