The Cambodia Daily
July 3, 2013
Less than a week into the official election campaign period,
supporters of Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling CPP have firmly
established their dominion along Phnom Penh’s streets and especially in
the centrally located Wat Botum park.
Since the campaign season began on Thursday, CPP youth supporters
have established a substantial, permanent presence in Wat Botum park,
one of the largest open areas in central Phnom Penh at the intersection
of two of the city’s main thoroughfares—Suramarit and Sothearos
boulevards.
Phnom Penh deputy municipal governor Khourn Sreng said city
authorities had granted Wat Botum to the CPP as the ruling party had
approached authorities about using the area for its campaign before the
opposition.
“We offered Wat Botum park to the Cambodian People’s Party because
this party came to ask for permission first,” said Mr. Sreng, adding
that City Hall and the Phnom Penh Election Committee had told the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) it was allowed to
conduct its campaign events in Freedom Park, an infrequently used open
space tucked between lightly trafficked Streets 106 and 108.
Since establishing its presence in Wat Botum park, the CPP youth have
made a noisy, and somewhat intimidating, show of their affection for
Mr. Hun Sen, as well as their distaste for their main opposition in the
upcoming national election. On a number of occasions on Monday, CPP
supporters intermittently made a human chain across the westbound lane
of Suramarit Boulevard in order to prevent CNRP supporters on motorbikes
and tuk-tuks from passing through.
The CPP youth continued to block the street, forcing travelers to
find alternate routes through the city, late into the evening on Monday,
chanting pro-CPP slogans as music and messages from CPP leaders blasted
from a wall of speakers trucked into the park.
On Tuesday, the street in front of the CPP campaign area at Wat Botum
was cordoned off by police at the behest of City Hall, who said that it
was necessary to close the street in order to ensure public safety as
protesters from the Boeng Kak eviction community attempted to
demonstrate in front of Mr. Hun Sen’s villa down the street.
“We closed this road because we are worried about security due to the
Boeng Kak residents’ protests,” Mr. Sreng said, adding that the street
would be re-opened today.
National Election Committee Secretary-General Tep Nytha said that the
CPP supporters’ actions were illegal, contradicting Interior Ministry
officials who said that the action was permissible with proper
authorization.
“I think that blocking the road during the election campaign is not
right because this action is banned under the election law. The blockage
has the potential of disrupting public order,” Mr. Nytha said.
However, Lieutenant General Khieu Sopheak, spokesman for the Ministry
of Interior, said the action was legal because the CPP youth had
received express permission from municipal authorities to block the
road.
“Political parties are able to block the road for election campaigns
if they received permission from relevant authorities,” he said.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said that the ruling party was being given
favorable treatment in being allocated unique access to Wat Botum park.
“The governor of the municipality is a member of the CPP. They should
alternate, 15 days for CPP and 15 days for CNRP [in Wat Botum park],
but they do not do that. They [City Hall] know the best place for
campaigning and they are the one who decides because there is a conflict
of interest,” he said.
The Phnom Penh Election Committee also informed the CNRP on Tuesday
that it must take down hundreds of party banners that have been hung on
electricity and telephone poles throughout the city, citing election
rules that preclude political parties from using state property in its
campaigns, according Mr. Sovann.
“Now they [the Phnom Penh Election Committee] have ordered us to
remove the banners that we have posted on the electricity polls. But our
[Phnom Penh] working group does not agree to remove them,” Mr. Sovann
said, noting that the CPP has also put up scores of their own banners on
poles planted in sidewalks along the city’s main streets.
“The CPP can do whatever they want. They post their banners, their
signboards and their leaflets all over the place. When my party posts
only the banners on a few electricity polls, they order us to remove
them,” he said.
Long Chhenkai, the director of the Phnom Penh Election Committee
declined to comment on the rationale for the decision, and the
accusations of political bias against his committee.
“We have already told the parties about our decision, ask them for further information,” he said.
Mr. Sovann, of the CNRP, said that the election committee told his
party that their signs needed to be taken down “in order to preserve the
beauty of the city” and that the municipality needed to use the
electricity polls to promote its celebration of the fifth anniversary of
the designation of Preah Vihear temple as a World Heritage Site on
Sunday.
Hundreds of young CNRP supporters gathered Tuesday in front of the
National Assembly before driving through the city in a raucous display
of support for the opposition party.
Khut Samol, 33, a CNRP member who helped organize Tuesday’s rally,
said that the opposition party was now organizing mostly mobile rallies
to avoid disturbances and to work around City Hall restrictions on their
campaigning.
“The CPP is the ruling party so they can use whatever spaces they
want. Now we are planning rallies to meet in different places every day
so they can not disrupt us,” he said.
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