Opposition leader Kem Sokha uses his hat to gesture to supporters during a campaign rally yesterday in Siem Reap province. Facebook |
PM warns CNRP not to test ‘patience’
Phnom Penh Post | 26 May 2017
Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday threatened to unleash war on the
opposition party if he loses patience with their campaign for the June 4
commune council elections, saying it did not matter that his rivals
were unarmed and that his party would burn their homes down.
Speaking at a conference for Cambodia’s Christian community in Phnom
Penh, and breaking with his custom of not campaigning during the
official pre-election period, Hun Sen called on opposition leader Kem
Sokha to “calm down” his party or risk a one-sided war.
“Some people say they do not have any guns so war could not happen,
but I want to remind you that even if there are no guns, war could still
happen,” Hun Sen said, accusing the opposition of cynically exploiting
his party’s historically close ties to Vietnam.
“Your insults of ‘traitor’, your words . . . of disdain for the CPP
that it ran out of people for its rallies, so it brings Vietnamese to
the rallies – these are words that can cause war if the CPP cannot be
patient anymore and goes and burns your homes down.”
Hun Sen appeared to be referring to a Facebook user who earlier this
week posted a video to her profile accusing the Cambodian People’s Party
of padding its rallies with Vietnamese citizens because one
campaigner’s motorbike bore the country’s licence plates.
The premier also said in his speech that if his warnings were heeded,
he would still prefer to take the Cambodia National Rescue Party on at
the ballot box in the June 4 commune elections instead of in a war.
“The CPP is patient in order to ensure stability – but if the party
was not patient and especially if Prime Minister Hun Sen was not patient
– it would not take hours [to defeat the CNRP]. But we need to compete
on votes, since that’s better,” he said.
Opposition parties have during past elections used the CPP’s
historical ties to Vietnam, which installed the ruling party in power in
1979 and defended it militarily during the civil war in the 1980s and
early 1990s, as fodder for easy votes at elections.
Hun Sen is a fluent speaker of Vietnamese and has often said Vietnam
should be appreciated for overthrowing Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot in
1979. But he has also denied being under the thumb of Cambodia’s
historical enemy, and has vigorously defended his party’s independence.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said by telephone that the opposition,
which says it is aiming for almost two-thirds of the vote on June 4, had
at no point during the campaign brought up Vietnam and had been
focusing on promoting its policies.
“The past is past. Let’s talk about the present. Who has said that?
No one,” Sovann said, dismissing Hun Sen’s surprise speech as a
last-ditch effort to avoid a large defeat in the first independently run
election in Cambodia after years of poor government.
“Let him say whatever he wants,” the spokesman added. “My only
response is that we would like to appeal to all of the Cambodian people
to go to the polls on the 4th of June, 2017, and vote for the CNRP, and
for the future of our nation and our people.”
Sokha, the opposition leader, has been travelling around the
country’s 24 provinces since the official campaign opened last weekend,
mainly promoting his party’s policy to provide each of Cambodia’s more
than 1,600 communes with $500,000 a year to develop their own areas.
On Wednesday, in Pailin province, a former Khmer Rouge bastion that
carried on its fight against the Phnom Penh government until September
1996, and today remains home to many war-weary veterans, Sokha also told
voters not to be scared by the CPP’s threats.
“Believe me, they would not dare start a war each one of them is a
millionaire,” Sokha said of the CPP. He argued that the ruling party’s
officials had too much to lose and would not fight. “In the previous
times, they could go into the forests, but now they cannot.”
“There will not be a war. Don’t believe it.”
But Buntenh, a dissident monk who heads the Independent Monk Network
for Social Justice, said by telephone that he believed Hun Sen’s speech
had betrayed his concerns about what might happen on June 4 – and at the
national election in July 2018.
“He is more aggressive at this time because he sees the losses
coming. He sees the manner of the Cambodian people now. They are not
really afraid of voting for the opposition party anymore. That’s why he
is using intimidation and fear,” Buntenh said.
“In the elections of the past five terms, he did not see any of the
clear signals of a loss, so that’s why he did not speak during the
campaigns. Now the signals of a loss are bigger than at the past
elections. The Cambodian people know this election is in their hands.”
“The prime minister fears a loss. I don’t have anything more to say than that: He is fearing a loss.”
Mr. Hun Sen is under the thumb of Xi jinping. But soon, Cambodia will be under the boot of President Trump. You dare to ally with China and President Trump will teach you a lesson for betraying USA.
ReplyDeleteAnd more Cambodians will be deported from USA soon, a lot more.
9:22 AM
DeleteThe election winner CNRP and the Khmer people WILL make a
military alliance with the traditional enemy of Vietnam, China.
We will teach expansionist Yuon a lesson !!!