CNRP eyes March for ‘final’ push
A “final campaign” to force Prime Minister Hun Sen to step down
or accept the Cambodia National Rescue Party’s demand for a re-election
is being targetted for March, an opposition party official said
yesterday.
During rallies in Banteay Meanchey and Battambang over the weekend,
CNRP deputy president Kem Sokha spoke of a new strategy aimed at forcing
Hun Sen out of office.
Party spokeswoman and lawmaker-elect Mu Sochua yesterday said that
the plan’s details would depend on what happened after Sokha and CNRP
president Sam Rainsy’s questioning at Phnom Penh Municipal Court on
Tuesday over allegations they incited violence leading to at least four
deaths on January 9.
If all goes according to plan, the campaign would begin in March, she said.
“One of the possibilities is an economic boycott of companies close to the [ruling Cambodian People’s Party],” Sochua added.
At yesterday’s “people’s congress” in Battambang, hundreds of military police wielding AK-47s were deployed throughout the city.
“It was a shock. It’s really a show of fear, not strength . . .
Around the market area, Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha stopped to talk to the
people and [armed security forces] were there to intimidate,” Sochua
said.
Por Vannak, commander of the military police in Battambang province,
said that the security forces had not stopped CNRP supporters from
attending the rally.
“They [the CNRP] just made such a claim, but people were free to
attend the event. We did not stop them or block roads,” he said, adding
that armed military police had been deployed to prevent public disorder
and to manage the flow of traffic.
Rainsy and Sokha yesterday called on security forces to refrain from
violence against demonstrators and to join the opposition movement.
“Civil servants and workers and people are aware of what’s right and
what’s wrong, and they support the Cambodia National Rescue Party. Only
the armed forces are not [aware],” Rainsy said at yesterday’s rally. “I
would like [the armed forces] to turn to support [the CNRP], not to
shoot people, for the sake of their relatives.”
Rainsy claimed that foreign governments were increasingly lending
their support to the CNRP, reiterating an earlier call for China to
mediate between the two sides.
“All parties consider China as a friend of the Khmer people. So China
can have a role to play in a compromise to find a solution to the
current political crisis in Cambodia,” he said.
Foreign powers should consider their responsibilities more carefully ahead of the planned “final campaign”, Sochua said.
“What is the international community willing to do to fulfil their
responsibilities? Some of these countries have trained the security
forces. Are they training them to do this?” she asked.
Sokha also had a warning for members of the security forces who may
use force against demonstrators in the future – you may yet have your
day in court.
“I would like to implore [members of the security forces] who are
competent not to join absolutists who shoot the Khmer, who are the same
[people] as them. Please stay neutral,” he said.
A team of lawyers tasked with investigating whether a suit could be
filed to the International Criminal Court (ICC) over the recent violence
would begin to collect evidence in April, he added.
But senior CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap yesterday said the proposal to file a suit with the ICC would make no headway.
“The appeal [to the ICC] is normal, because soldiers serve the whole nation as well as the royal government,” he said.
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