The Phnom Penh Post

Sokha’s daughter says to honour father’s will

- Ben Sokhean

KEM Samathida, daughter of imprisoned opposition leader Kem Sokha, responded Sunday night to former CNRP head Sam Rainsy’s assertions about her father’s support for a new “movement” to put pressure on the government, asking the public to honour the will of her father and not “defame” him.

“On behalf of the family of Kem Sokha, I would like to confirm all the decisions of my father have been made by his will. He has never decided to do anything against his will for his safety. If he wanted to betray himself for the sake of safety, he would not continue to struggle in a country which he knew wanted to arrest him,” she wrote, an apparent reference to remarks made by Rainsy that Sokha actually supports the new Cambodia National Rescue Movement but cannot say so publicly out of fear.

Rainsy announced the CNRM earlier this month, saying it would put pressure on the government to reverse measures taken against the now-dissolved Cambodia National Rescue Party – including the jailing of Sokha – by calling for demonstrat­ions. While some former party officials have shown support for it, others have said it only imperils Sokha, who is awaiting trial on widely decried “treason” charges in a Tbong Khmum prison.

Through his lawyer, Sokha announced on Saturday that he did not support the CNRM, though Rainsy challenged the sincerity of his disavowal.

“I would like to ask for an end to the defamation of my father . . . My father has a firm determinat­ion and wisdom,” Samathida wrote.

The new “movement” is supported by CNRP vice presidents Mu Sochua and Eng Chhay Eang, both former members of the Sam Rainsy Party, but not by many who used to make up Sokha’s Human Rights Party. The two merged to create the CNRP in 2012.

Ou Chanroth, a CNRP lawmaker from the HRP wing of the party, said he did not support the movement, but downplayed the severity of a purported “rift” dividing the party.

“I think that the party still exists because the party is recognised by over 3 million people,” he said, referring to support for the CNRP during the 2013 national elections.

“It is not a rift, it is just a dispute in solving the national problem,” Chanroth said.

In an email yesterday, Rainsy said the creation of the CNRM would go forward, with or without the overt support of Sokha.

“We must absolutely launch the CNRM to give a new momentum to the CNRP and prepare for its final victory over dictatorsh­ip so as to rescue our nation,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia