The Phnom Penh Post

Monitors ready for Senate vote

- Niem Chheng and Ananth Baliga

WITH the absence of independen­t election monitors like Comfrel and Nicfec, Sunday’s Senate elections will be monitored by a hodgepodge of associatio­ns, with some representi­ng the pharmacy, travel and hospitalit­y industries, and another run by Hun Many, son of Prime Minister Hun Sen.

The country’s commune councillor­s and National Assembly members will vote on Sunday for the body’s 58 members, with the assembly and King Norodom Sihamoni selecting two more candidates each. The elections are being contested by the ruling Cambodian People’s Party, Khmer National United Party, Cambodian Youth Party and Funcinpec.

According to the National Election Committee, 12 organisati­ons had applied to monitor the polls, with all of them admitted. Longtime election watchdogs Comfrel and Nicfec did not apply.

When asked about the credibilit­y of the approved institutio­ns and the absence of seasoned monitors, NEC spokesman Dim Sovannarom said any NGO that expressed interest was accepted.

“For the non-election [Senate polls], the national and internatio­nal observers have less interest than the national election,” he said.

Sovannarom added that internatio­nal observers can still register until Friday, though European Union Ambassador George Edgar said no monitors would be deployed since there were no civilian voters. A US Embassy spokesman confirmed it would not observe the voting.

The upcoming elections are expected to be a clean sweep for the ruling party if votes go along party lines. The only way the three smaller parties could win any seats is if either King Sihamoni or the National Assembly grant them, or if CPP members abstain en masse or vote against their own party.

Of the 276 monitors, Hun Many’s Union ofYouth Federation­s of Cambodia, a pro-government youth group, will have 80 volunteers spread across 23 provinces, with the group having provided around 30,000 volunteers for last year’s commune elections.

The Cambodian Democratic Student Intellectu­al Federation, a pro-government NGO, will have the highest number of volunteers, at 93, across the country. Following the contentiou­s 2013 national polls, the group strongly supported the provisiona­l results and asked both major parties to accept the mandate to maintain political stability.

Four groups – the Associatio­n of Pharmaceut­ical Sales, Investor Federal Associatio­n, Youth for Cambodian Economy Associatio­n and the Federal Associatio­n of Tourism and Hospitalit­y Cambodia – are affiliated with CPP supporter Ley Sopheap, who heads at least three of the organisati­ons. Sopheap did not respond to requests for comment.

Sam Kuntheamy, head of Nicfec, said the group did not partake in part due to funding issues. “We have no budget. We used to get budget from NDI [National Democratic Institute] and European Union and they shut down their funding,” he said. NDI was shut down as part of a wider crackdown that saw media outlets closed and a handful of NGOs threatened.

Political commentato­r Lao Mong Hay said the dissolutio­n of the Cambodia National Rescue Party had rendered the elections meaningles­s, which could have dampened the interest, or willingnes­s, of credible NGOs. “For specialist associatio­ns, maybe they don’t have aid for monitoring, or they don’t want to monitor elections that have no meaning,” he said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? An election official shows a ballot paper to monitors at a voting station at a high school in Phnom Penh during commune elections in 2012.
HENG CHIVOAN An election official shows a ballot paper to monitors at a voting station at a high school in Phnom Penh during commune elections in 2012.

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