Cambodian Prime
Minister Extends Reign Amid Opposition Boycott of Parliament
By THOMAS FULLER
Published: September 23, 2013
BANGKOK — Cambodia’s
long-serving, authoritarian prime minister, Hun Sen, was elected to another
five-year term in office on Tuesday despite a deadlock with the opposition,
which has refused to attend the National Assembly in protest over alleged
electoral cheating.
Mr. Hun Sen was set to be sworn into
office later Tuesday by Cambodia’s king, Norodom Sihamoni, officially extending
the prime minister’s 28 years in power.
The king has sought in vain to broker an
end to the acrimony after Mr. Hun Sen’s foes claimed widespread cheating in
the July 28 election and rejected the
official results, which left Mr. Hun Sen’s Cambodia People’s Party in the
majority, though weakened.
Still, Mr. Hun Sen has projected what
some analyst’s see as unusual signs of weakness.
He has made uncharacteristic,
conciliatory gestures, including three recent meetings with Sam Rainsy, the
leader of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party. One lasted
about five hours and centered on changes to the country’s electoral system.
Analysts disagree on whether Mr. Hun Sen,
who in the past was dismissive of the opposition, is biding his time or has
been significantly damaged by the election.
In its worst showing since 1998,
the Cambodian
People’s Party won just 68 seats of the 123 in the National
Assembly, compared with 55 for the opposition, which made its greatest gains in
a decade thanks to Mr. Rainsy’s newly unified party. The opposition said it
would have captured the majority in a fair election.
David Chandler, a historian based in
Australia and a leading expert on Cambodia’s politics, said Mr. Hun Sen “has no
intention of diminishing his grip on the country” and has control of the major
levers of power.
“Cambodian politics are very crass,” Mr.
Chandler said. “The people who run the country are the ones with the money and
the guns.” But the opposition’s parliamentary gains and the losses by the
Cambodia People’s Party have put Mr. Hun Sen in “slightly unfamiliar
territory,” Mr. Chandler said.
“I think he feels like he’s lost a couple
of chess pieces,” he said. “He’s a bit more cautious.”
By contrast, Ou Virak, the president of
the Cambodian
Center for Human Rights, an independent advocacy organization in
Phnom Penh, sees Mr. Hun Sen as badly wounded and fearful for the future.
The governing party’s election campaign
was very personalized and built around the presumed popularity of Mr. Hun Sen,
so the outcome “was a major blow to his ego,” Mr. Ou Virak said.
In his speeches over the past three
years, Mr. Hun Sen has repeatedly mentioned the Arab Spring; an apparent
preoccupation that Mr. Ou Virak said helped give insight into the prime
minister’s mind-set.
“He is fearful, and he is looking at some
of the other long-term dictators and strongmen around the world who have
fallen,” Mr. Ou Virak said.
The opening of the National Assembly on Monday
was attended by foreign dignitaries, including the American ambassador to
Cambodia, William E. Todd. But soon after the ceremony, the United States
Embassy in Phnom Penh issued a
statement saying Mr. Todd’s attendance was “not an endorsement
of any election outcome or of any political party.” The statement also called
for a “transparent review of irregularities” in the July election that would
help address “flaws in the electoral process.”
Read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/24/world/asia/cambodian-opposition-citing-disputed-election-boycotts-opening-of-parliament.html?_r=0
Read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/24/world/asia/cambodian-opposition-citing-disputed-election-boycotts-opening-of-parliament.html?_r=0
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