Five of the eight political parties contesting seats in next month’s
national election on Monday signed an agreement vowing to run clean
campaigns and voluntarily disclose their spending practices and sources
of election funding.
Representatives from the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), Khmer
Anti-Poverty Party, the League for Democracy, the Khmer Economic
Development Party and the Republican Democracy Party all signed the
pact, while the ruling CPP, Funcinpec and Cambodia Nationality Party
were absent from the signing ceremony.
The initiative was organized by seven election monitoring and
transparency groups as a way to address a lack of legislation that would
make it mandatory for parties to disclose their financial information
leading up to and during the election period.
“The purpose of this ceremony is important because fairness in using
financial resources in the election campaign is crucial for free and
fair elections,” said Thun Saray, chair of the board of directors at the
Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (Comfrel).
“The campaign is the most important time in the electoral process,”
he added. “Without the [the agreement], irregularities may occur and
violence may occur.”
The financial disclosure agreement is the same as the one signed by
four political parties ahead of last year’s commune election. Parties
are expected to provide information on “income/contributions received
during the three months before the end of the campaign period,” as well
as spending over the official campaign period, which begins on Thursday.
While there is no specific law on campaign financing, chapter 6 in the
Law on Political Parties prohibits parties from receiving money from
government institutions, NGOs and foreign firms.
Comfrel executive director Koul Panha said the CPP had written to the
body saying that they would ask members to be transparent about their
finances, but he doubted they would go as far as to make it a law.
“The CPP does not really have the willing to support the [idea of]
political campaign finance law. Why? That’s a big question I cannot
answer,” he said.
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan referred questions to
Information Minister Khieu Kanharith, who said: “Usually, potential
candidates take charge of most of the expenses. The funding is from
grassroots-level members.”
He added that the cost would be shared among candidates.
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