Be up front with NEC plans, CNRP tells CPP


Op-Ed: The Phnom Penh Post
Be up front with NEC plans, CNRP tells CPP
Fri, 14 March 2014

A day after opposition leader Sam Rainsy said election reform talks were being “cut off” due to ruling party intransigence on the issue of National Election Committee reform, the opposition has asked the Cambodian People’s Party to officially declare its stance on the matter.

Senior CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap told the Post on Wednesday that reform of the NEC – widely seen as beholden to the ruling party and blamed by election watchdogs for a number of issues that allegedly compromised last July’s election – would not take place this mandate.

But the Cambodia National Rescue Party has said it will wait for a response to a letter sent to the CPP yesterday before deciding to officially call off negotiations, the next session of which are scheduled for Monday.

“The [CNRP] understands that issues related to the reform of the electoral institution into an independent, constitutionally mandated body [that is] chosen by two-thirds of all National Assembly lawmakers is a necessary priority for election reform that cannot be ignored,” head CNRP negotiator Son Chhay wrote to his CPP counterpart Bin Chhin.

“Please, Your Excellency, confirm the position of the Cambodian People’s Party on the proposal.… Whether the [CPP] agrees or not, and how the [CPP] understands the reform of electoral institutions, so that the joint committee can take these issues for discussion on March 17,” he wrote.

Chhay also asked the CPP to assist in organising a joint seminar on election reforms involving both parties, experts and civil society groups. Last Friday, the CNRP invited NGOs to its own separate seminar on election reform.

Chhin could not be reached for comment yesterday but his fellow CPP negotiator, Yeap, said the CNRP’s demands were holding back talks.

Despite his comments on Wednesday, Yeap declined to confirm that the CPP’s response would necessarily lead to talks being called off, saying the upper echelons of the party would have to decide.

“The [CPP’s] stance is to bring peace and a spirit of national reconciliation. We will wait to see how [party] leaders understand [this issue],” he said.