Cambodian Government to Interview Signers of Petition for Possible Fraud
VOA | 2 June 2016
PHNOM PENH—In Cambodia, a petition containing more
than 170,000 thumbprints from people who express deep concerns over ongoing
political turmoil is now being investigated by the government for possible
fraud.
Cambodia's Interior Minister Sar Kheng announced Thursday that the
government is creating a working group to determine the authenticity of
thousands of thumbprints attached to the petition the opposition Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP) submitted to the Royal Palace on Monday.
The CNRP said those who signed the petition want King Norodom
Sihamoni, the country's largely symbolic king, to intervene in the ongoing
political turmoil that some worry will plunge the country once more into
violence.
But now officials in the ruling party, which has been in power
since 1979, say they will create a group that will conduct in-person interviews
with people listed on the petition to determine whether they had, in fact,
signed it themselves.
Kheng said the working group would be named the
"Investigation and Examination of Thumbprints Given by the Citizens to
Petitions of the Cambodia National Rescue Party."
‘Waste of money’
Yim Sovann, a CNRP spokesman, said the government is wasting
resources that would be better spent on issues such as border protection and
poverty reduction.
Gen. Khieu Sopheak, Ministry of Interior spokesman, could not be
reached for comment. On Wednesday, Sopheak told VOA Khmer that if CNRP
officials are found to have submitted forged thumbprints, the party would be
culpable for "immoral activities" and defrauding the monarchy.
Meas Ny, a social development researcher, said the formation of
the working group was an attempt to take revenge on the opposition party and
would only make the situation more tense.
"I think this is just a waste of taxpayer money, taxpayers
like me, on a useless activity that [the government] thinks is a major
issue," he said.
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