Cambodia, Bangladesh Aimed To Further Promote Ties, Cooperation

Cambodia and Bangladesh pledged to further strengthen bilateral ties and cooperation for mutual benefits, the Cambodian foreign ministry said, in a press statement yesterday.
The pledge was made during an official visit of Bangladeshi Foreign Minister, AK Abdul Momen to Cambodia, from Jul 14 to 16, the statement said.
Momen underlined the Bangladeshi government’s wishes to promote cooperation with Cambodia, particularly on economy and food security, during a courtesy call on Cambodian Prime Minister, Samdech Techo Hun Sen, on Friday, the statement said.
It added that, the visiting Bangladeshi foreign minister also held a bilateral meeting with Cambodian Foreign Minister, Prak Sokhonn on Friday, discussing bilateral cooperation, as well as, regional and global issues of common concern and interests.
“The two foreign ministers noticed with pleasure, the similarity between both countries on several aspects, serving as ground for building and expanding the existing good relations,” the statement said.
Within the framework of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Momen sought Cambodia’s support, as the ASEAN chair this year, for Bangladesh’s bid to become an ASEAN sectoral dialogue partner, it said.
Sokhonn assured Momen of Cambodia’s support, underlining that, it needs passing through the ASEAN secretariat’s assessment and a consensus among all ASEAN member states, according to the statement.

Source: NAM News Network

Cambodia’s Hun Sen Prepared to Extend His Rule

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party is well placed to extend its rule in next year’s national elections after trouncing the competition at last week’s local commune elections.
The victory would also enable Hun Sen to hand power to his eldest son.
As expected, the CPP took advantage of a ban on the main opposition Cambodian National Rescue Party, whose supporters struggled to reorganize before the vote with hundreds of its members before the courts or in jail.
However, the Candlelight Party, which emerged from the remnants of the CNRP, established itself as Cambodia’s main opposition party, with a total of 17 political parties vying for thousands of positions in 1,652 communes — clusters of three to 30 villages.
“The elections went the way most people were expecting, so there were certainly no surprises there,” said David Totten, managing director of Emerging Markets Consulting in Phnom Penh.
“Given the instability that there’s been regionally and internationally, there may even be some people who’d breathe a sigh of relief that Cambodia – whilst continuing on a political path that’s not acceptable in the eyes of many – at least it’s not a cause of instability or concern in the region.”
Final results will be announced by the National Election Committee on June 26, but the preliminary count shows the CPP won 72.7% of the popular vote, up from 50.76% in 2017, when the CNRP scored almost 44% of the overall vote, shortly before it was outlawed by the courts.
This year, the Candlelight Party won 21.78% of the popular vote, a long way behind the CPP and the CNRP’s previous tally, but there were mitigating circumstances.
Opposition candidates were split among a slew of new parties and the CNRP’s ever-popular former leader, Kem Sokha, did not contest the vote while remaining under house arrest amid his continuing treason trial.
Other senior opposition figures had fled abroad including co-CNRP leader Sam Rainsy.
Ou Virak, president of the Phnom Penh-based Future Forum think tank, said the Candlelight Party had performed well, given the circumstances, and that was largely due to old allegiances.
“Despite all of the government’s attempts to either crack down, suppress, harass the Sam Rainsy popularity, that gets core supporters, that pool of people remain, and I think they remain very loyal to his politics and then to the politics of the opposition,” he said.
These results have an added significance because opinion polls are shunned in Cambodia and Hun Sen has backed his son, Hun Manet, as the next CPP prime minister, a move that has been endorsed by the party.
Totten said it was “far too early and far too difficult” to say whether a transition of power would go smoothly but he added, “In any system when a leader who’s been around for such a long time in a position of such obvious control, people start to anticipate his or her departure.
“That could lead to a certain degree of unfamiliar instability around political alliances,” he said, adding the government meanwhile would concentrate on reforming and repairing the damage caused to the economy by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Voter turnout was also low in what Liz Throssell, spokesperson for the United Nations human rights office in Geneva, described as a “paralyzing political environment” in a country which has witnessed a “systematic shrinking of democratic space.”
She also noted that 118 former CNRP members had been excluded from running for office for five years, while candidates were reluctant to register complaints, fearing retaliatory legal proceedings or being struck from the ballot.
Eight days after the poll, the Phnom Penh Municipal Court jailed dozens of CNRP supporters for between five to eight years, including Khmer-American lawyer Theary Seng.
Chak Sopheap, executive director of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, said the convictions and jailing had highlighted the government’s “unwillingness to allow any opposition to exist in the country.”
“As well as some form of intimidation and threats of legal action, certain candidates have been removed from the lists before the commune council election,” she said. “All of these incidents, they are not surprising because this is the similar pattern that has been used in the past.”
The dissolution of the CNRP enabled the CPP to win every seat contested in the National Assembly the following year, which resulted in the country becoming a one-party state for the first time since 1993 U.N.-sponsored elections.
Ou Virak said he expected the voting trend seen at this year’s commune election to be repeated at the national ballot in July next year. Mergers with smaller parties are possible but it is unlikely the Candlelight Party could recapture more than 40% of the popular vote, as the CNRP did, he said.
“I think that will be seen as too much of a risk to accept for the ruling party. I think, looking back again, they dissolved the CNRP easily,” he said. “They can do that again if there’s any real threat to their victory.”

Source: Voice of America

CPP Fully Supports 10th Proposed Amendment to Constitution

The ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) has voiced its full support for the 10th proposed amendment to the country’s constitution.
The proposed amendment to 8 articles in the constitution aims to ensure the supreme institution of Cambodia, particularly the executive body in charge of leading overall national affairs, could operate smoothly and sustainably, said the ruling party in an announcement released at the end of its two-day Central Committee’s Extraordinary Conference.
It will also ensure the protection and maintenance of the country’s peace, social security, public order, and political stability at all circumstances which is the foundation for the nation’s development and happiness of the Cambodian people.
At a press conference here on July 14, Minister of Justice H.E. Keut Rith explained that the 10th amendment to Cambodia constitution is all for the national interest, and will not degrade the country’s multi-party democracy under a constitutional monarchy.
It is the ultimate purpose of constitutional amendment proposal endorsed earlier by the Council of Ministers.
The amendment will supplement the 1993 constitution for the best of Cambodia and its people, H.E. Minister added.
According to the minister, the Constitutional Council had studied carefully the proposed amendment and assured that it will not affect Cambodia’s constitutional monarchy and multi-party democracy.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodia’s Ruling Party Held Extraordinary Conference To Set Action Plan For 2023

The ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP), yesterday, held an extraordinary conference of its Central Committee, to set out an action plan for 2023, the year in which the country’s next general elections will be held.
The party’s honorary president, Samdech Heng Samrin said, in his opening speech, that, the CPP’s landslide victory in the commune election last month, clearly reflected people’s confidence in the party’s leadership and political programmes.
“We will strive to make our party even more victorious in the seventh National Assembly election in 2023,” he said.
Samrin, who is also president of the National Assembly, noted that the country’s successful fight against the COVID-19 pandemic was a great achievement made by the CPP-led government, in protecting people’s lives and stabilising the economy.
The CPP extraordinary conference lasted for two days. It was presided over by CPP’s president, Samdech Techo Hun Sen, who is the prime minister of Cambodia, and was yesterday attended by more than 3,400 party members from across the country. The party’s current central committee consists of 865 members.
The CPP has ruled the country since 1979. General elections are held every five years in the country.

Source: NAM News Network

CPP Central Committee Wraps Up Extraordinary Conference

The extraordinary conference of the Central Committee of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) was concluded this evening at the party’s headquarters in Phnom Penh, under the chairmanship of CPP President Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen, and CPP Honorary President Samdech Akka Moha Ponhea Chakrei Heng Samrin.
The meeting reiterated the CPP’s support for Samdech Techo Hun Sen as the Prime Ministerial candidate for the 7th legislature of the National Assembly and H.E. Hun Manet, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces, and Commander of the Royal Cambodian Army, as Prime Minister-candidate for the future.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press