People sit on a bench at voter registration office in Phnom Penh at the beginning of September. Hong Menea |
2,500 registrants suspect: CNRP
Phnom Penh Post | 26 October 2016
The Cambodia National Rescue Party suspects almost 2,500
foreigners – most of them Vietnamese – of having illegally registered to
vote during the current registration drive, an official said yesterday.
CNRP election affairs head Meng Sopheary said the party’s observers
had recorded 2,459 people who did not speak Khmer fluently or had been
identified as outsiders by locals, adding that the party would lodge a
complaint first with individual district authorities and then with the
National Election Committee if they were unsatisfied with the results.
“The observers noticed that they are not Khmer. They are foreigners.
Mostly they are Vietnamese,” Sopheary said. “In Phnom Penh and Svay
Rieng, the number was the highest. In Phnom Penh, there are more than
1,000 people. And in Svay Rieng, it is close to 1,000 people.”
Only Cambodian citizens can register to vote. However, as many ethnic
Vietnamese have lived in Cambodia for generations, often without proper
documentation, the sensitivity surrounding citizenship and nationality
has plagued elections, with the opposition often accused of using the issue to mobilise supporters.
NEC spokesman Hang Puthea was not available yesterday, though the
official has previously vowed the body would pursue all complaints.
Director of election watchdog Comfrel Koul Panha said a lack of
language skills did not disqualify someone with the correct documents
from voting, but called for more scrutiny.
“[Language] is just part of the elements. We cannot conclude
immediately, one needs to examine more in-depth. We cannot only take the
[language] and only the name [into consideration].”
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