“What is the point of going to jail for the sake of going to jail, or getting killed for the sake of getting killed?” Rainsy wrote, explaining it would only set the opposition back if he was to return to Cambodia to be arrested, adding that he feared he would be killed.“Getting into the hands of Hun Sen . . . would not advance our cause; on the contrary it would be a silly gift to Hun Sen – who has continuously tried to eliminate me since the deadly March 30, 1997, grenade attack in Phnom Penh – that would rather weaken our cause and demoralize CNRP supporters,” he said.
Prime Minister Hun Sen speaks at a graduation ceremony at the National Institute of Education yesterday in Phnom Penh. Facebook |
Hun Sen taunts Sam Rainsy, branding him a coward for not returning home
Phnom Penh Post | 16 June 2017
Prime
Minister Hun Sen used a public speech yesterday to mercilessly mock former
opposition leader Sam Rainsy, taunting him to make good on a promise to return
to Cambodia, sarcastically referring to him as a “hero” and even singing a few
bars of a classic song suggesting his long-time rival was full of nothing more
than false bravado.
The
October 12 ban on Rainsy’s return was lifted on Wednesday morning after Rainsy
had, in a Radio Free Asia interview the night before, called on Hun Sen to “be
brave enough” to rescind it and compete with him as the opposition leader at
the July 2018 national election.
Speaking
at a graduation ceremony yesterday, Hun Sen said he was disappointed that
Rainsy had not honoured his end of his challenge on RFA, and had instead
appeared to cite the ever growing list of politically tinged criminal
convictions and charges he faces as remaining “obstacles” to his return to the
country.
“He said
... if the ban was lifted, he would come back immediately,” Hun Sen said. “So I
called Bin Chhin, the deputy prime minister and the acting minister for the
Council of Ministers, to cancel the old [order] to open the door for this brave
man to enter."
“Hero,
please come on in. The door’s open,” the prime minister added, explaining that
he hoped Rainsy was not waiting for him to pardon his convictions. “If prison’s
the obstacle, in this entire life he won’t be coming back.”
He then
compared the character of the former opposition leader – who was forced by
newly amended laws to step down from his position as Cambodia National Rescue
Party president in March – to the boy described in Golden Era singer Sinn
Sisamouth’s classic Buffalo Eats the Rice Paddy, a tale of false bravado made
in an effort to woo a woman.
“The
buffalo eats the rice paddy, and I don’t really dare chase it away; the buffalo
walks away, and I chase after it for darling to see,” Hun Sen crooned.
“The
crocodile’s in the water, and I don’t really dare to catch it; then the
crocodile is dead, so I catch it so that darling can see,” he continued in his
rendition.
Still not
finished taking apparent glee in Rainsy’s failure to return, he also chided his
long-time political opponent for not announcing his nonreturn on Facebook. “He
posted it on Twitter,” he said, glaring and noting that very few Cambodians use
the service. “And it was in English, too.”
Rainsy
did not respond to questions about why he did not honour past pledges to return
“in a matter of hours” to face his convictions if the ban was lifted. In a
statement emailed to media, however, he said it was Hun Sen who was the coward
for refusing him safe passage home.
“What is
the point of going to jail for the sake of going to jail, or getting killed for
the sake of getting killed?” Rainsy wrote, explaining it would only set the
opposition back if he was to return to Cambodia to be arrested, adding that he
feared he would be killed.
“Getting
into the hands of Hun Sen . . . would
not advance our cause; on the contrary it would be a silly gift to Hun Sen – who has continuously tried to eliminate me
since the deadly March 30, 1997, grenade attack in Phnom Penh – that would
rather weaken our cause and demoralize CNRP supporters,” he said.
Rainsy’s
decision to once again go into self-imposed exile in 2015 – after a forgotten
two-year jail sentence for defamation was suddenly rekindled – contrasted with
the refusal by his successor, Kem Sokha, to do the same when repeatedly
threatened with arrest by Hun Sen last year [you mean the sam Kem Sokha that Hun Sen groomed and aided and abetted?]
Sokha
instead barricaded himself inside the Cambodia National Rescue Party’s offices
in Phnom Penh for more than six months and challenged the premier to follow
through on the threats, warning that he would unleash mass protests if he was
arrested.
He was
never arrested, and was pardoned late last year. Yesterday, Sokha was in
Battambang and has spent the last week travelling the country delivering speeches
to supporters after leading the CNRP to unprecedented gains at the June 4
commune elections.
But
Buntenh, a dissident monk who heads the Independent Monk Network for Social
Justice, said he believed the opposition was in good hands now and that Rainsy
returning to the country would only help the prime minister drive a wedge into
the party.
“Sam Rainsy
should not try to come, because the CNRP is strong enough. He should wait for
some more time, at least after the 2018 election,” Buntenh said. “Hun Sen will
gain more political interests if Rainsy comes, as he can play more games with
Rainsy.”
“They are
teasing each other,” he said, explaining most people had long ago grown tired
of their quarrelling and wanted more substance. “Hun Sen and Sam Rainsy are
best friends and biggest enemy at times, so it is not new to us. I do not care
much on the matter.”
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