Critics: Cambodia's New Korea Envoy Has ‘No Experience’
Cambodian Ambassador to South Korea Long Dimanche sits in his house after an exclusive interview with VOA on March 13th, 2016.
VOA | 20 April 2016
PHNOM PENH—A direct phone call from
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen alerted Phnom Penh city hall deputy
Long Dimanche to his new role as the country’s envoy to South Korea.
The 36-year-old Dimanche will replace Suth Dina, the disgraced former
ambassador who was arrested by Cambodia's Anti-Corruption Unit on April
4 and jailed in Phnom Penh’s Prey Sar prison days later.
“I was a bit surprised when I received the call from the premier to
serve in the new post,” he hold VOA's Khmer Service following the
Saturday morning phone call.
The eldest son of Long Visalo, a secretary of state at the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, and son-in-law to Nhem Vanda, vice president of the
National Committee for Disaster Management, Dimanche studied
international relations in France before getting a job as assistant to
then-Phnom Penh Governor Kep Chuktema in 2005.
Dimanche said that although his father helped him pursue an education and find work, his appointment is not nepotistic.
“The appointment is not based on blood lines as some people have
suggested,” he said, adding that he would strive to serve Cambodian
migrant workers in South Korea as the new ambassador.
“The corruption issue is an issue we have to solve,” he said. “Even
when I worked in Phnom Penh Municipal Hall, I worked with transparency,
collecting opinions from the public when there were allegations of
irregularities.”
Some critics, however, disagree. Tep Vanny, a prominent Boeung Kak
lake activist who has had many a run-in with city security forces over
environmental and land title issues, said Dimanche is not a suitable
candidate for the ambassador job because he was a “dishonest” spokesman
for the municipality.
“He is not sincere in his words to reporters and the people," she
said. "He seems to not have the ability to tell the truth or the will to
serve the people who are victims, such as the Boeung Kak residents.”
Dimanche countered that the controversies he encountered during his
city hall tenure taught him valuable lessons and that many of his
critics are unaware of the behind-the-scenes work he had done with local
communities.
Since late March, Hun Sen has pushed ahead with his controversial
reform agenda with a midterm cabinet reshuffle in which eight ministers
faced the axe, despite resistance from a bureaucracy used to getting its
way and practiced in shrugging off allegations of nepotism and
corruption.
Who needs experiences when you have "CONNECTION" or you know what....Only in the Kingdom of Wonder!!!
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