Cambodia PM: Agreement With Opposition May Be Near
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Monday that secret talks with the
country's political opposition have resolved most of their differences,
and the two sides may soon reach an agreement for the opposition to end
its boycott of parliament.
Hun Sen said that a single "small point" — which he did not specify —
remains unresolved between his ruling Cambodian People's People Party
and opposition leader Sam Rainsy's Cambodia National Rescue Party, and
that they might reach an agreement before the Cambodian New Year in the
middle of this month. He said he had assigned Interior Minister Sar
Kheng to negotiate the last point with Sam Rainsy.
Sam Rainsy told reporters that his party had been taking part in secret
talks, and that it would cancel plans for a massive demonstration if an
agreement was reached.
He said his party remained adamant that a special commission be
established to pursue electoral reform and an early general election.
The official results of the last election extended Hun Sen's 28-year
rule by giving his party 68 seats in the National Assembly, compared to
55 for the Cambodian National Rescue Party — a significant boost over
the 29 seats the opposition had held in the previous parliament.
The opposition protests, along with labor actions for a higher minimum
wage for garment factory workers, put the government under unaccustomed
pressure. It resulted in violence in January, when the authorities used
force to quash the workers' actions. In turn, Hun Sen warned the labor
unions, which have close links to the opposition, to keep out of
politics. Most public demonstrations in the capital were banned, though
the ban was loosely enforced.
While touting the possibility of an agreement, Hun Sen also warned Sam
Rainsy that he faces the possibility of arrest for allegedly instigating
labor violence and insulting the country's constitutional monarch, King
Norodom Sihamoni, by sending him an open letter calling the convening
of parliament illegal. The king formally approves the new parliament.
Hun Sen, known for his canny and tough political maneuvering, appeared
to be using the threat as a bargaining point in the negotiations with
the opposition.
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