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From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 6:24 AM
Subject: Fwd: CAMBODIA: Time to get to work
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*FOR PUBLICATION
*AHRC-ETC-036-2013
October 17, 2013

*An article by **Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth* *published by the Asian Human
Rights Commission*
*CAMBODIA: Time to get to work*

The more Hun Sen attempts to ignore grievances of the increasingly vocal
cohort of Cambodian voters who allege election irregularities and fraud,
the more the emboldened and determined opposition party demands an
independent impartial joint CNRP-CPP investigation committee to seek more
accurate accounting of ballots cast in the July 28th national election.

A metaphor seems appropriate. Imagine spectators gathering around a glass
jar filled with water to watch one of Cambodians' passtimes, *chul trei krem
* or fish fighting. Two fish swim around, looking for one another's weak
area to attack. Gills open, fins and tails flapping, their scales turn dark
colors, the fish seem to contract, poised to attack. Would it be a fight to
the death or will an owner interrupt the fight to save his fish for the
next fight?

The Cambodians' political deadlock is a tragedy. There cannot be a winner.
Hun Sen and his CPP know, and concerned foreign governments, too, know, the
ruling party can in no way continue to govern as a one-party government and
a one-party parliament devoid of opposition members who were duly elected
by at least half of the country's voters. Half of the country has openly
rejected Hun Sen's 28 years of autocratic rule and the CPP's 34 year
domination of Cambodian governance. Even many CPP partisans acknowledge
that fresh leadership is overdue. In fact, reliable reports assert that
increasing numbers of civil servants are unhappy with the status quo and
that officers in the armed forces are overtly questioning if they are on
the wrong side of history.

Hun Sen and his close associates are vehemently against an investigation
committee. His reluctance is suspect if, as Hun Sen asserts, the CPP won
the election fairly. Sam Rainsy is on the record as saying he would abide
by the findings of a nonpartisan investigating committee. Would the true
reason be that Hun Sen has no intention of ceding power? The aftermath of
Cambodia's recent election has surely made clear that Hun Sen and the CPP
are no longer secure nor uncontested as they once were. More Cambodians
agree it's time for change, *ph'do.*

Hun Sen seems aware of his tenuous hold on power. So, on Sept 26 he spoke
at his first new cabinet meeting for more than 6 hours about reforms,
addressing corruption, nepotism, the rule of law and other issues. But
Cambodians say Hun Sen and the CPP have made many undelivered promises
before. Hun Sen's proposed reforms may come too late.

*Baek Chea O, Ho Chea Stoeng *

To "open Pandora's box" means to take an action that seems small and
benign, but that produces harsh and sweeping results. Such a Pandora's box
was opened when King Sihamoni acted to convene Cambodia's Fifth Parliament
on Sept 23 despite popular appeals not to do so, including even the
delivery to the Royal Palace of the signatures of about half a million
voters who petitioned the king to refrain from opening the Assembly until
after an investigation, and warnings from the opposition that it would
boycott the National Assembly if convened on that date.

The Khmers' expression *Baek Chea O, Ho Chea Stoeng,* refers to a
disagreement that takes a life of its own as it spreads like flowing water
that creates water stream and turns into a river. The king's opening of the
National Assembly of 123 seats total, with only 68 members of the CPP
attending, left 55 seats empty of opposition members. This one-party
Assembly approved Hun Sen as Prime Minister and his cabinet as the Royal
Government of Cambodia. The stream of opposition quickly grew from a stream
into a river.

The CNRP immediately characterized the new Parliament and the Royal
Government as unconstitutional and urged the world's nations not to
recognize the government. The CPP countered by calling the CNRP's actions
unconstitutional as the opposition rejected the Assembly and the Government
sanctioned by the King.

This, again, is like the Khmer folk dance the *Ramvong *circle dance. Here,
politicians from both parties are participants. They dance around and
around in a circle as long as the drumbeats *thak theeng thong* sound. Like
*trei krem samdaeng tuor* or fighting fish showing their aggressive
postures, the dancers perform their *chak kbach* showing off their skills
in leg and hand movement.

"The ballet of dueling press conferences has begun. But the playbook has
changed," writes Elizabeth Becker, author of *When The War Was Over,* in
"Cambodians Refuse to Accept Rigged Elections" in YaleGolobal Online.
"Cambodians are far less likely to accept Hun Sen's promises and say so in
social media. Foreign partners are watching, worried about their
investments," she says.

On Oct 6, the CNRP held a people's congress at Freedom Park where its
leaders met with some 15,000 to 20,000 voters who passed a 10-point
Resolution instructing the party to demand the establishment of an
investigation committee, to carry on mass protests, undertake a general
strike of civil servants and workers across the country, intensify
diplomatic contacts, to submit "millions of thumbprints" to the UN and to
the 18 signatory governments of the Paris Peace Accords, among others.

On her Website, CNRP leader Mu Sochua reaffirmed her party's commitment to
nonviolent mass protests and a general strike, and announced a mass rally
at Freedom Park on Oct 23, the date of the 22nd anniversary of the Paris
Peace Accords that ended Cambodia's conflict involving four Khmer warring
factions: "We will be coming from all national roads and will meet at
Freedom Park at 3PM." Sochua remarked, as soon as CNRP vice president Kem
Sokha declared "we would organize a mass protest during the Water
Festival," the government immediately cancelled the annual Water Festival, *Bon
Om Touk*, for 2013.

The *Bon Om Touk* festival, which takes place in November, has typically
been attended by as many as two million spectators from across the country
that come to Phnom Penh for three days of boat races to celebrate the
seasonal reversal of water flow from the Tonle Sap Great Lake into the
Mekong. In this heated political atmosphere, Hun Sen has reasons to fear.

Meanwhile, Hun Sen's RGC has moved swiftly to fill all nine parliamentary
commissions with CPP members thereby keeping elected CNRP members who
boycotted the Parliament effectively outside of the National Assembly.

CNRP leader Sam Rainsy has been visiting foreign capitals for two weeks to
drum up support for an investigation committee and non-recognition of the
current regime. He also calls on the signatory governments of the Paris
Peace Accords to intervene in Cambodia's deadlock.

However, the Oct 9 Phnom Penh Post reported that some lawyers and analysts
question Sam Rainsy and the CNRP's "legal basis" for charging the National
Assembly as "unconstitutional."

Article 76 of the Cambodian Constitution stipulates "The National Assembly
consists of at least 120 members." In Cambodia's Constitutional Council's
Decision No. 054/005/2003 CC.D of July 22, 2003, the Council interpreted
paragraph 1 of Article 76: "This means that there shall be at least 120
deputies (assembly members) to be able to form the National Assembly at
every legislature. Electoral law cannot limit the number of
parliamentarians to less than 120. This paragraph 1 is a necessary
condition for the formation of a National Assembly but not its functioning."

For Prime Minister Hun Sen, the King's stamp of approval on the CPP-only
National Assembly and the RGC makes both creations legitimate although half
of the country refuses to accept them and insists on asking, "Where is my
vote?"

As Becker writes, Cambodians are "an awakened citizenry (who) refuses to
play along. Integrated with the world, many Cambodians have become too
aware, too sophisticated, to accept the rule of a corrupt elite that relies
on force and openly steals the fortunes of the country while trampling on
individual rights."

*Realpolitik*

In the world in which nation-states seek to maximize national interests,
idealism and humanity take a back seat.

Mu Sochua's frustration is understandable as governments that push for
electoral investigation and reform also call on disputants to work together
as these governments congratulate Hun Sen for his election "victory" and
deal with him as legitimate. They speak ambiguously. "You can't go both
ways," Sochua says.

On Oct 14, France and Australia joined other countries such as China,
Singapore, Japan, India, Brazil in congratulating Hun Sen on his "victory"
and on becoming Prime Minister. Which country will be next? And one has to
question whether Sam Rainsy and the CNRP are engaging in a futile exercise.

Unfortunately, that's what Realpolitik is: to seek maximization of power
and influences, and of national interests. Everything else is secondary.
Justice for the half of Cambodia's people who reject Cambodia's current
regime is secondary. In practice, a government does recognize another on
the basis of political expediency that serves its goals, more than on some
ideal principles.

*Facing Reality *

Cambodia is not going to develop or improve if democrats who want
*ph'do *continue
to repeat thinking and behavior that has brought no positive result. They
should reassess their ways of thinking and their actions rather than
feeling victimized and blaming others for their misfortune. Lord Buddha
taught 2,500 years ago, "What we think we become," and "We are responsible
for what we do or not do."

Facing reality, democrats must learn and understand the world in which they
live. Learn to imagine, to create, and to apply positive thinking as Buddha
preached. Critical thinking does not mean criticizing someone for
something, but assessing our actions and behavior to determine whether they
have brought us closer to our goals. Rather than fueling racism against the
Vietnamese immigrants in Cambodia, democrats should re-examine and
introduce reforms to Cambodia's existing immigration policy. As the late
King Father once said, the divine placed Khmers and Vietnamese as neighbors
eternally, Cambodians cannot pick up their borders and move. It is long
past time for democrats to brush up on and apply Buddha's teachings.

I believe the CPP is incapable of effective reform. Its image is too deeply
embedded in the minds of the Cambodian people for the CPP to rebound. To
survive, the CPP's only viable tactic is to divide the opposition. This, it
does well. Hun Sen will not cede power, and with each passing day the
likelihood that an impartial investigation into the July election results
becomes less likely. By attending the opening of the Assembly,
international players were, in fact, signaling to the CNRP that the time
for work is here. Even if an investigation was now to be launched and the
CPP found culpable, Hun Sen would not relinquish power.

In response, the CNRP must remain united and resolute. This is required
both to counter the government's attempts to divide it, and to keep faith
with the hundreds of thousands who have cast their lot with this new
coalition party as the best hope for themselves and their nation. But at
this time, keeping faith with the voters must mean taking the seats in the
National Assembly that it has rightly earned. It's time to work change from
the inside, master the levers of power, and train those who will assume
leadership after the next election. By remaining outside the Assembly, the
CNRP leaves the CPP free reign to introduce laws and projects to its
advantage.

These next five years offer the CNRP an opportunity for leadership
development and consolidation of political gains across the nation.
Building thousands of democratic leaders involves cultivating leadership
capacity through training and continuing the leadership's openness to
voices and ideas from those who have been denied that voice for decades.
These challenges are formidable, but not insurmountable. When the next
election approaches, the CNRP will be ready to take the reins of
government, at last.

*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]. *


*


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