SRP have lost a few more of their good activists and media outlets. Kong  
Sam Onn, Hang Chakra, Moeung Son and the head of Moneakseka Khmer  including 
his newspapers have been neutralized by the CPP. The  results were from 
direct confrontational approaches or maneuvers called  "creating events." 
Granted that the international media have paid new attention  to this case, but 
Cambodian voters don't read the New York Times, the Washington  Post and the 
like. 
 
We need the oppositions to help seek alternative solutions to help the  
government to serve Cambodia better. The CPP needs the oppositions to help  
legitimize its existence, but it will also use its power to secure its  
interests. The oppositions are too weak to use confrontational approaches  
against 
the CPP. That's is the naked truth. 
 
Not all SRP officials are in favor of this actions; therefore, I am  not 
surprise if  they need to negotiate with Premier Hun. It has been  done many 
times before.  After all, both parties need each  other to survive. It is not 
the CPP's best interest to destroy RSP  completely.
 
It is another lesson for overseas Cambodians-- fight with noodles not with  
emotions. 
 
===========
 
 
In a message dated 7/30/2009 1:27:45 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:


Have  you heard that Sam Rainsy is negotiating about ending this case?
As far as  we know, this calculation is no brainer. The Cambodian
people don't need  this kind of activist stupidity. A little tiny case
has been made to be a  tremendous provocation. It started from the Sam
Rainsy camp. Don't you  think that enough is enough?
Sam Rainsy and his fans should stop this kind  of rhetorics. The people
of Cambodia deserve better.


On Jul 29,  7:48 am, [email protected] wrote:
> In  Cambodia, when  personal cases become publicized and politicized, no
> lawyer  will  come forward to take the case including lawyers in the  
SRP.  
> Omnipotent power of Premier Hun Sen is enough for most (if not  all)
> lawyers to retreat. Social and political pressures are  enormous for both 
 
> individuals—Mme Mu and Premier Hun. Even if  Premier Hun Sen is sincere 
and tell  the
> court to be fair, the  court itself will not have the guts to rule 
against  
> the Prime  Minister. It is not going to happen easily anywhere in Asiatic 
 
>  society, especially in Cambodia where fear and respect go together for  
the
> head  of the government.
> The  best thing to deal  with every critical issue is for SRP to clearly
> think  collectively in advance what kind of course of actions it should 
take  in
> order  to get better results for Cambodians and for Cambodia.  Is a 
lawsuit
> against the  Premier the best way to solve Cambodian  social issues or 
will
> it trigger him to  react?  
>  The  case of Madame Mu has produced great excitement for SRP’s  
supporters
> as well as  for some NGOs and international  organizations; however after 
the
> excitement is  over, no concrete  change will really take place. The CPP 
have
> been quietly  watching the strength of its opponents and take good notes. 
 
> As  we expected, the international community will continue  to support the
> government  of Cambodia via many programs  requested by the Hun Sen’s 
regime.
> The support for  the  opposition, on the other hand, will be under 
pressure
> and weakening.  Although some diehard opposition members would like to 
stick
> to  their  confrontational approaches to stir up Cambodian’s emotions  to
> support their  cause, more and more Cambodians are tired of  that.
> It  is unfortunate that the majority of Cambodian people do  not mind 
(some
> do not  even think about) how Premier Hun Sen act,  speak or run the
> government for they  are too busy to make a  living.  Such  a nonchalant 
manner is
> probably resulting  from the way they are looking  down on most Cambodian
>  politicians.
> In their  mind Cambodian politicians are “all the  same.”
>
> =======================
>
> Lawyers  Say They Are ‘Free’ To Defend
> By Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer  
> Original report from Washington
> 28 July 2009
>  Opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua faced the court over her  defamation  suit
> with the prime minister on Friday without a lawyer. After her  first 
attorney
> quit—facing defamation charges himself—she was  unable to find  another, 
she
> said, due to “political  pressure.”
> Cambodian lawyers say they are free to represent the  clients  they want,
> but Mu Sochua’s case has underscored the  entanglement of politics and  
the
> court that critics say stops  the judiciary from being independent.
> “There is no problem as long as  the client approaches us,”  said 
Cambodian
> attorney Poeung Thida.  “We just puck up a client we feel we want  to
> defend. If we don’t  want it, we just don’t take the case. This is our 
free  will.”
>
> In Mu Sochua’s case, her first attorney, Kong Sam  Onn, quit  after he was
> countersued by Prime Minister Hun Sen and  was put under  investigation 
by the
> country’s bar association.  His case was dropped after he  apologized to 
Hun
> Sen. (Kong Sam  Onn declined to comment, saying he left because  of a “
> personal  issue.”)
> Mu Sochua defended herself with a brief statement to the  court, in a case
> that is to be decided on Aug. 4.
> Chiv  Song Hak, president of the 647-member bar association,  said  
lawyers
> in the country have “enough freedom” to make their own  choices.
> “The law does not restrict them to only representing this  client and not
> the other,” he said. “Our code of conduct only  states that a  lawyer 
has the
> right to decline a client they  don’t want to represent.”
> Mu Sochua, a US-Cambodian citizen and deputy  secretary-general for the 
Sam
> Rainsy Party, said she did not  agree.
> “How can a lawyer do his job if they still feel scared?” she  asked. “
They
> still feel that they will become a victim like my  lawyer, Kong Sam  Onn. 
I
> see that professional lawyers are  vulnerable to political pressure.”
> Mu Sochua had also sought legal  counsel from the Cambodian  Defenders
> Project, but the head of  the organization, Sok Sam Oeun, said his  group 
defends
> the  poor.
> “She has enough money to hire a lawyer,” he said of Mu  Sochua. “And so
> far as I know, there are many lawyers in the Sam  Rainsy Party.  To say 
that
> there is no lawyer willing to  represent her is  unreasonable.”
>
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