Prime Minister Hun Sen offered equal parts carrot and stick in a
speech aimed at the opposition yesterday, affirming the ruling party’s
willingness to concede key opposition demands while simultaneously
threatening prosecution and forceful crackdowns if demonstrations start
anew.
Speaking to disabled soldiers in Kampot province, Hun Sen said the
ruling party would acquiesce to the opposition’s demand for its own
television licence, as long as it applied through a private company. Hun
Sen also said he would give the National Election Committee
constitutional status – another major sticking point for the opposition
and observers.However, the premier tempered the concessions with sharply worded
threats to both Cambodia National Rescue Party leadership and those who
would join any grassroots-level demonstrations, saying to those who may
plan to come out, “be careful of death”. On the subject of an opposition TV licence, Hun Sen said he had first
made the offer to the CNRP on April 9 in a phone call with party
president Sam Rainsy.
“I also asked [Information Minister] Khieu Kanharith to divide one
channel from the frequency of the national television [TVK] for them to
set up” a station, the premier said, blaming the party leadership’s
reluctance to file the paperwork on their stubbornness at the
negotiating table.
The prime minister went on to say that he would also agree to adding a
constitutional mandate for the NEC to Chapter 15 of the constitution,
even though he indicated that he found the idea somewhat outlandish.“The National Election Committee as a constitutional institution, I
have never heard of such a thing,” Hun Sen said before signalling he had
accepted the request. “[We] will amend the constitution to add one more
chapter to put the [NEC] into … the constitution.”
Hun Sen also reaffirmed the ruling party’s concession to hold the
2018 election in February, several months in advance – an early election
being a key opposition demand – but took pains to remind listeners that
there was still an iron fist inside the velvet glove.“I have already let you be free for a while, and if you want to test
me, I need only 48 hours” to crack down, he said, going on to warn the
opposition against being “overbearing” in their demands of
constitutional change.Hun Sen also insinuated that documents accusing CNRP leaders of
incitement were ready and waiting, should he deem it necessary to file
them.“Incitement documents are already drafted,” he said. “You cannot
escape, and you have no immunity – no need to remove your
[parliamentary] immunity in the National Assembly, just [to file] an
arrest warrant.”
He went on to urge the opposition to join the National Assembly and
get down to the work of drafting their proposed reforms, but concluded
with another thinly veiled threat.“It is your right as to whether you recognise [the government] or
not, [but] if you are against the law, you will be handcuffed – and
don’t try to hide in an embassy,” the prime minister went on to say.Moeun Chhean Nariddh, director of the Cambodian Institute for Media
Studies, said that an opposition television station would be a big step
forward in a country with a ruling party-dominated broadcast media.
“Given the recent media blackout on the return of the leader of the
opposition party [Sam Rainsy] and of the electoral campaign by the
state-run TV and private TV that is aligned with the ruling party, this
is a good opportunity for the opposition party to represent their
voice,” he said.However, CNRP deputy president Kem Sokha yesterday dismissed Hun
Sen’s offer of a TV licence as “bait”, and said the party had more
important things to worry about.“It is not important, this [offer] about the television licence. What
is important, is the electoral reform,” he said. “We have not thought
of this yet – we are thinking of [a new] election first.”
Sokha reacted more favourably to the suggestion to join the National
Assembly to draft the NEC constitutional amendment, but said the
opposition couldn’t end its boycott without a clear, detailed agreement
in place.“If the [ruling] Cambodian People’s Party really has the intention to
amend the constitution, it must allow the negotiating groups to meet
and talk together. [We] must have clear political agreement and
witnesses,” he said.Fellow opposition lawmaker-elect Son Chhay also responded coolly to
Hun Sen’s concessions, saying they had been on the table for months, and
hardly represented a leap forward.“The offer has already been around for quite some time,” he said.
“Now we need to clarify what it means by ‘constitutional NEC’ … to write
down the points that will make the NEC truly independent – independent
budget, independent decisions, independence in the way people will be
recruited.… And the National Assembly needs to be reformed too, because
it has been a rubber stamp for too long.”“The offer of a [new] election in February was not acceptable, that’s
why we got stuck” in stalled negotiations in April, he added.
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