The Star Malaysia

Hun Sen party assured of a win

Senate election a foregone conclusion after opposition wiped out

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PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s ruling party is assured of a sweeping victory in the election of a new Senate after the only real opposition to it was eliminated.

The Senate has minor decision-making powers in Cambodian politics, primarily rubber-stamping legislatio­n, but the foregone conclusion of yesterday’s vote will be a foretaste of a general election for the National Assembly.

The polls in July are sure to sustain the rule of the Cambodian People’s Party and long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen.

The only opposition party in Parliament, the Cambodian National Rescue Party, was dissolved in November after aggressive legal challenges by the government were sustained by the politicise­d courts.

Government supporters then replaced the party’s members of Parliament and its commune councillor­s – the voters in yesterday’s indirect election.

Hun Sen has been in power for three decades, and while maintainin­g a framework of democracy, tolerates little opposition. His grip seemed shaken by 2013’s general election, when the Cambodia National Rescue Party mounted a strong challenge, winning 55 seats in the National Assembly and leaving Hun Sen’s party with 68.

The opposition also made a strong showing in last year’s commune council elections, capturing 5,007 of the 11,572 councillor positions.

Hun Sen’s ruling party then stepped up its steady offensive against critics and opponents.

Media outlets seen as critical of the government were forced to shut down, and most senior members of the Cambodia National Rescue Party fled abroad.

“Without the presence of the main opposition that has 55 MPs and 5,007 commune councillor­s representi­ng the will of the people, there will be no real free and fair competitio­n as determined by the principles of free, fair and inclusive elections,” said a statement on the Senate election from the Cambodia National Rescue Party, e-mailed by Mu Sochua, its former deputy president, now in exile.

“We urge the United Nations and the internatio­nal community to denounce the holding of the Senate election this weekend and to take immediate and stringent measures including sanctions as a signal that it will not condone dictatorsh­ip,” it said.

The United States, and last week, Germany, have banned issuing visas to certain Cambodian officials considered responsibl­e for the deteriorat­ion of democracy.

Rights groups have also been highly critical.

 ??  ?? No middle ground: Hun Sen (centre) greeting commune councillor­s at a polling station in Kandal province. — AFP
No middle ground: Hun Sen (centre) greeting commune councillor­s at a polling station in Kandal province. — AFP

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