*CAMBODIA: democrats must build new leaders and focus on
nation-building                 *
 *FOR PUBLICATION*
AHRC-ETC-032-2013
September 30, 2013

*An article by **Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth **published by the Asian Human
Rights Commission*

As per his usual custom, sixty-year-old King Norodom Sihamoni clasps his
hands in a show of traditional Khmer respect, his face wears a ready soft
and gentle smile. The king was a graceful dancer in his youth and is known
never to have wanted to be king.

Buffeted by the political winds, however, on Monday, Sept 23, the king
acceded to the demands of the Cambodian People's Party leaders, who
insisted that the king perform his constitutional responsibility and open
the inaugural session of Cambodia's fifth parliament despite ongoing
challenges to the legitimacy of the election that gave the CPP a slim
majority. The National Assembly was half empty. Only 68 of the 123 seats
were occupied. Elected delegates from the opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party were 200 kilometers away at Angkor Wat, taking their own
symbolic oath to be faithful to the people's will.

Last Sept 7, tens of thousands of voters and supporters of the CNRP
gathered at Freedom Park in Phnom Penh, and gathered again on Sept 15, 16,
17, carrying candles, incense, and lotus flowers, protesting alleged
election irregularities and fraud that sanctioned the awarding by the
CPP-appointed National Election Committee of a 13 seat advantage in the
National Assembly to the CPP – 68 seats to 55 for the CNRP. Protesters
endorsed CNRP's persistent demand for an independent election probe to
investigate the allegations of fraud and provide voters with "truth and
justice."

The king, who "shall reign but shall not govern" (Article 7 of Cambodia's
1993 Constitution), was pressed to fulfill his constitutional duty to
convene the first session of the National Assembly, "no later than sixty
days after the election" (Art. 82), though in fact the convening could have
occurred as late as September 26th, 60 days after the July 28th election.

*Pandora's Box*

A Pandora's box was opened with the king's fateful action. Tossed aside
were some half a million signatures from Cambodian citizens and Buddhist
monks who were blocked from reaching the royal palace to submit cartons of
petitions pleading for the king to delay the opening of the National
Assembly. Also ignored was the opposition's warning that it would boycott a
parliamentary opening that occurred before CNRP-CPP talks aimed at
resolving the election disputes were concluded.

The king's action transformed the half empty assembly of 68 lawmakers from
a single party into a National Assembly. A day after, on Sept 24, in an
oral vote 68 CPP legislators approved Hun Sen as Prime Minister, and his
new cabinet as the Royal Government of Cambodia. A royal decree formalized
the events.

Increasing numbers of Cambodians have become vocal. They see the king as
having disregarded the popular will which seemed to support a delay of the
opening of the National Assembly.  As such, these protesters assert that
the king has failed two other of his constitutional roles.  He does not in
this instance represent a "symbol of unity and eternity of the Khmer
nation" (Art.8), or to have fulfilled his "august role of arbitrator to
ensure the faithful execution of public powers" (Art. 9).

Upset Cambodians also question the royal decree that installed Hun Sen as
Prime Minister, as he was rejected by voters in his home province according
to the CPP's own ballot count, trailing his CNRP challenger by 104,000
votes.  Nor, logic follows, should Hun Sen's cabinet appointees have been
approved to comprise the Royal Government of Cambodia for the five year
term ending in 2018.

Where, Cambodians ask, is an impartial investigation of what most agree was
an election plagued with significant irregularities? What, they ask, has
happened to the free and fair elections espoused in the 1991 Paris Peace
Accords that ended the long Cambodian civil war?

Protests have been largely peaceful, but as the regime long in power sought
to move events along, its hands off façade began to shred. The evening
before the opening session of the National Assembly, men in surgical masks
wielding riot guns, watched by military police who later joined them,
attacked protesters with batons, slingshots and electric prods, injuring
seven journalists, mostly photographers, covering the peaceful protest.
Reporters Without Borders referred to the attack as "Deliberate violence
against journalists covering peaceful protests."

In truth, even people who sympathize with the CPP think there is a need for
change, a need for new leadership. An overwhelming number of Cambodia's 15
million people have been born since the Khmer Rouge were ousted and chafe
at the continuation of the Hun Sen regime, now in place since 1985.  The
CPP, in fact, has ruled even longer, since 1979. This is the only
government most Cambodians have known. They are ready for change.

Even as the official election results show a reduction in CPP-held seats
from 90 to 68, published findings in several audits, including the
government's own, report one in ten registered voters was left off the
voters' lists; and the US-based National Democratic Institute's audit found
another tenth of names on the new list did not belong to real people, but
to "ghost voters." The CNRP claimed more than 3 million votes were
"misappropriated" by the CPP.

For his part, Hun Sen insists on the constitutional rule that a 50 percent
plus one majority allows the CPP to form a new government regardless of
what anyone thinks. For Hun Sen, a government decreed by the king is
legitimate. The CNRP sees it as a product of a "constitutional coup."

Constitutionally a new Khmer government comes into being with the approval
of the National Assembly, which, as Art. 76 stipulates, "consists of at
least 120 members."

*International Relations *

The United States and the European Union have been consistent in their
calls for "a transparent review of irregularities" in Cambodia's elections,
the participation of both political parties in the National Assembly, the
working together of the CNRP and the CPP to resolve electoral reforms,
among other suggested reforms.

China, too, has been consistent in her immediate support for Hun Sen and
the CPP. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang congratulated Hun Sen on his
reappointment as Prime Minister at the opening of the National Assembly.

According to the Phnom Penh Post, 18 foreign envoys attended the opening
ceremony of the National Assembly, including US Ambassador William Todd,
who created a political flap when he, perhaps inadvisably, was photographed
with both arms raised and both hands signaling a "V" sign. The import was,
at best, ambiguous. The embassy insisted the "V" was meant to indicate
Peace, but others took the alternative meaning, Victory. It was observed
that Ambassador Todd avoided Hun Sen and the embassy noted that the
ambassador's presence did not imply support for the election results.

As Cambodians debated endlessly each capital's policies toward the two
major political parties, UN Special Rapporteur on Cambodia Surya Subedi
noted, "roughly half of the population voted for one party and half for the
other," and "It is critical for the New National Assembly to be represented
by the two key parties . . . to be truly representatives of the whole of
the Cambodian people."

*The Old Fox is back*

Feeling safe and again empowered at a ceremony re-installing him as Prime
Minister, Hun Sen cast aside the low-key persona he had adopted over the
last few months in favor of the bellicose leader more familiar to the
Cambodian people. In lengthy remarks, Hun Sen sought to sow doubts among
CNRP supporters worldwide by asserting that during their talks to find a
solution to the disputed election outcomes, Sam Rainsy had abandoned his
demand for an independent investigation committee into alleged election
irregularities and fraud and requested for himself the position of
parliament president. According to Hun Sen, "Sam Rainsy added that the CNRP
would accept (the official result that) CPP (won) 68 (National Assembly
seats) and CNRP, 55."

Hun Sen claimed the CNRP-CPP talks collapsed because he, Hun Sen, refused
to give the presidency of the National Assembly to Sam Rainsy. Hun Sen
listed what assembly posts Sam Rainsy wanted for the CNRP, and what Hun Sen
said he was willing to give.

While Hun Sen told the press that the CPP still maintained "the door open
for negotiation" with the CNRP, he threatened at a cabinet meeting to
release an audio recording of the conversation with Sam Rainsy if the CNRP
persists in holding demonstrations.

CNRP Vice President Kem Sokha hit back immediately: Hun Sen is "concerned
and nervous" about the mass movement in support of the CNRP and popular
demands to know the truth about election irregularities. To CNRP officials,
Hun Sen's threat to release the audio recording is a familiar tactic, one
he has employed in the past, taking comments out of context to serve his
purposes. The CNRP said it welcomes the release of the unedited tape in its
entirety. Kem Sokha said the CNRP has nothing to hide. There were 6 other
CNRP officials with Sam Rainsy at the first talks; 14 at the second. Kem
Sokha contended that at the Sept 14-15 CNRP-CPP meetings, the CNRP
persistently demanded investigation of election fraud.

On Sept 25, Sam Rainsy told a press conference at CNRP headquarters in
Phnom Penh that the opposition's boycott of the National Assembly will
continue: "We will not cooperate in any manner with the present National
Assembly and with the present government unless there are guarantees that
there will be an investigation committee to investigate the election
irregularities and to find justice for the voters, whose will has been
distorted," and "a program of reforms that both parties can agree upon."

He also said, "We will conduct a worldwide campaign to delegitimize this
government, which is the result of a constitutional coup and which does not
represent the Cambodian people."

Yet, the best way to delegitimize this government is for the Cambodian
people to stop their submission, obedience and cooperation with it.

Sam Rainsy announced the opposition's intention to hold a one-day
nationwide general strike of factory workers, civil servants, and
shopkeepers.

A senior official of the CNRP told me the CNRP has the people on its side;
the CPP's only remaining tool is brute force; the CNRP has opted for
nonviolence to oppose armed men. It is like a breath of fresh air to be
told of Cambodians' brave efforts to disassociate themselves from a culture
of violence.

*The Water Buffalo *

Generally, Cambodians' behavior is guided more by outbursts of emotion than
by reasoned, calm thinking. Another observer has suggested that this
tendency to react emotionally reflects the persistent theme of violence in
Khmer culture generally. He referenced Australian scholar John Tully, who
wrote about the late King Father's grandfather, King Norodom. King Norodom
said, "Cambodia is like a water buffalo, placid but capable of becoming
terrible in his rage."

Hun Sen is one such water buffalo. He wants what he wants and when he wants
it. His rage has allowed him to commit incredible acts of inhumanity. One
can imagine that the public face of equanimity he displayed during the
election was founded in his supreme confidence of victory, not by a desire
to avoid violence.

*Back to Negotiations?*

Hun Sen's rejection of an independent election probe committee shows he
fears that fraud will be revealed.  He is not prepared to relinquish power,
having said he intends to remain as Prime Minister until he is (at least)
74.  Instead, in a marathon speech of more than six hours, Hun Sen
enumerated the reforms he and his government will undertake.  One might
think this reform agenda was motivated by his realization that his
popularity is waning. But according to the Cambodia Daily, "Hun Sen's
6-Hour Reform Promise Met With Yawns." In the Phnom Penh Post, political
analyst Kem Ley expressed skepticism about Hun Sen's reforms: "I've
listened to him for 20 years, I hear the same song sung around the election
every year."

Surely Hun Sen knows he cannot govern indefinitely with a government and a
parliament devoid of opposition members. And surely Sam Rainsy, too, knows
he cannot stay forever on the sidelines of the political process that
requires fixing, that the CNRP will have to take its seats in the National
Assembly in order to affect the legislation and have a legitimate political
platform from which to speak.  This stand-off cannot continue for long.

As of this writing CNRP leader Sam Rainsy has let it be known that
opposition legislators will take up their seats in the National Assembly
"after we hold negotiations with the CPP." First on a list of 10 demands is
investigation to "assess and address" election irregularities. Sam Rainsy
was reported in the Phnom Penh Post to have said the CNRP is interested in
"transparent" negotiations: "We want to present our ideas clearly, and we
want to (share them)."

*Reality and the Wonderland *

There are men who see reality as it exists and deal with it. They can use
imagination, creativity, and positive thinking to deal with problems, or
they can learn to cope with predicaments while searching for an acceptable
solution. Inflexibility keeps situations frozen in place and destroys any
hope of progress.

There are those who embrace a world of make believe, where shortcomings are
denied and others are blamed when things go wrong. Hun Sen rewrites history
to serve his purposes. Sam Rainsy chooses to blast the Vietnamese
"swallowers of Khmer soil" to deflect awareness of his own inability to
bring Hun Sen to justice.

I don't expect some Cambodian democrats to like what I write today. But the
sooner democrats come to realize that Hun Sen is not going anywhere in the
short term, the better. It is wiser to invest energy in building unity and
solidarity through nonviolent approaches, to use this five year period to
consolidate resources, develop depth in a leadership cadre, learn the
skills of governing in order to chip away little by little the regime's
autocracy and injustice through existing political mechanisms and
processes. In this way, democrats may help the Khmer nation reach its
highest interests in liberty, justice, and the rule of law.

I would like to repeat what I have often written: Democrats must work
tirelessly to build leaders by the thousands and to focus seriously on
nation building.

.................

Dr. Gaffar: *The AHRC is not responsible for the views shared in this
article, which do not necessarily reflect its own.*


*About the Author:*

* *Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth is retired from the University of Guam, where he
taught political science for 13 years. He currently lives in the United
States. He can be reached at [email protected]. *


*







-- 
"There's only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving,
and that's your own self."
~ Aldous Huxley

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