The Phnom Penh Post

Rainsy told to ‘go to prison’

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National Rescue Party has much support around the world but when confronted with problems, Mr President has always fled from the country. They jail, Mr President flees.”

The critic, who did not give his name, compared Rainsy unfavourab­ly with Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of Mya n ma r’s National League for Democracy party, who spent 15 years under house arrest before leading her part y to a landslide electoral victory last year.

“So, I would beg pardon from His Excellency. Please, I hope you can clarify. Don’t run away from prison . . . go to jail and win the citizens’ support.”

Rainsy has not stepped foot in Cambodia since November, when he avoided returning from a trip to South Korea after a warrant was issued for his arrest in a case widely believed to be politicall­y motivated.

In comparison, his deputy Kem Sokha, who also faces a charge many have deemed political, has remained holed up in the party’s Phnom Penh headquarte­rs.

Responding, Rainsy steered into familiar terrain, saying his arrest or death would not “rescue” the country from “the Yuon” – a reference to Vietnamese people considered derogatory by some.

“If Sam Rainsy goes to Cambodia now, and Sam Rainsy is jailed or killed, no problem, but after I die, please tell me whether Cambodia will get away from the claw of the Yuon, [tell me this] and I will agree immediatel­y,” Rainsy said, before reminding the crowd of the grenade attack on a protest he led in 1997, which killed at least 16 people.

“I am not afraid of dying, but dying must be useful. You shouldn’t die by being duped, or being useless . . . that is an absolute no. [I need to] keep my life and defend the nation.”

He then addressed references to Myanmar, which he held was seeking a solution between“Burmese and Burmese”, claiming the problem in Cambodia was between “Khmer and Yuon”.

Responding via email yester- day, Rainsy – who previously tried to link the CNRP with the NLD’s momentum – expanded on the difference­s between the countries, saying Aung San Suu Kyi had never faced an assassinat­ion attempt, which he contrasted with the “attitude of Cambodian leaders”, citing the 1997 grenade attack.

“Over the last 100 years Burma has never lost any territory to any neighbouri­ng country implementi­ng an expansioni­st policy, which is not the case for Cambodia,” he added.

Speaking yesterday, political observer Ok Serei Sopheak said Rainsy’s continued use of shopworn criticisms of Vietnam would not cut it in the current political context in which supporters wanted to see strength.

“It’s time. Those supporters are trying to find some heroism, some charismati­c leaders who have the courage to say that ‘I’m here, I’m with you and I’m against injustice’ and show that by even going to jail, because whatever has been tried so far has failed,” he said.

 ?? PHOTO SUPPLEID ?? Self-exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy talks to Cambodian diaspora in New York last week during a visit to the United States.
PHOTO SUPPLEID Self-exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy talks to Cambodian diaspora in New York last week during a visit to the United States.

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