Cambodia Opposition Party Plans Fresh Protest
RFA | 26 March 2014
Cambodia’s main opposition party plans to resume mass
demonstrations against Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government by holding a
“people’s congress” in Phnom Penh’s Freedom Park on Sunday to gauge
public feedback on stalled election reform negotiations.
Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP) President Sam Rainsy said his party has
applied to the city authorities for permission hold the demonstration,
which will commemorate the anniversary of a deadly March 30, 1997
grenade attack on an opposition rally.
Sam Rainsy’s announcement of plans to restart
the demonstrations follows the apparent breakdown earlier this week of
the CNRP’s talks with Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) aimed at
ending an eight-month political deadlock over disputed July 2013 polls.
The
CNRP, which claims the CPP rigged the elections and has demanded fresh
polls, suspended its participation in the talks on Monday after the CPP
repeatedly refused its demands for an overhaul of the country’s main
election body.
Sam Rainsy said that at Sunday’s event, which the
CNRP expects more than 5,000 people to attend, party leaders would
discuss plans for negotiations with the CPP and other strategies.
He
urged authorities to allow the demonstration to go forward undisturbed,
warning that there were more opposition supporters than CPP followers
in Phnom Penh.
“I believe that the CPP will not be so stupid as
to prevent such a gathering, otherwise it would look very bad for them,”
he told reporters at a press conference.
City Hall
The
last round of CNRP-led mass demonstrations in Freedom Park was
violently dispersed on January 4, a day after police shot five people
dead in a brutal crackdown on garment workers protesting for higher
wages.
Shortly afterward Hun Sen issued a ban on public
protests, which he rescinded late last month while warning that any
opposition demonstrations could be met with simultaneous pro-CPP
rallies.
Phnom Penh City Hall spokesman Long Dymong said his
office had received the CNRP’s request to hold the people’s congress but
was currently not allowing any public gatherings in Freedom Park while
authorities investigate violence amid the early January protests.
City officials would meet with CNRP officials to discuss their request to use the site, he said.
“We are reserving the location for an investigation,” he told RFA’s Khmer Service.
“City
Hall is not allowing any gatherings at Freedom Park while the
investigation into the violence has yet to be concluded,” he said.
Authorities have accused the opposition of provoking violence that led to the early January crackdown.
If
it goes forward the demonstration will fall on the 17-year anniversary
of the grenade attack, which injured more than 150 people including Sam
Rainsy and killed 16.
Rights groups have accused Hun Sen's
administration of involvement in the attack, saying those responsible
have gone unpunished.
Call for EU to Referee
In a
separate announcement on Wednesday, the CNRP said it had asked the
European Union to act as a referee in the party’s dispute with the CPP.
Sam
Rainsy and his deputy Kem Sokha put the request to a delegation of
seven visiting EU parliamentarians led by German diplomatic Werner
Langen, chair of the EU’s Delegation for relations with the countries of
Southeast Asia and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN),
party representatives said.
The CNRP leaders asked the
delegates, who are scheduled to meet with Cambodia’s Foreign Affairs
Ministers Hor Namhong and Cabinet Minister Sok An later on in their
visit, to tell Hun Sen’s government the opposition will not budge on
demands for free and fair elections, public affairs director Mu Sochua
told RFA after the meeting.
“Sam Rainsy asked the EU delegate to pass this message on to the CPP,” she said.
The
meeting came a day after Sam Rainsy returned from a trip to Australia
and New Zealand to drum up international support for the party’s
demands.
The party has made repeated calls to the international
community to pressure Hun Sen’s government on election reform, as well
as calls to the U.N. for an independent probe into last year’s
elections.
I honestly believe kids parties are up there with moving house for stress ... the constant negotiation, ever escalating costs and deep down fear you'll fall flat on your face ... eek!
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