Ministry Says It Found Proof of CNRP Thumbprint Forgery
Ministry Says It Found Proof of CNRP Thumbprint Forgery
Cambodia Daily Weekend | 6 August 2016
The Interior Ministry on Friday announced the preliminary results of
a two-month investigation into whether the CNRP had faked thumbprints
on a petition submitted to the king, saying it had uncovered evidence
that the opposition party forged some of the prints and obtained others
under false pretenses.
Although the committee, which comprises
officials from the National Police as well as police or government
officials from every province, stopped short of announcing penalties
for the opposition party, it seemingly paved the way for criminal
charges to be laid by saying that unspecified “action” would be taken in
the matter.
Interior
Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak, left, gestures during a press
conference at the ministry’s headquarters in Phnom Penh on Friday to
announce the preliminary results of a probe into the veracity of the
thumbprints on a CNRP petition. (Siv Channa/The Cambodia Daily) In
June, Prime Minister Hun Sen asked the ministry to assess whether the
opposition party had forged some of the prints on a May petition calling
for King Norodom Sihamoni’s intervention to end repression against
government critics. The premier said it was hard to believe that the
CNRP had actually collected the tens of thousands of thumbprints on the
10,036-page petition. Speaking on behalf of the committee,
Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak listed a total of 80,502
inaccuracies the investigators had found after scrutinizing 2,600 pages
of the petition over the past two months. “The CNRP said they had
collected thumbprints from 25 provinces, but it’s only 21 provinces,”
he said during a press conference at the Ministry of Interior on Friday. “There
are irregularities with 80,502 people, and 1,623 people were not
present when the petitions came around, and some did not live in the
areas but had names in the petitions,” he continued. Among the
irregularities General Sopheak listed were 43 thumbprints that had
been replicated on the petition at least 100 times each, and a total of
738 thumbprints that had been used multiple times. He said 127 people
had complained that CNRP activists misled or coerced them and had
disavowed their signatures on the petition. “After this
conference, we hope that those who made this will wake up,” Gen. Sopheak
said. “Also, action must be taken. If not, why did we create this
committee?” He declined to specify what he meant by “action,” saying only that the group’s report would be submitted to the government. “We will report to the government. Then we will know what we will do next, after this report,” he said. CNRP
lawmaker Eng Chhay Eang said that because the committee’s members were
all working for the government, their conclusion was not surprising. “They should invite us or nongovernmental organizations for the sake of transparency,” he said. He
added that he was concerned the intense scrutiny of the prints would
have a chilling effect on citizens who might be afraid to sign petitions
in the future. “In a democracy, when people submit a petition,
the [government’s] job is to look at the meaning; it’s not to examine
thumbprints,” he said. “This is a threat to people to stop thumbprint petitions or stop supporting the CNRP.”
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