Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn shakes hands with his Japanese counterpart Kazuyuki Nakane at the 13th Asia-Europe Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Myanmar. Facebook |
Japan ‘expresses concern’ over CNRP
Phnom Penh Post | 22 November 2017
Japan’s foreign minister joined the EU in voicing alarm over the dissolution of the CNRP
to Cambodian Minister of Foreign Affairs Prak Sokhonn at a ministerial
summit in Myanmar on Monday – even as his Chinese counterpart reiterated
Beijing’s support for the move.
Japan, which is typically tight-lipped on political issues, is
funding and offering technical assistance for the 2018 national
elections along with the EU.
In a meeting with Sokhonn at the two-day Asia-Europe Meeting of
Foreign Ministers’ (ASEM), Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Kazuyuki
Nakane “expressed concern” over last week’s dissolution of the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, and urged the Kingdom to
conduct next year’s election “in a way that appropriately reflects the
will of the people”, said Hironori Suzuki, counsellor for the Embassy of
Japan in Phnom Penh.
However, Japan will continue to provide assistance to the National
Election Committee while “keep[ing] dialogue” with the Cambodian
government, Suzuki said.
Japan joins several Western countries in their disapproval of the
Supreme Court’s decision last week, though Prime Minister Hun Sen has
declared he does not care about international criticism. In a speech on
Sunday, the premier dared the international community to cut aid, saying
he was confident China would fill the gap.
Indeed, the meeting between Sokhonn and China’s Foreign Minister Wang
Yi on Monday struck a decidedly more friendly tone, according to a
statement from China’s Foreign Ministry provided to Reuters.
According to the statement, China “supports the Cambodian side’s
efforts to protect political stability and achieve economic
development”, and believes the Cambodian government can hold elections
“smoothly” next year.
In her own meeting with Sokhonn at the summit, the EU’s High
Representative for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini repeated warnings
that Cambodia is risking its preferential trade agreements with the EU.
She also criticised Cambodia’s “significant steps away from the path of pluralism and democracy”.
Bates Gill, a professor of Asia-Pacific security studies at Macquarie
University in Sydney, said China’s political support helps Cambodian
leaders deflect criticism from the international community.
“Given the deepening political and economic relationship between
Phnom Penh and Beijing, it should come as no surprise that Cambodia’s
leaders value support from China above disapproval from the United
States and Europe,” Gill said in an email.
Paul Chambers, a lecturer at the College of ASEAN Community Studies
at Thailand’s Naresuan University, said Beijing is giving Hun Sen
political legitimacy in exchange for preferential treatment for Chinese
companies doing business in the Kingdom.
“It is such a reciprocal arrangement which explains why Phnom Penh
values Beijing’s opinions most and why Beijing is so supportive of Hun
Sen,” Chambers said in an email.
Also yesterday, Swedish Foreign Affairs Minister Margot Wallström
said the Scandinavian nation “is currently reviewing the forms of our
engagement in Cambodia” and will not initiate any new development
agreements, except in education and research.
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