
Cambodia National Rescue Party supporters gather at Freedom Park during demonstrations in Phnom Penh yesterday. PHOTO SUPPLIED
CNRP, CPP set table for meet
The
Cambodian People’s Party and the Cambodia National Rescue Party have
formed working groups to set the agenda for high-level talks between
their respective leaders, though the date for any such meeting is still
up in the air, representatives of both parties said yesterday.
Refuting
earlier government claims that negotiations to end Cambodia’s political
stalemate had been scheduled for January 2, Interior Minister Sar Kheng
and CNRP deputy president Kem Sokha said yesterday that each party had
assigned three delegates to work together on an agenda before Prime
Minister Hun Sen and opposition leader Sam Rainsy sit down for talks.
Neither offered a specific date for the negotiations, but both said they would start soon.
“In fact, there will be a
meeting, but [we] have not set a date yet – there will be a meeting
soon,” Kheng said, adding that the working groups of both parties were
now in contact with each other.
“There will be [negotiations]; we cannot avoid that, because we are all Khmers, and we must have talks,” he continued.
The
CNRP’s Sokha said yesterday the working groups were necessary in order
to establish an agreed-upon agenda so the top-level negotiations could
progress smoothly.
“As the National Rescue Party, the topic which
we will take into debate is a new election,” Sokha said, echoing
opposition demands for Hun Sen to step down and call a new vote. “We
generally have the real will to solve the deadlock problem, but the
topic that must be solved has to do with the people’s will, which is the
request for a new election.”
Sokha also noted that, despite the
talks, the ongoing demonstrations in Freedom Park would continue until a
resolution was reached.
Independent political analyst Chea
Vannath yesterday urged both sides to keep the people’s best interests
in mind, and said that since the playing field between the parties had
been levelled by the ongoing mass protests, the negotiations could yield
promising results.
Going on to say that each party represented
roughly half the population, Vannath argued that it would be best for
ordinary Cambodians if the two could work in tandem.
“King Father
[Norodom Sihanouk] told his children again and again that children have
to unite,” she said. “As a formula, 50 plus 50 equals 100. That means
that if both parties work together to serve people, our country can
solve big problems, but if 50 is working against 50, we only remain at
zero, and our country cannot grow.”
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