CPP Vice President Say Chhum, seen during a Senate session earlier this year, issued a leaked party statement soliciting support for the government’s handling of recent border tensions. Heng Chivoan |
Leaked letter orders CPP officials to support PM
Phnom Penh Post | 13 September 2017
A CPP Central Committee letter leaked on Facebook and local
media yesterday shows the party ordering top officials across the
country to release public statements supporting Hun Sen’s resolution of
the recent border dispute with Laos.
The classified letter, signed on Saturday by Cambodian People’s Party
Vice President Say Chhum, called on “directors of provincial and
municipal party committees to persuade government officials, armed
forces, teachers, monks, business people, farmers, students and civil
society organisations to submit a petition supporting the statement of
Samdech [Hun Sen] . . . about Cambodia’s border issue”.
A similar outpouring of support came from all corners of the
country’s government institutions following the widely criticised arrest
of Cambodia National Rescue Party President Kem Sokha on charges of
“treason”. The letters and statements from ministries, local
governments, armed forces, student groups and pro-government NGOs were
published on government mouthpiece Fresh News.
Sok Eysan, spokesman for the CPP, confirmed the letter was authentic
yesterday, and defended it as a normal part of political party
hierarchy.
“It is the party’s discipline; it means that the party has internal
unity from top to bottom. If the leader says that, the subordinate
repeats that. Therefore, for this case, they need to agree with each
other in both political stance and action,” Eysan said.
“It is a campaign to attract the public’s support, and to have the
people see that CPP is strong and has unity and solidarity,” he added,
characterising the CNRP as disorganised by comparison.
Mao Monivann, a CNRP lawmaker, claimed the strategy was similar to those employed by the Khmer Rouge.
“We have experienced this during Khmer Rouge regime. We used to say
that the superior orders that, [then] the inferior will do that,” he
said.
Monivann said the opposition did not make a habit of ordering people
to support its leader’s positions, but instead followed the will of the
people.
But political analyst Meas Nee suggested the opposition could take a page from the CPP’s politicking playbook.
“It is a strategic war for gaining the support from the people
nationwide,” he said, noting that the opposition might use a similar
tactic to rally support for the release of Kem Sokha.
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