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Sunday’s procession could be used as a “pretext” for a further crackdown, following months of what has been labelled by the European Union a campaign of “judicial harassment” by the state against political opponents.
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| Members of the gendarme attend a meeting in Phnom Penh yesterday that was chaired by General Sao Sokha. Photo supplied |
CPP gameplan? ‘Attack’
Phnom Penh Post | 21 July 2016
Though the Cambodia National Rescue Party’s president is
in self-imposed exile and its acting leader confined to party headquarters, the
opposition continues to pose a threat and must be further “attacked” and
“weakened”, the ruling party’s top officials decided at a meeting this week.
The remarks – which suggest the
Cambodian People’s Party will apply further legal pressure to its opponents
through the judiciary, something it repeatedly denies doing – were included in
the official minutes for the party’s Tuesday central committee meeting.
“The CNRP is having a crisis of its
machine’s leadership and faces many internal issues . . . [we
must] continue to make it weaker through our strategy, encourage other parties
to participate a lot in the election and push the implementation of the court’s
procedure for all illegal actions of leaders, officers and activists of the opposition
party,” the document states.
“Before the election and after the
election, our party had to face attacks from the opposition, but, so far, it
has changed. We are attacking while the opposition party is … holding on. [We
must] take the opportunity and attack, strongly and jointly.”
To prevent a “colour revolution” and
to protect the government and the people’s “harmony”, the party must also
“strengthen the state’s equipment of power, especially the armed forces and the
court”, it further states.
Contacted yesterday, CPP spokesman
Sok Eysan denied the party was targeting political opponents. He said the statement
about “pushing” the courts simply meant the party wanted ongoing cases
concluded as soon as possible so the two parties could resume dialogue.
“We want it to be fast, but it is up
to the court,” Eysan said.
However, coming amid a deteriorating,
and what one CNRP lawmaker termed “dangerous”, political atmosphere, the CPP’s
deliberations on Tuesday added more fuel to fears that even harsher measures
are impending.
On Sunday tens of
thousands are expected to descend on Phnom Penh for the funeral procession of
anti-government critic Kem Ley, who was gunned down in broad daylight on July 10, in what many have
characterised as an assassination.
Meanwhile, several armoured personnel
carriers and tanks were spotted this week being transported toward the capital,
with social media users sharing clips of the convoy online.
Defence Ministry spokesman Chhum
Socheat yesterday maintained the equipment, withdrawn from the Thai border,
merely required repairs and storage during rainy season, and the relocation was
not connected to the upcoming march.
“It is normal,” Socheat said, adding
that tensions on the border had eased, allowing for the hardware to be moved.
However, a source in the diplomatic
community who is regularly briefed on military affairs, said he doubted that
explanation. “They’ve had them up there for several wet seasons, and there’s
been no need for them for about three years,” the diplomat said.

A frame from a video posted to social media earlier this week in which a man calls for a Cambodian revolution. YouTube
Meanwhile
yesterday, more than 200 members of the National Military Police, including its
chief, Sao Sokha, met at their Phnom Penh headquarters to address “security and
safety” in the wake of Ley’s murder.
In what National Military Police spokesman Eng Hy characterised
as an effort to allay citizens’ concerns in the wake of the killing, more
provincial gendarmerie troops will be deployed around the capital, though Hy
did not specific how many.
“The military police always have to be ready, and they must
patrol to control the situation,” Hy said.
The military are simultaneously investigating an alleged “coup
plot” made by an unnamed man in a video posted on YouTube.
However the man, saying he was part of the Khmer Liberation
Front, yesterday released a statement denying he wanted to instigate a coup,
claiming he just wanted people to “wake up and think about national issues”.
Socheat, of the Defence Ministry, said the man had been
identified but declined to reveal further details. “We are working on it,” he
said.
As tensions rise, the fate of the CNRP’s acting president Kem
Sokha also remains precarious.
After avoiding
an arrest attempt by
heavily armed police in late May, the politician, who is charged with ignoring
a summons to appear as
a witness in a case related to his alleged affair with a hairdresser, has
remained holed up at party headquarters.
Official spokespeople for the CNRP – which has vowed to stage
mass demonstrations if Sokha is arrested – were unreachable to comment
yesterday.
However, a senior lawmaker,
who requested anonymity, said members were on edge and feared Sunday’s
procession could be used as a “pretext” for a further crackdown, following
months of what has been labelled
by the European Union a
campaign of “judicial harassment” by the state against political opponents.
“Everything is pretext for a crackdown, and we cannot resist if
Hun Sen decides to finish with Kem Sokha,” the lawmaker said.
“We still hope that the [Tuesday] statements by [US assistant
secretary of state for human rights, democracy and labour] Tom Malinowski and
other pressure from the EU maybe is enough to convince them not to cross the
Rubicon.
“I’m scared that at the same time of arresting Kem Sokha, they
will arrest other leaders of the party, and what happens next is difficult to
see . . . when [the CPP] go forward, they cannot go back, there will be
no dialogue anymore.”


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