Cambodia’s opposition leader Sam Rainsy, touring Europe and the U.S., said
Thursday that international support is growing behind his party’s call for an
independent probe into claims of fraud and other irregularities in the country’s
recent elections.
Speaking in Washington following his visit to Europe,
Sam Rainsy said that governments and parliamentarians in the European Union, the
United States and several other nations had backed demands by his Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP) for an investigation into the
allegations.
“The EU and other countries have expressed suspicions about
the election results,” said the CNRP president, whose visit to Europe last week
took him to Britain, France and Belgium.
“They know about the election
irregularities and fraud, so they support the establishment of an investigative
committee.”
The CNRP has boycotted parliament since it convened for the
first time last month after July 28 elections in which Prime Minister Hun Sen’s
ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) was declared winner by the
government-appointed Election Committee despite claims of vote
tampering.
According to official results, the CPP won 68 parliamentary
seats to the CNRP’s 55.
The CNRP has held several mass protests and plans
many more to push for a probe into the election irregularities and to question
the legitimacy of Hun Sen’s government.
Sam Rainsy
arrived in the U.S. on Tuesday and met with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State
William Joseph Burns, who he said also pledged his support for the probe into
irregularities, which the CNRP says includes the removal of one million voters
from the electoral rolls.
“He stated the U.S stance—that Washington will
continue to encourage [Phnom Penh] to establish an investigation to find the
truth and to promote real democracy based on the will of the people,” Sam Rainsy
said.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said independent
observers had noted “serious election irregularities” in the Cambodian polls.
“We do believe and continue to believe that a credible and transparent
review of the election would help efforts moving forward,” she told a media
briefing on Wednesday.
The United States, Psaki added, wanted the CPP and
the CNRP to seek a resolution of the electoral dispute through dialogue that
served the best interests of the Cambodian people and promotes reforms.
Sam Rainsy said that he had also met with United Nations officials and
U.S. lawmakers, including members of the Senate, who he said had submitted a
resolution demanding an investigation into the election results “to provide
justice to the voters.”
Sam Rainsy said that he was encouraged by the
response to his party’s demands, adding that the international community had
taken a much more cautious approach to this year’s election than it had to those
held since the U.N. reintroduced competitive polls to the country in 1993 after
decades of civil war.
“In the past, the international community—including
the U.N.—rushed to accept the election results, but in 2013, many countries and
non-governmental organizations demanded an investigation to uncover the truth,”
he said.
“In 2013, we have hope that democracy will not be
disrespected.”
The CNRP president again traveled to Europe on Thursday to
hold talks with Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs Emma Bonino and will return
to Cambodia on Oct. 22.
Power share
Sam Rainsy said that
while the CNRP disputed the official results of the government-appointed
National Election Committee (NEC), which oversees the country’s polls, the party
wanted to play a role to check the powers of Hun Sen’s CPP.
“If the CPP
wants to find a solution in this transitional period before we uncover the
truth, we must share the power,” he said.
“If the ruling party leads the
government, the CNRP must lead the National Assembly (parliament), and we must
also ensure the independence of the court.”
He said that the CNRP’s call
to check the power of the ruling party is “less about power sharing than it is
about holding the CPP accountable before the people.”
Negotiations
between the CPP and CNRP aimed at forging a political compromise collapsed last
month after the opposition party demanded key posts in the National
Assembly.
Mass demonstration
Sam Rainsy said that following
his return to Cambodia, he would assist in preparations to hold what he called a
“long-planned” mass demonstration on Oct. 23 against the CPP and over its
refusal to allow an independent election probe.
The opposition leader
also criticized the CPP for “exaggerating information” from previous
negotiations between the two parties, without elaborating, saying that the CNRP
would abstain from any further talks unless they were made open to the public
and the media.
Hun Sen had threatened last month to release an audio
recording in which Sam Rainsy purportedly acknowledged a CPP election victory
during negotiations.
Earlier this week, the CPP said that it would amend
laws and take other steps to reform the country’s electoral
system.
Reported by Huot Vuthy for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated
by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua
Lipes.