Bangkok Post

Hun Sen set for big win

Hun Sen set to extend 33-year grip on power

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PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) said yesterday that it won a general election that rights groups said was neither free nor fair.

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

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

“The CPP won 80 percent of all the votes and we estimate we will win not less than 100 seats,” Sok Eysan said.

Results from across the country were still being announced by the National Election Commission last night. Official results aren’t expected until mid-August.

Although 20 parties contested the polls, the only one with the popularity and organisati­on to mount a credible challenge, the Cambodian National Rescue Party, was dissolved last year by the Supreme Court. Its leaders had called urged a boycott. Exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy said: “For the Cambodian people, unable to make a real choice because of the absence of the CNRP, the result of this false election conducted in a climate of fear is a betrayal of the popular will.’’

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia went to the polls early yesterday in an election set to extend strongman premier Hun Sen’s 33 years in power after the only credible opposition was dissolved, effectivel­y turning the country into a one-party state.

All eyes were on voter turnout, with opposition figures urging a “clean-finger” boycott to send a message to the ruling party in what is essentiall­y a referendum on Hun Sen’s popularity.

“This election is very important to me, I come to vote because I want happiness, developmen­t and peace for the country,” said voter Im Chanthan, 54, who said she was “happy” to be casting a ballot in the same polling station as Hun Sen in Kandal province.

The bombastic leader and his wife Bun Rany arrived shortly after voting at 7am. Smiling, he greeted voters before casting his ballot and holding up his ink-stained finger as cameras flashed.

More than eight million voters are registered in the sixth general election since the United Nations first sponsored polls in 1993, as the country emerged from decades of war.

Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) has won every election since 1998 and the 65-year-old has trumpeted the peace, stability and economic growth of his years in power.

The premier has been in office since 1985 and was a former member of the ultra-Maoist Khmer Rouge regime but defected and was installed as leader during the Vietnamese occupation of the 1980s.

But dissatisfa­ction with corruption and a growing youth population with no memory of the Khmer Rouge helped the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) win more than 44% of the 2013 vote and carve out a similar share in local elections last year.

That success spurred a crackdown by Hun Sen, who accused the opposition CNRP of being involved in a plot to topple the government.

Police last year arrested and charged one of the opposition leaders with treason and the Supreme Court later banned the party.

In the lead-up to yesterday’s vote authoritie­s have also hemmed in independen­t media and NGOs while former opposition members have fled the country in fear.

The United States and the European Union have pulled funding and assistance for the vote, but Cambodia’s staunch ally China has provided support.

Hun Sen has maintained a tight grip on the country through a mix of political and family alliances in the police, military and media.

With control over vast parts of the state, he has also placed his sons in key positions in what analysts see as an attempt to create a dynasty.

Hun Sen portrays himself as a saviour of the country but elides his early membership in the Khmer Rouge.

The brutal group ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979 and its attempts to create an agrarian paradise resulted in the deaths of a quarter of the population.

The government says 19 other parties are contesting Sunday’s democratic poll, but critics say the groups are obscure or newly created to give it a veneer of credibilit­y.

Rights groups have slammed the election as a sham and a farce.

Meanwhile, authoritie­s vowed that they would take action against anyone who urges others not to vote in the polls, creating a climate of fear in the country.

Cambodia’s leaders have faced internatio­nal criticism but only limited travel and financial sanctions have been passed by western government­s.

Sam Rainsy, an opposition leader who lives in self-exile to avoid court cases he says are politicall­y motivated, commended the US House of Representa­tives for passing the Cambodia Democracy Act earlier in the week.

The act proposes sanctions for members of Hun Sen’s inner circle.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Cambodia’s Prime Minister, Hun Sen, and his wife Bun Rany, show their stained fingers after voting yesterday.
REUTERS Cambodia’s Prime Minister, Hun Sen, and his wife Bun Rany, show their stained fingers after voting yesterday.

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