Friday, 25 May 2012
Meas Sokchea and David Boyle
Phnom Penh Post
At 25, Sin Chan Pov Rozeth is the youngest candidate running for commune
chief in the June 3 election and faces a ruling party opponent more
than half a century her senior.
The young Sam Rainsy Party
hopeful is pitted against the Cambodian People’s Party Kem Chhorng, 78,
who has been the chief of O’Char commune in Battambang town since just
after the Khmer Rouge were overthrown in 1979.
Sin Chan Pov
Rozeth’s former job was selling quails here, where she grew up with only
her mother, who sells vegetables for a living and lives in the SRP
headquarters.
But for the past week, she has been aggressively
selling something more abstract: a campaign message to end alleged
corruption in the commune, build a healthcare centre and construct a
sewer system to stop continual flooding.
“Even though my
competitor is old and has experience, I still hope that I will beat him,
because in the 20 years that he has been a commune chief, he has not
served people well but thinks about money; there has been no development
for people,” she said.
The first-time candidate, who has
actively supported the SRP since she was 11 years old, said it was the
will to develop, not experience and gender, that is important.
“In
Thailand, they voted for a woman to lead the country. Why in our O’Char
commune can people not vote for a woman to lead?” she said.
Kem
Chhorng says her promises are full of hot air and wants to know where
the money is going to come from to build the pledged projects when the
national budget offers the commune scant funding.
“What she says
is just to attract, for her pride. She looks pretty but she is young,
she does not have experience and she cannot do. She has never been a
commune chief,” he said.
“Since 1979, I have never lost any time
an election for commune chief so far. If I threaten people for money,
they would not vote for me,” he said, adding that in that time he had
built four schools in four separate villages.
He added that he
was old and would agree to leave politics if he lost, but said he was
100 per cent confident he would win the seat, and that the CPP would
gain two more councillors in O’Char commune.
Currently, they have seven councillors in O’Char compared to the SRP’s four.
Out
on the campaign trail, Sin Chan Pov Rozeth is winning supporters, at
least at face value, including 90-year-old Om Heb, who assures her he
will be voting SRP on June 3.
“Women work well. I would try with
her once. The men are [too] busy looking at the road,” he said, after
hearing her confident campaign pitch, which sometimes includes a
portable, stand-mounted flat-screen TV blaring out SRP campaign videos.
The
CPP are taking a less personalised approach to campaigning in
Battambang, driving through town in huge convoys of hundreds of
flag-waving supporters on motorbikes and dozens of cars blurting out
their campaign slogans from loudspeakers.
Sin Chan Pov Rozeth
faces an uphill battle against this show of force, and once again this
campaign, there have been widespread allegations of political
intimidation.
Just yesterday, the SRP announced they would file a
criminal complaint over an alleged assault on their Battambang district
councillor, Khy Meng Lynh, by a CPP member – an attack they say
resulted in a dislocated collarbone.
Another problem, said
political observer Son Soubert, was the division between the SRP and
smaller opposition parties such as the Human Rights Party and the
Norodom Ranariddh Party, which yesterday announced plans to merge with
Funcinpec.
“Well, I just wish that they get better, but I doubt
it, because when the opposition is not united, the people will be
divided, and some will go to the Sam Rainsy and some to the HRP.
In the battle for the O’Char seat, the SRP is also contesting the soon-to-be-merged NRP and Funcinpec.
More
important than the influence of an emerging, politically aware younger
generation, is the reaction to the continuing escalation of land
disputes at the ballot box, Son Soubert said.
And there is
another factor that might work against Sin Chan Pov Rozeth’s campaign –
the mass migration of young people in the area seeking jobs in Thailand,
which has escalated amidst the Thai government’s pledge to raise the
minimum daily wage to 300 baht (US$9.50).
Most people in
Battambang town are understandably reluctant to say who they will
support in the election, but they unanimously agree there has been at
least one positive democratic sign – far more vigorous campaigning from
all parties.
These commune elections mean nothing in terms of
real parliamentary muscle, but as a key battleground at next year’s
National Assembly elections, they will provide an indication of whether
Cambodians are willing to consider change.
With SRP MP Mu Sochua
set to face off directly with CPP Interior Minister Sar Kheng in
Battambang in the 2013 ballot, the result will provide insight in what
is set to be a fierce battle on the biggest political stage.
2 comments:
Bravo lady!....Bravo...! Fight for your right to be free.Its time is now...thank you .
Khmer
I am trilled and so inspired seeing sister Sin Chan Pov Rozeth
has courage to stand up against the social injustice and decided
to make the changes for the better. I personally appeal the
district constituants to rally in support of her and finally vote for
her.
May the force be with you my beloved sister.
KPCS
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