CPP consolidates power in  new government   
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=21852)  
 
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=21852&pop=1&page=0&Itemid=52)
   
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index2.php?option=com_content&task=emailform&id=
21852&itemid=52)     Written  by Cheang Sokha      Friday, 26 September 2008  
 
Ruling party takes over all but one  key parliamentary position; rights 
advocate calls on opposition to drop  boycott


 
HENG CHIVOAN 

Prime Minister  Hun Sen speaks to reporters at a news conference after the 
King opened the  National Assembly on Wednesday. 

ANEW government was sworn in Thursday despite the  total absence of 
opposition parliamentarians, who vowed to boycott the  ceremony to highlight 
their 
allegations of electoral fraud.  

Twenty-six elected officials from the Sam Rainsy Party and three  from the 
Human Rights Party - more than a fifth of the total 123 elected  
parliamentarians - were absent from the  meeting of the National  Assembly. 

Prime Minister Hun Sen attributed their absence to  infighting within the 
opposition bloc. "I think the internal problems of  the SRP are growing," he 
told 
reporters, adding that the government would  be formed with or without 
opposition officials. 

SRP  parliamentarian Yim Sovann said his party decided to join the 
inauguration  ceremony Wednesday after the Cambodian People's Party, which 
controls 90  
of the Assembly's seats, promised to improve the election law and give the  
SRP a "bargaining voice" in the assembly. 

They withdrew Thursday,  however, to protest the use of a single vote for all 
government positions,  which Yim Sovann said the CPP used to "dictate" the 
process.   

In one block vote, the National Assembly elected its prime  minister and nine 
deputy prime ministers, along with chairpersons and  deputy chairpersons for 
its nine committees. The CPP received all but one  of the positions - 
Funcinpec stalwart Nhek Bun Chhay will remain as a  deputy prime minister - in 
a 
dramatic consolidation of its authority.  

The CPP dealt some secretary and undersecretary positions at  ministries to 
its partner Funcinpec, which earned only two seats in the  National Assembly.

 
____________________________________

...[the opposition parties are] not strong enough to pull  off a boycott. 

 
____________________________________

Get over it
Ou Virak, director of the Cambodian  Center for Human Rights, encouraged 
opposition parliamentarians to put  aside their grievances and delve into the 
duties of their posts.   

He described the SRP's previous plans to boycott as political  manoeuvering 
to gain power and insisted "they were not strong enough to  pull off a 
boycott".     
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