Cambodia's Hun Sen Feels Politically Vaccinated
BANGKOK, Thailand -- When Cambodian Prime Minister
Hun Sen received
his AstraZeneca vaccination shot, he
suddenly felt invulnerable and
vowed to rule
indefinitely.
Hun Sen is already one of the world's
longest ruling prime ministers,
confident his successor
will be his son Hun Manet who is a West Point
graduate,
or Finance Minister Aun Pornmoniroth.
The vaccination
shot against COVID-19 he received on March 4 may
delay
those plans.
"I will not die anytime soon.
And now that my body is vaccinated, I
will not easily
die," Hun Sen, 68, announced after receiving
an
AstraZeneca injection at Calmette Hospital in the
capital Phnom Penh.
"I will rule until a point that I feel I no longer want to rule."
The U.S. perceives Hun
Sen as dangerously pro-China because he allows
major
Chinese investment and infrastructure projects, enabling
Beijing
to extend its reach into Southeast
Asia.
Cambodia is simultaneously embroiled in a harsh
crackdown against Hun
Sen's political opponents, enforced
by prison sentences and fueled by
allegations of coup
plots.
On March 1, Phnom Penh's Municipal Court
sentenced nine former
Cambodia National Rescue Party
(CNRP) leaders in absentia for an
"attempt to commit a
felony" and "attack and endanger institutions of
the
Kingdom of Cambodia."
The most prominent of the
fugitive opposition leaders is Sam Rainsy
who received a
25-year prison sentence, while the other eight
received
similar punishment. They denied the
charges.
"Troubled by sentences today targeting
political opposition leaders in
Cambodia, particularly
given a lack of due process," U.S. Ambassador
to Cambodia
W. Patrick Murphy responded on Twitter.
The
aristocratic Mr. Rainsy was already dodging a 15-year
prison
sentence for "inciting military personnel to
disobedience" in 2017.
While sheltering in France, he
was convicted of other crimes including
a race-baiting,
forged treaty erasing the Cambodian-Vietnamese
border.
In 1998, then-U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia
Kenneth Quinn denied Mr.
Rainsy's allegations that
Washington was blocking a FBI investigation
into a 1997
grenade attack in Phnom Penh which killed more than
20
people and injured 100, including one
American.
Despite Cambodia's political confrontations,
the U.S. is keen to have
good relations with Hun Sen so
American businesses remain welcome in
the laisse-faire
capitalist economy.
"Who hasn't dreamed of owning a
classic @harleydavidson motorcycle? I
stopped by their
Phnom Penh showroom today to see the iconic
American
brand," Ambassador Murphy tweeted in
September.
He displayed photographs of himself clad in
a padded black leather
jacket accented by a
stars-and-stripes patterned tie, astride a
Milwaukee,
Wisconsin-built Harley in their
showroom.
Simultaneously in September, the U.S.
Treasury Office used the
Magnitsky Act to sanction a
Chinese government-owned real estate
company for starting
to build a seaport, airport runway and holiday
resort at
Dara Sakor on Cambodia's southern
coast.
.
Then-U.S. Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo cited unconfirmed "credible
reports" that Beijing
was plotting to use the multi-billion-dollar
facilities
"to host military assets."
Beijing and Phnom Penh
denied the allegation and said the Union
Development
Group's project was for civilian use.
The U.S. action
"not only undermines legitimate business interests,
but
is a complete violation of Cambodia’s sovereignty,"
China's
embassy in Cambodia said.
Hun Sen's
successor is widely expected to be his eldest son,
Army
Commander Hun Manet, 43, who is empowered to control
the military if a
conflict erupts, and also holds elite
political positions.
His father however also indicated
Finance Minister Aun Pornmoniroth
could be the next prime
minister.
"Khmer-service broadcasting of foreign radio
stations is trying to
smear the Hun family for building a
dynastic rule to transfer powers
to the generations of
prime minister’s children and grandchildren,”
said
ruling Cambodian People's Party spokesman Sok Eysan,
according to
a Voice of America report on March
4.
"We observe that this effort [to groom Hun Manet]
is underway," said
political commentator Meas Nee said.
"We do not know when."
American warplanes heavily
bombed Cambodia during the late 1960s and
early 1970s,
killing hundreds of thousands of Cambodians
in
Washington's regional Vietnam War.
Hun Sen was a
regiment commander in Pol Pot's anti-U.S. Khmer
Rouge
guerrillas at the time.
They achieved victory
in 1975 against the U.S.-backed Lon Nol regime
while
defeated U.S. forces retreated in panic.
Hun Sen
defected from the Khmer Rouge in 1977 and sought sanctuary
in
neighboring Vietnam, fearing Pol Pot's paranoid
internal purges.
More than one million Cambodians perished under Pol Pot's ultra-Maoist regime.
In 1978,
Vietnamese forces toppled Pol Pot's regime, installed Hun
Sen
as Cambodia's foreign minister, and occupied the
ravaged Southeast
country before exiting in
1989.
After becoming prime minister in 1985, Hun Sen's
track record included
bloody battles to remain in power,
targeting Cambodian political
rivals and remnants of
Khmer Rouge in the jungles.
***
Richard S.
Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based American foreign
correspondent
reporting from Asia since 1978. Excerpts
from his new nonfiction book,
"Rituals. Killers. Wars.
& Sex. -- Tibet, India, Nepal, Laos,
Vietnam,
Afghanistan, Sri Lanka & New York" are
available at
https://asia-correspondent.tumblr.com