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| Supporters of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party gather Tuesday. © AP |
Cambodia eyes opposition deputy's arrest amid crackdown
ATSUSHI TOMIYAMA, Nikkei staff writer | 16 June 2016
PHNOM PENH -- The ruling Cambodian People's Party is
intensifying its crackdown on the leading opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party, angling to arrest the group's second-in-command and deal a
critical blow ahead of Cambodia's 2018 general election.
Hundreds
of CNRP supporters surrounded the party's headquarters in central Phnom
Penh on Tuesday, delivering rice, water and other staples. Deputy party
chief Kem Sokha has been holed up in the building since May 26, fearing
arrest. Police armed with rifles waited on a nearby street, ostensibly
to provide traffic control. The CPP is working to weaken and divide the
CNRP, making politics as usual impossible, said Yim Sovann, an
opposition lawmaker and party spokesman.
CNRP
leadership has been under siege for some time. A warrant was issued in
November for the arrest of party chief Sam Rainsy in connection with a
past defamation case. Rainsy alleged in 2008 that Deputy Prime Minister
Hor Namhong had been involved in the operation of a Khmer Rouge prison,
a claim that earned Rainsy a conviction in 2011. The opposition leader
received a royal pardon in July 2013, yet was stripped of his seat in
the legislature when the case suddenly re-emerged.
This
time it is Sokha, the de facto CNRP leader in Rainsy's absence, who is
under threat. Recordings of 44 phone calls between the deputy chief and
a female hairdresser appeared on social media in February. The woman
confirmed her identity in April, describing her relationship with Sokha.
The de facto party leader failed to appear in court as scheduled,
apparently leading to a push by the CPP for his arrest.
Cambodia's
next general election is in 2018. The CPP barely locked down a majority
of seats in the National Assembly in 2013. But opposition groups nearly
doubled their representation, and they are gaining popularity among
Cambodia's poor.
Sokha's arrest would deal a major blow to the
CNRP, potentially fracturing the party. But heavy-handed crackdowns on
opposition leaders could bring international censure, including economic
sanctions.

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