Photo By Heng Sinith/AP. Cambodia's main opposition leader Sam Rainsy of the Cambodia
National Rescue Party smiles as he waits for Prime Minister Hun Sen to
resume a meeting at the Senate headquarters in Phnom Penh, Cambodia,
Tuesday, July 22, 2012. Cambodia's ruling and opposition parties on
Tuesday held a round of talks to end the yearlong political deadlock.
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Photo By Heng Sinith/APCambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, center, sits as he resumes a meeting with Cambodian main opposition leader Sam Rainsy of the Cambodia National Rescue Party at the Senate headquarters in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Tuesday, July 22, 2012. Cambodia's ruling and opposition parties on Tuesday held a round of talks to end the yearlong political deadlock.
Cambodian political rivals hold fresh talks
Chron News / AP | 22 July 2014
PHNOM
PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Leaders of Cambodia's ruling and opposition
parties met Tuesday for talks aimed at ending a yearlong political
deadlock since last year's contentious election.
Eight representatives from the two camps, including Prime Minister Hun Sen and opposition leader Sam Rainsy,
met in a closed-door meeting at the Senate office in Cambodia's capital
amid tightened security, as more than 100 local and foreign journalists
waited outside.
Both
parties said in a joint statement released to the media Monday that Hun
Sen and Sam Rainsy will hold talks for the third time in the past year
to "defuse political tension."
Lawmakers from Sam Rainsy's Cambodia National Rescue Party have boycotted their seats in the Parliament since last July's election, which they alleged was rigged, and are demanding reforms and new elections.
The
talks came after the arrest last week of seven opposition lawmakers and
another party activist after violence broke out when party members
tried to stage a rally at Freedom Park in Phnom Penh. It is expected
they will be released after the two parties reach an agreement.
The
CNRP said Monday that the talks will discuss the agreement they reached
in principle in April, including conditions under which a new electoral
commission will be set up with the approval of the two parties, local
elections to be held in February 2017 and the next legislative elections
which are set for early 2018.
Hun
Sen has been in power for almost three decades and, despite Cambodia
being formally democratic, his government is authoritarian and known for
intimidating opponents. A strong showing by Sam Rainsy's party in last
year's polls posed the strongest challenge to Hun Sen in years.
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