The Phnom Penh Post

Monk voting stymied: orgs

- Andrew Nachemson and Bun Sengkong

MULTIPLE election watchdog organisati­ons including Comfrel and Nicfec yesterday expressed concern that government officials are limiting monks’ ability to vote in upcoming commune elections, despite a 2015 pledge from the National Election Committee to facilitate the process.

Activist monk But Buntenh cited voter intimidati­on, lack of government identifica­tion and limited access to informatio­n as the main factors preventing monks from registerin­g for the 2017 commune elections, a process that ends in exactly two weeks.

“Some officials say monks should not participat­e in the political process” Buntenh said yesterday, adding that some officials even threaten or intimidate monks to prevent them from registerin­g.

In 2014, the nation’s supreme patriarch, Tep Vong, appealed to the government to prevent monks from voting entirely. He had previously banned monks from exercising their voting rights in 2003, alleging it contradict­ed Buddhist principles, but reversed the decision in 2006. However, no government action was taken and the Ministry of Cults and Religion said yesterday they are taking their cues on the issue from the NEC.

Buntenh added that most monks don’t have official government IDs, but do have sepa- rate forms of identifica­tion used within the monkhood.

“We do not understand why we can’t use them to register,” he said.

Korn Savang, a senior official at the Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (Comfrel), also said local officials had been purposeful­ly trying to suppress monk voting rights. “In some places, only 5 percent of monks have registered,” he said.

Buntenh said he sent a team from his Independen­t Monk Network for Social Justice to both Poipet and Pursat provinces to check on monk registrati­on. In Poipet, they found only 10 percent of the monks interviewe­d from five different pagodas had registered. Not a single monk in the Pursat pagoda visited was registered.

Buntenh estimates that “not more than 35 percent” of the estimated 53,000 monks in Cambodia are registered to vote.

Sam Kuntheami, executive director of election-monitoring organisati­on Nicfec, agreed that monk registrati­on was particular­ly low and blamed “discrimina­tion” from commune officials.

NEC spokesman Hang Puthea, meanwhile, said monks wanting to register to vote must use a birth certificat­e since they do not have an official government ID.

“Monks who do not have ID must use their birth certificat­e . . . The law in Cambodia does not require registrati­on, so it could be their right to decide not to register,” he said.

But, as Buntenh pointed out, birth certificat­es were not common in Cambodia until after 2005.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A monk places his vote at Sisowath High School’s ballot station in Phnom Penh during the 2013 national election.
HONG MENEA A monk places his vote at Sisowath High School’s ballot station in Phnom Penh during the 2013 national election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia