The Phnom Penh Post

Sokha sets sights on 60 percent

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the CNRP to overtake the ruling party in the July 2018 national election.

The Cambodian People’s Party won 61.8 percent of the total vote at the 2012 commune election to the opposition’s combined 30.7 percent, and the CPP has dismissed the opposition’s hopes of winning a majority of votes this time around as wishful thinking.

The ruling party, which has long maintained tight control over local-level administra­tion, has never come close to being challenged in the three rounds of commune elections that have been held since the locallevel government was democratis­ed in 2002.

T h e S a m Rainsy Party and Human Rights Party – which combined to form the CNRP in 2012 – won majorities in only 40 communes compared to the CPP’S 1,592 in 2012, leaving most of their elected officials powerless to enact policies.

The turnout in Kampong Chhnang yesterday was subdued, with no more than a thousand supporters rallying in the provincial capital for

Opposition leader Kem Sokha speaks at a rally yesterday in Kampong Chhnang province.

about an hour to show their support for Sokha, who delivered a speech promising CNRPrun communes would be more accountabl­e.

M a n y o f those who did tur n out i n K a m p o n g C h h n a n g town to greet Sokha were themselves candidates for election, and while prediction­s varied about the CNRP’s chances, none predicted it would win any fewer than half of the province’s 65 communes.

“We hope the wave of support this time takes over the CPP, and that the people have woken up,” said Mok Keam, a 72-year-old who is running for his home commune’s council, adding that he was finding door-knock campaignin­g easier than before.

“It is different from past mandates. I have seen this from distributi­ng leaflets to people’s houses. They seem happy to vote for the party, and they are unhappy with the current commune chief,” he said. “He develops the commune with- out consulting with people.”

Others said they believed there were many people who were not prepared to join public campaignin­g but would nonetheles­s vote for the CNRP come June 4.

Yet while many may be afraid of the repercussi­ons of identi- fying themselves as opposition supporters in their home areas, others were abandoning that fear, said Pol Tit Theany, a 4 6 - y e a r- o l d mathematic­s teacher at a local state high school who said he asked for the day off.

“There are many threats in Cambodia, particular­ly for people in public jobs,” Tit Theany said. “They can force us to resign from our work. For me, there has been a little bit of threatenin­g . . . [but] I always participat­e in all social actions, especially for my party.”

“If you talk about my boss, we are talking about His Excellency Sam Rainsy,” he added, referring to the former leader of the CNRP who was banned from returning to Cambodia by the CPP government last year.

Sokha will continue his tour of the country today by taking his pitch for change and decentrali­sed developmen­t to the provinces of Battambang and Pailin after continuing west yesterday from his two stops in Kampong Chhnang and one in Pursat province.

The message there and elsewhere, he said, will highlight what the opposition says are the stakes at play come June 4.

“Commune leaders are very important, and when you select leaders who are brutal, you will suffer,” Sokha told the crowd. “When you select leaders who are corrupt, you will be poor, and live with great difficulty. And when you select leaders who threaten, you will live in fear.

“So, brothers and sisters, vote for leaders you can be satisfied with, and who believe you can live in prosperity and with fraternity and solve your problems.”

We hope the wave of support this time takes over the CPP, and that the people have woken up

 ?? ALEX WILLEMYNS ??
ALEX WILLEMYNS
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