SRP leader Sam Rainsy says he wants a mass coalition of all political parties who oppose the ruling CPP, but analysts say the pride of party leaders could hamper any potential merger. (TANG CHHIN SOTHY/ AFP)
Friday, 02 May 2008
Written by Meas Sokchea
The Phnom Penh Post
It was only moments after his return on April 29 from a campaign sweep through Canada and the US that political leader Sam Rainsy declared his readiness to merge with Cambodia’s two other major opposition parties as the country races towards national elections in July.
Only such a marriage would have a chance at diminishing the power of Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party’s (CPP), which observers expect will become absolute in the absence of the coalition government deals which have resulted from previous polls.
But Rainsy’s offer was not without conditions and accusations aimed at the very partners he is seeking, something analysts say reveals an opposition hopelessly at odds with itself and unlikely to loosen the CPP’s stranglehold over Cambodia’s political affairs.
“They do not have confidence in each other,” said Chea Vannath, the former director of the Center for Social Development who is now an independent analyst.
“They must merge together to compete with the CPP, but ... they cannot call for a coalition only as the election arrives,” she told the Post on April 30.
“A coalition is a very important force, but each (party leader) is too proud and will not agree to work together.”
Corruption, legal problems and even messy personal lives have come into play and Rainsy and leaders of the Human Rights Party (HRP), headed by former activist Kem Sokha, and Prince Norodom Ranariddh’s self-named political organization point fingers at each other, while at the same time pledging to support a coalition.
Upon returning to Cambodia, Rainsy demanded that the “weak points” of both of his potential allies be addressed or all three risked being “held hostage” by the CPP.
Kem Sokha, who has been at the center of a vicious whisper campaign over alleged graft, needed to sort out corruption allegations made by his former employees at the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, according to Rainsy.
The Prince, in self-imposed exile since he was ousted as head of the royalist Funcinpec party amid a flurry of legal assaults, including one for adultery, must tidy up his private affairs, Rainsy said.
“No one else can help him with that,” he told the Post.
These comments have not gone down well, with Kem Sokha shooting back that Rainsy – the long-time darling of foreign pro-democracy campaigners – has no real commitment to form a coalition, as well as legal problems of his own that could jeopardize the opposition’s election chances.
The HRP has long pushed for a coalition with the two other opposition parties, but the plan is still “a failure,” Sokha said, adding that while he would unconditionally join Rainsy, he did not know if he could merge with the Prince’s Norodom Ranariddh Party, or NRP.
“He (Ranariddh) is different from me,” he said, accusing the NRP of shamelessly using a joint meeting with his own group to encourage defections to the NRP.
“This is a divide and rule policy it does not demonstrate the good will you need to form a democratic coalition,” Sokha said.
The disarray is, however, just more evidence of the CPP’s pending election landslide, according to government spokesman Khieu Kanharith.
“This is five riels being divided between three people,” he told the Post on May 1.
The opposition “merged many times before but those mergers were always broken – it is no worry to the CPP,” he said.
Officials at the NRP, while professing to want a coalition, claim that the two other parties simply waited until it was too close to the July 27 elections to realistically merge.
Registration for parties ends on May 12, and NRP spokesman Muth Chantha said, “When the election will arrive so soon why … hold press conferences about coalitions?
“We cannot merge now into one big party, it is too late. It is very deceptive to claim we can.”
Credibility remains elusive for the fractious opposition, said Koul Panha, executive director of the Cambodian election monitor Committee for Free and Fair Elections, and the most recent bickering does not help.
“The merger must be sincere … but do these three leaders have the will to do this?” he said.
Only such a marriage would have a chance at diminishing the power of Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party’s (CPP), which observers expect will become absolute in the absence of the coalition government deals which have resulted from previous polls.
But Rainsy’s offer was not without conditions and accusations aimed at the very partners he is seeking, something analysts say reveals an opposition hopelessly at odds with itself and unlikely to loosen the CPP’s stranglehold over Cambodia’s political affairs.
“They do not have confidence in each other,” said Chea Vannath, the former director of the Center for Social Development who is now an independent analyst.
“They must merge together to compete with the CPP, but ... they cannot call for a coalition only as the election arrives,” she told the Post on April 30.
“A coalition is a very important force, but each (party leader) is too proud and will not agree to work together.”
Corruption, legal problems and even messy personal lives have come into play and Rainsy and leaders of the Human Rights Party (HRP), headed by former activist Kem Sokha, and Prince Norodom Ranariddh’s self-named political organization point fingers at each other, while at the same time pledging to support a coalition.
Upon returning to Cambodia, Rainsy demanded that the “weak points” of both of his potential allies be addressed or all three risked being “held hostage” by the CPP.
Kem Sokha, who has been at the center of a vicious whisper campaign over alleged graft, needed to sort out corruption allegations made by his former employees at the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, according to Rainsy.
The Prince, in self-imposed exile since he was ousted as head of the royalist Funcinpec party amid a flurry of legal assaults, including one for adultery, must tidy up his private affairs, Rainsy said.
“No one else can help him with that,” he told the Post.
These comments have not gone down well, with Kem Sokha shooting back that Rainsy – the long-time darling of foreign pro-democracy campaigners – has no real commitment to form a coalition, as well as legal problems of his own that could jeopardize the opposition’s election chances.
The HRP has long pushed for a coalition with the two other opposition parties, but the plan is still “a failure,” Sokha said, adding that while he would unconditionally join Rainsy, he did not know if he could merge with the Prince’s Norodom Ranariddh Party, or NRP.
“He (Ranariddh) is different from me,” he said, accusing the NRP of shamelessly using a joint meeting with his own group to encourage defections to the NRP.
“This is a divide and rule policy it does not demonstrate the good will you need to form a democratic coalition,” Sokha said.
The disarray is, however, just more evidence of the CPP’s pending election landslide, according to government spokesman Khieu Kanharith.
“This is five riels being divided between three people,” he told the Post on May 1.
The opposition “merged many times before but those mergers were always broken – it is no worry to the CPP,” he said.
Officials at the NRP, while professing to want a coalition, claim that the two other parties simply waited until it was too close to the July 27 elections to realistically merge.
Registration for parties ends on May 12, and NRP spokesman Muth Chantha said, “When the election will arrive so soon why … hold press conferences about coalitions?
“We cannot merge now into one big party, it is too late. It is very deceptive to claim we can.”
Credibility remains elusive for the fractious opposition, said Koul Panha, executive director of the Cambodian election monitor Committee for Free and Fair Elections, and the most recent bickering does not help.
“The merger must be sincere … but do these three leaders have the will to do this?” he said.
39 comments:
Sam Rainsy was only looking for cashes support from oversea when he called for United oppositions after the commune election. He had to raise up false hope that he can win the election to get their support. He can't be negative about his capability and lose face among his supporters, which is why he's getting more desperate and go as far as accusing everyone as Khmer Rouge killers ... . People like Sam Rainsy is no leader and will never be. He got everything upside down and backward since day1.
thanks for sharing. i'll vote for you once your name is up.
You promise?
I think all 3 opposition leaders don't really want to merge but they just said that because they want to fool Cambodian people and they may get some pressure from foreign leaders. I personally don't trust them. Kem Sokha is absolutely corrupt as far as I know and I believe his ex workers.
Ranaridh is a bad leader, he has no shame as a prince he kiss Hun sen ass to betray his partner. Sam Reansy is a family run politician and laways want to revenge with the royal family who is his family ennemy and of course Hun Sen is a very corrupt leader He is bad!
Re: wwww.about-Cambodia.blogspot.com
KJE the pro-Viet self-proclaimed Free-thinker should change his blog name to anything but about-Cambodia.
If KJE akso known as Free-thinker really wants that much publicity that bad, tell me now so I can schedule a task to hit his blog every minute, 24/7.
KJE can do the math as to the # of hits in just one week time.
Please let me know.
Can KJE of about-Cambodia be the same Viet that has been shitting all over KI-Media after all these times???
One Cambodian kid
Only ah Hun Sen wants Vietcong!
The rest of the entire Cambodian people denies the Viet plunderer.
Vote ah Hun SEN out!!!
Vote the coalition party IN!!!
The world sees and knows the true color of the Viet plunderer already!!!
Go home Vietcong, Go home!
Khmer people needs no Vietcong on Khmer land!
DONT MATTER WHAT YOU ALL TRY FOOLS! CPP WILL BE 120 PERCENT WINNER VIA CHEATING DIRECTLY AND INDIRECTLY CPP KNOWS THAT BECAUSE YOU ALL FUCKING BLIND,,, SRP NRP HRP WHAT ELSE DRP KRP GRP AND SO ON IT IS USELESS!!!! HUNSEN ONLY CAN BE REMOVED BY CIVIL WAR PEOPLE REVOLUTION BUT HUN SEN KNOWS THAT CAMBODIANS ARE CHICKEN THEY DARE NOT IT SEEMS POL POT HAD DONE THE JOB FOR HUN SEN!!!! I BET HUN SEN PRAY AND THANKS POL POT EVRY NITE lAUGH MY ASS OFF TO ALL THOSE IDIOTS WHO PARTICIPATE THIS FAKE ELECTION INCLUDING THE FOOL LON NOL'S SON HAHAHA WHAT A JOKE!!!!
Of course the CPP will win, but if the two other parties merge with the SRP they will get more seats in the HOUSE. Staying separately as they are now, the big losers are the two; from my point of view, SRP is still the second winner anyway.
How can we create a civil's war? Cambodians's can't even deal with Thailand in the Preah Vihear province's case.
You're right...Actually, cambodians are too chicken, maybe, They're too tired. NOT A LOTS OF THINGS TO EAT.
The way Khmer Rouge rule the country, Hun Sen is just copying it.
Friends try to visit Cambodia at the farms. I mean not just looking people living near the road. Try to go farer than the road, You'll see how real cambodians look like. Very Poor. That's why it's easy for Hun Sen to rule. With money and bribery.
Burn 100 houses and build 1 house, and make a ceremony (sekha sala or sampoot).
Just took the Choeung Prey district case, when someone speak too strong, Maa Chhoeun, the director of police's school, ask his cronies to take this SOMEONE out. You know, Maa Chhoeun will only paid 1000 dollars to kill one person.
THAT'S THE WAY CPP RULE...
It won't change in Cambodia in the next 10 years. It's just a fake economy. Hun Sen and his cronies are just liar toward cambodians...Maybe a civil's war can happen. It's just took someone strong enough to make people believe. I hope it will never happen. The viets want and will take a full control of Cambodia.
LET'S JUST PRAY THAT WILL NEVER HAPPEN !!!
Khmer Canadian
to Khmer Canadian:
quite agree with what you said about he way CCP rules the country, but disagree with what you talked about the future of Cambodia.
from political point of view, yes, the next 10 years might has very little progressions in the law and justice system in this country.
but from economical point of view, no, Cambodia will be very different! Cambodia's economy will be much better from now.
6:28
You are one stupid Cambodian kid. Your posts are idiocy plain and simple.
This is not about hits, this is about expressing one's opinions and letting other people who have the ability to understand them, read it.
You are probably just some L. B. ghetto kid with a computer.
agreed.
My suggestion for Mr. Sam Rainsy and all other political parties to keep things simple. Simpicity is the key to long term beauty.
Hello, 10:51PM,
Since you mention about SIMPLICITY, let me add some more quotes to yours.
Anyway, the game of politics is a complicated one invilving all kinds of tactics. Here the quotes go:
Nothing is more than simple greatness; indeed, to be simple is to be great.-Emersom
Simplicity, of all things, is the hardest to be copied.-Steel
Simlicity is nature's first step, and the last of art.-Bailey
Hello 10:36 PM,
From what I know...I am not so sure about what you said there KJE or is it the so-called "Free-thinker", the pretender on KI-Media?..Rofl!
"some L. B. ghetto kid with a computer!"?...that, ladies and gentleman, the word of KJE, the pretender on KI-Media...the Pro-CPP, Pro-Yuon, owner of about-Cambodia blog that is desperate for attention....Rofl!
KI-Media posted the article from the Phnom Penh Post.
Please read the entire issue at:
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php?option=com_news_portal&Itemid=78
You can also compare this article to one posted on www.about-cambodia.blogspot.com previously as well as this one http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1209&Itemid=52 with this one http://about-cambodia.blogspot.com/2008/04/united-opposition-dream.html
So you guys know where I am coming from and that I have some of the same sources.
Mr. 10:36 AM,
Don't be a racist Mr. Free-Thinker, after all this is Khmer's blog.
"You are probably just some L. B. ghetto kid with a computer." is in itself indicative of being a jack-arse already!!! So watch your language KJE, this is a warning!
Hi 10:36 a.m.,
So what is your "big" opinion about this whole politic thing other than belittle of yours?
All politicians are cheating us. Don't make more conflict among us.
They are finding ways to get power and after that MONEY. How do they form the mass coalition? 1000 more year, I bet.
Of course the SRP will win, but if the two other parties merge with the CPP (Communist Pro youn Party) they will get more seats in the HOUSE. Staying separately as they are now, the big losers are the two; from my point of view, SRP is still the second winner anyway.
These fucking retarded gorillas must cease and desist (at once) your an incessant provocative political rhetoric, or we've force ourselves to implement our one-bullet-two-kill policy to hamstring your ignorance.
I think your incessantly provocative political rhetoric "cooked brain" of yours, rather deserves one-bullet-to-kill policy right between your eyes, and to hamstring your ignorance nuts.
good day.
kiss my arse you fucking Viet parasite @2:08 AM!
Viet go home!
Cambodia needs no Vietcong invader on Khmer land!
Viet Parasite must quit pretending to be Cambodian speaking out as Cambodian...
Cambodian people denies Viet parasite!!!
"The world sees and knows you low-life Viet parasite true color already!"
And that is the universal language about the Viet parasite!
We do not need any help from you.
You people are the root of the problem. The culprit needs to be identified and eliminated, which is why the one-bullet-two-kill policy needs to be implemented.
All ah Khmer-Yuon disgusting "parasites" should not be allowed to copexist with our true countrymen who spilled blood for the freedom of this country; they only impede and backpedal the progress of the country.
3 diffrent political parties, 3 different policy plateform, 3 unbacked down and uncompromise leaders who have been always suspecious of each other, 3 leaders who have always been claimed that they are better than one another.
Don't tink they can come in one piece pack for thes leaders.
12:44
God, now we got an Aussie or Kiwi weighing in too. Get lost.
It is the Vietcong high culture to called Khmer Krom as the Khmer Youn because they are dying to live to with the Khmer Krom people!
Cambodian people denies The Viet parasites/invaders!!!
"The world sees and knows you low-life Viet parasite true color already!"
And that is the universal language about the Viet parasite!
kiss my arse you fucking Youn parasite @2:08 AM!
Youn go home!
Cambodia needs no Vietcong invader on Khmer land!
Youn Parasite must quit pretending to be Cambodian speaking out as Cambodian...
Cambodian people denies Youn parasite!!!
"The world sees and knows you low-life Youn parasite true color already!"
And that is the universal language about the Youn parasite!
Are some of these folks related to Hun Xen by blood? Because the language they have used is similar to that that has been used by Hun Xen; otherwise some of them must be barbarians.
Nope...just the Viet/Yuon parasite that keeps shitting recklessy here all over Ki-Media as usual. That's all!
But the universal language is - "The world sees and knows the Viet low-life true color already!!!"
Does that help 8:36 AM? Don't hesitate to call or email us okay?
Southeast Asia
Apr 29, 2008
A new political breeze in Cambodia
By Brian McCartan
CHIANG MAI, Thailand - A gathering coalition of smaller parties could give Prime Minister Hun Sen's now dominant Cambodian People's Party (CPP) an unexpected run for its money at National Assembly elections scheduled for this July.
The CPP has ruled the country either alone or in tandem with rival parties since the restoration of multi-party democracy in 1993 and in recent years has strongly consolidated its grip on political power. With its comparatively strong grassroots network, firm control over the national media, and recent successful economic policies, the CPP is widely expected to win the most seats at this year's polls. But perhaps not by the landslide many analysts had until now predicted.
To be sure, Cambodia's other main political parties are still
generally in disarray. The Funcinpec party has recently been undermined by internal divisions, leading party founder Prince Norodom Ranariddh to cut ties and start up a new small political party bearing his name. Meanwhile, the major opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) still lacks the numbers and resources to alone represent a real democratic challenge to the CPP. The SRP party has likewise in recent years been plagued by internal discord over strategy and leadership.
Now, faced by the near certainty of another CPP election victory, talks have begun among medium- and small-sized parties of forming a coalition to contest the elections on the same ticket. Some political analysts believe there is some hope of success for such a coalition considering that the CPP received less than half the popular vote during the last general election in 2003 and the more recent commune elections held in 2007.
The 2003 polls resulted in a political stalemate, as neither the CPP nor Funcinpec managed the two-thirds majority constitutionally required to form a government. After a full year of political wrangling and paralysis, both sides agreed to change the rules to an over 50% majority and a new coalition government was formed in July 2004, which the CPP now dominates.
An estimated 23 parties contested the general elections in 2003; as many as 57 different political parties could contest the next polls, around 20 of which are expected to officially announce their candidacy during the April 18 and May 12 registration process. The three main opposition parties now negotiating the formation of a possible coalition include the SRP, the Human Rights Party (HRP) and the Funcinpec breakaway Norodom Ranariddh Party (NRP). A united opposition would increase the individual parties bargaining power vis-a-vis the CPP and in an electoral upset could together form the next government.
The HRP, formed in July 2007 by human rights activist Kem Sokha, founder of the once influential and foreign-funded Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR), cuts a particularly compelling contrast to the CPP. Sokha was jailed for publicly criticizing Hun Sen's policies and has successfully ridden that controversy, along with the CCHR's strong grassroots network, into politics.
The party claims over 10,000 supporters attended its opening congress and several well known political figures have joined its ranks, including Pen Sovann, a former prime minister of the early 1980s communist government. Kem Sokha has a grassroots reputation for fighting corruption and human rights abuses earned as a lawmaker in the dissolved Buddhist Liberal Democratic Party and later as a senator for Funcinpec before he left to create the CCHR in 2002.
With those political forces coalescing, there are already signs of a CPP rearguard defensive. Several of the newly created parties are allegedly in league with the CPP and have been launched strategically as political Trojan horses to penetrate and disrupt a possible united opposition front.
Democratic dirty tricks
The CPP has a long history of running rough and tumble election campaigns and there are growing accusations that the party is again using intimidation and threats against opposition supporters in the run-up to the polls. Senate elections held in January 2006 were criticized by local election monitoring organizations as undemocratic and slanted in favor of CPP-affiliated candidates. For the upcoming elections, 7,000 local election observers and 40 international monitoring bodies have registered to observe the elections.
Ou Virak, the current president of CCHR, believes that while overall the election environment will be better than previous polls, by international standards they still will not be free and fair. He claims that in recent months opposition activists have received threats and that a few have even been killed under mysterious circumstances.
Although there is not yet any hard evidence to indicate any political motivation behind the murders, Ou Virak sees the upshot in killings as "worrisome", particularly considering one of the main opposition parties is running under a human rights banner.
There has also been growing pressure on opposition members to defect to the CPP, particularly among SRP candidates. Where that doesn't work threats have been made against certain SRP commune chiefs and at least one, Tout Saron from Kompong Thom province, was jailed on March 18 on the some say trumped up charges of allegedly preventing an SRT activist from defecting to the CPP. The arrest of two other SRP officials is also being sought in connection with the case.
The arrest and warrants are already drumming up bad publicity for the CPP. Brad Adams, Asia director of Human Rights Watch, said in a March 23 statement, "Dubious arrests of opposition officials months ahead of an election should set alarm bells ringing. This divide-and-conquer strategy is a well-known tactic of Prime Minister Hun Sen to subdue his opponents."
In the same statement, the US-based rights advocacy group said it believes that the CPP is conducting a "concerted campaign to coerce SRP members to defect to the CPP and punish those who refuse to do so, with the intention to split and weaken the opposition party before the national elections".
Hun Sen's CPP has long harassed the SRP, according to rights groups. In 2005, SRP member of parliament Cheam Channy was convicted to seven years in prison for what many considered an unsubstantiated charge of creating a rebel army. He served one year and was released after receiving a pardon from King Norodom Sihamoni. SRP leader Sam Rainsy, meanwhile, was convicted that same year for defamation of government leaders and fled the country. That intimidation follows on the bloody and still unresolved grenade attack against a Sam Rainsy rally in 1997 which killed 16 and injured 150 people. Human Rights Watch has alleged the attack was carried out by Hun Sen's own bodyguard unit, charges the premier has strongly denied.
Faced with such strong-arm tactics, few expect the opposition to actually win the July polls. Amendments to previous election laws mean that the CPP can form a government as long as it wins over 50% of the vote, rather than the previous constitutional requirement of a two-thirds majority. In 2003, inconclusive poll results meant that neither the CPP nor Funcinpec could form a government until several months later an agreement to amend the rules was reached.
With an opposition coalition in the offing, it's unclear if the CPP will need to reach out to one of the medium or several of the small parties to form the next government. After a major split and a number of defections, the CPP's current coalition partner, Funcinpec, is not expected to win as many seats at the upcoming polls as it managed in 2003. The party currently holds 20 of the National Assembly's 123 seats.
Due to their historical antagonistic relations with Hun Sen, it seems unlikely for now that the leaders of any of the other major opposition parties - including the SRP, HRP and NRP - would be keen without major concessions to join a CPP-dominated coalition government. Whether their party representatives, many as in the case of the SRP now in the opposition for over a decade, share those views after this July's polls will represent the success or failure of a united opposition.
Brian McCartan is a freelance journalist based in Chiang Mai, Thailand. He may be reached at brianpm@comcast.net.
(Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing .)
These fucking cockroaches and gorillas should shut the fuck up, if you don't have anything POSITIVE to say about your opposition.
Well, if they can't take the heat, they should get out of the kitchen.
starting with those freaking Viet trollers/pimp/parasite/plunderers!
We don't think you people produce adequate heat in the kitchen that would allow us to stay away from it. Plus, you people need us, and we'll make sure that we'll always be here to raise Cain on behalf of you people and ah Khmer-Yuon.
Ah Khmer-Yuon (Chan & cheng), we notice your insidious movements. We'll keep our eyes on you (in Saint Paul, MN).
Well then, stop yapping like a sissy.
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