HRP holds steady on NA boycott   
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=21822)  
 
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=21822&pop=1&page=0&Itemid=52)
   
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index2.php?option=com_content&task=emailform&id=21822&itemi
d=52)     Written by Meas Sokchea      Thursday, 25 September 2008    
THE OPPOSITION  Human Rights Party held firm on their commitment to boycott 
Wednesday's  opening session of the National Assembly, despite a last-minute 
deal that  saw Sam Rainsy Party members change their stance.

HRP President Kem  Sokha could not be reached for comment Wednesday, but 
Secretary General  Yem Ponharith told the Post their boycott was still in place 
as 
they  continue to wait for a response from King Norodom Sihamoni to their  
request for a separate swearing-in ceremony.

"We have not changed  our stance on the boycott," he said. "We want the 
Cambodian people to be  clear about our position. The SRP decided to attend, 
and 
that is their  right. But our alliance remains strong."

He said the SRP informed  him of their decision to attend on Tuesday night, 
but that both parties  remain committed to resolving their disputes over July's 
national  elections.

Prime Minister Hun Sen joked with reporters  about  the absence of HRP 
members following Wednesday's inauguration.
"All  political parties participated in the first session [but] I received 
word  that HRP President Kem Sokha and his entourage got stuck in traffic,  
meaning that he tried to attend but was a bit late making his decision,"  Hun 
Sen 
said.

Yem Ponharith dismissed the prime minister's  comments, saying all party 
members were firmly behind the boycott and had  remained at party headquarters.

"I heard about the prime minister's  comments. I don't know who could have 
told him this, but it is untrue," he  said.

Puthea Hang, executive director of the Cambodian election  monitor Nicfec, 
said Wednesday that SRP members chose not to wear the  proper uniform of 
elected 
parliamentarians, suggesting they were not  entirely happy about attending 
the session.
He said they decided to  attend to show their respect for the people who 
voted for them.

The  HRP, one of the newest entrants in Cambodia's political arena, won three 
 of the National Assembly's 123 seats.
But the party risks losing them  because of its decision to skip Wednesday's  
ceremony.

Government officials had earlier said any party  that refused to attend the 
swearing-in would be stripped of its  posts. 



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