The National Assembly yesterday passed in a landslide vote the
first of three judicial draft laws – the Law on the Organisation and
Functioning of the Courts – in a move that signalled to observers that
passage of the remaining two was practically a fait accompli.Sixty-four Cambodian People’s Party lawmakers – one was absent –
voted unanimously to approve the draft law in its current form despite
an ongoing parliamentary boycott by the opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party, and over the objections of civil society, which has
blasted the laws for their opaque drafting process and their potential
to blur the line between the Kingdom’s executive and judiciary.
One of the biggest changes called for in yesterday’s bill is the
creation of specialised courts, a move that one legal expert
characterised as unnecessarily complicated.
“I would like to thank the National Assembly, which adopted the Law
on the Organisation and Functioning of the Courts today,” Minister of
Justice Ang Vong Vathana told lawmakers yesterday, adding that the aim
of the law was “to make our people trust in the courts”.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann, however, maintained the party’s position
that the current assembly was not legitimate, and promised to fix any
flawed legislation passed during the opposition’s absence.
“We will amend all of the laws that do not serve the interests of the
nation when we have full power in the government and in the
parliament,” he said.
Nonetheless, observers, including political analyst Kem Ley, said
yesterday that the passage of the law’s companion legislation was only a
matter of time. Ley characterised the hasty passage of the law as part
of a broader scramble to enact more restrictive legislation in light of
the CPP’s losses in last year’s national elections.“I went down to the communities, down to the villages; it’s very
clear right now that the supporters of the CPP are in the minority,” he
said. “So the group of the CPP in the central committee understands
clearly the situation. If they move forward as a democratic country,
they will not win the next election. Every law, every reform is to keep
control on power, not to find justice for the people.”Duch Piseth, trial-monitoring program coordinator for the Cambodian
Center for Human Rights, also said the two sister bills were as good as
approved. “[The CPP] made it clear again and again that they would pass
these laws in a few days, so we are sure that they’re going to pass
these laws quickly,” Piseth said, expressing concern over the lack of
debate on the bills.
In addition to enacting onerous regulations, Piseth continued, the
law would ensure that “the Ministry of Justice controls,
administratively and financially, the courts”.Legal expert Sok Sam Oeun has also expressed concern over the law's
threat to judicial independence, as well as logistical hurdles brought
about by its creation of specialised courts – for criminal, civil,
commercial and labour cases, each overseen by its own president – within
Cambodia’s municipal and provincial courts.
“It is too many layers,” he said on Wednesday.
Additionally, he continued, the law would deepen the Justice
Ministry’s control by codifying its de facto power over court clerks,
ensure that civil cases would continue to be overseen by often-biased
prosecutors and enact a system in which small-claims cases would be
decided upon, in part, by non-professional counsellors.
The assembly yesterday also began its read-through of the next draft
law, the Law on the Role of Judges and Prosecutors, and is expected to
continue reading the bill today.
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