8th August 2012
Radio Free Asia
Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy expects a ‘political solution’ before 2013 elections.
Cambodia’s exiled politician Sam Rainsy is optimistic that he
will be allowed to return home from exile under a political compromise
and run in next year’s election as head of a new opposition alliance.
The government has said that he may not return without serving a
two-year jail sentence for uprooting markers at the Cambodia-Vietnam
border in 2009.
But Sam Rainsy, who is currently involved in efforts to merge
Cambodia’s two key opposition parties to forge a united alliance against
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP), said he
believes there will be a “political solution” for his return.
“The situation would not remain the same. It is not the first time
that I was expelled from the National Assembly [parliament] and
convicted. This time will also be the same as the past. There will be a
political solution,” he said in an interview with RFA's Khmer service in
Washington.
He did not elaborate on how a resolution would be reached but said
that in 2006, he was able to return from exile after foreign governments
expressed concern that the government framed charges against him to
silence the opposition.
Party for National Rescue
Sam Rainsy is in the process of merging his Sam Rainsy Party (SRP)
with another key opposition party, the Human Rights Party (HRP), to put
up a united challenge against Hun Sen’s CPP in the 2013 vote.
He is in the U.S. as part of a global tour with HRP President Kem
Sokha to raise awareness of their new party–the Party for National
Rescue–and put what he called foreign pressure on the Cambodian
government to allow him to return.
They are scheduled for talks with officials of the U.S. State Department and the United Nations.
Sam Rainsy will be the new party’s candidate for Prime Minister in
the July 2013 vote, he and Kem Sokha told RFA, calling for electoral
reforms to make the elections fair and credible.
“In order to have a free and fair election, the National Election Committee must be reformed and restructured,” Sam Rainsy said.
The two parties had previously criticized the National Election
Commission for being biased toward the CPP, which has ruled the country
for three decades and easily won the country’s past three commune-level
elections amid political violence and other problems.
“We would like Cambodia to become a fully democratic country. And we
would like the world community and the U.S. to rescue Cambodia, which is
getting too close to becoming a waterfall,” Kem Sokha said.
Sam Rainsy, first elected to the National Assembly two decades ago,
first went into exile in 2005 after facing defamation charges for
criticizing government corruption.
He returned the next year after receiving a royal pardon, but went
into exile again in 2009 after leading the border protest and was
convicted in absentia on charges of incitement and damaging property.
He called his conviction groundless and unacceptable.
Alliance
The plan for the SRP and HRP parties’ merger was announced at a
meeting in Manila in July, after the wheels for the plan were set in
motion nearly two years ago.
They had attempted to merge ahead of local-level elections for
commune council chiefs in May, but were unable to decide on common goals
at the time.
Kem Sokha said that the Cambodia Democratic Movement for National
Rescue, the transitional body ahead of the merger, has established
working groups to unite the two groups and is in the process of creating
a joint national platform and common party policies.
“We all already know that we want to rescue the country, so [that is
why] we have decided to name the new party the ‘Party for National
Rescue.’ Our principles are to merge the positive points from the two
parties into a new single party,” Kem Sokha said.
Sam Rainsy said the party’s unity would be crucial to its success.
“The current situation has required all democrats to be united to
rescue the country. This is what the country needs. If we fail to
answer country’s need, that would be a big mistake,” Sam Rainsy said.
“We have no choice but to be united into one force.”
Meanwhile on Wednesday in Phnom Penh, Hun Sen, who has been prime
minister since 1998, dismissed any notions that the new party could be a
threat to his CPP, saying the alliance was likely to crumble.
“They announced they are committed to the alliance. They said Hun Sen
is afraid of the alliance, and it is not true,” he said, predicting the
political in-fighting between the two parties would be like “dogs
fighting for food.”
Reported and translated by Samean Yun for RFA’s Khmer service. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
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