The Phnom Penh Post

Push to add PM’s history to curricula

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Rouge fighters to defect. He said the Defence Ministry has already requested the Education Ministry to incorporat­e the premier’s narrative.

“I think we need to prepare all this knowledge, place it in public and build it into the history curriculum,” he said. “We learn about other kings in the past and, though this regime’s king comes from kings, Samdech [Hun Sen] comes from real people.”

Education Ministry spokesman Ros Salin yesterday declined to comment.

Sowath was speaking at an event for journalist­s yesterday to prepare for the 40th anniversar­y of Hun Sen’s crossing into Vietnam after defecting from the Khmer Rouge, in which he was a deputy regimental commander.

The event will be marked on Wednesday when the premier travels to the east of the country to reenact the 1977 journey. Hun Sen returned two years later alongside a group of fellow ex-Khmer Rouge cadres, who were installed into power with backing from the Vietnamese military.

The story is perhaps the most divisive political narrative in modern Cambodia.

While the CPP has played down the premier’s Khmer Rouge record, emphasised his sacrifice and cast the moment as one of “liberation”, many opposition figures characteri­se it as an “invasion” and accuse the ruling party of remaining “puppets” of Vietnam.

Reached yesterday, Chin Chanveasna, director of NGO Education Partnershi­p, declined to discuss the Defence Ministr y’s proposal, though he expressed hope the government would consult with stakeholde­rs and developmen­t partners before making any changes to textbooks.

San Chey, executive director of transparen­cy NGO ANSA, said he believed the curriculum should steer clear of the government’s achievemen­ts, adding any student interested in pursuing the topic could easily find the necessary material.

“We already have a lot of history to learn about,” he said.

Sebastian Strangio, author of Hun Sen’s Cambodia, said the proposal formed the next step in the CPP’s attempts to “enshrine” the premier’s legacy.

He said that the narrative, based around the toppling of the Khmer Rouge and the CPP’s stewardshi­p of country’s peace, developmen­t and stability, formed a core element of the party’s claims to legitimacy and had been propagated for decades.

“Hun Sen’s personal story is being mobilised to fortify this old political narrative and of course Hun Sen’s story has been a part of this for a long time.What’s new about this is putting it in the curriculum,” Strangio said.

“Hun Sen’s defection was an important event and it was something that came with a lot of risks, so he deserves credit for an act of bravery, but the current version of history that’s being propagated by the CPP government excludes any dissenting views or complicati­ng factors on this story.

“And this is politics – this isn’t history, plain and simple.”

 ?? AKP ?? Hun Sen talks to soldiers at a military installati­on in 1983 during an inspection of the site.
AKP Hun Sen talks to soldiers at a military installati­on in 1983 during an inspection of the site.

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