A Change of Guard

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Saturday, 26 October 2013

After Protests, What Next For Political Stalemate?


“I mean strikes forever until a resolution is found,” Mr. Sovann said, adding that he was not concerned with “demonstration fatigue” among CNRP supporters if they see that their efforts are not achieving results.



By Colin Meyn and Kuch Naren Oct. 26, 2013

The opposition CNRP wound up another round of demonstrations on Friday, ending what were some of the largest protest marches ever against Prime Minister Hun Sen’s long-ruling CPP government.

Tens of thousands of supporters accompanied opposition leaders in marches across Phnom Penh to deliver a petition with more than 2 million signatures to the U.N. They also delivered letters to numerous embassies seeking the international community’s re-engagement to ensure that Cambodia’s 22-year-old wish to become a genuine, multiparty democracy is finally fulfilled.

–News Analysis


Everyone thinks I'm creepy. 

While Mr. Hun Sen’s government capitulated,strategically, in the face of the opposition’s vow that it would march in the streets from Wednesday to Friday, there is little indication that the CNRP’s show of people-power muscle has pushed the CPP any closer to meeting even the opposition’s most basic demands.


The next meeting between CNRP and CPP cannot take place unless the opposition parliamentarians agree first to take their oath as official lawmakers,” CPP lawmaker and party spokesman Cheam Yeap said.




The CNRP, Mr. Yeap said on Thursday, will not win any more concessions from the ruling party until their 55 lawmakers, who are boycotting the National Assem­bly, take their seats.


I never know what I'm saying.

He also alluded to an earlier threat by Mr. Hun Sen that the ruling party could redistribute the CNRP’s seats if they continue to boycott.

“Three months after the King convened the first National Assembly session [on September 23], we can write to the National Election Committee [NEC] and Constitution­al Council to take legal measures…to bring them [CNRP lawmakers] to the National Assembly, or what shall we do with the remaining seats?” Mr. Yeap asked, preferring to leave his own question unanswered.



While the laws on political parties and elections say the NEC can give away a party’s seats if the party “declares to abandon” them, Mr. Yeap has led the argument in re­cent weeks that an extended boycott is effectively abandonment.


I only care about my Banana Kingdom

Neither the CNRP nor Tep Ny­tha, secretary-general of the NEC, agrees with Mr. Yeap’s theory. [ Hmmm....]

CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said the opposition would not consider taking its seats until mechanisms are put in place to guarantee the reform of the NEC and other state institutions.

Mr. Sovann, who is an elected CNRP lawmaker for Phnom Penh, said that the opposition wants to sit down for further talks at which the CPP would have to make guarantees for reform, and would then put in place mechanisms to enforce those guarantees. That would be the minimum requirement before the CNRP considers taking its place in parliament, which is necessary to legitimize Mr. Hun Sen’s government.


“If you really want to solve the problem and want electoral reform, we have to sit down first, negotiate, make the meeting public about what we will do next,” Mr. Sovann said.

“We have to agree on everything, including electoral reform and reform of some other state institutions before we take oaths [in the] National Assembly,” he said.

If the CPP continues its refusal to talk, they will face “endless demonstrations and strikes,” he added.

“I mean strikes forever until a resolution is found,” Mr. Sovann said, adding that he was not concerned with “demonstration fatigue” among CNRP supporters if they see that their efforts are not achieving results.

“The people agree to work very hard today, but they will get a prize at the end,” he said of the motivation for ongoing protests.

However, he declined to say when the CNRP would hold its next demonstration if the CPP continues to refuse to talk.

“I don’t think they will refuse,” Mr. Sovann continued.

“From now until December we [parliamentarians from both parties] have a lot of things to do, especially about the budget law for 2014. So I think that the CPP should consider seriously and come to the table and talk.”

Mu Sochua, a lawmaker-elect for Battambang province and chief of public affairs for the CNRP, said that if there is no progress at the negotiating table, the opposition would make good on its threats to hold nationwide protests to rally support.

“We will go back to demonstrations. We said nationwide. We said boycott, and at each demonstration people are more determined,” she said, adding that electoral reform is being talked about by the CPP specifically because the CNRP’s massive support has shown the unfairness of July’s election.

“In the three months [since the election], to establish this sense of ownership and credibility for the CNRP is huge—the political space that we have, moral power that we have, political clout that we have,” she said.

“Do you think the CPP can govern on their own? Do you know that the CPP wants legitimacy? They do not feel conformable with what they have in their hands. They cannot govern alone,” she added.

Last week, as the CNRP prepared for its three-day demonstrations marking the 22nd anniversary of the 1991 Paris Peace Agreement on October 23, the CPP announced it would hold a seminar on election reform, the next step in the party’s promise to change electoral laws and related institutions.

Mr. Yeap, the CPP spokesman, said that this should be enough to convince the CNRP that the CPP is serious about conducting thorough reforms in the next mandate.

“We already declared that we have a firm stance to make in-depth reforms around elections, so it is pretty clear we will conduct reforms to create a better [electoral institution],” he said.

When asked what specific reforms would be made, Mr. Yeap declined to answer.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

devil cheam yeap and king sihamony they are cambodian,they are yuon all khmer should know about history,king haft yuon and haft italian,king from sihanouk was cheating politic to his own people he only the side of devil hun sen king house at peking treat his physical at china,why he work liberal people,he was killed 3 million people because the communist regime,and devil sihamony follower,so everything still the same tactic,so khmer should not bow down to him any more,if still he will kill more by his kindness,please don't want his donate a little bit but he kill every body lives as soon as possible.

Anonymous said...

to cnrp if you on strike you need to ask a permission from cpp if feel you win,if you ask for a permission every time you want to strike,cpp think you scare them,with cpp if no bomb they don't care,you know devil hun sen is a hard head look like metal and the one use a lot of tactics,cheating,flexible talk,he's number one chor antarak cheat.

Anonymous said...

Do not make a deal with the Communist Cambodian People. When they are weak they would invite you to the negotiating table and when they are getting stronger they would act like thugs and thorns in the eyes. They are clever in deceiving as the Artic fox. And now we see their soft spots so just keep striking their heads harder and harder until they smashed in to pieces. Make sure that death to the CPP is so certain to all of us. People should organize a public forum to denounce all of what they have done all ugly things to the country in the last 30 years, now the public are on our side we should not miss this opportunity. Therefore, the next election comes around they would have none seat in the parliament. And then what they going to do. They just sitting and do monkeys businesses and some of them may try to run away to escape the people court of justice. The worst is yet to come.

Anonymous said...

please cnrp don't bow down and take the oat in front of this dog king,he and his father are the same cheating their own people.

Anonymous said...

Recently , Hun Sen issued a decree to halt illigal logging but he
did not promise to chop his head off if the illigal action continue .
Hun Sen & his old cronies will reign Cambodia for another 5 years of Nepotism , crony ism , impunity , corruption , injustice ,
land grabbing , depletion of national resources , for more debt ...
*** The Ministry of Interior at this moment cannot find Chhouk
Bandit and the latest news is that he is appealing the Provincial
Court decision from his hiding place ? - This is the start of New ,
deeply reformed of the 5th Mandate Government .

Anonymous said...

Cambodia is a cursed nation bcos of too many idiotic . Cpp build school ah chkout raincy stop them. Ah pler.Khmer rough kill tree millions people. Right ?. And youn save khmere life . Right ?. Ask you why ah lerker raincy recure tov vinh.? .Reply

Anonymous said...

CNRP should change the way they are protesting.
They should send all 55 elected MPs to sit inthe parliament if they have to take oath. But n return those 55 MPs make daily protest every time during the parliamentary session. They set up signs in protest in the office and on the sitting desks at he plenary session chamber. They can say they join the National Ass for the sake of unity and spirit of people but don't mean they recognize the National Ass and Government. Almost the same as US Ambassador, Todd, told the press that he participated in the National Ass swearing session didn't mean US support it.
By sitting in at the National Ass, CNRP can do many things. They can protest inside out, they can harass CPPHun Sen cabinet members, they can summons them, list is on and on. While Sam Rainsy should stay out but continues to galvalnize people outside the ring. So they can use the legitimate positions inside congress to disturb CPP inside while they ccan maontain momentum utside.