Bangkok Post

Hun Sen ‘willing to stake life’ on poll result accuracy

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PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s strongman Premier Hun Sen yesterday rejected claims the results from last month’s widely criticised election had been falsified, saying he would stake his life on their accuracy.

Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party claimed it won all 125 parliament­ary seats in the deeply flawed July 29 poll, cementing the country as a one-party state and extending his 33-year grip on power.

Opposition figures had called for a boycott of the vote after the main opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) was dissolved last year in a crackdown that saw one of its leaders charged with treason.

Turnout was a whopping 82%, leading Hun Sen to dismiss the campaign to shun ballot boxes as a failure. But independen­t observers did not take part and rights groups pointed to voter intimidati­on.

In a speech to athletes in Phnom Penh, the bombastic Hun Sen, 66, denied “vote cheating (and) inflating figures” of turnout. He dared opposition leaders to join him and swear on their lives over the claims.

“I swear to die from...a car accident, a plane crash, an electrocut­ion, a lightning strike, anything that leads to death,” he said. “Do you dare to swear or not?”

“Those who have alleged the figure (of turnout) was inflated, please swear. Swear to die all together,” he added.

Some 6.9 million votes were cast in the national election. But nearly 600,000 ballots were spoilt in a sign of resistance to a vote which opposition members called a “sham” and “false”.

The United States threatened to broaden visa restrictio­ns on senior Cambodian officials, while the self-exiled co-founder of the disbanded opposition described it as a “terrible setback”.

The EU condemned the results, while China congratula­ted Cambodians.

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