School of Vice:
This fuss over the slogan - just like that created by "Black Money" protests - is getting sillier by the day.
Why worry if your commune chiefs are not under order to put the party's agendas (i.e. Angkar Leu's!) ahead of the welfare of the people who have the right to either re-elect or ditch their commune chiefs democratically? Isn't the CPP (as its name implies) all about serving the Cambodian people anyway? Is something hitting home here?
When Khmer people express their concern over the mass, unregulated influx of Vietnamese settlers into their small country they are accused of racial incitement and branded xenophobic. When they are urged to rid of self-serving commune chiefs, the opposition party stands accused of "incitement"!
If a given incumbent commune chief has been doing a good job for the commune, whether by adhering to party directives or otherwise, then his/her constituents would be the first to know and note down that fact, and therefore no amount of fictitious slogans could alter that perception to the party's own disrepute or detriment.
😎😎😎
CNRP president Kem Sokha and (from left) deputies Pol Ham, Mu Sochua and Eng Chhay Eang raise hands at a CNRP extraordinary party congress to confirm its new leadership.Pha Lina
20 Mar, 2017 Meas Sokchea
P
The Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) will neither officially use a political slogan that has raised the ire of the ruling party nor ban local officials from using it, senior officials said yesterday.
CNRP deputy presidents Mu Sochua and Eng Chhay Eang said yesterday that the party congress never endorsed the slogan “replace commune chiefs who serve the party with commune chiefs who serve the people” making it unnecessary to amend it.
The ruling Cambodian People’s Party has characterised the slogan as “incitement” and threatened to take legal action as a result, with dozens of CPP commune chiefs releasing statements condemning it.
Sochua said the party “never spread the slogan”, but added that there was no law under which the CPP could ban it. “The slogan is just a slogan,” she said.
This position was echoed by Chhay Eang. “Whoever wants to use the slogan, go ahead,” he said. “The party does not urge anyone that you must use or must not use the slogan.”
He added that if the catchphrase were not a reflection of local sentiment then it would not be used. Furthermore, he said, even if a court were to ask the party to change it, the CNRP would be unable to do so as the slogan did not fall under its official policy.
Reached yesterday, CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said this meant the CNRP did not want to withdraw the slogan. “We have not yet had any specific reason to believe” that they won’t use it, Eysan said, adding that the CPP would file a complaint if the slogan continued to be used.
3 comments:
Because the CPP is so panic about this upcoming election, even the CNRP's fart is illegal too.
Sooner or later, there will be a new law stipulating that: "the CNRP cannot fart".
8:49 am
បញ្ជាដែកជោ :
ហាមផោម មុនផោមត្រូវសុំច្បាប់។
It appears quite clear with or without the 2018 election, the
Khmer people with the leadership of the CNRP shall resort to
and roll out Plan B. !!! ✊️✊️✊️
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