The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cambodia’s Senate vote goes ahead without opposition party

-

PHNOM PENH: Voting for Cambodia’s Senate began yesterday in an election decried by critics as a ‘farce’, with Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling party set to dominate months after the country’s only viable opposition party was dissolved.

The vestiges of Cambodia’s democratic project crumbled late last year when Hun Sen oversaw a crackdown on the press, civil society and the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, which was disbanded in a court ruling not long after its leader Kem Sokha was arrested on treason charges.

Though the Senate vote arouses little interest in Cambodia because the upper house is seen as a rubber-stamp body and candidates are elected by other officials rather than the public, the result is a clear prelude to the national poll set for July.

“We expect to win overwhelmi­ngly,” CPP spokesman Sok Eysan told AFP, brushing off allegation­s that the election is undemocrat­ic.

“CPP is regretful that we lost a main challenger but we cannot help them because they violated the law,” he said, referring to the opposition party.

The majority of the 62-seat Senate body is elected by thousands of local commune councillor­s and members of the National Assembly.

But the opposition CNRP will have no say as its parliament­ary and commune seats were redistribu­ted to other parties following the dissolutio­n in November.

The CPP now holds more than 95 percent of the commune councillor positions, comfortabl­y enough to sweep the vote.

A total of four groups, including the royalist Funcinpec Party, are contesting the poll.

It is the first time that the Senate election is being held without a main opposition party.

The six-year-term Senate was formed in 1999 and its first election was held in 2006.

Opposition figure Sam Rainsy, who helped co-found the CNRP, said in a statement from abroad that the Senate election was a ‘farce’ and urged the internatio­nal community to condemn it.

Western democracie­s and rights groups have slammed Hun Sen’s effort to clear out rivals.

The EU and the US have pulled support for the election in July, while Germany has suspended preferenti­al visa treatment for private travel for Hun Sen and his family.

Sebastian Strangio, author of ‘Hun Sen’s Cambodia,’ said the main effect of the CPP’s recent clampdown ‘has been simply to remove the pretence [of a functional democracy] and entrench a new era of less apologetic one-party domination.’

In the election on yesterday 58 seats are voted on, while the country’s king and the National Assembly each put forward two candidates to complete the total 62.

We expect to win overwhelmi­ngly. CPP is regretful that we lost a main challenger but we cannot help them because they violated the law. Sok Eysan, CPP spokesman

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Hun Sen drops a ballot into a box during a senate election in Takhmao, Kandal province.
— Reuters photo Hun Sen drops a ballot into a box during a senate election in Takhmao, Kandal province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia