CAMBODIA
No Foreign Observers at the Coming Elections
No International Recognition for an Illegitimate
Government
Resulting from Illegitimate Elections
Legislative elections in Cambodia
are scheduled for July 28, 2013. Their organization by the National Election
Committee (NEC), controlled by the authoritarian Cambodian People’s Party (CPP),
which has been in power for 34 years, runs fundamentally counter to
international standards.
Methods used by the NEC/CPP include
the manipulation of electoral lists, which allows the CPP to give itself a 27%
start over the opposition before polling day. This 27% lead is made up of
fictional voters, an automatic reservoir of support for the ruling party (10%) (1),
and of real voters who are known to be favorable to the opposition and whose
names are surreptitiously removed or deemed invalid by the NEC (17%) (2).
At the same time, the human rights
situation continues to deteriorate with political opponents, critics and
protesters being arrested, convicted and sent to prison on trumped-up charges.
As leader of the opposition I have found myself the victim of the CPP judicial
machine. I have been sentenced to a heavy prison sentence, forced into exile
and deprived of my civic and political rights. I am therefore excluded from the
electoral contest, which will allow the outgoing CPP prime minister to retain
his post without being challenged.
In these conditions it’s clear that
the coming elections will be everything but democratic, free and fair. However,
the Paris accords on Cambodia signed under the auspices
of the United Nations in 1991 demand “authentic
elections” to guarantee “a system of liberal democracy, on the basis of
pluralism.”
Faced with this totalitarian drift
toward a one-party system, it is essential to support the United Nations, which
has recommended a series of reforms to make the coming elections acceptable by
international standards. Two key ideas are included in the recommendations: a
reform of the composition and operations of the NEC to make it more impartial
and credible, and the safe return of the leader of the opposition who must be
able to stand as a candidate for prime minister and to take part fully in the
electoral campaign as in any parliamentary democracy.
But as long as the Cambodian
government continues to reject the UN recommendations, other international
organizations, friendly countries and non-complacent non-government
organizations are asked not to send electoral observers. In fact, based on the
above figures, the result of the July 28 election has already been decided:
another landslide victory for the CPP, which will defeat the opposition by at
least 27%. There is no point going to watch a game that has been fixed in
advance. Some ill-informed observers just risk validating the charade, which represents
an injustice to the Cambodian people, whose will is being distorted. In the communal
elections of June 2012, the CPP won a Soviet-style victory, while the two
components of the parliamentary opposition – now merged into the Cambodia
National Rescue Party – still won 31% of the vote, despite the famous 27%
handicap and other unfair practices by the CPP.
International organizations and
friendly countries are also asked to make known to the current government of
Cambodia that, after July 28, any government arising from fraudulent and
illegitimate elections will, given the scale of the fraud, be likewise
considered as illegitimate.
Sam Rainsy,
President of the Cambodia National
Rescue Party and leader of the opposition.
(1) Fictional, or phantom, voters significantly inflate the electoral
register, which has 9.7 million names while the population of voting age is
only 8.9 million. See "Sam Rainsy Calls
Foul on National Voter Register" in The Cambodia Daily, January 23, 2013. There
is clear evidence of impersonation.
(2) On
the eve of communal elections on June 1, 2012, about 1.5 million legitimate
voters, or 17% of the electorate, were likely disenfranchised. See "Ahead
of Elections, Right to Vote in Doubt for 1.5 Million" in The Cambodia Daily, February 29, 2012, and "Names
Missing from Voter Rolls," Radio Free Asia,
May 10, 2012.
1 comment:
Why EU Ambassador told Hun Sen last week hat the 27 countries of EU will support Cambodia upcoming election ?
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