In February, Hun Sen used controversial amendments to the country’s Law on Political Parties to force the resignation of former opposition leader Sam Rainsy, a man who previously told me Chinese aid enables rights abuses. The CNRP now has a new leader whom Hun Sen has declared amenable – and the government can assure foreign observers that it is holding free elections against an opposition that is technically intact.
Supporters hold images of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen at a campaign rally on Friday in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (Samrang Pring/Reuters) |
Snubbed by Trump, Cambodia is embracing Chinese ways
Washington Post | 2 June 2017
Cristina Maza is a freelance journalist based in Cambodia.
Prime
Minister Hun Sen says Cambodia is a democracy because the country holds regular
votes — such as the local elections taking place this weekend. But is a country
truly democratic when the opposition lives in fear of imprisonment and the
prime minister uses the threat of violence to maintain power?
A former
Khmer Rouge cadre [military commander] who later defected from the murderous regime, Hun Sen has
been Cambodia’s ultimate arbiter since he rose to power on the back of the
Vietnamese invasion that freed the country from the Khmer Rouge in 1979. Now
he’s determined to ensure that his ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP)
doesn’t come close to losing power, as it did in the disputed elections of
2013, when the party received the lowest number of votes in its history.
The
ruling party’s deepening relationship with China, Cambodia’s biggest patron, is
shaping how it is consolidating power (and brazenly perpetrating human rights
violations along the way).
As
Cambodia grows less dependent on Western aid thanks to billions of dollars of
Chinese investment in big infrastructure projects, Hun Sen has moved away from
traditional allies such as the United States and embraced Beijing’s brand of
authoritarian democracy. Last month, Hun Sen traveled to Beijing to participate
in the Belt and Road Forum, a meeting on China’s ambitious international trade
and development strategy.
Meanwhile,
the Trump administration’s shortsighted goal of cutting all development aid to
countries such as Cambodia has shown Hun Sen that thwarting democratic norms
won’t make an important dent in the country’s coffers, allowing him to brush
off Western criticism with ease. (This year, Cambodian officials cited
President Trump’s decision to bar several news outlets from access to the White
House to justify their own crackdown on foreign news broadcasters operating in
the country.)
Cambodia
canceled annual joint military exercises with the United States just months
after launching new military exercises with China, and shortly after Chinese
President Xi Jinping visited Phnom Penh.
During
his visit to Cambodia in October, the Chinese leader promised the kingdom
hundreds of millions of dollars in aid, including advanced telecommunications
equipment for its military, and canceled about $90 million worth of debt. Hun
Sen has railed against Washington for demanding that Phnom Penh repay its
war-era debt. “They brought bombs and dropped them on Cambodia and [now] demand
that the Cambodian people should pay,” Hun Sen said in March.
Now, with
elections around the corner, Hun Sen is taking a page from China’s playbook by
invoking the threat of color revolutions, a reference to the social movements
that led to regime change in parts of the former Soviet Union.
China has
jailed citizens for allegedly colluding with foreign governments to implement
regime change. Hun Sen has used campaign season to announce that the government
is prepared to use force to prevent any such attempts.
“Any act
that leads to overthrow must be absolutely cracked down on and there will be no
pardon,” he told an audience in Phnom Penh, according to the Cambodia Daily.
“To ensure the lives of millions of people, we are willing to eliminate 100 or
200 people because we have seen bitter past experiences.”
Those
comments weren’t isolated. Over the past year, Hun Sen undermined the
neutrality of the military by calling on it to crush color revolutions and keep
him in power. “All armed forces are obliged to ensure that Cambodia is free
from any color revolutions,” he wrote in a Facebook post in November. “The
armed forces shall protect the legitimate government.”
Last
month, he amplified the point to a gathering of soldiers. “The Cambodian
People’s Party must win elections, every election,” he said, according to local
media. “War will happen if the CPP does not control the country anymore.”
Phil Robertson,
deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, said the comments constitute a
threat: “They’re saying they will instigate civil war to hold on to power.”
During a
March ceremony for a new infrastructure project, the prime minister warned
reporters that they would go to jail if their work upset the peace. Reporters
have been beaten and harassed. The government recently threatened to shutter
any news outlet that didn’t follow its strict guidelines on how to cover the
June elections.
In May
2016, four human rights workers with the organization Adhoc and an election
official were arrested for allegedly bribing a witness. Hun Sen intervened in
the judicial process by publicly stating that they should all go to jail.
The
activists’ defenders say they merely reimbursed the food and travel costs of a
woman seeking legal advice, a young hairdresser accused of being the mistress
of then-deputy opposition leader Kem Sokha. The affair, which both parties
denied, was likely invented for political purposes.
The prime
minister often uses the country’s conservative social mores to undermine the
moral authority of his opponents. Smearing his foes with stories of illicit
love affairs is one of his preferred tactics. Today, the activists from Adhoc
are still in pretrial detention, jailed along with Cambodia’s 20 other
political prisoners.
The prime
minister has also used his power over judges and lawmakers to undermine the
main opposition group, the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP). In
February, Hun Sen used controversial amendments to the country’s Law on
Political Parties to force the resignation of former opposition leader Sam
Rainsy, a man who previously told me Chinese aid enables rights abuses. The
CNRP now has a new leader whom Hun Sen has declared amenable – and the
government can assure foreign observers that it is holding free elections
against an opposition that is technically intact.
But with
general elections scheduled for next year and the country moving closer to
China and away from the West, the threats to the prime minister’s opponents
will almost certainly become more severe.
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