by Kuch Naren and Simon Lewis – Cambodia Daily - May
24, 2013
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| Union of Youth Federations of Cambodia (UYFC) president and Prime Minister Hun Sen’s son, Hun Many, center right, poses with Chea Chheng, right, and other UYFC supporters in this undated photograph. |
A student who appeared to lead a protest this week
against U.N. human rights envoy Surya Subedi claimed Thursday the university
lecture hall confrontation was completely unplanned, and had nothing to do with
his close connections to a CPP-aligned youth movement.
On Tuesday evening, 23-year-old Chea Chheng, a student
at the Royal University of Law and Economics, was among the most vocal of a
group of students who angrily accused special rapporteur Subedi of bias, as
others unfurled banners calling for Mr. Subedi to cease his work monitoring
human rights in Cambodia.
Union of Youth Federations of Cambodia (UYFC)
president and Prime Minister Hun Sen’s son, Hun Many, center right, poses with
Chea Chheng, right, and other UYFC supporters in this undated photograph.
Fellow students identified Mr. Chheng as a well-known
figure with the Union of Youth Federations of Cambodia (UYFC) a CPP-aligned
youth group headed by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s son and CPP National Assembly
candidate Hun Many.
In an interview Thursday, Mr. Chheng said he only
volunteered for the UYFC, as he did for Prime Minister Hun Sen’s national
land-titling program, and said Tuesday’s demonstration against the envoy at
the Cambodian Mekong University was spontaneous and was not linked to the CPP.
“I just wanted to respond to the failure of [Mr.
Subedi’s] report. That’s why I took the opportunity of his lecture at the
university to raise my questions regarding his report,” Mr. Chheng said. “The
protest was not planned or pre-organized. Being a Cambodian youth, I have the
right of free expression,” he said.
“Banners, of course, were prepared by other students,
but it was not planned in advance,” he said.
“Indeed, I was not a leader of the protest. Whatever I
did was not for the gain of any political party. I just expressed my
disappointment [with Mr. Subedi].”
SRP lawmaker Yim Sovann said he could not say for sure
whether the students were politically motivated, but said that he “wouldn’t be
surprised” if some of the young protesters turned up in government positions in
the future.
Independent political analyst Lao Mong Hay said
Wednesday that there were reasons why young people would want to join pro-CPP
youth movements.
“It’s quite understandable. There are incentives they
enjoy,” he said. “They can find jobs and that kind of thing—privileges.”
An earlier youth movement loyal to Mr. Hun Sen, the
Pagoda Children, Intelligentsia and Students Association, widely known as the
Pagoda Boys, were a regular presence for a number of years, staging
pro-government counter-demonstrations against groups affiliated to the
political opposition. The group of avid Hun Sen loyalists would frequently
intervene, physically, in so-called inappropriate protests, by factory workers
seeking wage rises, for example.
The Pagoda Boys have been quiet of late, though the
group’s former president, Seng Sovannara, was in 2005 appointed as deputy
governor of Phnom Penh’s Daun Penh district, and now serves as an
undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Justice.

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