Deputy Prime Minister Sok An Dies at 66
The Cambodia Daily | 15 March 2017
Sok An, whose path to becoming one of the most powerful men in
Cambodia traced the career of Prime Minister Hun Sen, died on Wednesday
evening, according to a government spokesman. He was 66.
As
Cambodia’s most senior deputy prime minister and the head of the Council
of Ministers, a role specifically created for him, Sok An’s vast
control over state bodies large and small was rivalled only by that of
his boss for the past four decades, Mr. Hun Sen.
The
two began working together shortly after the fall of the Khmer Rouge in
1979, when Mr. Hun Sen became foreign minister of the Vietnamese-backed
socialist government. Sok An became chief of cabinet at the Foreign
Ministry in 1982, three years before Mr. Hun Sen was promoted to prime
minister.
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said that Sok An passed away at 6:32 p.m. on Wednesday.
As
one of the prime minister’s top lieutenants over the past three
decades, Sok An assumed control of government bodies as diverse as the
Apsara Authority, which oversees the Angkor Archaeological Park, the
National Petroleum Authority, which awards oil exploration contracts,
and the Accreditation Council of Cambodia, which controls the higher
education system.
He lost a number of these positions as part of a
reshuffle of power following the 2013 national election, in what some
speculated was an effort to spread the wealth within the ruling party.
Sok
An was also one of the government’s top negotiators, having been among
the lead diplomats for the Phnom Penh government in talks with rival
factions that led to the signing of the Paris Peace Agreement in 1991.
He also oversaw the Cambodian side of the Khmer Rouge tribunal after
heading protracted talks with the U.N. that eventually led to its
creation on the outskirts of Phnom Penh.
For months, Sok An had
stopped appearing in public, though his cabinet chief and colleagues
said little about his health. What appears to have been premature rumors
of his death were swirling on social media over the past weekend.
He
is survived by his wife and five children, including sons Sok
Puthyvuth, who is among the country’s most prominent businessman, Sok
Sokhan, who became a CPP lawmaker in 2015, and Sok Sangvar, a senior
official at the Apsara Authority.
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