The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cambodia calls campaign to boycott election a ‘crime’

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PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s election commission yesterday described calls to boycott a controvers­ial election on July 29 as a ‘crime’ and said authoritie­s were already pursuing charges against those who criticised the vote.

Strongman leader Hun Sen is set to extend his 33-year grip on power in the upcoming election after supporting the dissolutio­n of the main opposition group last year and turning up the heat on civil society and the media.

In recent weeks, however, opposition figures – mostly those who left the country in the wake of a sweeping crackdown – have pushed back and called on voters to skip the poll in protest.

“In a democratic country, the election is very important, so the campaign against the election or to disrupt people from going to vote is a crime,” Tep Nytha, secretary general of the National Election Commission, told reporters.

He said authoritie­s would take legal action against anyone involved in the boycott and some people who called in to ‘curse’ election officials and use ‘bad words’ against them were being targeted, but did not elaborate.

The government has previously warned of prosecutin­g boycott campaigner­s and Tep Nytha doubled down on the threat while unveiling tens of thousands of ink bottles yesterday.

Supporters of a boycott have posted photos on social media holding up a‘ clean finger ’– a symbol of protest to urge Cambodians not to dip their fingers in the ink used in the process.

The daughter of Kem Sokha, a leader of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party who was arrested in the crackdown and remains behind bars on charges of treason, showed support for the boycott yesterday on Twitter. “No CNRP, no real election! No voting, no dirty finger!” she said.

The upcoming vote will be the most one-sided in recent memory following the dissolutio­n of the main opposition party, which made significan­t gains in national elections in 2013 and in local polls four years later.

Western democracie­s withdrew funding for the vote but Cambodia’s biggest backer China has maintained support.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Cambodia’s National Election Committee official use a bottle of indelible ink to mark a finger during a briefing on the voting process in Phnom Penh in preparatio­n for the upcoming general election.
— AFP photo Cambodia’s National Election Committee official use a bottle of indelible ink to mark a finger during a briefing on the voting process in Phnom Penh in preparatio­n for the upcoming general election.

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