Cambodia: Parliament Endorses New Cabinet
 
    *   _Foreign_ (http://www.mysinchew.com/taxonomy/term/37)  
2008-09-25 15:33 
 
 
 
    *    
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen walks on his way  to the National Assembly 
in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, 24 Sept 2008.  (Photo courtesy: AP 
Photo/Heng Sinith)
 
 (http://www.mysinchew.com/files/25099.jpg) 


 
PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA: Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen promised to combat  
corruption and advocate good governance as he unveiled the country's new 
Cabinet 
 on Thursday (25 Sept). 
Cambodia's newly elected lower house of parliament, overwhelmingly packed  
with lawmakers from Hun Sen's ruling party, voted to approve the Cabinet, which 
 
is filled with the same ministers who served in Hun Sen's administration the  
past five years. 
"A new term but with the same old face," Hun Sen, 57, told the National  
Assembly after the vote. 
Hun Sen's Cambodian People's Party took 90 of 123 seats in July elections,  
ensuring that it will have a free hand in virtually all legislative matters. 
Hun Sen, Asia's longest-serving leader, said his new government will not  
"waver in its commitment to accelerate development and comprehensive  reform." 
He has made similar promises in the past to foreign aid donors, who give  
hundreds of millions of dollars in aid each year to the impoverished Southeast  
Asian nation. 
But critics have often criticized his government for doing little to control  
corruption, illegal logging and land-grabbing by well-connected businessmen. 
Cambodia was ranked 166 among 180 countries in Transparency International's  
2008 Corruption Perceptions Index, where the No. 1 country is the least 
corrupt.  Transparency International is a Berlin-based international 
non-governmental  agency. 
Hun Sen responded to the findings with his trademark rebuff, saying many  
issues in Cambodia have been exaggerated by his critics. 
"It is their right to write whatever they want," he said. "Nothing is perfect 
 in this world. Social injustice and corruption occur everywhere. The 
difference  is how small or big they are." 
All 26 lawmakers of the Sam Rainsy Party, Cambodia's main opposition group,  
boycotted Thursday's vote, as did three other lawmakers from the Human Rights  
Party. The two parties have disputed the results of July's election, saying 
they  were rigged to help secure votes for Hun Sen's party.  (AP)






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