CNRP blocked in N’west
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy will have to wait a little longer
to visit the only province he hasn’t toured since his return from exile,
as villagers and soldiers blocked his party from entering Oddar
Meanchey’s Anlong Veng district, the last Khmer Rouge stronghold.
The Cambodia National Rescue Party was set to hold a public forum
yesterday morning at the house of former district deputy governor Nhem
En, who recently defected to the CNRP, but was stopped from doing so by
authorities, En and local opposition officials said.
As Rainsy and his deputy, Kem Sokha, were travelling towards the
Oddar Meanchey town, they heard the party was being blocked by soldiers
and decided to turn back, Rainsy said.
The party has called off a further tour of the northwest planned for the next few days as a result of safety concerns.
Rainsy said the Interior Ministry told him that rogue members of the military were responsible.
“We have suspended [our tour], because these are so-called
uncontrolled elements of the army. So we have talked with the Ministry
of Interior, and they said they would do whatever is possible to ensure
our liberty of movement. But they told us that those elements can’t be
controlled,” he said.
The opposition believes this because “in that province, we saw police
forces trying to ensure our freedom of movement and our safety, but
those police forces were outnumbered by these army elements”.
A number of Interior Ministry officials could not be reached for comment.
A soldier deployed to the area where the CNRP was blocked told the Post
on the condition of anonymity that he was part of a large number of
soldiers in the area who had defected to the government in the late
1990s, benefited greatly, and did not want the opposition leaders to
criticise the ruling party in the district.
But according to the soldier, the wives and family members of many
such troops were the ones who had gathered to block and protest the
opposition party, while the soldiers were deployed to “keep order”.
According to En, Anlong Veng District Governor Yim Phanna and Anlong
Veng commune chief Vong Pheak had refused him permission to hold a forum
for about 2,000 opposition supporters at his home. En – who defected to
the opposition last month – said it was politically motivated.
“When I had not joined the Cambodia National Rescue Party, I lived in
harmony here, but after joining the CNRP, I have been intimidated and
oppressed,” he said.
Phanna, the district governor, said the people of Anlong Veng clearly opposed the CNRP leaders visiting.
“Excellency Sam Rainsy does not need to come and stir up trouble
here. People support the Royal government. They do not want [him] to do
anything here,” he said.
The population of Anlong Veng – more than 40,000 – had received much
since it became an “integration” area in the late-1990s, he said, and
they were grateful to the CPP for it.
He added that soldiers had merely been deployed to keep order if clashes broke out.
Phanna also said he had only stopped En from holding a forum at his
home because the house owner had complained that the rental contract was
for a massage shop and guesthouse, not for political meetings.
According to CNRP lawmaker-elect Pol Ham, eight opposition officials
had their phones confiscated by plainclothes soldiers yesterday.
“The individuals who took [our phones] were wearing plainclothes, but they had pistols at their waist,” he said.
Khamboly Dy of the Documentation Centre of Cambodia said the people
of Anlong Veng had faced harsh conditions in the last years of the Khmer
Rouge and are fiercely loyal to the CPP, thanks to the benefits that
integration brought.
“Hun Sen’s win-win policy was a strategic measure that touched
directly on the heart of the Anlong Veng’s residents and many other
former KR soldiers and their families in other strongholds,” he said,
referring to the strategy for bringing Khmer Rouge soldiers into the
fold.
The CPP took nearly 60 per cent of the vote in Oddar Meanchey in last
year’s election, along with its sole parliamentary seat. But according
to Rainsy, the fact the opposition managed to garner “about 20,000
voters” despite irregularities shows the opposition has a local support
base.
The CNRP will hold a press conference today in Phnom Penh to discuss yesterday’s incident.
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