The Phnom Penh Post

Figures show registrati­on of voters behind schedule

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in registrati­on was a major concern.

“The rains are not over yet, which affects some people’s travels . . . [and] some families have not made it easy for their members to register. Only the head of the family has registered,” Puthea said, explaining that Water Festival celebratio­ns this month would also not help the cause.

He added that the NEC was now trying to get the word out. “We have leased more private radio stations in the provinces and . . . we are reaching out to teacher training centres so they can be the disseminat­ors,” he said.

Registrati­on numbers have fallen rapidly in recent days. In the two weeks from October 24 to Sunday, an average of about 43,500 people registered per day. Yet for the first six days of this month alone, the average drops to 31,800 – with a record low of 27,322 people registerin­g on Sunday.

With about 6.8 million people registered and 23 days of enrollment remaining, the recent average of about 30,000 people per day would only allow the NEC to register about 7.5 million people by November 29 – well short of the objective of 9.6 million.

Preap Kol, head of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Cambodia, took to Facebook yesterday to appeal for more to be done to speed up registrati­on. He said many people sti l l falsely believed they did not have to register if they voted before.

“The number of people registerin­g is falling by the day, even though about 30 to 40 percent of eligible voters have not registered yet,” Kol wrote. “The total number of people may end up being less than 80 per- cent if there is no immediate and strong push.”

CNRP s p o k e s man Y i m Sovann could not be reached. However, CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said that many countries have much lower voter participat­ion in elections than 80 percent.

“There’s nothing to worry about. Registrati­on is about 70 percent completed, and there are two or three weeks left,” Eysan said. “Some countries vote with only 40 percent [of voters], and that is used officially. So what about us, with 70 or 80 percent?”

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A woman has her fingerprin­t taken during the digitised voter registrati­on process at an office in Phnom Penh earlier this year.
HONG MENEA A woman has her fingerprin­t taken during the digitised voter registrati­on process at an office in Phnom Penh earlier this year.

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