2012-07-31
Radio Free Asia
Representatives from Cambodia’s two largest opposition parties meet for the first time inside Cambodia.
Officials from two key Cambodian opposition parties which have
agreed to merge have met for the first time inside the country, laying
the groundwork for registering their new joint party.
Some 300 members of the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) and Human Rights Party
(HRP) attended Monday’s meeting of the Cambodia Democratic Movement for
National Rescue (CDMNR), the interim group implementing the merger.
The meeting at HRP’s headquarters in Phnom Penh was the alliance’s
first since the two parties announced in Manila on July 17 that they
were joining forces to challenge Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling
Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) in the July 2013 general election.
Kem Sokha, CDMNR vice-president and HRP president, promised
supporters the two parties are working on creating a joint political
platform and will publicize it to voters before the merger.
“We are working to create a political [framework] immediately to
register the new party [for the upcoming election]. We understand the
laws. We won’t let our supporters down,” he said.
He added that the two parties’ commune councilors are working at the
grassroots level to prepare for the merger and that representatives from
the two parties say they are striving to “legally register” the party
without losing their current lawmakers’ seats.
The SRP currently holds 26 seats in the National Assembly while the
HRP has three, but officials say they will lose those seats if their
current parties are dissolved ahead of the election.
Two to tango
CDMNR and SRP President Sam Rainsy, who lives in exile and faces
charges in Cambodia that he says are politically motivated, told the
meeting that the two parties will campaign both locally and
internationally to press Cambodia’s government to allow for his return
in time for the vote.
Addressing the meeting via Skype videoconference from an undisclosed
country, he said the new joint party candidate will be a crucial
alternative to Hun Sen, who has been the country’s prime minister since
1998.
“There are only two candidates for prime minister, Hun Sen and Sam
Rainsy. So without my presence, there would be no election. Just as in
boxing, you need two people to box,” he said.
He said they will also campaign to press the government to reform the national election commission.
The two parties had previously criticized the national election
commission, saying its members are biased toward the CPP, which has
ruled the country for three decades, and which easily won the country’s
commune-level elections in 2002, 2007, and 2012 amid political violence
and other problems.
On Tuesday, Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha began a trip to the U.S. and
other countries to drum up global support for pressure on the Cambodian
government.
Reported by Tep Soravy for RFA’s Khmer service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
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