The Phnom Penh Post

Banh: The Khmer Rouge worse than sanctions and pressure

- Niem Chheng

MINISTER of National Defence Tea Banh said on Thursday that having sanctions and external pressure placed on Cambodia was not worse than life under the brutal Khmer Rouge regime.

Tea Banh, who is also deputy prime minister, was speaking to military and ruling party officials as they commemorat­ed the 42nd

anniversar­y of Prime Minister Hun Sen’s struggle to reach Vietnam in 1977 and return with troops to liberate Cambodia from the Khmer Rouge

His journey began at Koh Thmar, in Memot district’s Tonloung commune in the eastern Tbong Khmum province.

“I regard sanctions and externa l pressure as not being worse than the Pol Pot regime, which created a ‘prison wit hout walls’.

“With them, people could only wait to be k illed,” Banh said.

Without mentioning any names, Banh said some people had tried to misreprese­nt the facts regarding Cambodia.

“Nowadays, there are messages from abroad, and these messages keep coming endlessly. They slander us and try to incite us. They do not mention the truth – they say only that Cambodia has been devastated.

“And some ambitious foreign groups outright believe this handful of voices and try to find every way . . . they boast of putting on sanctions and pressure. We all have to remember this,” said the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) member of the National Assembly for Siem Reap province.

Banh also appealed to the military to strengthen themselves in order to fulfil their duties and in preparatio­n for facing any new possible dangers posed by what he called the “ignorant” group or enemy attempting to bring down the CPP-led government of Hun Sen.

He said they had to protect peace and the accomplish­ments Cambodia had made.

“Talking about livelihood­s, they say Cambodia is getting poorer and poorer, and that they cannot allow Cambodia to remain in this situation and must make a change. They

say it is necessary to change the government.

“They chant ‘change, change’ everywhere and tell young children to shout the word. I ask: what was that? In the past, we did not even have a bowl to put porridge in. Now we at least have this and many other things. Why do you need [regime] change?” Banh asked.

Kin Phea, the director-general of the Internatio­nal Relations Institute at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, said Banh may have been referring to two groups, including former Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) officials in self-exile.

The other may have been members of the Cambodia diaspora who he said did not know the truth regarding developmen­t in Cambodia.

Phea agreed with Banh that having internatio­nal sanctions placed would not be worse than life under the Khmer Rouge.

However, he said Cambodian politician­s should stop comparing the current situation with the Khmer Rouge era. Making such comparison­s would not make Cambodia develop f urt her, he said.

“Politician­s should stop comparing now with the past but should see how Cambodia compares to other countries that have been through similar situations. How have these countries developed so far and how we should develop our country?

“We should not take political advantage from the Khmer Rouge era, instead we should have new ideas for the count r y’s prosperit y,” he said.

Banh also appealed to teachers to spread Hun Sen’s story in schools. He told the Buddhist clergy and artists to educate the public on this part of history.

He said the research team at the Institute of Military History should continue their research into Hun Sen’s journey from June 21, 1977, to May 12, 1978, while he was in Vietnam.

“We have to continue this work and tell the true history – this is to avoid the confusion that could turn a liberator into something else. This would be against the truth,” he said.

Youk Chhang, the executive director of the Documentat­ion Centre of Cambodia (DC-Cam), said on Thursday that significan­t historical sites regarding the Khmer Rouge needed to be highlighte­d and preserved.

“Revisiting such history is a healing process … important for all and the nation herself,” he said.

He said Hun Sen’s journey to Vietnam had not been well recorded because it involved Cambodia’s eastern neighbour.

“However, we cannot talk about the Khmer Rouge without having an objective discussion about both Vietnam and China,” Chhang said.

 ?? CAMBODIA ARCHIVES/VIETNAM NEWS AGENCY ??
CAMBODIA ARCHIVES/VIETNAM NEWS AGENCY
 ?? DOCUMENTAT­ION CENTER OF ?? Prime Minister Hun Sen speaks with refugees from the eastern zone in 1977.
DOCUMENTAT­ION CENTER OF Prime Minister Hun Sen speaks with refugees from the eastern zone in 1977.

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