A Change of Guard

សូមស្តាប់វិទ្យុសង្គ្រោះជាតិ Please read more Khmer news and listen to CNRP Radio at National Rescue Party. សូមស្តាប់វីទ្យុខ្មែរប៉ុស្តិ៍/Khmer Post Radio.
Follow Khmerization on Facebook/តាមដានខ្មែរូបនីយកម្មតាម Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/khmerization.khmerican

Saturday 19 January 2013

Cambodian Strongman and Karaoke King [Hun Sen The Great and The Dear Leader of Cambodia?]

January 18, 2013, 
Phnom Penh — Karaoke is big in Cambodia. Very big. Office workers sing and dance the night away while sipping iced beer in windowless, bunker-like karaoke parlors known as “KTV”s. Younger viewers download the videos directly onto their computers and sing at home.

 http://youtu.be/ndOGbDPlavY
The lyrics to “Techo Hun Sen on Fishing Lots” begin, “All people really appreciate Samdech Techo Hun Sen, who, on February 28, has broadcast in every direction, making all people very happy about Samdech’s cleverness to declare that…” Then, in Hun Sen’s voice the song continues, “To everyone in the whole Tonle Sap basin, there will be no more fishing lots.”

Flip to any of the country’s nine major television channels — all owned by government officials or business people with close ties to the governing Cambodia People’s Party and it won’t take long before a karaoke video singing the praises of Prime Minister Hun Sen or his wife, Bun Rany, comes on the air.
The programming is part of a quiet but long-running propaganda campaign that takes full advantage of Cambodians’ passion for sing-along.

 http://youtu.be/5iMjEmipCyI
The lyrics begin: “The Peace Palace [Hun Sen's office building in Phnom Penh] is full of scented flowers on July 28, 2011. It’s the highest supreme honor for the First Lady of Cambodia — tremendously excited. It’s a lucky time, 9:00 a.m., to receive a Kittiprittbandit title from the Royal Academy, presided over by an actual doctor of philosophy, Hun Sen, her beloved husband.” The song continues, “Excellency Bun Rany has built foundational achievements. She is a Cambodian women’s hero who is talented in heart, breath and charity.”
Hun Sen, a canny former Khmer Rouge guerrilla fighter who later rebelled against the regime, has held power for the past 27 years. Western countries criticize his government’s record on human rights: Protesters and activists have been shot, and high-profile opposition figures are routinely prosecuted on trumped-up charges. But the steps that he is taking to remake Cambodian culture in his own image are perhaps an even more insidious form of control.
Hun Sen has already commissioned dozens of the country’s top comedians as military officers in his personal bodyguard unit, ensuring that their jokes toe the party line. Nearly every new school, bridge or road that has been constructed or renovated in the past decade is named after Hun Sen or Bun Rany.
Hun Sen and his relatives have been given lavish, nonsensical royal titles with Sanskrit roots. Hun Sen now goes by Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo, something like Illustrious Prince, Great Supreme Protector and Famed Warrior. Or Techo, for short.
And then there is Hun Sen karaoke, the hundreds of songs by Hun Heng, the prime minister’s personal songwriter. (The two men are not related.) In the 1990s, Hun Heng’s job was to compose pastoral love ballads that were then recorded and sold as Hun Sen’s own work. Any pretense that Hun Sen writes his own material has since been dropped, and Hun Heng is a fairly well-known figure in his own right.

I asked Hun Heng if he would meet me to talk about his compositions, but he refused. “It’s very hard to explain,” he said over the phone last month. “I can’t explain this whole thing with just a few words.”
But the songs speak for themselves. Videos celebrating two of Hun Sen’s recent major policy decisions have been in heavy rotation on multiple television stations recently.
One of them praises a measure to end a system of privately owned fishing lots and open up more space for subsistence fishing. “This sub-decree of 7 March 2012 has truly sprung from the intellectual and thoughtful mind of someone who is trying to conserve endangered fishing resources,” sing a man and a woman in harmony, over image after image of flopping fish.
“Heart of the Volunteer Teenager” lauds a program that dispatches students to survey disputed land in the countryside. In the video, old women flash toothless grins as they hold up their land documents while a singer croons: “Mother Bun Rany gives us opportunity and destiny, and Father Techo is highly superior and elicits our great gratitude.”
Dozens of karaoke panegyrics to Bun Rany, a former nurse with a formidably bleached and powdered face, enumerate her good qualities. She is “a Cambodian women’s hero.” She has a “great, famous history.” She is a “great model person.” She is “an actual mother of charity.” She has “actually changed people’s ways of thinking — oh!” She is “actually made of diamonds and gold.”
One video presents a blow-by-blow of the day in 2011 when the first lady was given not one but two titles by the Royal Academy of Cambodia, the nation’s highest academic body: Most Outstanding Lady of Cambodian Society and Kittiprittbandit — roughly, Glorious and Upright Person of Genius.
Sophal Ear, a Cambodian-American academic who closely follows the political situation here, told me that “the constant playback is like any propaganda.” And while most people don’t run out to buy up the DVDs, “it eventually seeps into the consciousness.”
Sophal Ear also pointed out that Hun Sen’s vast musical output is a throwback to the days of the charismatic late King Norodom Sihanouk, who was a prolific songwriter, singer, filmmaker, jazz saxophonist and painter.
But a friend recently explained to me an important distinction. Of Sihanouk’s songs, he said, “they are very beautiful and meaningful.” But “listening to Hun Sen’s songs is like eating bad food.”
As it happens, this friend had been struggling to find a primary school for his six-year-old son that isn’t named after Hun Sen. “There are only a few in the entire city,” he explained. The boy finally ended up at Hun Neang Elementary School. It is named after Hun Sen’s elderly father, who was recently given his very own title: Tycoon of Great Honesty and Charity.

Julia Wallace is managing editor of The Cambodia Daily.

6 comments:

500Reil_toilet said...

funny how almost all past, present dictators communist government praised themselves a lot. Hun Sen and hun Bunny no differ

Anonymous said...

I felt sick hearing the lyrics of this song, lauding Bun Rany and Hun Sen with nauseating praises.

Anonymous said...

Questions to be answered


How many Kilometres squares of land and sea area have been given to your master Hanoi ?

How many Kilometre squares of farmland and forestry land have been sold for 99 years for the price of $1 per year for your master Hanoi and your cronies?

How many millions of dollars are missing from national treasury account each year?

How many thousand of our Khmer people have to seek for slavery jobs, many of them have been abused and killed in Thailand, Malaysia, each year?

How many thousand of families you and your cronies have evicted them from their properties so far for your benefits?

Have we, as a nation, got any dignity to see our Angkor Wat, built by our noble ancestor to be our national emblem, is being run by Vietcong Xoc Kong? He has not paid any tax so far, 2.5 million tourists visited Cambodia each year, where has all the money disappeared?

Are we confident to put our national security under Vietcong commander Tea Banh as commander in Chief of Cambodian Armed forces?

What will the future be like as Vietnamese can come to live free and has more right than our people?

Where our children will be as most land and all assets are sold ,debt is mounting higher and higher each year,10 billions Dollars so far, and there is no real industries beside the garment industries that all owned by foreigners, which our workers have to work their fingers to their bones or fainted for just $60 per month?

Are we poisoned by the peace that will cost us the whole history?


True Khmer

Anonymous said...

Hun Sen spent money to make Karaoke to praise his plan which doesn't work . His
subsistence fishing policy has became anarchic fishing which result in fish stock
depletion . When to fishing lots were privately owned , there were little or none of
illegal fishing because the owners protected their own lots . Since the elimination
of private fishing lots , many fishmen start to compete one another , using illegal
fishing equipments including electrocution , chemical etc ... whereas the authority
cannot stop them and turn to taking bribe to see no evil hear no evil . To save his
face, Hun Sen who insisted that his policy is really the best ( chak kho visai ) ordered
deputy to put hot measure to work , using military tanks if necessary and his sycophans praise him with the song.
The subsistence fishing policy was started by a couple cases of corruption in the lots
bidding in Kampong Cham which involved with distance relative of Hun Sen . Instead
of eradicate corruption , Mr PM eliminate private fishing lots .

Anonymous said...

Hun sen name on every things in Srok Khmer from Machine that Vacuum sew to machine that pump/suck water to machine that pump the crab out of his Ass or Bunrany's Ass! Or toilet seat all bear his name and his wife name;Schools,bridges,gardens,roads,etc.
Sound like supreme leader Kim jong el of N.Korea this is his accomplishment of doing nothing getting credit for doing nothing.

Anonymous said...

We always have a lot to say, because we don't have the privilege.
Dbn't have the provilege, also don't have the responsibilities.