In Cambodia, Shifting Allegiances Shape a Tougher Than Usual Election
Gilles Sabrie for the International Herald Tribune
A poster of Prime Minister Hun Sen in Anlong Veng. More Photos »
By THOMAS FULLER | New York Times | 25 July 2013
ANLONG VENG, Cambodia — A decade and a half after the last remnants of
the Khmer Rouge capitulated in this northwestern town, the streets are
festooned with images of their erstwhile enemy, Prime Minister Hun Sen,
who is seeking to prolong his 28 years in power in an election on
Sunday.
In one of the many shifting allegiances of post-genocide Cambodia,
former Khmer Rouge soldiers proclaim loyalty to Mr. Hun Sen, who drove
them from power in 1979 alongside invading Vietnamese forces, ending
their murderous attempt to build a peasant utopia.
After retreating here and fighting Mr. Hun Sen well into the 1990s,
Khmer Rouge veterans today credit the prime minister with orchestrating
peace, building roads and schools, and helping turn Anlong Veng, once
shrouded in jungle and studded with land mines, into a moderately
prosperous town. This last stronghold of the Khmer Rouge now has 3G
Internet access.
“It’s like sports — you should join the winning team,” said Nhem En, a
former official photographer for the Khmer Rouge who took the haunting
and now notorious images of prisoners before they were executed at the
infamous Tuol Sleng prison.
Kong Sing, a former Khmer Rouge medic who lost an eye during the more
than two decades of fighting, now works as a veterinarian and lives
comfortably in a two-story wooden house. “Of course, it’s strange that
we used to be their enemy and now we support them,” he said. “But what
should we do? We have had enough of war.”
Yet despite Mr. Hun Sen’s ability to overcome the resistance of even his
toughest enemies, he is finding new challenges from other quarters of
Cambodian society in the fifth parliamentary election since 1993, when
multiparty democracy was restored. Younger, more restless voters, many
of whom were born after the Khmer Rouge scourge, take peace for granted.
And voters in the increasingly modern capital, Phnom Penh, are tiring
of what is effectively one-party rule.
As a result, Mr. Hun Sen — who maintains a difficult-to-defeat political
machine — faces what analysts describe as a formidable contest, tougher
than the governing party is accustomed to and one that features starkly
competing political priorities.
His Cambodian People’s Party is underlining the achievements of the past
three decades, including economic growth that hovers around 7 percent.
The opposition is focusing instead on issues that preoccupy many
Cambodians today: growing corruption and an uneven distribution of
wealth in a country where the richest (and often politically connected)
drive luxury cars and own villas while their countrymen struggle on amid
grinding poverty.
Opposition leaders are also highlighting the authoritarian ways of Mr.
Hun Sen’s government, which keeps tight reins on most news media outlets
and closes down organizations viewed as antigovernment.
The rallying cry of the young opposition supporters in Phnom Penh is
“change.” They campaign throughout the city on motorcycles, emblems of
greater mobility and incomes than their parents knew.
The opposition was galvanized by the return last Friday of Sam Rainsy, a
former finance minister who fled Cambodia in 2009 rather than face
charges in a highly politicized trial. Mr. Sam Rainsy, who was greeted
by tens of thousands of supporters at the Phnom Penh airport, was
pardoned by Mr. Hun Sen under pressure from the United States and other
governments that provide aid to the country.
But the National Election Committee has ruled that Mr. Sam Rainsy missed
the deadline to put his name on the ballot. He says he will contest his
exclusion, raising the possibility of a disputed election and clashes
between government supporters and those from his Cambodian National
Rescue Party.
In a country without a tradition of reliable opinion polls, the
election’s outcome is difficult to predict. Analysts say, however, that
Mr. Hun Sen has a great advantage in his tight control of the news
media, the patronage machine he has built up over the years for the
Cambodian People’s Party and the ability to use the party’s wealth to
mobilize support. The party currently controls the overwhelming majority
of the lower house, whose seats are up in the election and whose
chairman names the prime minister.
Sok Touch, the rector of Khemarak University in Phnom Penh, said
government officials had been telling voters that a vote for the
opposition would mean being cut off from government largess. “Cambodia
is still very poor,” he said. “But the C.P.P. is getting richer and
richer, and it can buy people.”
Across the country, employees of companies with close links to the
government are often treated as foot soldiers of the party. That
tendency was on display recently at a newly constructed casino here in
Anlong Veng that is owned by a businessman with close ties to Mr. Hun
Sen.
Croupiers, mostly young women in yellow vests and bow ties, had been
summoned to the casino’s cafeteria, where a man seated at a table showed
them a sample ballot. “There are eight political parties, and the
C.P.P. is No. 4,” he said. “If you love the C.P.P., tick No. 4.”
The past mixes awkwardly with the present in Anlong Veng. Mr. Nhem En,
the former photographer for the Communist Khmer Rouge, runs a massage
parlor where masseuses wear high heels and heavy makeup. He is also
deputy governor of the district. Ten minutes from the center of town,
across the street from the casino, visitors can pay $2 to see a pile of
ashes in an unkempt vacant lot, the spot where the body of the Khmer
Rouge leader, Pol Pot, was cremated in 1998.
Old Khmer Rouge soldiers, many with visible war wounds, now run small
businesses or till the rice and cassava fields. At night, officials from
the ruling party project campaign videos on large portable screens,
extolling its achievements.
The opposition is barely visible here, as is the case in many other
remote areas. A former Khmer Rouge platoon commander, Teng Sakun, who
lost his left foot to a land mine, said he knew nothing about the
opposition because he had never seen it represented on television. The
Khmer-language news media report little about Mr. Hun Sen’s challengers.
Mr. Teng Sakun said he could trust Mr. Hun Sen because of the prime
minister’s peasant background. (Mr. Hun Sen was himself a Khmer Rouge
cadre before joining the Vietnamese forces to overthrow the movement.)
After decades of turmoil, during which he lived in thatch huts in the
jungle, Mr. Teng Sakun now has a grocery shop in Anlong Veng and drives a
Toyota Camry.
That type of trajectory may be one reason that in the last election, in
2008, Mr. Hun Sen’s party won comfortable majorities in all five of the
western provinces with strong concentrations of former Khmer Rouge
soldiers.
Elsewhere, the country also seems ready to put the past to rest.
Although only a handful of Khmer Rouge leaders have been brought to
trial for the deaths of 1.7 million Cambodians from 1975 to 1979, the
lack of prosecutions is not an issue in the election.
Mr. Nhem En said that “sometimes” his past taking photos of adults and children headed to their executions haunted him.
But then he changed the subject to his massage parlor and the resort he plans to open.
“Of course the past always meets the present,” he said. “But we have to be flexible.” [how convenient for him!]
8 comments:
Hun put his crimes' money in Viets' banks, Thai bank, China bank, Malay Bank, Singapore bank, Swize bank etc. but in the end, everyone wants him dead, so that they could have it all. They did it to our predecessors and they will do the same to this no brain leader too. By then, they will be burnt in hell forever and ever, just like those greedy of the past ancesters for sure, how blind, dumb and crazy are you Hun? why can't you learn from the past? But since you are so wicked, god will not enlightened you but to let you work really hard to you death without having time to enjoy it really, so, bless are you who have eyes to see and ears to hear....
Long Live Viet Nam and Long Live Hun Sen and CPP...
We will killed all of you useless human.. we prepared 3 billion dollars after the election if you not joint the government... We prepared snipers forces to kills all of you and we prepared secret forces if you protest after election ... at the end we will kills all of you..
You will not get free and fair election ... because we deleted more then 1millions voters and we have more then 1 millions ghost voters and other.. so lost just with this ... CPP already won 25% just from this .. This election we will win 90 seats or more ...
Long live Viet Nam and CPP and Hun Sen...
U will never see Khmer Prime Minister only Viet Nam approved one or Vietnamese bloods ... You are all useless khmer and should never live .. soon your country will be our NEW PROVINCE ....
Long Live Viet Nam and Long Live Hun Sen and CPP...
We will killed all of you useless human.. we prepared 3 billion dollars after the election if you not joint the government... We prepared snipers forces to kills all of you and we prepared secret forces if you protest after election ... at the end we will kills all of you..
You will not get free and fair election ... because we deleted more then 1millions voters and we have more then 1 millions ghost voters and other.. so lost just with this ... CPP already won 25% just from this .. This election we will win 90 seats or more ...
Long live Viet Nam and CPP and Hun Sen...
U will never see Khmer Prime Minister only Viet Nam approved one or Vietnamese bloods ... You are all useless khmer and should never live .. soon your country will be our NEW PROVINCE ....
Long Live shit @ 4:46 PM
At least we, Khmer dare to rebel against our oppressive government.
What have you, coward Viet, done? Nothing, but fleeing your country from a handful of dictators!
Hun and his dynasty is holding our King Hecmoni as their hostage, we have to rescue our king ASAP. Let go everyone free our King!!!
Koh Tral Island must not be forgotten
By “any patriot Khmers”
Why do Koh Tral Island, known in Vietnam as Phu Quoc, a sea and land area covering proximately over 30,000 km2 [Note: the actual land size of Koh Tral itself is 574 square kilometres (222 sq miles)] have been lost to Vietnam by whose treaty? Why don’t Cambodia government be transparent and explain to Cambodia army at front line and the whole nation about this? Why don't they include this into education system? Why?
Cambodian armies are fighting at front line for 4.6 km2 on the Thai border and what's about over 30,000km2 of Cambodia to Vietnam. Nobody dare to talk about it! Why? Cambodian armies you are decide the fate of your nation, Cambodian army as well as Cambodian people must rethink about this again and again. Is it fair?
Koh Tral Island, the sea and land area of over 30,000 square kilometres have been lost to Vietnam by the 1979 to 1985 treaties. The Cambodian army at front line as well as all Cambodian people must rethink again about these issues. Are Cambodian army fighting to protect the Cambodia Nation or protecting a very small group that own big lands, big properties or only protecting a small group but disguising as protecting the Khmer nation?
The Cambodian army at front lines suffer under rain, wind, bullets, bombs, lack of foods, lack of nutrition and their families have no health care assistance, no securities after they died but a very small group eat well, sleep well, sleep in first class hotel with air conditioning system with message from young girls, have first class medical care from oversea medical treatments, they are billionaires, millionaires who sell out the country to be rich and make the Cambodian people suffer everyday.
Who signed the treaty 1979-1985 that resulted in the loss over 30,000 km2 of Cambodia??? Why they are not being transparent and brave enough to inform all Cambodians and Cambodian army at front line about these issues? Why don't they include Koh Tral (Koh Tral size is bigger than the whole Phom Phen and bigger than Singapore [Note: Singapore's present land size is 704 km2 (271.8 sq mi)]) with heap of great natural resources, in the Cambodian education system?
Look at Hun Sen's families, relatives and friends- they are billionaires, millionaires. Where did they get the money from when we all just got out of war with empty hands [in 1979]? Hun Sen always say in his speeches that Cambodia had just risen up from the ashes of war, just got up from Year Zero with empty hands and how come they are billionaires, millionaires but 90% of innocent Cambodian people are so poor and struggling with their livelihood every day?
Yes, Hun sen knew from day one of his Vietnamese appointment that Khmer do not like him that's why he kills, threatens and bribes just so he can stay in his position of power. That's why he has blood on his hands and shit on his feet.
It's a shame he does not have the intelligence to implement genuine change in his behaviour to a more favourable one.
Real shame that no one close to him cares and dedicate enough to give him advise with any wisdom in it.
It's additional shame that his communist ideology makes him lose his religious believes, because, any good monks would advise him that when you cause suffering to others this will not bring peace to your life (karma).
In the end he has to go as Mr. Rohrabacher has said, if he is stupid enough to fight this he will go the same way as other dictators before him.
9:11 PM
Anonymous said...
You all heard what Congressman Rohrabacher said :
'Hun Sen has to go, he has been in power too long!, if he still holds on to his position of power after this election, he will be under close scrutiny'.
You know what that means 'under close scrutiny'?
It means America will investigate everything about the Hun sen's empire, including his associations (no matter where they are), all his money -how much he has, where he got it from, who he killed, who he slept with - yes the lot!
America can do this, we know what happened when they investigated the 911 terrorist attacks, the whole world knew everything about those terrorists - how, where, what, when, who and why.
We remember when America froze assets of those suspected association of these terrorists? Some of Hun sen's cronies had their assets frozen too at that time.
The aid money from America, Australia and EU came from their tax payers -their people. I'm sure they'd like to know what Hun sen did with all their money because Cambodia is not a developed country and the general population are still suffering.
So go ahead Hun sen, cheat all you want and continue to be greedy for power. I for one would like to know how much you and your cronies have in all your bank accounts, how you got it, what you use it for, what you've been up to, who and how you've killed. It would be interesting.
9:21 PM
Anonymous said...
You see!, under Sam Rainsy's competent leadership- even a dictator (vicious human being) has a choice of how he can go.....
Hun sen's smart way to go:
-Accept your errors and take accountability.
-Accept the people's choice as who their leader should be and support that leader by giving your co-operation.
(This is the Khmer love Khmer way to go).
Hun sen's stupid way to go...:
- continue to be arrogant, deceitful, bribe, threaten and kill. Then you will go .... Just like other dictators ... Gadafi, Saddam (just to name a few).
(Of course, you should know that this is what yuens want -division so that they can sabotage, the damage is Khmer kill Khmer ). You have intelligence then don't fall for Hanoi's primitive dirty trick.
CNRP knew exactly what they are doing when they announced 'we won't take any Khmer as our enemy' and they meant it!!!
Khmer love Khmer
In memory of Lok Tar Sen Koy
NIGHTMARE FINALLY OVER FOLKS!!!
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