The Jerusalem Post

Cambodia’s ruling party claims victory in much-criticized election

- • By PRAK CHAN THUL and TOM ALLARD

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) – Cambodia’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) said on Sunday that it had won a general election that rights groups said was neither free nor fair due to voter intimidati­on and the absence of any significan­t challenger to Prime Minister Hun Sen.

With no real opposition to speak of, Hun Sen was widely expected to win. But the election was widely criticized as a sham because of a campaign of intimidati­on by Hun Sen and his allies against critics and the dissolutio­n of the main opposition last year.

CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said the party won an estimated 100 out of 125 parliament­ary seats.

“The CPP won 80% of all the votes and we estimate we will win not less than 100 seats,” Sok Eysan told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Results from around the country were still being announced by the National Election Commission on Sunday and official results aren’t expected until mid-August.

Hun Sen’s opponents had called for an election boycott.

The National Election Commission (NEC) said in a statement that voter turnout was 82.71%. Earlier in the day it put the figure at 80.49%.

In the previous general election in 2013 turnout was 69.61%.

“This is the success of the election,” Sik Bun Hok, chairman of the NEC, said in a televised news conference. 8.3 million people were registered to vote on Sunday.

“This time is higher,” he added. “Cambodia should be proud.”

Yoeung Sotheara, an election analyst and legal expert who previously worked as a poll monitor in Cambodia, said Sunday’s result was best compared with the result of the nationwide local government elections in 2017, where turnout was 90%, or 7.1 million voters.

Electoral reforms in 2016 made it easier for people to register where they lived and cleaned out dead people and “ghost” names from the voter list, he said.

Scenes on the ground in the capital Phnom Penh painted a different picture than that presented by the government. At a polling station near the river, election workers outnumbere­d voters and a slow trickle of people arrived throughout the day.

Another polling station at a school was quiet, with a handful of voters casting their ballots in the mid-afternoon heat.

Critics say the election is a backward step for democracy in Cambodia, marred by intimidati­on by the ruling Cambodian People’s Party and the dissolutio­n last year of the main opposition Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP) and the jailing of its leader, Kem Sokha, on treason charges.

The number of spoiled votes will be closely watched amid reports of Cambodians being told to vote or face adverse repercussi­ons from employers and local government officials.

Some Cambodians told Reuters they planned to enter the voting booth, have their finger stained with ink but file an incomplete ballot paper as a protest.

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