PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — He screamed, “This is so unjust!” But Yann Rith, a
25-year-old resident of Phnom Penh, did not struggle against the group
of men who carried him away. A supporter of Cambodia’s political opposition, Mr. Yann Rith was taking
part this week in a practice protest, a role-playing exercise intended
to show other supporters how to submit peacefully if arrested by the
riot police.
“We will be nonviolent!” Mr. Yann Rith declared, as he patted down his rumpled, button-down shirt.
Cambodia’s opposition is planning to confront the country’s
authoritarian government with a demonstration on Saturday to protest
what it says was widespread cheating in the July 28 national election
that the ruling party says it won. But in a country scarred by years of
civil war and genocide, the leaders of the opposition are proceeding
cautiously, doing everything they can to convince the public that the
protest will be peaceful even as government security forces have begun
deploying.
The planned demonstration here in the capital is scheduled to last only
three hours and will remain in the public square that Cambodian law
designates as a protest area. The opposition carried out two rehearsals
this week with thousands of supporters listening to instructions on how
to resist any provocations.
“We don’t want a revolution, we don’t want a brawl,” Kem Sokha, the vice
president of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, told
supporters gathered for a rehearsal on Wednesday. “We just want
justice.”
Nearly six weeks after the election, which a number of monitoring groups
say was marred by widespread voting irregularities, Cambodian politics
remain in a deadlock. The leader of the opposition, Sam Rainsy, early on
called for a special committee to investigate the reported
irregularities and decide whether new balloting or recounting was
necessary. But hopes of a negotiated solution have faded as Mr. Sam
Rainsy says his attempts to engage the governing party “led nowhere.”
And there seems little doubt who has the upper hand.
Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has been in power 28 years, has a firm grip
over the army, the police, the judicial system and nearly every other
institution in the country, analysts say. As a symbol of his power, the
Khmer-language news media, which toe the government’s line, preface the
prime minister’s name with a Cambodian honorific that roughly translates
as “His Highness.”
Ou Virak, the president of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, an
independent advocacy organization in Phnom Penh, said he supported the
right of the opposition to protest but was skeptical it would threaten
the governing party’s grip on power.
“How are you going to topple the government with a three-hour demonstration?” he said.
Mr. Sam Rainsy says he is counting on the protests to maintain the
momentum and energy of the election campaign. “They will look bad when
they come with their guns and water cannons to crack down on us,” he
said in an interview, referring to security forces. “We will offer them
flowers.”
The election in July was a political milestone for the country because
the governing party, the Cambodian People’s Party, lost its near-total
monopoly on power, taking 55 percent of the seats in Parliament, down
from 73 percent in the previous election, according to unofficial
results. Mr. Hun Sen — who with the help of the Vietnamese in 1979 drove
out the murderous Khmer Rouge — appeared chastened by the result, and
in the days after the election, he spoke in conciliatory terms about his
relations with the opposition.
But in recent weeks, he has returned to his characteristic combative
style, honed over years in which he has accumulated unrivaled power.
Once official election results are announced, which is expected on
Sunday, members of his party say, with or without the cooperation of the
opposition, they will proceed with the opening of a new session of the
National Assembly and form another government, possibly as early as next
week.
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