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| Hun Sen greets supporters in Phnom Penh, June 13, 2013. |
‘The CPP declined to sign the pledges.’
Six of Cambodia’s eight political parties registered to contest July national elections have signed agreements with nongovernmental organizations promising to fight graft as part of their campaigns, amid allegations of a culture of “intimidation and threats” by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s party towards opposition groups.
The anti-corruption pledges commit the parties to push
for an expansion of the current practice of declaration of assets by officials
and to give public access to information to expose corruption.
They also call for the implementation of strong law
enforcement to prosecute graft offenders, according to Transparency
International Cambodia, an anti-corruption watchdog which was present for the
signing of the pledges.
The pledges also highlight the need to combat nepotism
and bribery in education and for access to government positions.
The pledge signing came as a group of 10 NGOs highlighted
a culture of intimidation against Cambodia’s opposition parties in the lead-up
to the July 28 elections, alleging that Hun Sen’s Cambodia People’s Party (CPP)
was “buying votes” within local communities in order to gain an upper hand in
the polls.
Parties that signed the anti-corruption pledges included
the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), Funcinpec, League for Democracy
Party, Republican Democracy Party, Khmer Anti-Poverty Party, and Khmer Economic
Development Party.
The CPP and the Cambodian Nationality Party—a smaller
opposition party—declined to sign the pledges.
Transparency International applauded the six parties for
their commitments to fighting corruption, but called for a comprehensive
access-to-information law including whistleblower protection and for
improvements to the country’s existing anti-corruption law.
“Cambodia’s key institutions are relatively weak compared
to other developed democratic countries and must undergo effective checks and
balances,” the group said in a statement.
“Strengthened institutions are also needed to build a
fair and democratic system that prevents individuals from abusing power for
personal gain and allows the country’s citizens to benefit from a fair system
that provides equal opportunities.”
Kol Preap, the group’s executive director, called on the
Cambodian people to work closely with their elected representatives to battle
corruption.
“We now invite the people to stand together with their
leaders to fight the corrosive problem across the country, to monitor
politicians’ actions on progress being made and to hold them accountable,” he
said.
‘Intimidation and threats’
On Thursday, 10 NGOs—including Cambodian rights group
Adhoc, Cambodia Center for Human Rights (CCHR), Cambodian Human Rights Action
Committee (CHRAC) and Committee for Fair and Free Elections in Cambodia
(Comfrel)—said they are concerned with the country’s pre-election environment
because of actions taken against the opposition by the ruling CPP.
While the groups have not observed any pre-election
violence, they said in a statement that the CPP had grown increasingly hostile
toward the opposition in the last five months, and particularly in May, with
elections around the corner.
“We are concerned because, in observing the political
environment from the national level to the grassroots level, we have seen
intimidation and threats against political parties,” Comfrel Director Koul
Panha told RFA’s Khmer Service.
According to the NGO statement, local authorities and
village chiefs have threatened supporters of non-CPP parties and routinely
prevented them from joining opposition rallies.
The group also reported instances where opposition party
logos were destroyed and CPP agents were found to be buying votes from local
communities.
“NGOs have observed that local authorities are not
remaining impartial. They have distributed gifts from the CPP, such as clothing
and other materials, which is against the electoral law and regarded as vote
buying,” Koul Panha said.
Media bias
He said the NGOs also noticed a “media bias” against the
opposition parties, with prominent broadcasting networks CTN, TVK and Bayon TV
dedicating more time to Hun Sen and only the independent Beehive Radio—run by political
activist Mam Sonando—providing airtime for the opposition.
Koul Panha said that CPP-affiliated media groups have
also urged the public to demonstrate against Kem Sokha, the acting president of
the country’s main opposition group—the CNRP.
Over the weekend, more than 10,000 people took to the
streets of Phnom Penh in what opposition members said was a rally staged by the
ruling party against Kem Sokha for allegedly saying that a prison run by the
notorious Khmer Rouge regime in the capital had been faked by Vietnam.
Hun Sen on Thursday denied charges that the CPP was
behind the rally.
The CNRP has said that Kem Sokha’s remarks were “twisted”
out of context to weaken the opposition ahead of the national elections in
which Hun Sen is seeking to extend his nearly three decades in power.
“This kind of environment provokes violence and threats
against the opposition party’s [acting] president,” Koul Panha said.
The 10 NGOs also slammed the National Assembly’s CPP-run
permanent committee after dismissing 29 opposition members last week for
leaving their original parties—the Sam Rainsy Party and the Human Rights
Party—to form the CNRP coalition.
Two members of the disbanded Norodom Ranariddh Party who
joined the Funcinpec party have also been sacked from the assembly.
The Cambodian government should reinstate the dismissed
lawmakers and should remain neutral in all political matters, the NGO statement
said.
“The assembly doesn’t work according to the principle of
democratic pluralism. At this point, only the CPP is controlling the National
Assembly,” Koul Panha said, adding that “all major state institutions are under
CPP control.”
He accused the government of “destroying efforts to build
a good democracy in Cambodia” by trying to get rid of the country’s opposition
parties.
Reported by Samean Yun and Den Ayuthya for RFA’s Khmer
Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

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