With any kind of merger a smaller party is  at the mercy of the bigger one. 
In this case it is odd that a smaller and  dysfunctional party is seeking 
to merge with a bigger one with specific  demands.
Stop taunting the people with the  rhetoric, they are getting tired of such 
personal egos.  
 
Opposition merger now in SRP’s court, HRP  president says

 
Wednesday, 07 October 2009 15:02 Meas Sokchea 
 

 


THE Human  Rights Party has announced it is ready to join forces with the 
Sam Rainsy Party  as soon as its prospective partner makes the decision to go 
ahead with the  long-anticipated merger.

At a press conference Tuesday, HRP President Kem  Sokha said the party was 
ready to join with the SRP in a single opposition  front, and that people 
inside and outside the two parties want to see a united  democratic movement. 

“People have asked whether democrats can merge into  a single party,” Kem 
Sokha said. 

“The answer that has been given to us  is that if democrats do not merge 
into one party, the result will be  defeat.”

However, Kem Sokha said the party was maintaining three  conditions for the 
merger, including a term limit for the party president, a  change in the 
new party’s name and joint decision-making between officials from  the two 
sides. 

He acknowledged that the SRP and HRP have met eight times  already to 
discuss the merger, with no result, and said that if the SRP  leadership is 
unhappy with the terms, it should come to discuss them.

The  SRP’s deputy secretary general, Mu Sochua, said Tuesday that she met 
with an HRP  representative on Monday to speak about the merger, adding that 
the three  conditions set by Kem Sokha were acceptable to the party 
leadership.

“We  have not changed our will because we have made these announcements to 
the public  already,” she said, adding that both parties had been too busy 
to consider the  merger in recent months. “Our stance is the same – we do 
not dispute these”  points. 

She added: “We do not reject the change of the party’s name.…  The new 
party must change its name, but we just will change it when we have the  time,” 
she said.

Cheam Yeap, a senior lawmaker from the ruling Cambodian  People’s Party, 
expressed his congratulations over the merger plans but said the  CPP was not 
scared of the threat posed by a unified democratic front.  

“They cannot merge forever. They will have conflict together and be  
separated … because Kem Sokha has different ideals from Sam Rainsy,” Cheam Yeap 
 
said. 

“Even if they merge, they can’t win against us because we have  served the 
people for so long.”

 

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