CNRP youths listen to Sam Rainsy speak via video link yesterday morning at party HQ.Heng Chivoan |
CNRP angling for talks with CPP
Phnom Penh Post | 19 September 2016
An opposition party offer to shelve
planned nationwide demonstrations in return for long hoped-for negotiations
with the ruling Cambodian People’s Party found no apparent traction among
government officials over the weekend.
Speaking to
supporters at Cambodia National Rescue Party HQ on Saturday, party spokesman
Yim Sovann beseeched the CPP for talks to resolve the slew of legal cases
against opposition members, which have prompted the CNRP to threaten mass protests.
“[I] beg the other
party: please help to resolve [this] to avoid this leading to mass
demonstrations nationwide,” Sovann said, adding he was “frankly . . .
afraid” of the consequences of taking to the streets, an outcome the party “did
not want”.
“There is no
choice, and we don’t know what to do.”
But far from
conceding any ground, Prime Minister Hun Sen – who denies widespread
accusations of attacking his opponents through a CPP-controlled judiciary – on
Saturday dismissed the idea that a political crisis exists at all.
Hun Sen – who last
week threatened to crack down on any opposition protests with force – also defended the use of the
military to “maintain the peace”, comments that follow aggressive statements by
top military generals backing his threat.
Sokha, who has been
holed up at CNRP HQ to avoid arrest and was earlier this monthsentenced to five months in prison in relation to a “prostitution” case
against him, also addressed supporters over the weekend, as did Rainsy, who
spoke via video link from France, where he remains in self-imposed exile also
to avoid prison.
Speaking on
Saturday, Sokha highlighted articles in the constitution that permit peaceful
demonstrations, while also moving to reassure the government the party didn’t want
a “revolution” or “coup”.
“Please lead until
the term is finished in 2018,” he said, referring to the next national
election.
Appealing for a
“fair and equal” environment, Sokha, however, lashed out at the ruling party’s
tactics, saying the CPP “cut the head” of the CNRP and “bound its hands and
legs”.
“Don’t say that the
court case is an individual matter as an excuse, even the kids know, the whole
world knows.”
Reached yesterday,
CPP spokesman Sok Eysan maintained the party had no control over the courts and
would not consider negotiations until cases against opposition members were
concluded.
“Forcing the CPP to
abandon its position is impossible,” Eysan said.
Other government
officials also accused the CNRP of being the instigators of the unrest themselves,
including Phnom Penh Governor Pa Socheatvong, who recalled the opposition-led
protests following the disputed 2013 election.
“They can burn and
set a fire but they have no capacity to put it out,” Socheatvong said at the
opening of a canal in the capital’s Tuol Kork district on Saturday.
Also weighing in
was CPP lawmaker Sar Sokha, the son of Interior Minister Sar Kheng, who spoke
to his of Prey Veng province constituents.
“According to . . . my
father, the negotiation can happen for the two parties, but for wrongdoers . . . these
are matters of legal procedure, therefore allow the law to take care of it,” he
said.
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