Prime Minister Hun Sen speaks in the National Assembly in Phnom Penh earlier this week. Photo supplied. Pha Lina |
PM Hun Sen tells ministers to ignore CNRP requests to appear at assembly
Phnom Penh Post | 2 February 2017
A day after announcing plans to seize the opposition’s headquarters
and push legislation that would oust its president, Prime Minister Hun
Sen yesterday continued to push home the attack on his rivals, slapping
down their plans to summon three ministers to the parliament.
The move added to what one analyst called a “comprehensive” attack to
weaken the Cambodia National Rescue Party by the premier, who in a
speech to parliament on Tuesday also called for an investigation into
allegations published on social media that opposition lawmaker Yem
Ponhearith had an affair with a secretary at the assembly.
Speaking to media outlet Fresh News, the premier said he had told the
ministers of defence; agriculture, forestry and fisheries; and labour
to ignore any request by the CNRP to appear before lawmakers at the
assembly.
He said the opposition, which had announced plans to file a formal request to grill the men over issues relevant to their portfolio, had not “respected the law” by skipping a parliamentary vote on Tuesday, which stripped away their status as the assembly’s “minority” group.
“I will not allow them to clarify at the National Assembly,” the
premier told the government-aligned news website. “You have to respect
the law and participate at the National Assembly first; when you do not
respect the law, how can you ask ministers to clarify?”
The CNRP, which boycotted parliament for several months last year to
protest what it complained were politically motivated cases against its
leadership, has opted to avoid sessions where it objects to the agenda.
Yesterday, party whip Son Chhay said the CNRP planned to press ahead
and submit its request in two weeks and reiterated its stance.
“Whenever we do not support, we cannot go to participate . . . but we
guarantee we will go when we are the ones who summon, because we have
the responsibility to go, question and listen.”
Though the parliament’s internal regulations say that MPs shall not
be absent without permission from the assembly president, and stipulates
salary cuts for more than three days of unapproved leave, Cambodia’s
Constitution enshrines lawmakers’ rights to summon government officials
to the parliament.
Spokesman for the ruling Cambodian People’s Party Sok Eysan yesterday
held the opposition had violated the code and want to “create problems”
for ministers.
However, analysts yesterday were quick to point out that the prime
minister’s recent threats once again showed he was ready to wield the
law and courts as weapons against his political rivals.
During Tuesday’s tirade,
he threatened to have the court seize properties belonging to CNRP
president Sam Rainsy to pay damages in defamation cases against him and
proposed changing the Law on Political Parties to exclude anyone with a
criminal conviction from leading a party, a move clearly aimed at the
exiled Rainsy, who faces seven years in prison stemming from a series of
widely criticised cases.
The speech, one analyst said, showed the premier had grown frustrated
after failing in attempts to split the party through backroom
deal-making after in December approving a pardon to quash a “prostitution”-related case against CNRP acting president Kem Sokha.
Noting the recent social media posts implicating CNRP politicians in gambling and affairs, he said it appeared a “comprehensive attack” was underway.
“It seems like now Hun Sen has no shame,” said the long-term
observer, who requested anonymity. “The end objective of all of this is
to put the whole main opposition on their knees”.
Political analyst Ou Virak questioned the benefit of the premier’s
plans to damage the opposition, saying it would likely be seen as going
too far.
“The bar is low, but I think still, for legitimacy, the government
needs to appear to at least allow some sort of competition during the
elections,” Virak said. “If you lose legitimacy at that point, whatever
you do or don’t do, the people will just be frustrated and be angry.”
Speaking yesterday, National Assembly Secretary-General Leng Peng
Long said no proposal to amend the law on political parties had yet been
submitted, though Eysan, of the CPP, said he would meet with lawyers
today to discuss the issue.
Meanwhile, Peng Long said he had “arranged officials” to “research”
the allegation against Ponhearith, who was unreachable yesterday.
As for the property seizures, Ky Tech, a lawyer for both the premier,
who has sued Rainsy for $1 million, and National Assembly President
Heng Samrin, who has lodged a $60,000 claim against the politician, said
he would move to freeze assets when verdicts became final, noting
Samrin’s claim was still being appealed at the Supreme Court.
Rainsy’s lawyer, Sam Sokong, yesterday said he would appear at a
February 14 hearing for the defamation case, which concerns suggestions
spurred by purported leaked text messages that the premier paid social
media celebrity Thy Sovantha $1 million to attack the CNRP, but wasn’t
hopeful.
“We have strong evidence but not a lot of hope, we are afraid the
court won’t take it into account,” Sokhong said, citing the political
nature of the case.
Pretty much everyone ignores CNRP now a day. Nobody in the right mind would want to associate with a bunch of infantile CNRP losers.
ReplyDeleteNote: Scam Rainsy was never allowed to meet President Obama. Nor he will be allowed to meet President Trump. I think Trump will deport Rainsy back to Cambodia. lol....