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Supporters of the Cambodian National Rescue Party protest yesterday,
calling for fair and just elections at Phnom Penh’s Freedom Park.
Photograph: Heng Chivoan/Phnom Penh Post |
21 May 2013
By Meas Sokchea and Joe Freeman
The Phnom Penh Post
Thousands of protesters marched yesterday to greet United Nations
Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Cambodia Surya
Subedi – an oft-outspoken critic of the Cambodian government – with an
eclectic mix of complaints.
Some 3,000 people in total, mostly opposition Cambodia National Rescue
Party supporters, turned out for the demonstration timed to coincide
with the latest fact-finding mission by Subedi, whose relationship with
the government has cooled since Prime Minister Hun Sen snubbed him in
December.
The usual suspects were all there: the Boeung Kak and Borei Keila
protesters, the assembled CNRP party faithful, and a man who is growing
in stature as the opposition caretaker leader with the election race
heating up, Kem Sokha.
Sokha
dared Hun Sen’s government to debate policy with the CNRP on television
and in an extreme analogy, likened the National Election Committee to
the murderous Khmer Rouge regime.
“The
Khmer Rouge . . . if they kill someone, they said that they did it
according to the law, because that person opposed the organisation,”
he said, alluding to NEC statements that the law prevents them from
making any of the many changes the opposition is demanding.
Chief among them is that a national voter registration list which recent
studies have claimed is riddled with more irregularities than any of
its predecessors be overhauled and that structural government bias in
NEC be legislated out.
The opposition’s other quixotic agenda item was equal access to state media and political radio during the campaign.
Starting with a rally at Freedom Park near Wat Phnom, the march was a
feistier event than a previous gathering in April, when CNRP members
handed over similar recommendations to a representative of the National
Election Committee who came to meet them at the park.
After Sokha’s speech, the roving rally moved south from the park between
lines of uniformed riot police and blocked-off streets. Demonstrators
were largely untouched, except for a brief pushing match with uniformed
officers near the EU delegation on Norodom Boulevard. While there, Sokha
delivered a petition listing the CNRP’s grievances to EU Ambassador
Jean-Francois Cautain.
From the EU office, they moved en massed down Street 51, hanging a left
on 302, which brought them squarely in front of the UN office. Motorbike
drivers holding flags of Cambodia led the demonstrators, followed by
protestors on foot wearing white headbands.
Joined by other opposition leaders, including lawmaker Mu Sochua, Sokha
was let into the office about 20 minutes after Subedi arrived in a car.
They handed over the petition to the UN envoy and left not long
afterwards.
Boeung Kak lake land activists presented a different agenda, their long
battle to secure the release of imprisoned activist Yorm Bopha. At the
same time, they had a brief shouting match with tuk-tuk drivers, who
regularly demonstrate against Bopha after she was arrested on September 4
last year and charged with intentional violence over the assault of two
motodops.
Zoe Latumbo, spokeswoman for the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights in Cambodia, said Subedi would review
petitions from all groups present.
Subedi is scheduled to meet with the National Election Committee this
morning, where many of the issues raised at the march will likely come
up.
NEC secretary-general Tep Nytha said that any changes that his
organisation could make would require a delay in the national elections
scheduled for July.