Friday, February 10, 2012

PM ridicules SRP defections

Prime Minister Hun Sen cuts a ribbon during the opening of a new building for the Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Construction yesterday in Phnom Penh.


Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday mocked the recent defections and resignations of opposition Sam Rainsy Party members and called it proof it was impossible for the SRP to ever rule the Kingdom.
Speaking at the inauguration of the new Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning & Construction building in Phnom Penh yesterday, the premier warned that any change of government would necessarily entail loss of citizens’ lives.

“Now wait to see Egypt, [you] suppose it is finished, people die more than before. Libya, [you] suppose it is finished…[It has changed] but not according to the goal,” Hun Sen said.

Monday, February 6, 2012

SRP accuses ruling CPP of election vote-buying

In the wake of what the opposition Sam Rainsy Party has called unprecedented gains in the senate election, the party has said that “virtually every SRP councillor” was approached by ruling Cambodian People’s Party officials attempting to buy their vote in the election, a party statement issued yesterday said.

The statement said that in Kandal province, where Prime Minister Hun Sen lives and votes, SRP councillors were offered US$5,000 a vote to swing their support to the CPP.

“Many forms of intimidation were also used to frighten the opposition into voting for the CPP,” the statement said, adding that “virtually every SRP councillor in all provinces was approached by CPP officials and offered between $500 and $5,000 to sell their votes to the ruling party”.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Cambodian Senate resembles French, Indian upper houses in reflecting will of the people

PHNOM PENH (Cambodia Herald) - As Cambodians prepare to digest the release of the final results in last weekend's Senate elections, they should at least feel comfortable with the knowledge that the body that convened its first meeting in 1999 is one of the more democratic upper houses of parliament in the world today. Final results were due Sunday but have been delayed amid complaints from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party.

At first glance, the upper house of the Cambodian parliament resembles the Senate in France. But the combination of indirect elections for the majority of senators and the appointment of a small minority makes the Cambodian Senate more like the upper house of parliament in India, widely described as the world's biggest democracy. Interestingly, Myanmar has chosen a similar model for its new upper house of parliament, although the minority appointed (by the military) is proportionally much bigger.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Thwarted vote buyer wants compensation

A ruling party member caught vote-buying on tape told a court hearing yesterday he should be compensated by the man he attempted to bribe because he recorded their conversation. 

On January 23, the Battambang Provincial Election Commission fined Cambodian People’s Party member Cheam Pe A $US1,230 for attempting to buy Sam Rainsy Party commune councillor Mok Ra’s vote in Senate elections the following Sunday.
 

As a plaintiff, Cheam Pe A told Battambang Provincial Court yesterday that Mok Ra had broken the law by recording him offering the $700 bribe and asked for 10 million riel (US$2,475) in compensation.
 

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Court has not yet taken action to restore Mu Sochua's parliamentary immunity

PHNOM PENH (Cambodia Herald) - Phnom Penh Municipal Court has not yet take action to restore the parliamentary immunity of opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua, Deputy Prosecutor Sok Roeun said Wednesday.

He said there were many rules to follow to restore parliamentary immunity and suggested that Mu Sochua should read them before filing such a request.

Sam Pracheameanith, chief of cabinet at Ministry of Justice, said he hadn’t seen the file.

Cheam Yeap, a member of the Standing Committee of the National Assembly, said the parliament was waiting for a letter from the ministry to discuss the issue even though it is currently in recess.

Mu Sochua lost her immunity after losing a court case against Prime Minister Hun Sen in 2009.

I’ve won already, says PM

Prime Minister Hun Sen casts his vote on Sunday in Phnom Penh for the national senate election. The Prime Minister is confident of the outcome.
Prime Minister Hun Sen announced yesterday that at least one element of the 2013 National Assembly election is a foregone conclusion – he will still be in charge when it’s over.
Speaking only three days after his party won control of the Senate for the third time in a row, the premier said yesterday that there is no chance he will be displaced as prime minister, given the fact that he is the only candidate.

“Don’t worry; the opposition party has no possibility of breaking [the Cambodian People’s Party],” he told a crowd at a ground-breaking ceremony inaugurating national road 76 in Ratanakkiri. 

“At that time, who will be a Minister of Public Works? [We] don’t know yet, but the only candidate for prime minister is me.”

The premier also expressed his thanks to 797 members of Funcinpec, the Norodom Rannaridh Party and the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, who voted for the CPP at Sunday’s Senate election, including 179 councilors from the SRP.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

SRP says vote-buying fine not nearly enough

Meas Sokchea 
Tuesday, 31 January 2012

A Cambodian People’s Party member found guilty of attempted vote-buying in last Monday’s Senate election had been let off too lightly with a fine and should face legal action, an opposition Sam Rainsy Party councillor said yesterday.

At a hearing of the Battambang Provincial Election Commission last week, CPP member Cheam Pe A was fined US$1,230 after he was caught on tape offering SRP Tuol Ta Ek commune councillor Mok Ra $700 to cast his vote for the ruling party.
 

Senate Voting Along Party Lines, as Expected: Analysts

SRP MP Tioulong Saumura following her senate vote (Photo: The Phnom Penh Post)

The Senate elections held over the weekend produced results as expected, analysts said Monday. But the polls, open only to already chosen members of local commune councils, don’t reflect the will of the people, election observers said.

The ruling Cambodian People’s Party received about 78 percent of the votes, with the opposition Sam Rainsy Party taking the remainder, increasing from two to 11 seats.

Koul Panha, executive director of the Committee for Free and Fair Elections, said the numbers showed voting along party lines, as expected, rather than commune councils extending the will of the people.

There is no relationship like that,” he said.Some commune councils are unpopular over their handling of community problems like land disputes, he said.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Elections and Electoral Processes to Watch in 2012

Amid concerns about anti-democratic trends worldwide, several key elections will highlight the trajectory of democracy in 2012. Eberhard Laue

Last week’s spirited discussion on democracy at the World Economic Forum in Davos highlighted a growing sense of anxiety regarding the future of democracy and the rise of anti-democratic tendencies. Panelists identified several challenges to democratic progress, including a prolonged economic crisis, the exponential growth of technology, increased disparities in wealth and low levels of confidence in existing models of democratic governance.
Consolidated and emerging democracies juggle a variety of complex issues, from making democracy work for a citizenry besought by economic insecurity to rising levels of violence and ineffectual government institutions. For an organization like IFES, this is the context in which meaningful and durable electoral processes must be realized.
The following list highlights five elections that will play a significant role in shaping the health and trajectory of democracy in the coming year:

SRP touts senate gains

Officials count votes for the national senate election yesterday at a polling station in a school in the capital’s Boeung Trabek commune.
The Sam Rainsy Party was celebrating unofficial senate election results yesterday, claiming to have increased its number of seats in the upper house from two to 11 despite the incumbent government winning an overwhelming majority of the preliminary ballot results. 
Early results showed the SRP had won 21.93 per cent of the vote. The ruling Cambodian People’s Party dominated as expected, with 77.81 per cent after initial polling by the National Election Committee ahead of official results to be announced on Saturday. 

Fifty-seven of the 61 seats in the Cambodian senate are being contested in the election. Two of the remaining four will be appointed by the legislative house of parliament, the National Assembly, and the others by King Norodom Sihamoni.
 

In a vote derided by some analysts and observers as undemocratic because its participants are limited to commune-council members rather than the public, the SRP last night claimed a modicum of success.
 

Sunday, January 29, 2012

CPP claims 46 of 57 seats up for grabs in Senate election

PHNOM PENH (Cambodia Herald) -  The ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP) won 78.1 percent of the vote in Cambodia's Senate elections on Sunday with the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) getting about 21.99 percent, according to preliminary results announced by the National Election Committee (NEC).

The CPP announced separately that it had won 46 of the 57 seats up for grabs in the indirect election which was limited to less than 12,000 local councillors and national lawmakers. The SRP said it expected to win 11 seats. Two of the other four seats are appointed by the king and the other two are elected by the National Assembly.

Cambodian Senate background

PHNOM PENH (Cambodia Herald) - The Senate of Cambodia is the upper house of parliament which performs its duties as determined by the constitution and the law.

After National Assembly elections organized by the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) in April, 1993, a Constitutional Assembly was established in June.
 

Presided over by King Norodom Sihanouk, chairman of the Supreme Council of Magistracy, it drafted the Constitution of the Kingdom of Cambodia which stipulated that the king ruled according to the constitution and the principles of liberal democracy and pluralism.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Cambodia's political parties conclude 21-day campaign for Senate vote

PHNOM PENH, Jan. 27 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia's political parties had ended electoral campaigns for the third legislature of the Senate on Friday, two days prior to the vote.

Mao Sophearith, member of the National Election Committee (NEC), said Friday that during the 21-day campaign, the parties had promoted their political stances through marching and broadcasting on the National Television of Cambodia.

"In general, the campaign had been done smoothly with good environment and security," he said in a press briefing to conclude the campaign. "There was no any violence happened during the period."

Sam Rainsy warned of internal crisis ahead of senate election

PHNOM PENH (Cambodia Herald) -  Exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy has told party members via video conference that people in France have warned that the party will face an internal crisis if its electoral support declines and that increased support raise concerns for the ruling Cambodian People's Party, senior party officials said Friday.

The officials said Sam Rainsy made the statement in a video conference call from France to party headquarters on Wednesday. During the conference, Sam Rainsy urged members to avoid being bought by other parties, the officials said.

Sam Rainsy is now in France to escape from being jailed as he was sentenced by the Cambodian courts to two years in prison after he uprooted boundary marker 185 in Svay Rieng province.

Senate election campaign ends smoothly

PHNOM PENH (Cambodia Herald) -  Cambodia's three-week campaign for Senate elections ended smoothly Friday without any violations until the final day,  National Election Committee (NEC) Secretary General Tep Nitha said.

“We had four complaints and we're resolving those problems,” he said.

Tep Nitha said the situation on election day on Sunday was expected to be normal since the vote is restricted to members of the National Assembly and commune councils.

Alleged vote-rigger files suit over taping

Meas Sokchea 
Friday, 27 January 2012

AN opposition Sam Rainsy Party councillor who taped a ruling Cambodian People’s Party member attempting to buy his senate vote has been summoned to court to answer charges that he illegally recorded the man’s voice.
 

On Monday, the SRP circulated a recording in which CPP member Cheam Pe A offered Mok Ra, Tuol Ta Ek commune councillor in Battambang town, US$700 to vote for his party’s candidate in senate elections on Sunday.
 

The SRP subsequently filed a complaint with the Battambang Provincial Commission against Cheam Pe A, who has now filed a lawsuit against Mok Ra.
 

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Villagers wary of Pheapimex olive branch

May Titthara 
Tuesday, 24 January 2012

A deadly land dispute in Pursat province ended over the weekend with a victory for the villagers, but they said yesterday this might have more to do with the upcoming commune elections than a change of heart within the company owned by the wife of a senator.

The villagers from Tnort Chum commune in Krakor district said Pheapimex Group – which is owned by Choeng Sopheap, wife of Cambodian People’s Party Senator Lao Meng Khina – had agreed to return disputed land to them, following intervention by a group of CPP members from Phnom Penh on Saturday.

SRP claims ruling party busted for vote-buying

Meas Sokchea with additional reporting by David Boyle  
Tuesday, 24 January 2012

The opposition Sam Rainsy Party claimed yesterday that they had caught members of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party attempting to buy an SRP vote in Battambang province and had evidence to prove it.
 

Mok Ra, Tuol Ta Ek commune councillor in Battambang town, claimed yesterday that he had recorded CPP members Cheam Pe A and Run Thel, both of whom had defected from the SRP, on tape attempting to buy his senate vote for US$700 at the Banorn Hotel on Sunday.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

HRP gets Muslim boost

Members of Cambodia’s Cham Muslim community celebrate Ramadan in 2010 at a mosque in Phnom Penh’s Russey Keo district.


A coalition of Cambodian Muslim groups joined forces yesterday to pledge their allegiance to the minority opposition Human Rights Party, one of the groups’ leaders said.

Sith Ybrahim, president of the Khmer Islam Movement and former Funcinpec parliamentarian, said he had led representatives from 12 Muslim groups to join as party members of the Human Rights Party.

“I listened to every principle of every party, and the others have always spoken about democracy, but it is democracy for the individual not the public,” Sith Ybrahim said, adding that the HRP offered a unique and appealing political platform.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Mu Sochua Seeks Reinstatement of Parliamentary Immunity

Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh
Cambodian parliamentarian and human rights leader Mu Sochua meets with US Secretary of Sate Hillary Clinton during a Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards event in Washington, DC on April 12, 2011.


Phnom Penh Municipal Court authorities refused to accept a letter from opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua Tuesday seeking to have her parliamentary immunity renewed.

Mu Sochua, a representative of the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, had her immunity pulled in 2009, after she filed a defamation suit against Prime Minister Hun Sen, who countersued in return. She was ultimately fined nearly $4,000.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

NEC claims final cut on SRP video

Deputy General Secretary of NEC, Sokolak Tipor.

Cambodia's main opposition party has slammed the National Election Committee for interfering in its election campaign and taking voting decisions away from the voters, party officials said yesterday.

The opposition Sam Rainsy Party yesterday sent a letter to the NEC, accusing it of editing out important parts – including images of a woman being beaten by police during an eviction –  of two campaign videos that were aired by state-run National Television Kampuchea (TVK) on Tuesday.

“The Sam Rainsy Party is very shocked and finds it deeply regrettable that the NEC has cut out pictures and words from the SRP campaign video without a discussion beforehand,” SRP’s letter to the NEC said. 

“The NEC shows that it is biased and willing to cover up the cruelty of the ruling party.”

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Opposition Officials Push US for More Support in Elections

Tuesday, 10 January 2012
Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh
Daniel Baer, US State Dept. Deputy Assistant Secretary
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor


“We raised so many issues, including judiciary reform, land disputes, corruption and elections.”
A senior US official met with members of Cambodia’s opposition parties and other government officials on Tuesdayto discuss ways forward toward free and fair elections later this year and next.

Daniel Baer, who is the US State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for democracy, human rights and labor,met with officials from government, the opposition Sam Rainsy and Human Rights parties and others, to discuss upcoming commune elections, which will be held in June 2012, and national elections, to be held next year.

Campaign season: SRP seeks Funcinpec, NRP votes

Wednesday, 11 January 2012
Vong Sokheng 
The Phnom Penh Post 
In the fourth day of the Senate campaign, opposition Sam Rainsy Party yesterday called on council members from rival parties to help the SRP gain seats in the upcoming election.

In a statement issued by exiled leader Sam Rainsy, the SRP called on Funcinpec and the NRP to vote for SRP lawmakers in the January 29 election since those parties are fielding no candidates.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Senate election campaign does not gather much steam

The SRP held its election campaign at its headquarters with opposition leader Sam Rainsy joining in through video conference (Photo: Siv Channa, RFI)

08 Jan 2012
By Pen Bona
Radio France Internationale
Translated from Khmer by Soch
The campaign for the 3rd mandate senate election is under way but it does not attract much attention. The campaign which started on Saturday, will last until 27 Jan and only two parties are competing: the SRP and the CPP. The CPP led the campaign with great fanfare, but the SRP led a quiet campaign with meetings held at its party headquarters only.

Surprises Unlikely as Senate Election Approaches


Thursday, 05 January 2012
Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer | Washington, DC
Senate elections will be held on Jan. 29, but election monitors say the vote will hold no surprises, because the system is set up so that only two parties, the ruling and main opposition, will win votes.

About 13,000 political officials of the Cambodian People’s and Sam Rainsy parties will vote in the election. The outcome is more or less known, since the CPP has 8,000 voters and the SRP has 3,000.

That means an estimated 46 seats for the CPP and 11 seats for the SRP, along with two senators each appointed by the Royal Palace and the CPP-dominated National Assembly.

Friday, January 6, 2012

Elections ‘Best Opportunity’ Yet for Cambodians: Analyst

Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer | Washington, DC
Lao Monghay, has spent years watching Cambodian politics and was a researcher at the Asian Human Rights Commission.

With elections coming up in 2012 and 2013, Cambodians will again have a chance to elect their leaders. Political analyst Lao Monghay told “Hello VOA” Thursday now was the “best opportunity” for them to change leaders they are unhappy with.

In times past, Cambodians did not have choices, because their local leaders were appointed. That has changed, he said, but Cambodians must exercise their right to vote to take advantage of it, he said.
“Now, their destiny is in the hands of the Cambodian people entirely,” he said.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Surprises Unlikely as Senate Election Approaches

Senate elections will be held on Jan. 29, but election monitors say the vote will hold no surprises, because the system is set up so that only two parties, the ruling and main opposition, will win votes.

About 13,000 political officials of the Cambodian People’s and Sam Rainsy parties will vote in the election. The outcome is more or less known, since the CPP has 8,000 voters and the SRP has 3,000.

That means an estimated 46 seats for the CPP and 11 seats for the SRP, along with two senators each appointed by the Royal Palace and the CPP-dominated National Assembly.


The votes of the Funcinpec and Norodom Ranariddh parties, which hold seats in the National Assembly, “are obvious,” said Koul Panha, head of the Committee for Free and Fair Elections.

“So in the near future, if there are not any parties with commune council members, then others cannot participate,” he said. “For example, eventually, there will be only one party in the future that governs commune council members, which will mean a party competing only against itself, which then makes all its own party members commune councilors to vote for their own party. That’s meaningless.”

Nhiek Bun Chhay, Funcinpec’s president, said his party has about 300 commune councilors to vote in the Senate election. That’s not enough to gain any seats in the Senate, he said, adding that he would prefer to see the Senate held to a general vote among the population.

“Having a general election, like the [National Assembly] election, is better,” he said.

Noranarridh Ananda Yath, chief of cabinet for the Norodom Ranarridh Party, said the Senate elections should be reformed. His party has about 400 commune councilors, which is also not enough to win any seats in the Senate.

“Next time we hope we are able to join the contest,” he said.

Tep Nytha, secretary-general of the National Election Committee, said each party knows whether it can win or not before participating in the Senate election, but it is up to a party whether it wants to field candidates.

Arguments for reform of the election system need to go through the proper lawmaking bodies, he said. Around 60 countries worldwide have a similar system for electing their senators, he said.

Cambodia’s universal elections take place for the National Assembly at the national level and the commune councils at the local level, he said. Commune elections will be held later this year, with the National Assembly election to follow in 2013.

Campaigning for the Senate election, which is held for representatives of eight regions around the country, will go from Jan. 7 to Jan. 27.

However, in the upcoming election and others, the members of the opposition Sam Rainsy Party say they are at a disadvantage.

Some of their members have gone into hiding or left the country, for fear of biased legal proceedings, Yim Sovann, a lawmaker and spokesman for the party, said.

SRP members across the country have prepared for intimidation in this election, as well as commune council elections, he said.

The party is trying to mobilize victims of land grabbing, forced evicitions and border encroachment to protest against the ruling Cambodian People’s Party, he said.

“We will organize a mass demonstration to tackle the issues,” he said. “If there is no solution, nationwide protests are going to happen.”

Ruling party supporters have offered money to commune councilors to win their support, he said, a claim CPP officials deny.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Hun Sen in recent speeches has compared opposition leader Sam Rainsy to Pol Pot, saying his party restricts members in voting processes.

Internal CPP documents obtained by VOA Khmer show that the ruling party is preparing itself for upcoming elections—Senate, commune and national.

“Opposition parties and other bad spheres have never given up in aiming to topple the CPP,” one internal document warns.

Surprises Unlikely as Senate Election Approaches

Thursday, 05 January 2012
Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer | Washington, DC

Commune elections will be held later this year, with the National Assembly election to follow in 2013. (Photo: AP)
Senate elections will be held on Jan. 29, but election monitors say the vote will hold no surprises, because the system is set up so that only two parties, the ruling and main opposition, will win votes.