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| Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy (2012 file photo). |
"I am Mr. Hun Sen's only credible challenger and he wants to win an election without any challenger. It is like a boxer on [in] the ring. He wants to box alone, whereas I should be boxing against him. And, now he is even more afraid that I come too close to the ring," he said.
Daniel Schearf
VOA_June 06, 2013
BANGKOK — Cambodia's exiled opposition leader, Sam
Rainsy, has accused the government of pressuring Thailand into rejecting his
entry into Bangkok. Cambodian and Thai
authorities deny any pressure. But
Rainsy says Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen is losing ground ahead of the
July election and is doing his best to hinder the opposition.
Rainsy, who lives in in France, was scheduled to launch
his autobiography - We Didn't Start the
Fire: My Struggle for Democracy in Cambodia - Wednesday night at the Foreign
Correspondents Club of Thailand (FCCT).
He arrived in Bangkok Tuesday from South Korea but was
met by immigration officials at the airport who said he could not enter until
after July, when a national election in Cambodia will be over.
Rainsy left for Singapore and instead spoke to the FCCT
via Skype. He accused the Cambodian
government of interfering or pressuring Thailand to keep him out. He said the ban showed the government of
Prime Minister Hun Sen was growing afraid of the opposition.
"I am Mr. Hun Sen's only credible challenger and he
wants to win an election without any challenger. It is like a boxer on [in] the ring. He wants to box alone, whereas I should be
boxing against him. And, now he is even
more afraid that I come too close to the ring," he said.
Rainsy has lived in self-imposed exile since 2005 to
avoid an eleven year prison sentence for charges he says are politically
motivated.
Rainsy says in recent months he was welcomed by leaders
in Australia, Indonesia, and the Philippines but closer relations between
Thailand and Cambodia, he says, seems to have created what he calls a
"special problem."
Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra revived warm ties
with Cambodia established by her brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin
Shinawatra.
Thaksin also lives in self-imposed exile to avoid a
politically-charged sentence at home.
But Rainsy noted, unlike himself, Thaksin is treated well in Cambodia.
"In Cambodia he was received by Mr. Hun Sen, even
around election times in Thailand. So,
what I can notice, is that Mr. Thaksin Shinawatra, a good friend of Mr. Hun
Sen, even a former advisor to Mr. Hun Sen, came to Cambodia very often, he was
received with the highest honor," he noted.
Rainsy was banned from the July election but his Cambodia
National Rescue Party will take part.
Cambodia and Thailand deny any pressure or conspiracy to
keep Rainsy out.
Thailand's Foreign Ministry said Rainsy's planned book
launch, and meeting with journalists, just ahead of the election, were
unacceptable political activities.
Ministry spokesman Manasvi Srisodapol said the actions
were deemed detrimental to a friendly country and might affect Thailand's
interests.
"The Thai authorities concerned deemed that such a
visit with such activity has a political motive against a neighboring country
and is timed especially during an approaching election in that neighboring country. Accordingly, the Thai Ministry of Foreign
Affairs has requested immigration department to ban Mr. Sam Rainsy's entry into
Thailand," said Srisodapol.

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