"The vote count is important after elections," he said. "Women play a good role in the management of the vote-counting process. Engaging more women in that role will enhance the confidence in the official vote when it comes to vote counting during the election days."
Myanmar Elections Seen as Model for Cambodia
FILE - Young men are seen taking photos of a ballot box at a polling station in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, July 28, 2013.
VOA | 1 February 2016
PHNOM PENH—As Cambodia ramps up for
local elections in 2017 and national elections the year after, experts
say it should look to November's election in Myanmar — also known as
Burma — to improve security and build confidence in voters.
During the elections in Myanmar, which came after decades of military
rule, polling station observers and peacekeepers were deployed to
ensure free and fair voting procedures. Among them were Cambodians who
will be monitoring their own country's upcoming polls.
"During election day, we learned that it's the people who take care
of security affairs," said Koul Panha, head of the election monitoring
group Comfrel, which observed the vote in Myanmar. "They taught people
how to maintain security at the polling stations."
Sam Kuntheamy, head of the election monitoring group Nicfec, said good security management meant fewer violations.
"We should follow this good point of theirs," he said. "They did it
differently and better than us. We used a lot of armed forces, which
shows that there is a lot of insecurity. Firstly, it didn't feel like a
free election. It seemed like the freedom in the elections was still in a
fragile state."
Security in the Myanmar election was conducted with input from
political parties, something that is unlikely to happen in Cambodia, he
said.
Officials at the Ministry of Interior could not be reached for comment.
Roles for women
Hang Puthea, the former head of Nicfec who now serves as a member of
the National Election Committee (NEC), said the NEC will raise security
issues with the Ministry of Interior as it prepares voter registration.
Koul Panha urged the NEC to work harder to be more transparent and to
find more roles for women in the election process and vote counting.
"The vote count is important after elections," he said. "Women play a
good role in the management of the vote-counting process. Engaging more
women in that role will enhance the confidence in the official vote
when it comes to vote counting during the election days."
Cambodian officials are working to improve elections that follow
polls in 2013, where allegations of widespread irregularities moved the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party to boycott participation in
government for nearly a year.
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