“I don’t allow my
son to be a lawmaker while I am a father in power,” Mr. Hun Sen said at the
time.
That was five years
ago.
Months away from
July’s national elections, senior CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap said Tuesday that
the ruling party was putting at least two of the prime minister’s sons forward
as candidates for Parliament.
“The party has
approved the children of Samdech Decho [Mr. Hun Sen] to stand as CPP candidates
for the national elections,” Mr. Yeap said.
“All the sons of
Samdech Hun Sen have strong enough abilities in terms of higher education degrees
and commitment. More importantly, they have all received a great example from
their father, who has accomplished a lot in leading the country.”
Mr. Yeap said the
CPP would be putting at least two of the prime minister’s sons forward,
possibly all three, but declined to say more until the National Election Committee
began accepting official lists of party candidates in late April.
Mr. Yeap said the
time had come for the children of CPP leaders to start taking over from the old
guard in the ruling party, and that his own son—Battambang deputy provincial
governor Cheam Chansophoan—would be a reserve CPP candidate for the province.
“Everybody is
getting old,” said the 67-year-old Mr. Yeap, who planned to run in this year’s
elections for his last five-year term.
“We need the bamboo
shoots to replace the bamboo trees,” he added.
As for Mr. Hun
Sen’s sons, Manet, Manith and Many, all three have received overseas education,
U.S. military training, and in recent years have assumed high-profile roles in
public life, often featured on state-run TV at government events.
The most
high-profile, Hun Manet, 35, has rocketed up the military chain-of-command in
recent years. Among his many titles: Royal Cambodian Armed Forces major
general; deputy chair of the RCAF Joint Staff; head of the Defense Ministry’s
counterterrorism department; head of the ministry-spanning joint
counterterrorism taskforce; and deputy commander of the Prime Minister’s
Bodyguard Unit.
Mr. Hun Sen’s
second eldest son, Hun Manith, 31, is an RCAF colonel and deputy head of the
powerful Military Intelligence Unit. He also serves as deputy secretary-general
of the National Authority for Land Dispute Resolution.
The youngest son,
Hun Many, 30, spent a year studying at the National Defense University in
Washington, D.C., and heads up the CPP’s all-important Voluntary Youth
Movement.
Opposition SRP
lawmaker Son Chhay said he was not surprised by the CPP’s plans for the prime
minister’s sons to run in the elections.
“The prime minister
is looking at all opportunities to promote his children to take over when he is
old,” he said.
“[Party candidates]
should be a decision of the party; we don’t want to interfere. But what we want
is free and fair elections,” Mr. Chhay said.
Independent
political commentator Lao Mong Hay said the move was aimed at creating a
political dynasty in the Hun family.
“Father and sons
have been building up their power base among the youth for several years,” he
said. Running the prime minister’s sons in this year’s elections, he added, was
“to groom them and make connections to other party members,” and for one of
them to “eventually” replace their father as the next prime minister.
Mr. Hun Sen has
hinted as much more than once, most recently in May while replying to
“opposition parties” who had allegedly suggested that it was time for him to
step aside.
Comparing himself
to a devada, an angel in the Buddhist pantheon, Mr. Hun Sen said at the time,
“If there is a replacement of the devada, the replacement must be someone from
the devada’s family. If devada Sen is gone, there is also devada Kheng, devada
Yan…and so on down the line,” he added, calling out other top CPP officials.
But Mr. Mong Hay
said introducing the prime minister’s sons to the political process was also a
canny move.
“Maybe it’s a good
thing to get them directly and openly involved in politics,” he said.
The SRP’s Mr. Chhay
agreed.
“People will have
hope that the next generation will be more democratic and open-minded.”
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