PM tells CNRP’s Sokha to back off
Prime Minister Hun Sen warned deputy opposition leader Kem
Sokha yesterday that the ruling Cambodian People’s Party could easily
remove him as first deputy president of parliament at any time – the
first sign of brewing conflict between the pair since Sokha took the job
late last month.
The threat came just days after Sokha promised a crowd of party
members in Siem Reap that he would use the Cambodia National Rescue
Party’s newfound power in the National Assembly – along with the help of
a few CPP lawmakers – to summons and vote out long-serving and
“corrupt” government ministers.
“It is the period of Pchum Ben. We should celebrate the festival and
avoid insulting each other. [We should] not be touring [and talking to
people] for political gain,” the premier said, without referring to
Sokha by name. “Wherever you go, you find ways to talk about voting out
the prime minister and ministers.”
Since being voted in as first deputy president in parliament on
August 26, an arrangement prescripted under a political deal signed
between the CPP and CNRP on July 22, Sokha has also pledged to try and
introduce prime ministerial term limits this mandate.
As he implored Sokha to back off yesterday, Hun Sen cited comments
made by CNRP leader Sam Rainsy last month, in which he hailed the
freshly filled parliament as part of a new dawn of political
reconciliation in Cambodia.
“I would like to send a message that we must have a ceasefire. And we
are not the same as in Ukraine [where a recent ceasefire was broken].
We have said that we will work together,” the premier said. “If you [the
CNRP] want to vote out ministers, it’s OK, but we can also vote out the
first deputy president of the National Assembly.… It is the same, and
it will go back and forth.”
Despite new power-sharing arrangements, the CPP still holds a
seven-to-six majority on the assembly’s permanent standing committee and
an absolute majority on the floor of parliament, Hun Sen pointed out.
Speaking to the Post yesterday, Sokha said the prime minister
had no right to pressure him to stifle criticism of government
ministers, given that the CNRP was not in a coalition government.
“I think that he is very worried, and his speech means to defend
corrupt officials. It is contrary to his speech [last year] in which he
called on his own cabinet to clean themselves up,” Sokha said, before
explaining what exactly he had promised CNRP district and commune
councillors on Saturday in Siem Reap town.
“I talked about legal issues, and I just explained to the people that
according to the internal regulations of the National Assembly, 30
lawmakers can raise a motion to [summons and] accuse a corrupt
[minister], who can then be voted out if a majority is obtained – for
which the CNRP only needs seven votes from the CPP.”
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