CNRP President Kem Sokha (left) is currently in pre-trial detention, while (clockwise) CNRP lawmakers Yem Ponhearith, Eng Chhay Eang, Yim Sovann and Mu Sochua are all currently outside of the country. Post staff |
Amid strife, the CNRP is a party on pause
Phnom Penh Post | 5 October 2017
When Cambodia National Rescue Party President Kem Sokha stood arm-in-arm
with three newly minted deputies earlier this year, the quartet seemed
eager and ready to address the party’s next challenge at hand: critical
commune elections that could greatly bolster grassroots support.
After capturing 44 percent of the popular vote
and nearly a third of the country’s commune chief positions in the June
poll, the emboldened party appeared poised to mount a serious challenge
against the Cambodian People’s Party at the national ballot scheduled
for 2018.
But, almost exactly six months after his ascension to the party presidency, Sokha was arrested in a midnight raid
by nearly 100 police officials and summarily charged with “treason”.
Senior party leaders who were overseas chose not return, and others have
since left the country following Sokha’s arrest – the latest being party Deputy President Mu Sochua, who said she was warned her arrest was imminent following threats from Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Among the more than 20 senior party members who left the country for
various reasons are Co-Deputy President Eng Chhay Eang; lawmakers Ou
Chanrith, Ho Vann, and Long Ry; and spokesmen Yim Sovann and Yem
Ponhearith. Their absence leaves the CNRP without the chairs of its
executive, disciplinary and steering committees.
“With much of its leadership exiled, in hiding, or behind bars, it is
hard to see how the CNRP will be able to mount even a minimally
effective campaign for next year’s election,” Sebastian Strangio, author
of Hun Sen’s Cambodia, said in an email. “It will likely only
put up perfunctory resistance to the CPP. This, of course, is precisely
the government’s aim.”
The exodus was only exacerbated by near-daily threats from Hun Sen
claiming that there were others from the CNRP involved in the Sokha case
– frequently referring to them as “spies” – as well as statements from
Interior Ministry and National Police officials confirming that the
search was on for these individuals.
According to a Fresh News report, quoting an anonymous Immigration
Department official, only 20 of the CNRP’s 55 lawmakers are present in
Cambodia, with the rest having travelled abroad – though Sochua claims
only around 20 had left the country.
This intense scrutiny of the CNRP’s depleted forces was not lost on
government spokesman Phay Siphan, who was keeping his own tally of
absentee lawmakers on his Facebook page as of yesterday.
Crucially, many of these party seniors, under the stewardship of
Sokha, were instrumental in crisscrossing the country to mobilise
grassroots support in June. Now, the only remaining members with any
seniority or political sway are Deputy President Pol Ham and chief whip
Son Chhay.
“It’s not impossible” for the party to mount a serious campaign for
2018, said Sophal Ear, associate professor of diplomacy and world
affairs at Occidental College in Los Angeles – “but it will be harder
than before”.
“Kem Sokha’s arrest is one thing, but half the lawmakers and senior
members [are gone] and now we’re talking real human resources [issues],”
Ear said.
Meanwhile, recent developments have dealt a blow to the CNRP’s
post-election momentum. Following the elections, Sokha seemed to still
be in campaign mode. He had launched a tour of the provinces to thank
voters, but at the same time rallied support for next year’s elections.
Senior party functionaries followed suit. But that came to a halt with
Sokha’s arrest on September 3.
Even a more recent attempt to restart engagement with the CNRP base,
which saw Sochua travelling to the northwest last week, met with the ire
of the premier, who obliquely accused her of making “rude comments” in a
public speech.
The same night, she was warned by a “senior government official” that
she would be arrested within a week. The next day, she left the
Kingdom.
Strangio said her remaining in the country despite the deteriorating
political situation showed that the party was determined to push ahead,
but her departure would reverberate through the party structure.
“This sends a strong message to the CNRP rank and file that no one is beyond Hun Sen’s reach,” he said via email.
Sochua’s companion on her trip to the northwest, lawmaker Mao
Monyvann, put up a brave front when he insisted yesterday that the party
will continue with its activities, but at the same time, he said he
hoped senior members of the party would return to the country. “I
believe that some leaders who are abroad will not be there for long.
They will have to return back to fulfil their work [here],” he said.
Still, Monyvann admitted that the party’s current election
preparations are a far cry from what would have been under Sokha’s
leadership.
“Without his arrest, the atmosphere would have been normal and we could have done our activities fully,” he said.
Deputy President Ham conceded that the party has no plan for
demonstrations or even a parliamentary strategy, acknowledging the party
had no decision maker with Sokha behind bars.
“Our president is in a detention centre, but he is still president,”
he said. “[And] besides him there are no people to take a decision on
the stance of the party.”
The same sentiment was echoed by lower-level party members and
activists. Officials yesterday admitted the situation was not ideal, but
said that they had no option but to try to push the party’s message in
the provinces – even if they are being met with dejection from
supporters.
“The arrest of the leader has caused concern for the local
[officials] when they work. They feel uncomfortable and unhappy,” said
Battambang Commune Chief Sin Rozeth, a protégé of Sochua’s. Rozeth says
local CNRP officials have been pushing for supporters to participate in
the National Election Committee’s voter registration drive, but are
being met with fear and apprehension.
CPP spokesman Sok Eysan had little sympathy for the CNRP’s trials,
claiming that the party put itself in such a situation by not following
the law. “Do not say another [party] put pressure . . . it is they that
pressured themselves by breaking the law,” he said, declining to comment
in detail.
With the party faltering, the international community has stuck to
merely “raising concerns” and the premier is still barrelling along in
his crackdown on the opposition. Still, both Strangio and Sophal agreed
that Hun Sen has little concern for the optics of the current state of
affairs and will continue to tighten the screws.
“Certainly looks that way; no need to pretend anymore. And the price
so far has not been sanctions per se, so the frog can continue to have
the water’s temperature go up,” said Sophal. “Soon the water will boil
and the frog will be dead.”
CNRP can pause but LDP, GDP, Beehive Party, the Royal Party will not. Live goes on.
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