A Change of Guard

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Tuesday 16 December 2014

Hun Sen’s Son Rebukes Protesters in South Korea [Hun Manet went to study in a democratic country but came back to Cambodia to follow his dictatorial father]

BY  | DECEMBER 15, 2014
In a video shared widely on social media over the weekend, Prime Minister Hun Sen’s eldest son Hun Manet called on Cambodians living in South Korea to avoid protests against the ruling CPP and instead be grateful to his father’s government for re-establishing ties with the thriving economy.
Mr. Manet, who was traveling   to South Korea with his father for   the 2014 Asean-Republic of Korea Commemorative Summit, gave the speech during a dinner with a group of Cambodian officials, workers and students on Friday night.
He criticized the small group of Cambodian migrants who turned out to protest against Mr. Hun Sen’s government in Seoul on December 7, saying they should be appreciative. “If we didn’t have peace and stability, there would be no prosperity or reconnection with Korea, because our history with South Korea was cut before the war,” Mr. Manet said, referring to Cambodia’s decades of civil war.
“Do you know who reconnected the relations? It was Samdech [Mr. Hun Sen]…in 1996. Our initial relations were only with North Korea,” Mr. Manet told the dinner party.
Mr. Manet explained that the re-establishment of ties with South Korea had come in spite of opposition from then-First Prime Minister Norodom Ranariddh’s royalist Funcinpec party, which at the time led the coalition government.

“When we built this relation in 1996, there was an opposition [element] in our government, meaning that they didn’t want to build it,” Mr. Manet said. “But Samdech [Mr. Hun Sen] struggled to build it, until the ties grew larger.”
“Through this growing relationship, we have negotiated for opportunities that can bring our people to come to work and study here,” he said. “This is a positive thing.”
About 30,000 Cambodians presently work in South Korea, placing the country behind only Malaysia and Thailand as a destination for Cambodian workers, according to estimates last year from the Cambodian Center for Legal Education.
Despite Mr. Manet’s claims, the re-establishment of ties with South Korea in May 1996, which came three years after the U.N.-run elections, came with the public support of both Mr. Hun Sen and Prince Ranariddh as co-premiers.
Yet Prince Ranariddh’s father, King Norodom Sihanouk, was     a close friend of late North Korean dictator Kim Il Sung and a fervent opponent of recognizing South Korea, having pledged to never let Cambodia recognize the country.
Mr. Manet, in his dinner speech Friday, said the Cambodians who protested in South Korea on December 7—calling for the release of more than a dozen recently imprisoned social and political activists—did not appreciate the CPP’s struggle to reopen ties with the country they now work in.
“They insulted us on our weak points, some of which we acknowledge, and on some points that are not reasonable,” he said, accusing the migrant protesters of hypocrisy.
“They said illegal Vietnamese migrants have to be arrested and sent back to Vietnam, but, in the meantime, some of them ask Korea not to arrest them and send them back.”
Mr. Manet also defended the recent arrests of activists—including CNRP official Meach Sovannara—and said Cambodian authorities had been much more lenient than authorities in South Korea would ever have been.
“Some of the people spread information about the arrest of Meach Sovannara and the protesters,” Mr. Manet said. “In fact, if you keep track of this, it was more than one year that they did activities and we didn’t do anything [in response].”
“If they tried to go and do this in Korea, without legal permission, they would be handcuffed and put in cars.”

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Begin of Drgunzet's comment.

Oh man, look at Cambodia. The trashes are being struen and piling up on the streets.

The Khmer garbage drivers were accused of siphoning off the gasoline in the garbage trucks, and now these drivers are staging strikes. They claimed the right to siphon the gas, "It's the end of their shifts. Any gas left in the trucks belong to them."

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/cintri-workers-back-strike

The drivers demand the right to siphon the gas out of the trucks!!! Woah...woah...

What a sick race! It's very hard to deal with the Khmer. They always interpret things in their favor. If you disagree, they will get mad and attack you.

I remember as a child, there were a bunch of dark skin people who had this logic, "If the women were caught walking at night, we have the right to rape them. If you don't want to be raped, don't walk at night."

What a sick Khmer culture. You lack German logic and honor. You must be put under control by other superior races.

-Drgunzet-

Anonymous said...

-Drgunzet-

And you are a stupid motherf**ker because you are way off the subject.

Anonymous said...

The Vietnamese poster "-Drgunzet-" is Khmerization admin.

Wow, you have gone way too far, what the fuck Khmerization admin "-Drgunzet-" has been doing to look down on the Khmer victims, by saying the bones everywhere in Cambodia.

How disgusted thoughts of -Drgunzet-!

It is a fault of Khmerization Admin.

It is soooooo disgusted. I encourage the Khmerization readers and readers worldwide not to come this Khmerization blogging site to read the feedback from readers.

The Vietnamese poster -Drgunzet- have nothing to say until this cruel Vietnamese poster -Drgunzet- dare to commit the evil acts to say as mentioned above.

The comments of Vietnamese poster -Drgunzet- of Khmerization blogging site has reminded us and every Khmer/Cambodian folk about the killing fields (1975-1979) created by brutal Vietnamese secret agents and Pham Van Dong, Ho Chi Minh to wipe out Khmer/Cambodian population before they [Yuon/Vietnamese] took the entire Cambodian land and place the illegal Yuon/Vietnamese immigrants in Cambodia to fool the world. We can see that Hun Sen is a puppet of Vietnamese leaders in Hanoi and he is currently surrounded by the Vietnamese secret agents in CPP regime just like Pol Pot was previously surrounded by the Vietnamese secret agents hiding in Khmer Rouges uniforms along with a few real Khmer Rouges assistant like Y Chhean, a former governor of Pailin.



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