Former opposition leader Sam Rainsy criticises the ruling party, comparing their governance to the Khmer Rouge regime, in a video posted to his Facebook page. Facebook |
Out of government’s reach, former opposition leader Rainsy plays ‘bad cop’ [historian of little known history]
Andrew Nachemson / The Phnom Penh Post | 16 May 2017
Former opposition leader Sam Rainsy lobbed a characteristic firebomb
from France yesterday, drawing a pointed comparison between the ruling
Cambodian People’s Party and the murderous Khmer Rouge regime.
In a video
posted to Facebook, Rainsy expounds on the “hidden origins of the CPP”,
launching into a convoluted [huh??? As Sam Rainsy spoke in Khmer, the reporter Andrew must also know Khmer to make this judgment, as his opinion, as there's no attribution??] speech calling attention to Vietnamese
communists’ hand in creating the first iteration of the CPP in 1951 in
the form of the Kampuchean People’s Revolutionary Party.
He goes on to highlight Prime Minister Hun Sen and National Assembly
President Heng Samrin’s connections to both the Khmer Rouge and the
Vietnamese, before salting the wound by appearing to impugn Hun Sen’s
courage.
“Hun Sen ran away to live in Vietnam,” Rainsy taunts.
While such rhetoric has been a hallmark of Rainsy’s stump speeches for years, his abrupt resignation
in February from the party he helped to found raised the question of
what role he would go on play in the movement he spearheaded for
decades.
But yesterday’s video and others like it seem to answer that
question, analysts say: Rainsy has become the “bad cop”, hurling
incendiary remarks at the CPP from the relative safety of exile, taking
rhetorical risks that his former Cambodia National Rescue Party
colleagues can ill afford given the likelihood of legal repercussions. [No, he has become an historian. MOST Cambodians -- from all strata of society, including many times the "analysts" frequently quoted -- do not know their own history as most do not read BOOKS, even of the extremely limited books available, and of those limited books, available in the Khmer language. They have a very porous knowledge of history based on hearsay and short excepts they have read here and there, as their knowledge mainly comes from the oral tradition. Additionally, the Khmer language books are not as well sourced, even if with inside knowledge. Hence, given Sam Rainsy's erudite background, some free-up mental space away from the day-to-day concerns of leading an opposition under constant attack, his ability to communicate in Khmer and articulate entangled history in clear, easy-to-follow terms, he's using his time wisely to fill in a large gap of knowledge in the Khmer language that VERY, VERY, VERY FEW can do. - Theary C. Seng]
Rainsy was driven into his most recent stint of self-imposed exile in
late 2015, with the government making things official about a year
later, barring him from returning despite such a ban’s apparent unconstitutionality.
In February, Rainsy was obliged to resign from the CNRP to prevent
past convictions being used against the CNRP under a series of controversial amendments to the Law on Political Parties rushed through the parliament by the CPP.
All the while, however, a steady stream of harsh criticism has emanated from Rainsy’s Facebook page, which boasts about 3.9 million “likes”. The attacks have drawn even more defamation convictions,
only reinforcing the notion that anyone making similar remarks on
Cambodian soil would certainly find themselves before the Kingdom’s
oft-maligned courts.
In a recent interview, Sebastian Strangio, author of Hun Sen’s Cambodia, acknowledged that Rainsy now enjoys freer rein to use “strong rhetoric”.
“He hasn’t needed to play nice with the government so he’s just said
whatever he felt like saying … I’m not sure how coordinated it is, [but]
he and other members of the party have sometimes slipped into the good
cop, bad cop routine,” he said.
Since the 2013 national elections, Facebook has emerged as a key political battleground,
with a recent analysis showing that Cambodians are much more likely to
use the social media platform politically than peers in neighbouring
countries. With the stakes so high, both parties have used the platform
to push competing political narratives.
For instance, on April 17 – the anniversary of Phnom Penh’s fall to the Khmer Rouge – Rainsy took to Facebook to remind users of the ties between the Cambodian People’s Party and the Khmer Rouge. A week later, Rainsy posted a video
of a speech where he told supporters in France that the Cambodian
military secretly supports the CNRP. The statement prompted a
condemnation from a Defence Ministry spokesman, who accused Rainsy of
sowing dissension.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Hun Sen has also used Facebook to push sensationalist rhetoric, recently warning voters
that a victory for the opposition could plunge the country into civil
war, a warning that some saw as a veiled threat. On Thursday, the day
after Hun Sen’s most recent comments on impending war, the National
Election Committee issued a warning
against using similarly charged rhetoric during the official commune
election campaign season, promising legal action for violators.
But, if Hun Sen is largely seen as being above the law, Rainsy is
outside it, able to counter the prime minister’s fiery language from
abroad in ways former colleagues like CNRP President Kem Sokha can’t.
“Someone’s got to be left speaking truth to power on the outside –
he’s untouchable,” said Ear Sophal, a professor on world affairs at
Occidental College in California who also invoked the “good cop, bad
cop” dynamic.
Sophal said Rainsy is unlikely to be coordinating in “any meaningful
sense” with the party on the ground, partially out of fear of legal
consequences, but did say his recent attacks do appear to be part of a
plan.
Cambodian political analyst Ou Virak agreed that Rainsy was helping the CNRP play both sides of the issue.
“He can galvanise support without jeopardising the opposition,” Virak
said yesterday, calling it “an ideal role” for Rainsy, who may have
been frustrated by having to use more restraint once the CNRP became a
mainstream party.
Virak said Rainsy’s role is a necessary one, especially in light of the
fact that Hun Sen and other CPP figures can make inflammatory remarks
with impunity.
“Without that rhetoric they might not get the excitement they need.
They need rallies, supporters, people to convince others to go out and
vote and give money,” he said.
Deputy CNRP leader Mu Sochua would not comment on whether there was a
coordinated “good cop, back cop” routine, but did say Rainsy was a
“moral authority”, able to speak the truth and say things that other
people can’t.
Rainsy himself also declined to comment on whether the strategy was
coordinated, but unabashedly acknowledged that his embrace of the “bad
cop” role was intentional.“But we don’t need to be too explicit,” he
added.
“After June 04, 2017 Cambodia’s political landscape will be
different,” he said, referring to the date of the commune elections.
“The new situation will be conducive to an end of my forced exile. I
will do whatever I can to continue and to reinforce the CNRP’s mission
to rescue our nation from dictatorship, obscurantism and deadly
corruption.”
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