Voter list overhaul eyed
The first official meeting yesterday of a bipartisan committee tasked
with discussing election reforms agreed on “the organisation of voter
registration and a voter list to guarantee and defend the voting rights
of all people”, and that a law on political party finance be created, a
joint statement says.
While the two sides have agreed in principle on the need for a
revamped voter list, details of how that could be practically
implemented will only be decided after a yet-to-be-scheduled national
workshop with relevant stakeholders, opposition spokesman and committee
member Yim Sovann said last night.
They will be on the discussion table at a sit-down set for next
Monday, Deputy Prime Minister Bin Chhin, the head of the CPP’s
delegation, and Son Chhay, a senior opposition figure and head of the
CNRP’s delegation, said at a press conference following the more than
four-hour-long meet between the six members of each party that make up
the committee.
Missing voter names, partisan electoral institutions, unfair media
access and use of state resources in campaigning have all been cited by
watchdogs as key issues that undermined last July’s poll.
But despite the parties’ newfound unity on paper, their comments to
the press after the meeting revealed that serious discord remains.
The CPP’s Chhin hinted to reporters the CNRP’s boycott of parliament
would have to end for the agreed-upon reforms to be implemented.
“The ball is in [the court] of [his Excellency] Son Chhay, because
the Cambodian People’s Party side has gone to work [in parliament], and
if the [CNRP side] will join someday, you have to ask him,” he said.
“The reforms, in the end, they must [occur] in the parliament. If there is no parliament, there cannot be any reforms.”
The CNRP has long made it clear that the key “stumbling block” to a
political solution that would see them finally take their seats in the
National Assembly is their demand that an early election be held before
the current five-year mandate ends.
Though Chhay said he raised that issue in yesterday’s meeting, only
to be told by the ruling party that it was an issue better left to
discussions between party leaders, he insisted yesterday that reforms
would have to occur regardless of progress on that key demand.
“It’s two different things: reform and an early election.… One is a
technical thing, the other is a political thing,” Chhay told the Post.
“If we can’t have any political solution, especially agreeing to have
a re-election … then I don’t think we can stop the process of reform.
The CPP is committing themselves to this reform.”
While progress is being made between the two parties, “no one can drag [the CNRP] into parliament”, he added.
Chhin yesterday repeated the ruling party’s argument that the
Cambodian constitution states that the parliament cannot be dissolved
before the five-year mandate ends, but hinted that a political agreement
could “quickly” change things.
Monitors from umbrella group the Electoral Reform Alliance (ERA),
which produced a highly critical post-election report that has been
denounced by the government as an attempt to mislead the public,
yesterday welcomed the progress on reforms.
“I think the agreement between the two parties are in line with the
recommendations put forward by civil society organisations … and we
congratulate the two parties for reaching this agreement,” said Preap
Kol, executive director of Transparency International Cambodia. “There
are key and fundamental areas of reform but we would still need to see a
concrete and detailed action plan for technical [procedures].”
Cambodian Center for Human Rights president Ou Virak said that a law
on political party finance would “hopefully [lead] to less money [being]
involved in politics”.
He cautioned, however, that “the devil will be in the details” for all agreed upon reforms.
Meanwhile Hang Puthea, executive director of election watchdog
NICFEC, said yesterday’s agreement amounted to a tacit admission by the
CPP that the voter list for the election had serious problems.
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