Hun Manet Defends His Father's Record
Rights groups
have criticized Prime Minister Hun Sen’s 30-year rule for its harsh
treatment of political opponents, rampant corruption, over-exploitation
of natural resources, and a widening gap between rich and poor.
LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA—Lieutenant
General Hun Manet has defended his father Prime Minister Hun Sen’s
record, saying people should remember the role Hun Sen played in
bringing peace and national reconciliation to the country.
“Peace and stability have brought Cambodia to where it is now,”
Manet, Hun Sen’s eldest son, told VOA Khmer in an exclusive interview.
“These are the basis for development and hope for the future of our
people. These are two crucial foundations.”
Rights groups have criticized Prime Minister Hun Sen’s 30-year rule
for its harsh treatment of political opponents, rampant corruption,
over-exploitation of natural resources, and a widening gap between rich
and poor.
Cambodian
Prime Minister Hun Sen addresses the 2015 Sustainable Development
Summit, Saturday, Sept. 26, 2015 at United Nations headquarters. (AP
Photo/Mary Altaffer)
Despite offering a defense of Hun Sen’s record, Manet said it was up
to the people to choose how to define the strongman’s legacy.
“For the general population, they should consider that in evaluating a person’s legacy they must look at every aspect,” he said. “Even the opposition party or some individuals who say that there is no freedom or the government is a dictatorship, they are using the freedom [created by Hun Sen] to express their opinion to say that there is a dictatorship. They are using different means, like media, Facebook or whatever, that are in use or have been allowed.”
Over one million Cambodian migrant workers are employed in Thailand,
South Korea, Malaysia, and other countries in the region. Critics say
this labor exodus is evidence the government has failed to provide jobs
at home.
However, Manet said there were also some positive aspects of Cambodia’s migrant worker issue.
Cambodian
migrant workers get off from a Thai truck upon their arrival from
Thailand at a Cambodia-Thai international border gate in Poipet,
Cambodia, Tuesday, June 17, 2014. The number of Cambodians who have
returned home from Thailand.
“Migration, which has seen our people working in Thailand, is not all
negative,” he said. “There are positive aspects to it, too, if they go
to work legally and we have measures to support the rights and benefits
of our laborers overseas.”
He added that migrant workers gain valuable skills which they can use
to secure higher paying jobs or form businesses when they return, while
the government is working to boost the local jobs market by providing
more information to job-seekers, training the workforce, developing new
industries and finding new markets for agricultural products.
Manet, who recently concluded a 10-day tour of the US that was marred
by street protests, said he has been unfairly tarred with the same
brush as his father and encouraged observers to focus on his personal
contributions to the country.
Ousted
Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra (front 2nd R), former Thai Prime
Minister Somchai Wongsawat (front R) and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun
Sen (front C) pose with Hun Sen's extended family during their meeting
at the latter's house in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
“If you accuse the father and that accusation spreads to his
children, then would that also mean even my children and … [my father's]
grandchildren are also involved?”
“If you dare to use your rights to accuse other people, you must dare
to be accountable. You have an obligation to show whose land Hun Manet
grabbed, who Hun Manet killed and where Hun Manet spread communist
ideology. You have to prove these [accusations], not just say them.”
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