Opposition deputy leader Kem Sokha has promised to retire from
politics if his Cambodia National Rescue Party does not win a resounding
victory in the 2018 general election.
The CNRP deputy president made the comments in a speech in Kampong
Cham province on Saturday, during which he also urged other parties that
intend to field candidates in 2018 to join forces with the country’s
main opposition.
“I dare to say that we will win because the [CNRP] is still keeping
to its position and not turning away. I want to call on all Khmer
patriots in all political parties to consider the national democratic
interest and unite with the [CNRP],” he said.
“Because [the ruling Cambodian People’s Party] knows our stance is to
win and to guide the country to change the leadership … [CPP
politicians] are angry,” he added.
Sokha’s comments came just days after Prime Minister Hun Sen told a
gathering of Cambodian expatriates in the US that the CNRP had “a plan
to topple” the government “through people power” at the last election in
2013.
Hun Sen quoted Sokha as saying that if the premier did not step down he would be forced out as a “final measure”.
Hun Sen then reportedly told Sokha that he was fortunate not to have
attempted to overthrow him as it would have been Sokha’s “funeral day”
if he had.
The rhetoric comes amid a fractured detente between the two major
political parties, known as the culture of dialogue. Since it was
announced in July 2014, the purported cooling of rhetoric has been
marred by arrests of CNRP supporters and members, and of a Sam Rainsy
Party senator, Hong Sok Hour.
CPP spokesman Sok Eysan yesterday dismissed Sokha’s comments, saying
the CNRP was using the sentencing of CNRP activists as a political tool
to gain support, while in fact the 15 CNRP members and supporters given
lengthy sentences earlier this year had broken the law and were punished
accordingly by the courts. The CNRP and rights groups, however, say the
hearings were politically motivated and did not meet the minimum legal
standards for a fair trial.
Speaking to Australia’s ABC Radio on Friday, CNRP president Sam
Rainsy called Hun Sen’s Cambodia a “dictatorship”, a term the ruling
party warned the opposition against using under the new culture.
“This is just a fact as observed by everybody, including the civil
society, who deplores the continuous shrinking of Cambodia’s democratic
space, especially the restriction of freedom of expression,” he said
yesterday.
Yesterday, Rainsy maintained that the culture of dialogue wasn’t on shaky ground.
“It has been designed not just for Hun Sen and Sam Rainsy, nor for
only the CPP and the CNRP, but for the long term . . . It’s a must if we
want to strengthen democracy and to put an end to the culture of
violence in our country.”
Sunday, September 27, 2015
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