Rainsy himself said in an email the fact the government had ordered international airlines to ban him from returning home spoke volumes about what he called its “irrational and shameful panic when it comes to my presence and my potential role in Cambodian politics, especially at election times”.“Any election under such circumstances can be labelled anything but fair with a level playing field. This violation of basic democratic principles due to a lack of courage and sportsmanship is seriously eroding the Hun Sen government’s legitimacy,” he said.Rainsy said that he would be back in Cambodia “within hours” of any lifting of the ban. For some supporters, though, his absence might only stoke further anger with the government come voting day, according to Moeun Tola, head of rights group Central.“It’s not like a couple of years ago. People are more knowledgeable. They know Sam Rainsy still aligns himself with the CNRP, and people think if the CNRP wins the elections, Sam Rainsy might come back. It’s pushing people,” Tola said.“If he were here, his presence would help to inspire people’s sentiments, but when most people talk about the CNRP, they are still talking about Sam Rainsy,” he said.According to Council of Ministers spokesman Siphan, however, the government had moved on from the days when it cared about Rainsy. [The lady protesteth too much. Sam Rainy is the elephant in the room for both the CPP and the CNRP. But for the CPP and the Kem Sokha unreformed clique, he's also the ghost haunting them.]“He no longer has the right to stand or go to vote, so why do you care?” Siphan said. “We don’t care about him. He was a troublemaker. He caused trouble for our community.”“What else do you have for me?” he asked.
Ex-opposition leader Sam Rainsy (centre right, blue tie) and current CNRP leader Kem Sokha (centre left) greet supporters in Phnom Penh on the day of Rainsy’s return from self-imposed exile in 2013. STR/AFP |
Commune elections 2017: Is the CNRP missing Rainsy?
Phnom Penh Post | 23 May 2017
In a different era, when the Cambodian People’s Party’s rule
seemed inviolable, Prime Minister Hun Sen wrote to the King seeking a
pardon for opposition leader Sam Rainsy to allow him to return to
Cambodia, after four years abroad and a week before the national
election.
The decision, made in June 2013, seemed to make some sense. After
years hiding abroad to avoid prison here, Rainsy had developed a damaged
reputation – at best, as skittish, and at worst, cowardly – and the
CPP’s inevitable election victory would appear more legitimate with the
opposition leader around.
Yet if Hun Sen hoped Rainsy’s return would cause little more than a
splash, he was wrong. Throngs of supporters lined the streets to welcome
him, and after a rapid-fire national tour, his opposition party almost
doubled its parliamentary representation to come within seven seats of
an election victory.
For the first time since the 1990s, the idea of life after Hun Sen no
longer seemed far-fetched – and the lesson was not lost on the premier,
according to Brad Adams, the executive director of Human Rights Watch’s
Asia division and one of Hun Sen’s biggest critics over the years.
“He thinks he made a mistake in allowing Sam Rainsy back,” Adams said
in an interview with Radio Free Asia in December. “As we saw when Sam
Rainsy returned, hundreds of thousands of people came to the streets and
it provided a lot of energy and excitement for the campaign.”
Any legitimacy conferred by Rainsy’s presence was lost twice over as
the CNRP leader then led months of protests against the election
results. “Hun Sen, I think, is determined not to make that mistake
again,” Adams said.
With the commune elections now less than two weeks away, Rainsy is
once again in Paris – this time having been officially banished from
returning to Cambodia after fleeing a court case – and the government
has indeed made it clear it does not want him stumping for his party
this time.
Having handed the leadership of the CNRP over to his former deputy,
Kem Sokha, and with airlines banned from flying him to Cambodia, Rainsy
has now been properly exiled.
“At this time, he has no right to come back,” Council of Ministers
spokesman Phay Siphan said yesterday.
Still, whether the banishment of Rainsy could harm the CNRP’s chances
in any tangible way in the elections on June 4 remains up for debate.
According to Yoeung Sotheara, a legal and monitoring officer with
elections group Comfrel, though many in the opposition may be ruing the
absence of Rainsy’s charisma on the campaign trail, the party has for
the last five years said it is moving beyond personalist politics.
“The interesting question is whether supporters of the opposition
support the spirit of change, regardless of who is the leader of the
opposition. If it is true that they do, they will still come to support
the opposition,” Sotheara said.
“This is the interesting question: Will they still come? I think that
people who support the opposition party now care less about who is the
opposition leader. They care only about change. These are people who
want change in society.”
Sotheara said that the selection of Sokha as its new leader earlier
this year would likely prevent the CNRP from making any claims that
Rainsy’s absence harmed turnout.
However, Rainsy himself said in an email the fact the government had
ordered international airlines to ban him from returning home spoke
volumes about what he called its “irrational and shameful panic when it
comes to my presence and my potential role in Cambodian politics,
especially at election times”.
“Any election under such circumstances can be labelled anything but
fair with a level playing field. This violation of basic democratic
principles due to a lack of courage and sportsmanship is seriously
eroding the Hun Sen government’s legitimacy,” he said.
Rainsy said that he would be back in Cambodia “within hours” of any
lifting of the ban. For some supporters, though, his absence might only
stoke further anger with the government come voting day, according to
Moeun Tola, head of rights group Central.
“It’s not like a couple of years ago. People are more knowledgeable.
They know Sam Rainsy still aligns himself with the CNRP, and people
think if the CNRP wins the elections, Sam Rainsy might come back. It’s
pushing people,” Tola said.
“If he were here, his presence would help to inspire people’s
sentiments, but when most people talk about the CNRP, they are still
talking about Sam Rainsy,” he said.
According to Council of Ministers spokesman Siphan, however, the
government had moved on from the days when it cared about Rainsy. [The lady protesteth too much. Sam Rainy is the elephant in the room for both the CPP and the CNRP. But for the CPP and the Kem Sokha unreformed clique, he's also the ghost haunting them.]
“He no longer has the right to stand or go to vote, so why do you
care?” Siphan said. “We don’t care about him. He was a troublemaker. He
caused trouble for our community.”
“What else do you have for me?” he asked.
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