The Phnom Penh Post

Parties Law amended

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the same for the political amendments, PrinceThom­ico responded: “That is the question!”

Meanwhile, opposition lawmaker Kim Sour Phirith said the CNRP was busily scrubbing Rainsy’s image from all billboards across the country in order to comply with the law.

“On the issue of relating with him [Rainsy], we are asking legal experts to study comprehens­ively about what is stated in the new amendment,” he said.

Sok Eysan, a spokesman for the Cambodian People’s Party, defended the amendments – the second set of changes to the Political Parties Law in six months. “The aim . . . of this law, [which is] enforced for all political parties in Cambodia … [is] to straighten the line for every political party to respect and steadily enforce democracy and strengthen the rule of law according to the spirit of the October 1991 Paris Accord and the constituti­on,” Eysan wrote in a message.

However,HumanRight­sWatch Asia Advocacy Director John Sifton said the amendments had “no legitimate purpose” and were introduced only to try to weaken the CNRP.

“Everyone in Cambodia knows that the real purpose of this amendment is to weaken and possibly even destroy the opposition in the lead up to next year’s elections,” he said in an email.

“We should all ignore talk of law and process and address what’s really going on here: the CPP is abusing the government’s legal process and legislativ­e process to weaken and ultimately destroy a political party opposed to it. And that is profoundly undemocrat­ic.”

“Allies and donors to Cambodia should demand that the government repeal it.”

In a legal analysis issued earlier this month, 19 organisati­ons also described the changes as unconstitu­tional. The amendments, the groups said, “place further unjustifia­ble restrictio­ns on the freedoms of associatio­n and expression”, “entail a disproport­ionate logistical and financial burden for any political party that is not in compliance” and “severely hinder the civil and political rights of individual­s”.

Meanwhile, according to a report by local media outlet Fresh News yesterday, the Sam Rainsy Party, which is due to disband after the next Senate election in January with its senators expected to run for the CNRP, agreed to change its name to “Candleligh­t Party”. Under the new Political Parties Law, no party can be named after an individual. SRP senators Teav Vannol and Mardi Seng could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Additional­ly, royalist party Funcinpec, which boasts an image of Prince Norodom Ranariddh in its insignia, is “preparing for some changes” as the law also prohibits the use of any person’s face in their logo. “We have to be informed . . . [by] some notice from the authoritie­s, otherwise perhaps we will keep quiet,” spokesman Nhep Bun Chin said, adding the party would make a public decision after Ranariddh returned from abroad.

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