Monday, 7 July 2014
BY HUL REAKSMEY | the cambodia daily, JULY 7, 2014
CNRP Vice President Kem Sokha on Saturday used a ceremony marking the
17th anniversary of the July 1997 factional fighting in Phnom Penh to
promise to create a museum documenting “criminal” acts committed by leaders of Cambodia since 1993.
Speaking to about 100 supporters at the ceremony to commemorate the
fighting, which resulted in the ouster of then-First Prime Minister
Prince Norodom Ranariddh by then-Second Prime Minister Hun Sen, Mr.
Sokha said the museum would be established on foreign soil for political
reasons.
Former Funcinpec Information Minister Lu Lay Sreng, left, and CNRP Vice
President Kem Sokha, right, attend a ceremony in Phnom Penh on Saturday
to commemorate the people killed in the July 1997 factional fighting.
(Sani Sinary)
“In order to avoid the forgetting of criminal acts, I would like to say clearly that we will build a center recording the criminal events in Cambodia since 1993,” he said at the CNRP’s Phnom Penh offices.
“We will collect all the documents;
we will not keep them in Cambodia, but in an overseas country. I have
already contacted our Khmer people and foreign friends to set this
center up,” he said.
The fighting in 1997, on the weekend of July 5 and 6, resulted in the
death, torture or arrest of more than 200 people loyal to Prince
Ranariddh at the hands of those loyal to Mr. Hun Sen. The prince
at first sought refuge in France before returning and forming a new
coalition government with Mr. Hun Sen’s CPP in November 1998.
Sidelined again after his ouster in 2006 as president of Funcinpec, the Prince
unveiled the new Community of Royalist People Party in March this year
and has since used the party to attack the CNRP as a threat to the
monarchy.
Mr. Sokha, who was a Son Sann Party lawmaker during the 1997 fighting
and led the party’s dissolution into Prince Ranariddh’s Funcinpec in
early 1998, hit back at Prince Ranariddh’s criticism on Saturday.
“To speak frankly, Prince Norodom Ranariddh led all these military
forces to oppose the CPP, didn’t he?” he asked rhetorically. “If a
leader leads his subordinates and they are killed, and then he wants to
form a party to support the killers of his subordinates, how weak is
he?”
Mr. Sokha then accused unnamed Funcinpec officials of burying the killings of July 1997.
“We held the ceremony today to show all the dictators that the criminal
activities they committed are not yet buried,” the deputy CNRP leader
said. “The CNRP will always dig them up—and Funcinpec can’t bury these
criminal activities even with all the efforts they’ve tried.”
Cheang Vun, a senior CPP lawmaker, said by telephone that the ruling party was not concerned by Mr. Sokha’s plans for a museum.
“The CPP is not concerned by this center,” Mr. Vun said. “This only concerns them.”

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