Cambodian opposition threatens general strike, continued parliament boycott over poll results

Cambodia National Rescue Party leader
Sam Rainsy, right, answers to a reporter's question as his Vice
President Kem Sokha listens during a press conference at its
headquarters in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2013.
Cambodia's opposition party is threatening a nationwide general strike
to protest what it claims was a rigged election and the illegitimate
return to power of authoritarian leader Hun Sen. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

Cambodia National Rescue Party leader
Sam Rainsy gestures during a press conference at his party's
headquarters in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2013.
Cambodia's opposition party is threatening a nationwide general strike
to protest what it claims was a rigged election and the illegitimate
return to power of authoritarian leader Hun Sen. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
PHNOM
PENH, Cambodia - Cambodia's opposition party on Wednesday threatened a
nationwide general strike to protest what it claims was a rigged
election and the illegitimate return to power of authoritarian leader
Hun Sen.
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy said he is considering calling a one-day
strike for factory workers, civil servants and shopkeepers unless the
ruling party agrees to an independent probe of electoral fraud and a
program of immediate reforms.
He made the comments a day after ruling party lawmakers extended Hun
Sen's rule for another five years, despite a boycott of parliament by
the opposition.
Official results of the July 28 polls gave the ruling party 68 seats
in parliament compared to 55 for the opposition. The opposition says it
was cheated out of victory and has staged several mass demonstrations
against the election results.
Sam Rainsy said his Cambodia National Rescue Party would announce its
protest strategy within the next few days but was debating the idea of
calling for a general strike.
"The whole country for one day will hold a strike. All factories, all
civil servants, all shopkeepers will stop working that day — this is
one possible idea," he said.
The opposition leader also called on the international community and foreign companies to stop engaging with the government.
"We will conduct a worldwide campaign to delegitimize this
government, which is the result of a constitutional coup and which does
not represent the Cambodian people," he said.
Hun Sen's ruling party performed unexpectedly weakly in the election,
emerging with its poorest results in more than a decade to see its
majority wither in the 123-seat National Assembly. The opposition,
running on a newly unified slate, meanwhile boosted its number of
elected lawmakers to 55 from 29.
Sam Rainsy said the opposition's boycott at parliament, which
convened Monday, will continue until the government meets its demands.
"We will not co-operate in any manner with the present National
Assembly and with the present government unless there are guarantees" of
a probe into election results and that reforms will be made, he said.
He called for a moratorium on land grabbing and deforestation, two
major complaints against Hun Sen's government in recent years.
5 comments:
Only rhetoric, threats, but never serious or constant actions. it's hopeless.
Will one day strike impress Hun Sen, Yuon and Chinese?
Sam Rainsy shows he's hesitant leader. We need a true Khmer Gandhi.Could our dream come true sooner?
Rainsy is not a true leader, he is very weak, we need a new strong opposition leader , that can match with Hun Sen dirty politics.
ខ្មែរមួយចំនួនខ្លះបានដឹងជាមុនហើយថា មិនយូរទេពួក
សម រង្ស៊ី និង កឹមសុខា នេះនិង
ចូលក្នុង បន្ទប់បិទទ្វារចរចារបែងចែកអំណាចនិងកៅអីអង្គុយហើយ .....
សុំ
សម រង្ស៊ី និង កឹមសុខា!
កុំទុកពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរជាក្របី,
សំរាប់ ចម្លងភក់យួន!!!!!!!!!!!!
Post a Comment