CNRP lawmakers Eng Chhay Eang (back left), Yem Ponhearith (front left), and CPP lawmaker Chheang Vun (right) speak to the press after a meeting at the National Assembly yesterday in Phnom Penh. Pha Lina |
Party law vote set for Monday
Phnom Penh Post | 7 July 2017
Opposition lawmaker Eng Chhay Eang said yesterday that Cambodia
National Rescue Party banners featuring self-exiled former party
President Sam Rainsy will be taken down nationwide after a National
Assembly vote on Monday that is expected to ban the use of his image in
party materials.
However, he added, the banners will be put back up “when we win the election”.
The National Assembly’s permanent committee yesterday decided to call
a plenary session of parliament on Monday to vote on changes to the Law
on Political Parties that would ban the CNRP from “conspiring” with
Rainsy or using his face, voice or writing.
The changes ban any party from “using the voice, image, written
documents or activities” of a convicted criminal, or from “conspiring”
with one, and allows the courts to dissolve any party that breaks the
law or ban them from political activities and elections.
Chhay Eang, a long-time confidante of Rainsy, said after the meeting
that the CNRP’s 55 lawmakers would boycott Monday’s vote, effectively
allowing the CPP’s 68 lawmakers to pass the changes, which were ordered
by Prime Minister Hun Sen last week. “With this law their aim is to zoom
out to make the road that we can walk on become small. However,
everything the CNRP does is towards its goal: change through elections,”
Chhay Eang said after the permanent committee meeting, adding the CNRP
was unfazed.
“If they don’t let us use the name of Sam Rainsy, we’ll change it
out. We don’t worry. We work toward our goal,” he said. “When we win the
election, we will have enough votes to cancel it.”
Chheang Vun, spokesman for the CPP’s lawmakers, said the new
amendments to the law were necessary after a previous set of changes in
February – which forced Rainsy to step down as CNRP leader or risk his party’s dissolution – failed to stop him from campaigning via social media from abroad.
“We put pressure to not let any convicts be involved with any party,
and it’s very important. In our world, the superpower countries always
want small countries to be their satellite,” Vun said, in apparent
reference to the US.
“Those staying outside think that someday he can return [if a]
superpower country helps him to come, [but] when the superpower country
helps him to come it could affect Cambodian national society, making a
split in our nation and society.”
“We are doing this to defend the citizens,” he added.
Yet Rainsy – who again fled a politically tinged criminal conviction
in November 2015 after having returned in 2013 from self-exile to lead
the CNRP to huge gains at the disputed national election that year –
questioned the true motivations of the law changes.
“It’s really silly on the part of prime minister Hun Sen to order his
yes-men at the rubber-stamp National Assembly to produce a ‘law’ that
just targets one single person,” Rainsy said in an email. He added that
he would be careful not to provide the CPP pretext to dissolve the party
he helped create, but would not end his criticisms of the government.
“It’s now clear for the public that Hun Sen is afraid of me – his
best enemy – to the extent that only my name or my photo or my voice or
my shadow or any representation of me causes him insomnia,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment