You are free to cast your vote [well, at least some of you!]
but not to expect fair ballot results when they are officially announced by us!
- School of Vice
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School of Vice’s note: If the election was “free and fair”
as claimed by the CPP authorities, would
it not be to all parties’ benefit and peace of mind and conscience to have its
hotly contested ‘preliminary’ results investigated by an independent body of
experts, and once the results are verified and the election is declared to have
been in deed free and fair, then the Opposition will have no further cause for
complaints, and the ruling party will have gained credibility and legitimacy in
the eye of the electorate and the world at large, putting its democratic
governing mandate beyond all doubt? Even if the election has to be redone, it
would be worth all the amount of money spent, time and effort needed to do so
because the very idea of having the election in the first instance is to gauge
and consult the moods and intentions of the electorate at any given point in
time so that these moods and intentions are accurately represented by those
elected to enact and reflect them. By contrast, the continued refusal to have
these ‘alleged’ irregularities independently investigated could only mean one
thing, and one thing only, and that is:
the ruling party knows its insistence that the election was free and
fair will not and cannot stand up to scrutiny. Even if the ‘irregularities’
involve one or two voters having been denied their right to cast their votes,
or voter lists having been forged to remove eligible voters and to artificially
inflate non-existent ghost votes, this would still have been one or two irregularities
too many!
If there is no half-way house to Freedom, then surely there
is no half-way house to Democracy either.
****
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia August 29, 2013 (AP)
By SOPHENG CHEANG Associated Press
Associated Press
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen's ruling party criticized
the opposition's plan to hold a massive protest against last month's election
results, saying Thursday that a disruptive demonstration was not in the
country's interest.
In a rare statement, the Cambodian People's Party stopped
short of asking the opposition to cancel its rally planned for Sept. 7, but
implied that protesters would be held responsible for any unrest.
Official results from the July 28 polls gave Hun Sen's party
68 seats in the National Assembly against 55 for the opposition Cambodian
National Rescue Party. Opposition leader Sam Rainsy says his party would have
won 63 seats if the election had been fair.
Rainsy has called for next week's rally unless an independent
committee is formed to investigate alleged irregularities in the election.
Rallies since the election have drawn thousands of people
and raised fears of political violence, especially since the government has
responded by deploying troops and armored vehicles in Phnom Penh, the capital.
Hun Sen, Cambodia's leader for 28 years, has a reputation of
dealing harshly with his opponents.
Sam Rainsy said earlier Thursday that he plans to hold
training sessions and rehearsals to show supporters how to hold peaceful
protests, since the Cambodian people have little experience with opposition
rallies. He said he would call in foreign experts to help with the training.
"We are in the learning process," Sam Rainsy told
reporters. "We are receiving training and advice from people all over the
world who want to help ensure that demonstrations in Cambodia will be peaceful.
We will conduct rehearsals. We will assemble people and train them in how to
resist violence."
He denied allegations by the Interior Ministry, which
recently set a letter to all foreign embassies accusing the opposition of
trying to topple the government.
"We have no plan to topple anyone," Sam Rainsy
said. "We are protesting the election results and the election conduct and
a lack of transparency. We want to bring justice to the voters."
In its statement, the ruling party did not address the
opposition's demand for an impartial investigation into the election. But it
urged the opposition to hold another round of talks to ease the standoff, rather
than taking its discontent into the streets. The two sides have already held
three meetings over the dispute.
The protest is planned for one day before the National
Election Committee is expected to ratify the results.
"The announcement by the Cambodia National Rescue Party
to hold a massive demonstration against the result of the election — before the
final result is announced — will affect the livelihood of the people who are
living peacefully," the ruling party said in its statement.
Hun Sen's party also denounced the planned protest as an
effort to "intentionally destroy the election results" and a
violation of Cambodia's spirit of national reconciliation. It repeated its
claim that the election was free and fair.
The opposition's main complaint alleges that the voter
registration process failed to properly list possibly more than 1 million
people, who were therefore unable to vote. Several nonpartisan poll-watching
groups support that claim.
1 comment:
Hey,Hun shit what is free and fair? Was it cheating free/fair to you? What's country interest? According to your Cpp thugs' rules? Cheating/votes-buying and forcing to swear in your ruling party interest? Was that your country interest? Was that stealing,killing,intimidating,manipulating,evicted innocent Khmers,destroyed forests in favor Hanoi all of the above were in your country's interest?Oh come on wake up ah lop Cpp Hun thugs of Hanoi before it too late.stealing votes is in Hanoi's interest to hang on to power despite people will to change,your Cpp thugs deserve to be like Lybia-Qaddafi....
Prahok
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