Former opposition leader Sam Rainsy addresses CNRP supporters in a video posted on his Facebook page on Monday. Photo supplied |
Rainsy claims Monyvann working with ruling party to stage ‘coup’ in CNRP
Phnom Penh Post | 1 November 2017
With the opposition under pressure from the government and teetering on the brink of dissolution,
former CNRP President Sam Rainsy has claimed party lawmaker Mao
Monyvann is attempting a leadership change in light of current party
leader Kem Sokha’s detention – an allegation that was quickly dispelled
by other party members.
The self-exiled leader took to Facebook on Monday night to both
applaud Sokha’s bravery and strength for standing up to the government
and to condemn an attempted leadership “coup” being orchestrated by the
ruling Cambodian People’s Party, with Monyvann’s assistance.
“The information I received is that now there is someone coming out
to do what Hun Sen or the CPP have instructed,” Rainsy says in the
video. “That is Mao Monyvann.”
The allegation comes days after Rainsy and other senior party members overseas said
Sokha’s approval of a list of party nominees for Senate election should
be disregarded because it was given under pressure from behind bars and
was not in compliance with party procedures.
In the video, Rainsy continues to say that Monyvann was in the
process of lobbying support from lower-level party members in
anticipation of announcing a leadership change that would install him as
the new president of the main opposition party.
“So, this is a betrayal, an outright cheap betrayal which the
Cambodian people’s dignity and intelligence cannot accept,” he says.
Rainsy also makes a call to local and national-level CNRP officials
to leave the country if they find the increasing pressure from the
government too much to handle.
Reached yesterday, Rainsy said he had heard from grassroots
supporters and leaders in several provinces who said Monyvann had
approached them seeking endorsement for his leadership. Despite two
internal conflicts being made public this week, Rainsy maintained that
the party was focused on riding out the political storm as the Supreme
Court pursues a motion filed by the Ministry of Interior to dissolve the
CNRP.
“[We] all pursue the same objective, which is to prevent the
unconstitutional dissolution of the CNRP (we are confident now that this
will not happen) and to denounce any attempt by a few isolated sold-out
elements to take control of the CNRP,” Rainsy wrote in an email.
Monyvann refuted Rainsy’s accusations, characterising the claims as
those made by an “individual living far away” and contesting the
information the former opposition leader said he had received.
“He did not get information clearly and he just had a dream. A dream which is not true,” he said via telephone yesterday.
Monyvann said he had faced similar accusations since joining politics
in the 1990s, but that these had not affected his dedication to the
party. He also seemed to take a shot at the dozen or more opposition
lawmakers who had left the country since Sokha’s midnight arrest on
widely condemned “treason” charges in September.
Their departure has left the CNRP’s leadership split between home and
abroad.“I cannot run and leave my hero who is facing everything and
dares to go to jail. I cannot do that. But those living abroad, you left
with your choice,” he said.
Political relations between Monyvann and Rainsy have been strained in
the past. In 2011, Monyvann was expelled from the then-Sam Rainsy Party
after he accused two senior parliamentarians of wielding excessive
control over the party. He joined Sokha’s Human Rights Party after his
expulsion, before a merger of the two parties created the CNRP a year
later.
Yesterday, Monyvann’s denials were backed up by CNRP Deputy President
Pol Ham, who said Monyvann had not approached him in an attempt to
garner support for a leadership coup.
“How [Rainsy] knows that, I do not know. I have no idea because Mao Monyvann is working with me as normal,” he said.
Ham said Sokha would remain party leader, repeating past refusals by
party leaders after Sokha’s arrest to appoint a new president, despite
possible ramifications under recently passed amendments to the Law on
Political Parties that prohibit people with criminal convictions from
holding leadership positions within political parties.
Political commentator Ou Virak said it was not surprising the party
seemed to be unravelling given the immense pressure it was under. “The
party isn’t behaving as one. There has been a lot of internal
politicking,” he said yesterday.
As an opposition political party, the CNRP’s modus operandi –
and a contributing factor for its rise in popularity – was to
constantly point the finger at the government and others in power and
win voter support with polarising statements, he said. But now, the
accusations had turned inwards.
“That’s been the bread and butter in the rise of the party. And under pressure they are turning against each other,” he said.
Sebastian Strangio, author of Hun Sen’s Cambodia, suggested that one
of the CPP-led government’s goals could be “to put such immense pressure
on the CNRP that it fractures along SRP-HRP lines”.
“While these fissures have always existed within the party, up until
now the CNRP has done remarkably well to maintain a united front in the
face of Hun Sen’s assaults,” he said.
Opposition Senator Sor Chandeth said the two opposing sides of the dispute would be judged by party supporters.
“The citizens know former CNRP President Sam Rainsy very well and
they know Mao Monyvann very well,” he said. “Sometimes we don’t want
some politicians to do whatever they want, like what we call
demagoguery.”
Scam Rainsy, you quit CNRP long ago, how come you still get reports from CNRP? You never really quit, didn't you?
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