Opposition leader Kem Sokha arrives at Phnom Penh International Airport yesterday. Facebook |
In ongoing row, gov’t OKs Sokha, but not deputies
Phnom Penh Post | 6 April 2017
In yet
another twist in the ongoing row over the CNRP’s leadership, the Interior
Ministry has recognised Kem Sokha as the party’s president – but deemed its
three deputy leaders still illegitimate.
In a
letter addressed to Sokha yesterday, Interior Minister Sar Kheng said the
ministry recognised him as the Cambodia National Rescue Party leader but said
the elevation of lawmakers Pol Ham, Mu Sochua and Eng Chhay Eang as his vice
presidents still fell afoul of the opposition’s internal bylaws.
Analysts
have suggested that the lengthy back and forth over the leadership was an
effort to entangle the CNRP in red tape, and yesterday’s letter appeared to do
little to discourage that interpretation. The problem, the letter maintains, is
the date.
The three
were initially tapped for the deputy positions at an extraordinary congress on
March 2, when the party also first elevated Sokha to replace former president
Sam Rainsy, who stepped down on February 11 after controversial new laws passed
by the ruling party opened the possibility of his many seemingly politically
motivated convictions being used to dissolve the opposition.
The
Interior Ministry, for weeks after the congress, refused to recognise the new
leadership, claiming their selection violated an old party bylaw that required
an 18 month wait before a president was replaced. That statute was changed at
the CNRP’s congress before the leadership vote, but the ministry initially
declined to recognise it.
That
issue was thought cleared up after the opposition, on April 2, officially
renounced a campaign slogan that had irked the ruling party and, in a separate
letter the same day, reaffirmed their support for Sokha and the others as
president and deputy presidents.
Now,
however, the Interior Ministry says it considers the official date of their
selection to be April 2, which, Kheng noted, falls outside the 30-day window to
select new leaders mandated in the new version Article 47 of the party’s bylaws
– the same article under whose previous iteration the ministry accused the CNRP
of acting too hastily.
Kheng’s
letter yesterday acknowledged the deletion of the slogan from the opposition’s
official campaign platform but offered no path to a resolution regarding the
party’s deputies, only to say Sokha should handle it appropriately.
Reached
yesterday, deputy president-elect Chhay Eang said he was happy Sokha had got
the green light but urged the ministry to specify what steps it must take to
have its deputies recognised.
“Mr Sam
Rainsy resigned on February 11 and we arranged the president and deputy
presidents of our party on March 2, which was not more than one month,” he
said. “According to our understanding we did it correctly but if the Interior
Ministry thinks that we did incorrectly, please tell us what the right way is.”
Interior
spokesman Khieu Sopheak declined to elaborate on how the opposition could
overcome the latest bureaucratic barrier. “[Sokha’s] election is still OK, it’s
just his deputy presidents are not in accord with the statutes,” Sopheak said.
“Let him think about it by himself.”
The 3 deputies in CNRP were in part a compromise. They are there to undermine Kem Sokha's power. In other words, they are the proxies in which Sam Rainsy can assert control of CNRP from behind.
ReplyDeleteSo, Mr. Hun Sen does away the three deputies to help Kem Sokha to consolidate power within CNRP and fully cut off Sam Rainsy from any further influence.
Will the readership at T2P spike because of your "fake News" and "trash News"'s trolling here on T2P and everywhere else you had promised អាស្រកីដូង???
Delete8:19 AM
DeleteYOU trashy Yuon bark stupidity !!!