CNRP calls for top-level meeting
The opposition party yesterday called for a postponement of
election reform talks with the ruling Cambodian People’s Party in favour
of a meeting between top party leaders, citing the continuing failure
of a lower-level joint committee to agree on National Election Committee
overhaul.
The discord was such that following more than two hours behind closed
doors at the Senate – though CPP officials later said talks had only
lasted 30 minutes before the opposition cancelled the meeting – the two
parties not only failed to issue a joint statement, but also wanted to
hold separate, but simultaneous, press briefings.
After complaints from reporters, they agreed to hold them one after the other.
Son Chhay, the CNRP’s head delegate to the committee, said his party
wished to postpone talks because CPP delegates were refusing to focus
discussions on NEC reform.
“I would like to stress that our delegation . . . will not stop
negotiations. But [further talks] depend on discussing NEC reform.”
For that to happen, CNRP leader Sam Rainsy and Prime Minister Hun Sen must first meet, he said.
“If the CPP will put the national interest beyond the interest of
their political party, they have to prepare a top meeting between the
leaders. The reform of the NEC must come through a political agreement
between the CNRP and CPP.”
But Deputy Prime Minister Bin Chhin, head of the CPP’s delegation,
said his party had refused to sign a joint statement proposed by the
CNRP that would officially postpone negotiations because “it is not the
political will of the CPP” to do so.
An election reform framework agreed to at last week’s committee
meeting listed the reform of “election institutions” as one of 14-points
that would be taken to a public seminar for consultation.
However, Chhin said yesterday that specific CNRP requests, such as
the NEC being replaced by a new, constitutionally-mandated body and for
committee members to then require approval by two-thirds of parliament,
were outside of that framework.
“Requiring two-thirds of parliament to vote on the formation of an
election body is impossible, because it will tie up the nation,” he
said.
Koul Panha, director at elections watchdog Comfrel, said he was “disappointed” by the outcome of the meeting.
“There is too much centralised decision-making [by the parties]. They
have not really delegated decision-making [power] to the joint
committee because they need their top leaders’ decision on particular
issues . . . and that’s the reason they are unable to produce any
outcome,” he said.
Another meeting remains scheduled – at this point – for next Monday.
Theary Seng. This is sad. You were once a popular face for democracy. Now you are the face of a tyrant, your religion and your walk with Jesus blinds you from your sorrounding. You continue to drive away everyone close to you. Not sure if you can see the satan in yourself, but if you look at the reflection, you might see what others have seen. Stop driving yourself into hell, you deserve better than this.
ReplyDeleteHow can Cambodia change when you yourself cant stop practising your religion to insult the Khmer people?
Once a Fan.