Opposition boycott collapses  as SRP strikes deal on NA reform   
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=21823)  
 
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     Written by Vong Sokheng and 
Sebastian Strangio    Thursday, 25 September 2008     

Lawmakers from the opposition Sam  Rainsy Party cancel their planned boycott 
of the new National Assembly's  inaugural session after last-minute talks with 
CPP  officials



THE last-minute collapse of the opposition's planned  National Assembly 
boycott is an early indication the bark of the  opposition in the new 
CPP-majority 
mandate could be a good deal louder  than its bite. 

Following 11-hour talks with officials on Tuesday  night, Sam Rainsy Party 
officials agreed to attend Wednesday's  inauguration ceremony, leaving a 
handful 
of MPs from the Human Rights  Party to carry out the boycott alone. 

Both parties previously said  they would skip the inauguration to draw 
attention to their allegations  that thousands of opposition supporters were 
barred 
from voting in the  July 27 national poll due to the manipulation of voter 
lists.

Prime  Minister Hun Sen said Wednesday that SRP officials approached 
Cambodian  Chamber of Commerce Chairman Kith Meng with a message for the prime  
minister Tuesday evening, suggesting talks over the planned boycott.  

He added that a compromise was reached after midnight, with Sam  Rainsy 
agreeing to attend the ceremony in return for an amendment to the  Assembly's 
internal rules that would formally recognise the role of the  Kingdom's 
opposition 
parties. 

"The SRP requested that the  government recognise the role of the opposition 
... in order to save  face," Hun Sen told reporters after Wednesday's 
inauguration, adding that  the proposed amendment would be passed onto the 
Assembly 
after it had been  vetted by the NA's legislative committee. "I had no 
intention 
of  negotiating with those threatening a boycott, but I did so because of  
peace."

SRP spokesman Son Chhay said the role of the opposition was  vital in 
democracies. He hailed the agreement with the government and the  proposed 
amendment 
to the Assembly's internal rules as an important step  forward. 

 
____________________________________

I will not allow small-voice parties to hold the majority-  voice party 
hostage. 

 
____________________________________

"Within the amendment ... the opposition party will be officially  appointed 
by the King and will have some funds from the national budget to  help it 
perform its duties. This is a very important promise from the  prime minister," 
he 
told reporters at SRP headquarters Wednesday.  

In a tacit recognition of the difficulties faced by the SRP in the  new 
CPP-majority government, Son Chhay said that the party's involvement  was 
better 
for the future of Cambodia than continued non-cooperation. "We  quit the 
boycott 
because we are thinking of the interests of the nation,"  he said. "It was 
difficult to make the decision but we hope that  cooperation with the ruling 
party will help to encourage them to respect  the law and the rights of the 
Cambodian  people."

Unprecedented stability
Due to the  CPP's landslide electoral victory, which delivered the ruling 
party 90  seats out of 123, Cambodia has managed to avoid a post-election 
political  deadlock for the first time since the UNTAC era. After the 2003 
election,  
government was paralysed for more than a year as competing factions  
negotiated coalition agreements, but Hun Sen said the new government would  
rule with 
one voice. "From now on, I will not allow the small-voice  parties to hold the 
majority-voice party hostage," he said.

Puthea  Hang, executive director of election monitor Nicfec, said the SRP had 
 successfully used its boycott to force some changes, but that CPP  dominance 
would nonetheless be the keynote of the next five years. "We see  that the 
boycott of the opposition was a way of advocating for the CPP to  make changes 
in the NA, but it will still be difficult to establish checks  and balances," 
he said.

Comfrel Executive Director Koul Panha said  despite the overwhelming majority 
won by the CPP in this year's polls, the  compromise and appearance of Sam 
Rainsy at the inauguration was beneficial  for both parties. 

"I think the opposition was taking a risk [in  threatening a boycott], but 
the CPP was also taking a risk and the CPP  understands this," he said. "So 
they 
are taking another approach."  



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