Opposition leader Kem Sokha speaks to The Post on Friday at his home in Phnom Penh. Pann Rachana |
‘We have to keep moving’: Sokha speaks about Kingdom’s recent election – and the next
Phnom Penh Post | 19 June 2017
Opposition leader Kem Sokha said in an interview on Saturday
that he believed Prime Minister Hun Sen could be compelled to relinquish
power if he loses the July 2018 national election and that his party’s
task was now to present itself as a group ready to take the reins of
government.
In an hour-long interview at his home in Phnom Penh’s Tuol Kork district, Sokha told The Post the results of the June 4 commune elections
had not been as good for the opposition party as he had hoped, and that
he had spent the last week travelling the country to keep spirits up.
Sokha had set 60 percent of the national vote as the CNRP’s goal, but
preliminary results show it won only about 44 percent to the CPP’s 51
percent – still a large gain from the 2012 commune vote, when the
opposition won about 30 percent to the CPP’s 61 percent.
“Soon after the election, the ruling party announced it had won and
claimed that we lost – it made us disheartened, and so the big goal of
these trips has been to show people that we did not lose,” Sokha said,
explaining that the CNRP’s surge was significant.
“We won, and are moving forward, but we have to keep moving,” Sokha
said. “There were some people who worked very hard to vote for change
but for now we could not [achieve] change, so they were tired with it,
and we do not want them to get tired.”
Hun Sen and his CPP would now be rapidly reorganising for the July
2018 national election, Sokha said, so the opposition too had to press
ahead – especially with its former leader, Sam Rainsy, choosing again to
stay in France to avoid politically tinged criminal convictions here.
Rainsy last week said he would not be returning to Cambodia as
promised to face threats of arrest after Hun Sen lifted a travel ban on
his return. His announcement came about a year after Sokha decided to
stay in the country despite similar legal threats against him from the
prime minister.
Asked to compare his style as opposition leader to that of Rainsy –
with whom Sokha long feuded before they merged their competing parties
into the CNRP in July 2012 – Sokha demurred, and said that he could only
evaluate his own leadership style.
Yet pressed to provide some similarities and differences with Rainsy,
Sokha said he always tried to take a consultative and temperate
approach to leadership, and also tried not to react to provocations or
make big decisions on the fly according to his feelings.
“We have the same goals. We want change, because we have seen that
our country could face danger under today’s rulers – and both of us have
sacrificed a lot and have faced challenges – but for me, I do not think
it is only me who can lead,” Sokha said.
“Any person can lead when the party has clear principles and goals
. . . and as leaders, we should not just do things according to
feelings; we do things with strategy and principles – this is what I
have done.”
“Even try to poke me anywhere,” he added. “I will not just hop up
according to my feelings – I would use principles to try to solve the
issue. For the issues I handle, I take a group approach, and whatever I
put to the meeting, when the meeting decides, I release that.”
“This is my way of working.”
One of those decisions, Sokha said, was for the CNRP to abandon
anti-Vietnamese rhetoric. Like many foes of the CPP before them, both
Sokha and Rainsy have often turned to anti-Vietnamese rhetoric to appeal
to animosity toward the country’s historical enemy.
As recently as the 2013 national election, Rainsy used a campaign
stop at Angkor Wat in Siem Reap to call for the Cambodian people to take
the temple complex “back” from the CPP-connected Vietnamese-Cambodian
businessman who managed its ticketing system [Sok Kong in charge of the Apsara Authority, who has declared he's "proud to be Vietnamese", also owns Bokor Mountains, Kirirom Mountains both to build casinos and hotels; Sokimex petroleum, Sokha Hotels and Resorts in Phnom Penh, in Siem Reap, in Sihanoukville].
A month before that, Sokha had been caught on tape allegedly claiming
that the Khmer Rouge’s S-21 torture centre in Phnom Penh was fabricated
by the invading Vietnamese in 1979 as a propaganda tool to justify
their invasion of Cambodia.
Sokha acknowledged the opposition had appealed to hostility toward
the Vietnamese to win votes, but said it had made a decision to eschew
such rhetoric to instead focus on its specific policy issues – and to
avoid both being cast as a racist party and creating hostilities.
“The CNRP has become a party that is preparing to lead the country,
so there is no need to talk about these issues that just bring some
popularity and also bring disputes and tension. We should be raising the
points that bring interest for the people,” Sokha said.
“We can’t do it this time. If we did it this time, it will create
anger. It’s a hot issue and we try to avoid it,” Sokha said. “I
explained to the leaders of the party how this could gain or lose, and
the dangers, and they supported it . . . so this is the principle of the
party.”
Yet the CNRP has made such promises in the past before lapsing back
into the rhetoric, and the issue remains sensitive for Hun Sen, who was
installed by the Vietnamese in 1985 during Cambodia’s communist era and
has seethed at being called Hanoi’s puppet.
Many observers have wondered whether Hun Sen, who has now been prime minister for 32 years and has repeatedly warned that
civil war will break out if he loses power, would ever give up power to
his CNRP opponents if they win the July 2018 national election. He also
warned last month that he was prepared to “eliminate 100 or 200 people”
to ensure stability in the country.
Sokha said he did not know much about the man on a personal level,
but made no mistakes about his character as a political leader.
“For work, I know that he always tries to take advantage and does not
want to talk in an equal way with his partners. This is his character.
He wants to take advantage of us, so I don’t confront him or make him
angry, and I just stick to my stances,” Sokha said.
“We have seen that he has done the same thing again and again, both
in his way of speaking and character, and his political stance and his
message.”
Yet he insisted that he believed Hun Sen had “learned a lesson from
the past few years” – which have seen opposition officials and civil
society members sued, imprisoned, beaten and murdered – and would not be
so aggressive over the coming year.
An outright rejection of any CNRP win in 2018 was not impossible, he
said, but many elites Hun Sen would rely on for such a task would be
able to accept an opposition victory “when they believe that they live
peacefully with us, with their existing wealth”.
Sokha would not comment on the prospects of a coalition, but said the
party had learned from Funcinpec’s travails in the 1990s as the CPP’s
increasingly marginalised partner. In any case, he said it was not
certain the CPP’s outward control of the military and state institutions
would serve it much use.
“It’s not easy,” Sokha said of the idea of convincing the CPP to cede
power. “If the election is very close, it will be difficult and it
could lead to this or that, but I believe when we win strongly and
highly, there will be discussions about handing over power.”
“The situation now is not like 1993, 1998 or 2003, and it is not only
the people but the civil servants and the armed forces who know what is
positive and negative – and who is good and bad – and they do not want
Cambodian society to keep fighting,” he said.
“I believe Hun Sen and the CPP know this.”
It's funny that every time Theary Seng attacks Kem Sokha, the comment option is disabled. This crazy, religious woman is now doing more harm to the CNRP than the CPP. Sam Rainsy can accept the reality, why can't she?
ReplyDeleteU shut up. Some one else posted the news.
Delete4:19 AM
DeleteWe all agree.