The Phnom Penh Post

PM ‘determined’ after forgiving those behind ‘murder attempt’

- Ben Sokhean

PRIME MINISTER Hun Sen on Monday said he has forgiven t hose responsibl­e for an attempt on his life 20 years ago, using t he anniversar y to f urt her express his determinat­ion to prevent any “coup” or “colour revolution” f rom ta k ing place i n Cambodia.

Posting on his Facebook page, he said that Monday marked 20 years since an attempted assassinat­ion on him in Siem Reap prov ince.

At 8:52am on September 24, 1998, Hun Sen said, an anti-tank rocket was fired at his motorcade but missed, hitting a villager’s house located on the other side of the road instead.

One villager was killed and another injured.

“If I had died back then, what would have happened after my death in Siem Reap town? After that, could the [civil] war have been ended through [Hun Sen’s] ‘win-win’ policy [that enabled the remaining Khmer Rouge leaders to defect to the government] if Hun Sen was dead?” he asked rhetorical­ly.

“I have forgiven the people who attempted to murder me in Siem Reap. [But] you need to k now that I am still the prime minister and I will not let you murder me and I will not let you attempt a coup or colour revolution,” he wrote.

Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said the post showed the prime minister has strong morals in not seeking revenge on those who had tried to kill him.

“[Hun Sen] will not use personal issues to punish others. [ Justice] will depend on Buddhism’s karma. [Hun Sen] forgives and will not hurt others.

“He is serious about the fate of the country. He will not let anything affect Cambodia [negatively] like pre- vious generation­s. He will not allow [harm to Cambodia] at any cost or in any form,” Siphan said.

After the attack, the two main opposition leaders at the time, Prince Norodom Ranariddh of Funcinpec and Sam Rainsy of the Sam Rainsy Party left the country.

Spokespers­ons from their parties acknowledg­ed that they were worried about accusation­s by the po-

linking the assassinat­ion plot to within their ranks, according to a contempora­ry New

article.

In the attack, an anti-tank rocket was fired at Hun Sen’s motorcade just minutes before the opening of the National Assembly and the ceremony to swear in its members.

‘A proper investigat­ion’

At the time, many suspected that Hun Sen himself might have engineered the attack as an excuse to crack down on the opposition.

Socia l and politica l analyst Hang Vitou said t hat i f the events of September 24, 1998, were indeed an as- sassinatio­n attempt on t he prime minister then t here should be an investigat­ion even now, but he did not believe t hat t his was t he case.

“Personally, I am inclined not to believe that people attempted to assassinat­e Hun Sen.

“If people had tried to kill him, I think Hun Sen would not forget about it.

“If there had been a murder attempt, I believe that the armed forces or [the prime minister’s] bodyguards would have caught those responsibl­e,” he claimed.

“But if it really was attempted murder then there should be a proper investigat­ion. The case was not normal [and someone was killed],” he added.

 ?? AFP ?? Prime Minister Hun Sen (left) and Funcinpec party leader Prince Norodom Ranariddh toast the signing of a joint declaratio­n in Phnom Penh in 2001, three years after Ranariddh’s party was allegedly linked to an attempt on Hun Sen’s life.
AFP Prime Minister Hun Sen (left) and Funcinpec party leader Prince Norodom Ranariddh toast the signing of a joint declaratio­n in Phnom Penh in 2001, three years after Ranariddh’s party was allegedly linked to an attempt on Hun Sen’s life.

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