No End in Sight as Cambodian Political Crisis Deepens
RFA | 31 May 2016
The political stand-off in Cambodia intensified this week as
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) took steps to jail
opposition party leader Kem Sokha and supporters of the embattled leader are
attempting to prevent his arrest.
The CNRP supporters looked prepared for a long vigil as some of
them brought money, fresh drinking water, noodles, rice, bread, folding beds
and hammocks to the party headquarters in Phnom Penh. About a hundred people
have been gathering there during the night and around 200 others during the
day.
There were no outward signs of a police presence on Tuesday, but
that doesn’t mean the undercover agents for the government weren’t in
attendance.
Monday was a different story as hundreds of police, armed with
electric batons and tear gas guns temporarily blocked the road near the CNRP
headquarters as some of the party’s lawmakers attempted to deliver to deliver a
petition to King Norodom Sihamoni seeking his intervention in the tense
political drama.
CNRP lawmakers have been collecting petitions signed with
Cambodian’s thumbprints that urge the king to press the Hun Sen government to
release human rights activists, respect parliamentary immunity and stop
harassing Kem Sokha and the CNRP.
Authorities eventually decided to open the barbwire barricade on
Monday and allow the CRNP’s motorcade to pass.
Kem Sokha has been staying in the CNRP’s headquarters with his
subordinates and his family. In the room he uses, he sometimes sleeps on a sofa
and sometimes on a folding bed, as do his supporters. While his speech is
normal, and he does not express any fear when he talks, he seems worried about
his impending arrest.
He still remains incommunicado, however.
CNRP Parliamentarian Yem Ponhearith, told RFA that Kem Sokha
doesn’t need to come out to meet with the public, saying the party’s lawmakers
can deal with the public.
Hun Sen’s government has repeatedly attempted to get Kem Sokha
to testify in court as prosecutors pursue cases related to allegations that the
lawmaker had an affair with a young hair dresser. The allegations emerged in
March when recordings of telephone conversations between the two were leaked
online.
Hun Sen raises his hand
After a three-minute long meeting of the National Assembly on
Monday, 68 CPP lawmakers unanimously voted to allow the court to continue to
prosecute the Kem Sokha case. The CNRP boycotted the meeting.
The vote allows the government to pursue Kem Sokha without
lifting his legislative immunity as the legislature has done in the past when
the CPP controlled more than two-thirds of the legislature.
With the vote the National Assembly uses an exception written
into the Cambodian constitution that allows a lawmakers arrest for flagrant
offenses. By refusing to answer a court summons in a case related to the
affair, the vote means the legislature deemed the offense a flagrant one.
During the session National Assembly President Heng Samrin read
a statement asking lawmakers to allow the court to prosecute Kem Sokha.
“I would like the assembly to examine and adopt [a request]
allowing the court to continue its procedures over Kem Sokha's case, please
raise your hands," he said. Hun Sen was among those who raised his hand.
Also on Monday, the European Union condemned the “dangerous
political escalation” that is gripping the country as the Hun Sen government
pursues members of the opposition party on various cases in the run up to
elections in 2017 and 2018.
Phnom Penh has also arrested four members of the human rights
group ADHOC and an election official on charges related to the Kem Sokha
affair.
A warrant for the arrest of a United Nations worker has also
been issued on a charge related to the Kem Sokha case. So far, two complaints
have been filed related to Kem Sokha’s alleged affair with Khom Chandaraty. Kem
Sokha has refused to appear in court in a defamation lawsuit related to the
scandal.
Dangerous escalation
“EU Heads of Mission in Phnom Penh deeply regret the dangerous
political escalation of recent days and call for a halt to the judicial
harassment of the acting leader of the opposition and representatives of civil
society organisations,” the local EU’s Cambodia delegation wrote in a
statement.
“We urge the Cambodian authorities to resume as soon as possible
a peaceful and constructive dialogue with the opposition, which we see as a
prerequisite for the legitimacy of the forthcoming elections.”
Am Sam Ath, an investigator with the human rights group Licadho,
told RFA that the EU believes that Cambodia is going backwards politically.
“I think the EU has an important role to play in order to bring
the political and human rights situation in Cambodia back to normal” he said.
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan told RFA that the
EU’s sentiments are misplaced.
“The statement pertains to a political situation, and it seeks
to protect a person who violated the law, human rights and showed lack of
morality,” he said. “The statement doesn’t reflect what the government has done
so far to improve the rule of law.”
CNRP President Sam Rainsy has been staying in France or
traveling since an arrest warrant was issued for him in November over a 2008
defamation case, and he was removed from his office and stripped of his
legislative immunity. After Sam Rainsy left the country, the CNRP named Kem
Sokha its acting president.
The conflict with Kem Sokha is just one of the legal cases the
government or the ruling CPP has brought against opposition party members.
Human rights workers say the entire scandal is a bald attempt by
the ruling party to crack down on its political opponents and silence its
critics ahead of the elections. Hun Sen has ruled the country for 31 years.
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