Analysis
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY CHEANG SOKHA
Source: phnompenhpost
In
its switch to a strategy of nonstop demonstrations calling for a new
election, the opposition party has made a calculated decision to go
“all-in” and toughen its stance in a bid to ramp up domestic pressure on
the ruling party, political analysts said yesterday.
Since the
July 28 poll, the Cambodia National Rescue Party has pushed for an
independent probe into election irregularities, a request that the
government and Cambodian People’s Party have continuously rejected, and
which the international community has been unwilling to back with more than words.
As
a result, the CNRP is now responding to a growing chorus of supporters
and members who believe it has “been too soft in dealing with the CPP”,
Phoak Kung, a researcher at Britain’s University of Warwick, said.
“The
emerging consensus (at least within the circle of the opposition) is
that they need to take a tougher stance in order to make the CPP concede
[to] their demands,” Kung, whose research focuses on democratic reforms
in Cambodia, said.
CNRP public affairs
head Mu Sochua told the Post yesterday that the release of a
comprehensive report by a group of election watchdogs known as the
Election Reform Alliance (ERA) has emboldened the opposition by
providing “very clear evidence of massive fraud”.
“They [the CPP] can’t keep denying it. We can’t accept that,” Sochua said.
“[We
need] election reforms for a re-election in 2014, [and] we have to use
the ERA report as the base for electoral reform [instead of the
investigation].”
But according to Kung, even though continuous
protests may give the CNRP extra leverage to force concessions out of
the ruling party, “leaders need to be realistic” about what they can
get.
“There’s a threshold that the CPP cannot go beyond, such as re-election, the post of the National Assembly
president and investigations into irregularities. The current deadlock
can only be solved through dialogue and compromise,” he said.
Still,
the CNRP believes it has a historic opportunity to change Cambodian
politics and has thus “doubled down on using protests as the only viable
political weapon for change”, Peter Tan Keo, an independent political
analyst, said.
“Nothing else matters to the party at this point.
They are going all-in. My belief is that the CNRP is riding this ‘wave
of change’ to the very end,” he said.
“The CNRP, or any opposition for that matter, may never again get this opportunity.”
Carlyle Thayer, a Southeast Asia expert at the Australian Defence Force
Academy, said Prime Minister Hun Sen is likely to only make “minimal
concessions” despite pressure from all sides, including close allies.
A December 4 report by Chinese state-run news agency
Xinhua featured unprecedented criticisms of the government and
questioned Hun Sen’s political will to carry out proposed reforms.
“Once
Hun Sen embarks on a limited program of political reform, this will
ease pressures from within the CPP and from the international community,
including China,” Thayer said in an email.
“The opposition faces
the conundrum of whether to support these reforms or continue to stand
outside the process and dismiss all reforms as meaningless … the
opposition is likely to be unrelenting and uncompromising because
limited reforms will only entrench the Hun Sen regime in power.”
While
authorities at recent demonstrations have allowed protesters to march
and demonstrate peacefully, Thayer added that CNRP leader Sam Rainsy
might be hoping for a stronger response.
“I have always felt that
Sam Rainsy was hoping for an overreaction by security authorities to
generate martyrs for his movement. Any overreaction would have
galvanized domestic support … and swelled his ranks.”
According to
political researcher Kem Ley, protesters could face a bloody crackdown
if the demonstrations gather momentum and swell in size.
“If there
is no agreement between the two parties [on how to organise a new
election or a new National Assembly] in a secret way, I think the armed
forces will crack down on the demonstrators,” he said.
Ley added
that the best outcome would be an agreement for a new election in one or
two years’ time, a timeframe mentioned by Interior Minister Sar Kheng
last week as he told reporters a snap election was impossible.
Although
comparisons between the protest movements in Cambodia and Thailand have
been made in recent weeks, most prominently by Rainsy, the political
dynamic in the two countries is very different, said John Ciorciari,
Cambodia watcher and public policy professor at the University of
Michigan.
“Following the Thai opposition’s model of extended
protest could generate added international attention and domestic
sympathy for the protesters, especially if the authorities use violence
in response to a perceived escalation,” he said.
“[But] unlike the
Thai opposition, which has powerful friends in the military, judiciary
and other parts of the government, the CNRP faces an incumbent party
with a relatively firm grip on the security forces, the courts and other
key nodes of power.”
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY CHEANG SOKHA
Source: phnompenhpost
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