CNRP President Sam Rainsy participates in a memorial ceremony in Phnom Penh for victims of a 1997 grenade attack, Sept. 30, 2013. |
Cambodia’s opposition will hold a mass demonstration next
month to call for international intervention in the country’s political crisis
following disputed elections, according to party leaders.
The Oct. 23 protest by the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP)
at Freedom Park in Phnom Penh will coincide with the anniversary of a 1991
U.N.-brokered peace deal that ended decades of internal conflict, the leaders
said over the weekend.
Prior to the event, the CNRP will hold a public rally at the
same venue this Sunday to “decide the party’s next moves,” following its
boycott last week of the first session of parliament after the July 28
elections.
The boycott was aimed at challenging the election victory of
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP), which according to
official results, won 68 seats in the National Assembly, the country’s
parliament, compared with 55 by the CNRP.
The CNRP claims that the elections were tainted by fraud and
it was robbed of victory.
Paris Peace Agreements anniversary
The Oct. 23 demonstration will coincide with the 22nd
anniversary of the Paris Peace Agreements which were signed by the United
States and 17 other countries and laid out the process for ending decades of
conflict in Cambodia and building a democratic society anchored in human rights
and the rule of law.
The protest is being held “in order to bring petitions for
the United Nations and Paris Peace Agreements signatory countries to the U.N.
office in Phnom Penh,” a party statement said.
The CNRP, which has called for an independent, U.N.-backed
probe into irregularities in the elections, has led several mass demonstrations
since the elections.
Violence broke out on the sidelines of its latest protest on
Sept. 15 when a man was shot dead by police.
After talks between Sam Rainsy and Hun Sen failed to resolve
the election dispute, the country’s king last week convened parliament in which
CPP lawmakers voted Hun Sen to be reappointed prime minister and to form a new
government.
CNRP President Sam Rainsy has denounced Hun Sen’s new
government as “unconstitutional” for pushing ahead with a parliamentary session
without the opposition and has threatened to organize a nationwide general
strike.
‘Not too late’
CNRP Deputy President Kem Sokha said the party was holding
off until after this week’s Pchum Bum Buddhist holiday to lead more
demonstrations but was still demanding for an independent probe into election
irregularities despite the formation of the new government.
“It is not too late,” he told RFA’s Khmer Service, saying
the CNRP was still committed to maintaining its demands for the probe.
“The current government can’t work because no one recognizes
it,” he said, adding that Hun Sen’s government and parliament represent only
“half the country’s voters.”
According to the National Election Committee, which conducts
the country’s elections, the CPP won 3.2
million votes compared to CNRP's 2.9 million votes, the worst result obtained
by Hun Sen's party in more than a decade. The CPP also lost its two-thirds
majority in the legislature.
“The CNRP wants to hold demonstrations immediately but we [also]
want to wait until the Pchum Ben festival is over,” he said.
The festival is a time when Cambodians pay their respects to
deceased relatives.
Senior CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap criticized the CNRP’s plans
to petition the U.N. and Paris Peace Agreements signatories, likening the move
to inviting foreign countries to control the fate of an independent state.
“Sam Rainsy wants foreigners to control us forever,” he told
RFA.
“If the CNRP wants to make complaints to the United Nations,
then they should go ahead,” he said.
He said the opposition’s boycott of the National Assembly
was equivalent to not recognizing Cambodia’s King Norodom Sihamoni.
Grenade attack memorial
On Monday, as part of rituals for the Pchum Bum festival,
CNRP leaders attended a memorial ceremony for victims of a 1997 grenade attack
on an opposition gathering, calling for an end to the country’s “culture of
impunity.”
Rights groups have accused Hun Sen's administration of
involvement in the attack, which killed 16 and injured more than 150, including
Sam Rainsy.
Speaking at a stupa in Phnom Penh dedicated to the 16 who
died, Sam Rainsy called for the government to bring justice to the perpetrators
and said he hoped the country could shed its legacy of political violence.
“I urge all people to stay united and to work toward change
in the year of 2013,” he said.
“We want a change from violent to nonviolent culture. We
want to change the culture of impunity with an independent court to prosecute
criminals,” he said.
Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun.
Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink
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