The Borneo Post

Cambodian King urges Senate to protect justice and human rights

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PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s King Norodom Sihamoni yesterday urged senators to protect justice and human rights as the upper house of the country’s parliament met for the first time since the ruling party swept a controvers­ial election in February.

Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) won every seat up for grabs in the Feb 25 election after many opposition supporters were stripped of the right to vote late last year.

Rights groups and opposition leaders called the vote a ‘sham’ and ‘undemocrat­ic’, while Western government­s have suspended aid and some imposed sanctions, including travel curbs, on senior CPP members.

“The Senate has to guarantee to protect justice and human rights in order to improve happiness in our society,” the king said in a speech yesterday congratula­ting the newly- elected lawmakers.

He reminded them of the Senate’s duty to “protect basic constituti­onal rights and democracy, as well as the freedom and interests of all people”.

The CPP won 58 of the 62 Senate seats, which include two members each appointed by the king and the National Assembly.

The four appointees are members of the royalist Funcinpec party of Prince Norodom Ranariddh, who was once Hun Sen’s main rival but is now aligned with the prime minister.

Last November, the Supreme Court dissolved the main opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party ( CNRP) at the government’s request.

After the CNRP’s dissolutio­n more than 5,000 opposition councillor­s and lawmakers were stripped of their voting rights, the CNRP said, paving the way for the CPP’s landslide victory.

“The formation of this ‘ new Senate’ is just a part of the destructio­n of democracy in Cambodia, with the country painfully returning to a one-party system,” Sam Rainsy, the former CNRP opposition leader who lives in exile in France after he stepped down, said in a email to Reuters.

The CNRP was banned after Sam Rainsy’s successor, Kem Sokha, was arrested and accused of plotting to overthrow the government with help from the United States, accusation­s rejected by Washington and Kem Sokha, who is in prison.

US, which has spent more than US$1 billion to support Cambodia, said after the Senate election it would curb military support and other aid programs due to “recent setbacks” in the country’s democracy.

 ??  ?? King Norodom Sihamoni reads a document as he attends a senate meeting in Phnom Penh. — Reuters photo
King Norodom Sihamoni reads a document as he attends a senate meeting in Phnom Penh. — Reuters photo

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