Cambodian King appoints Hun Sen’s son as new PM

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

FILE PHOTO: Hun Manet, son of Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen is seen at a polling station on the day of Cambodia's general election, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, July 23, 2023. REUTERS/Cindy Liu/File Photo

Mr Hun Manet at a polling station in Phnom Penh on July 23, 2023, the day of Cambodia's general election.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

Mr Hun Manet was appointed Cambodia’s new leader by the King on Monday, after having effectively been given the post by his father, who ruled for nearly four decades.

Days after

a landslide victory in July’s election,

Mr Hun Sen – one of the world’s longest-serving leaders – announced he was stepping down as prime minister and handing power to his eldest son.

The polls were widely decried as a sham after the

opposition challenger, Candlelight Party, was barred from running

over a technicality. The ruling Cambodian People’s Party won all but five seats in the 125-member Lower House.

On Monday, following a request from Mr Hun Sen, King Norodom Sihamoni issued a royal decree saying that he “appoints Mr Hun Manet as the prime minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia for the 7th mandate of the Parliament”.

To officially become the country’s new leader, the 45-year-old and his new Cabinet must win a confidence vote in Parliament set for Aug 22.

The incoming government will usher in a crop of young ministers – with some taking posts vacated by their fathers.

While insisting he would not interfere with his son’s rule, Mr Hun Sen has promised Cambodians that he will step back into the prime minister’s job if Mr Hun Manet does not perform well.

Having come to power in 1985, Mr Hun Sen helped modernise a country devastated by civil war and genocide, although critics say his rule has also been marked by environmental destruction, entrenched graft and the elimination of nearly all political rivals.

The United States, United Nations and European Union condemned the July polls as neither free nor fair.

Mr Hun Sen rejected those allegations and said his handover, a dynastic succession compared by some critics to that of North Korea, was being done to maintain peace and avoid “bloodshed” should he die in office.

He also warned that should Mr Hun Manet’s life be seriously endangered, he would return as prime minister.

While groomed for the position for years, the eldest son of Cambodia’s iron-fisted ruler remains untested in the political arena, say analysts.

And there are few expectations that Mr Hun Manet will chart a more liberal path than his father, despite being educated in England and the US.

A member of the ruling party’s powerful permanent committee, he has been the Royal Cambodian Army’s commander since 2018.

Mr Hun Manet has met some world leaders, including President Xi Jinping of China, Cambodia’s main ally and a significant benefactor.

After stepping down, Mr Hun Sen will become president of the Senate in early 2024 and acting head of state when the King is overseas. AFP


See more on