fbpx
Wikipedia

Say Phouthang

Say Phouthang (Thai: ใส่ ภู่ทอง; RTGSSai Phuthong; d. 2016) was a Cambodian politician and a leader during the People's Republic of Kampuchea.[1][2]

Say Phouthang
សាយ ភូថង
Bust of Say Phouthang in Koh Kong Province
President of the Central Commission of the People's Republic of Kampuchea
Personal details
Born(1920-07-17)July 17, 1920
Koh Kong Province, Cambodia, French Indochina
Died(2016-06-13)13 June 2016
Bangkok, Kingdom of Thailand
Political partyCambodian People's Party
SpouseKho Phouthang
Military service
Allegiance Cambodia
Branch/serviceRoyal Cambodian Army

Background edit

Koh Kong in Cambodia and Trat in Thailand were ceded to French protectorate of Cambodia in 1904. Three years later, Trat was returned to Siam, in exchange for the Siamese province of Inner Cambodia, while Koh Kong remained part of French Cambodia.[3]

During World War II, as France was put in a difficult situation by the German invasion, the Thai army attempted to recover their lost territories in 1940. In what was to be one of the last colonial battles of the French Empire, the French navy pushed back the Thai attack ensuring the border of Cambodia, but leaving Thai Koh Kong population estranged. Koh Kong had been under Thai influence since at least the 17th century. After the Independence of Cambodia, Koh Kong was established as a Cambodian province in 1959.

The remaining population on the border between Trat and Koh Kong is referred to as Thai Koh Kong.

Biography edit

A child of Thailand on the last colonial battle of the French Empire edit

Say Phuthong was born in Ban Nabad, Koh Kong Province, on July 17, 1920[4] from a Cambodian family of Thai descent or "Thai Koh Kong". After the 1904 Franco-Siamese treaty, his family immigrated to live in Khlong Yai on the Thai side of the border.[5]

In the wake of the Franco-Thai War of 1940, Say Phuthong formed a local Khmer Issarak group around Koh Kong with the aim of "liberat[ing] Cambodia from France".[citation needed] In 1954, when Cambodia gained independence, he gathered national fighters into an independent Khmer group and traveled to Vietnam to study Marxism–Leninism and military science.[6]

In 1965, in an effort to crack down on communist guerillas, Prime Minister Norodom Sihanouk announced that Communist documents were found in Koh Kong and some were in Thai language, directly pointing his finger to the Thai Kho Kong and their leader, Say Phouthang.[7]

In 1970, "Uncle Sai" came back from Hanoi and proceeded to establish "Thai Koh Kong partisans" to repel the American influence in Cambodia. He aligned with the Khmer Rouge along with the Sihanouk group to overthrow the Lon Nol government.[citation needed] Say Phouthang led a grassroots resistance force based in Areng area, Thmor Bang district, Koh Kong province. In 1973, as the vice-president of the Kampuchean United Front for National Salvation or FUNSK on the Western front, he led an armed insurrection against the republican government.[8]

The first resistant against Pol Pot edit

From being a group with link of Khmer Rouge fighters, Say Puthang changed to the opposite side after the fall of Phnom Penh. Finding refuge in Thai territory, he went into hiding in the Cardamon mountains near the Thai border building strongholds and organizing troops. Say Phouthang "was among the first to rebel against Pol Pot".[9]

As they crossed the border to flee from the Khmer Rouge, "Uncle Sai" and the Thai Koh Kong party got to know Thai Generals Chavalit Yongchaiyudh and Wichit Yathip, who secretly helped their resistance movement.[citation needed]

Phouthang kept a tenacious but tiny army of only 3 small battalions against the Khmer Rouge who faced them with 27 battalions.[citation needed]

The leader from two lands who chose Hun Sen to lead since 1985 edit

Thai Koh Kong resolved to secretly send Say to Vietnam as he had fought closely with Vietnam since the Khmer Issarak and the Indochina Communist Party used to live in Vietnam for a while. Meeting with fellow revolutionary Cambodians such as Heng Samrin, they co-established the "Republic of Cambodia" on January 8, 1979, with Heng Samrin serving as head of state and "Uncle Put" as deputy head of state.[citation needed]

In December 1981, Say Phouthang led Vietnamese troops and the A-21 [police unit] with 12 tanks and about 900 troops to arrest Prime Minister Pen Sovan after the latter had disappointed Lê Đức Thọ, the chief adviser to the Hanoi-backed People's Republic of Kampuchea.[10] After this arrest, Say Phouthang was perhaps the most powerful Cambodian leader. Thus, he played a vital role in choosing Hun Sen as prime minister. Hun Sen came into the picture after prime minister Chan Sy died in late 1984. Despite his young age of 33, Say saw Hun Sen has the right man to lead the Khmer nation as Prime Minister,[11] something for which Hun Sen was grateful to the end of his life.[12]

Say Phouthang's health started declining in 1989 and he was hospitalized in Hanoi during that year.[13]

Say Phouthang was the third in 1981, fourth in 1985[14] or fifth after 1993[9]-highest-ranked member of the Cambodian People's Party's politburo until the end of his political career.

During the elections of May 1993, he was second on the list of candidates for the Cambodia People's Party in Kandal Province, and he won, but he resigned even before the results were published. After the restoration of the monarchy, he was appointed as a member of the Privy Council of King Norodom Sihanouk on December 25, 1993.[13]

At the end of his life, he retired to live at Klong Yai on the Thai side of the border where he had grown up. Going to and from his home to his hospital in Bangkok for regular treatments, he died in the Thai capital city on June 12, 2016.

Legacy: the nationalist of Koh Kong edit

 
The monument and the road named in honor of Say Phouthang in Koh Kong Province were inaugurated in presence of his old friends Heng Samrin, Tea Banh and Tep Vong.

In the "rather pluralistic composition of the PRK", Say Puthang was one of the only two powerful individuals who were not Khmer and did not go to Vietnam, who split with Pol Pot before 1975 along with Bou Thang, the Minister of Defence and member of a small northeastern ethnic minority. According to Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, Say Phouthang was considered by the Cambodian people as one of the "main heroes who sacrificed everything to liberate the country from the Khmer Rouge regime".[9]

He has given the responsibility of Koh Kong provincial governor to his son Yuth Phouthang, and his warrior spirit lives on through his of kick boxer-turned-movie-star grandson Eh Phuthong.[15]

In 2018, on National Road that he helped to build to connect Phnom Penh to Koh Kong, a massive monument was inaugurated in his honor in presence of his old friends Heng Samrin, Tea Banh and Tep Vong.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ "CPP 'main hero' Say Pouthang dies aged 96". The Phnom Penh Post. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  2. ^ "Tearful farewell for the Thai-bornkingmaker who crowned Hun Sen". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Thai Community in Cambodia's Koh Kong". www.thaipbsworld.com. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  4. ^ a b Chivorn (2018-03-05). "រូបសំណាក និងវិថី សាយ ភូថង នៅខេត្តកោះកុង ត្រូវបានដាក់សម្ពោធដាក់ឲ្យប្រើប្រាស់ជាផ្លូវការ ក្រោមអធិបតីភាពសម្តេចពញាចក្រី ហេង សំរិន". Fresh News (in Khmer). Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  5. ^ "เปิดปูม 'ใส่ ภูทอง' คนปั้น 'ฮุน เซน' ผู้นำกัมพูชา". Bangkok Biznews (in Thai). 2016-06-18. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  6. ^ Slocomb, Margaret (2003). The People's Republic of Kampuchea, 1979-1989: The Revolution After Pol Pot. Silkworm Books. p. 45. ISBN 978-974-9575-34-5.
  7. ^ Gottesman, Evan (2003-01-01). Cambodia After the Khmer Rouge: Inside the Politics of Nation Building. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-08957-8.
  8. ^ Burchett, Wilfred G. (1981). The China-Cambodia-Vietnam Triangle. Vanguard Books. p. 195. ISBN 978-0-917702-13-6.
  9. ^ a b c Dara, Mech (2016-06-14). "CPP 'main hero' Say Pouthang dies aged 96". Phnom Penh Post. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  10. ^ Willemyns, Alex (2016-10-31). "Ex-Prime Minister Pen Sovann dies at 80". Phnom Penh Post. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  11. ^ Jeerawat, Na Thaland (2016-06-26). "Tearful farewell for the Thai-bornkingmaker who crowned Hun Sen". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  12. ^ Mehta, Harish C.; Mehta, Julie B. (1999). Hun Sen: Strongman of Cambodia. Graham Brash. p. 97. ISBN 978-981-218-074-2.
  13. ^ a b Jennar, Raoul Marc (1995). Les clés du Cambodge (in French). Maisonneuve et Larose. p. 254. ISBN 978-2-7068-1150-0.
  14. ^ Schier, Peter (1986). "Kampuchea in 1985: Between Crocodiles and Tigers". Southeast Asian Affairs: 150. ISSN 0377-5437. JSTOR 27908549.
  15. ^ Cochrane, Liam (2004-10-08). "Secrecy surrounds casino's dead dolphins". Phnom Penh Post. Retrieved 2023-05-25.

phouthang, this, cambodian, name, surname, accordance, with, cambodian, custom, this, person, should, referred, given, name, phouthang, thai, ใส, ทอง, rtgs, phuthong, 2016, cambodian, politician, leader, during, people, republic, kampuchea, ថងbust, kong, provi. In this Cambodian name the surname is Say In accordance with Cambodian custom this person should be referred to by the given name Phouthang Say Phouthang Thai is phuthxng RTGS Sai Phuthong d 2016 was a Cambodian politician and a leader during the People s Republic of Kampuchea 1 2 Say Phouthangស យ ភ ថងBust of Say Phouthang in Koh Kong ProvincePresident of the Central Commission of the People s Republic of KampucheaPersonal detailsBorn 1920 07 17 July 17 1920Koh Kong Province Cambodia French IndochinaDied 2016 06 13 13 June 2016Bangkok Kingdom of ThailandPolitical partyCambodian People s PartySpouseKho PhouthangMilitary serviceAllegiance CambodiaBranch serviceRoyal Cambodian Army Contents 1 Background 2 Biography 2 1 A child of Thailand on the last colonial battle of the French Empire 2 2 The first resistant against Pol Pot 2 3 The leader from two lands who chose Hun Sen to lead since 1985 3 Legacy the nationalist of Koh Kong 4 ReferencesBackground editMain article Koh Kong Province Koh Kong in Cambodia and Trat in Thailand were ceded to French protectorate of Cambodia in 1904 Three years later Trat was returned to Siam in exchange for the Siamese province of Inner Cambodia while Koh Kong remained part of French Cambodia 3 During World War II as France was put in a difficult situation by the German invasion the Thai army attempted to recover their lost territories in 1940 In what was to be one of the last colonial battles of the French Empire the French navy pushed back the Thai attack ensuring the border of Cambodia but leaving Thai Koh Kong population estranged Koh Kong had been under Thai influence since at least the 17th century After the Independence of Cambodia Koh Kong was established as a Cambodian province in 1959 The remaining population on the border between Trat and Koh Kong is referred to as Thai Koh Kong Biography editA child of Thailand on the last colonial battle of the French Empire edit Say Phuthong was born in Ban Nabad Koh Kong Province on July 17 1920 4 from a Cambodian family of Thai descent or Thai Koh Kong After the 1904 Franco Siamese treaty his family immigrated to live in Khlong Yai on the Thai side of the border 5 In the wake of the Franco Thai War of 1940 Say Phuthong formed a local Khmer Issarak group around Koh Kong with the aim of liberat ing Cambodia from France citation needed In 1954 when Cambodia gained independence he gathered national fighters into an independent Khmer group and traveled to Vietnam to study Marxism Leninism and military science 6 In 1965 in an effort to crack down on communist guerillas Prime Minister Norodom Sihanouk announced that Communist documents were found in Koh Kong and some were in Thai language directly pointing his finger to the Thai Kho Kong and their leader Say Phouthang 7 In 1970 Uncle Sai came back from Hanoi and proceeded to establish Thai Koh Kong partisans to repel the American influence in Cambodia He aligned with the Khmer Rouge along with the Sihanouk group to overthrow the Lon Nol government citation needed Say Phouthang led a grassroots resistance force based in Areng area Thmor Bang district Koh Kong province In 1973 as the vice president of the Kampuchean United Front for National Salvation or FUNSK on the Western front he led an armed insurrection against the republican government 8 The first resistant against Pol Pot edit From being a group with link of Khmer Rouge fighters Say Puthang changed to the opposite side after the fall of Phnom Penh Finding refuge in Thai territory he went into hiding in the Cardamon mountains near the Thai border building strongholds and organizing troops Say Phouthang was among the first to rebel against Pol Pot 9 As they crossed the border to flee from the Khmer Rouge Uncle Sai and the Thai Koh Kong party got to know Thai Generals Chavalit Yongchaiyudh and Wichit Yathip who secretly helped their resistance movement citation needed Phouthang kept a tenacious but tiny army of only 3 small battalions against the Khmer Rouge who faced them with 27 battalions citation needed The leader from two lands who chose Hun Sen to lead since 1985 edit Thai Koh Kong resolved to secretly send Say to Vietnam as he had fought closely with Vietnam since the Khmer Issarak and the Indochina Communist Party used to live in Vietnam for a while Meeting with fellow revolutionary Cambodians such as Heng Samrin they co established the Republic of Cambodia on January 8 1979 with Heng Samrin serving as head of state and Uncle Put as deputy head of state citation needed In December 1981 Say Phouthang led Vietnamese troops and the A 21 police unit with 12 tanks and about 900 troops to arrest Prime Minister Pen Sovan after the latter had disappointed Le Đức Thọ the chief adviser to the Hanoi backed People s Republic of Kampuchea 10 After this arrest Say Phouthang was perhaps the most powerful Cambodian leader Thus he played a vital role in choosing Hun Sen as prime minister Hun Sen came into the picture after prime minister Chan Sy died in late 1984 Despite his young age of 33 Say saw Hun Sen has the right man to lead the Khmer nation as Prime Minister 11 something for which Hun Sen was grateful to the end of his life 12 Say Phouthang s health started declining in 1989 and he was hospitalized in Hanoi during that year 13 Say Phouthang was the third in 1981 fourth in 1985 14 or fifth after 1993 9 highest ranked member of the Cambodian People s Party s politburo until the end of his political career During the elections of May 1993 he was second on the list of candidates for the Cambodia People s Party in Kandal Province and he won but he resigned even before the results were published After the restoration of the monarchy he was appointed as a member of the Privy Council of King Norodom Sihanouk on December 25 1993 13 At the end of his life he retired to live at Klong Yai on the Thai side of the border where he had grown up Going to and from his home to his hospital in Bangkok for regular treatments he died in the Thai capital city on June 12 2016 Legacy the nationalist of Koh Kong edit nbsp The monument and the road named in honor of Say Phouthang in Koh Kong Province were inaugurated in presence of his old friends Heng Samrin Tea Banh and Tep Vong In the rather pluralistic composition of the PRK Say Puthang was one of the only two powerful individuals who were not Khmer and did not go to Vietnam who split with Pol Pot before 1975 along with Bou Thang the Minister of Defence and member of a small northeastern ethnic minority According to Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen Say Phouthang was considered by the Cambodian people as one of the main heroes who sacrificed everything to liberate the country from the Khmer Rouge regime 9 He has given the responsibility of Koh Kong provincial governor to his son Yuth Phouthang and his warrior spirit lives on through his of kick boxer turned movie star grandson Eh Phuthong 15 In 2018 on National Road that he helped to build to connect Phnom Penh to Koh Kong a massive monument was inaugurated in his honor in presence of his old friends Heng Samrin Tea Banh and Tep Vong 4 References edit CPP main hero Say Pouthang dies aged 96 The Phnom Penh Post Retrieved 31 January 2019 Tearful farewell for the Thai bornkingmaker who crowned Hun Sen Bangkok Post Retrieved 31 January 2019 Thai Community in Cambodia s Koh Kong www thaipbsworld com Retrieved 2023 05 25 a b Chivorn 2018 03 05 រ បស ណ ក ន ងវ ថ ស យ ភ ថង ន ខ ត តក ក ង ត រ វប នដ ក សម ព ធដ ក ឲ យប រ ប រ ស ជ ផ ល វក រ ក រ មអធ បត ភ ពសម ត ចពញ ចក រ ហ ង ស រ ន Fresh News in Khmer Retrieved 2023 05 25 epidpum is phuthxng khnpn hun esn phunakmphucha Bangkok Biznews in Thai 2016 06 18 Retrieved 2023 05 25 Slocomb Margaret 2003 The People s Republic of Kampuchea 1979 1989 The Revolution After Pol Pot Silkworm Books p 45 ISBN 978 974 9575 34 5 Gottesman Evan 2003 01 01 Cambodia After the Khmer Rouge Inside the Politics of Nation Building Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08957 8 Burchett Wilfred G 1981 The China Cambodia Vietnam Triangle Vanguard Books p 195 ISBN 978 0 917702 13 6 a b c Dara Mech 2016 06 14 CPP main hero Say Pouthang dies aged 96 Phnom Penh Post Retrieved 2023 05 25 Willemyns Alex 2016 10 31 Ex Prime Minister Pen Sovann dies at 80 Phnom Penh Post Retrieved 2023 05 25 Jeerawat Na Thaland 2016 06 26 Tearful farewell for the Thai bornkingmaker who crowned Hun Sen Bangkok Post Retrieved 2023 05 25 Mehta Harish C Mehta Julie B 1999 Hun Sen Strongman of Cambodia Graham Brash p 97 ISBN 978 981 218 074 2 a b Jennar Raoul Marc 1995 Les cles du Cambodge in French Maisonneuve et Larose p 254 ISBN 978 2 7068 1150 0 Schier Peter 1986 Kampuchea in 1985 Between Crocodiles and Tigers Southeast Asian Affairs 150 ISSN 0377 5437 JSTOR 27908549 Cochrane Liam 2004 10 08 Secrecy surrounds casino s dead dolphins Phnom Penh Post Retrieved 2023 05 25 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Say Phouthang amp oldid 1174776111, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.