Myanmar opposition
Wed,
11 November 2015
Cambodia's opposition leader yesterday lauded the success of Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party in Myanmar’s historic election, an outcome he said will help pave the way for his party’s own electoral victory.
In a
post on his Facebook page, Cambodia National Rescue Party president Sam Rainsy
welcomed “the landslide victory” of the NLD, which he said is “good news for
democracy all over the world, especially for
Cambodia”.
Cambodia”.
He later told the Post that the
NLD’s expected victory in Myanmar’s election “shows, once more, that the days
of all authoritarian regimes worldwide are counted”.
“The wind of freedom that is
blowing throughout the world will also reach Cambodia in the near future,” he
said.
Rainsy went on to recall a trip
to Yangon in March 2013 during which he met with Suu Kyi and “discussed the
possibility of all democrats in our region joining hands to help bring about a
democratic and peaceful change in our respective countries”.
Cambodia, which has been ruled
by Prime Minister Hun Sen for more than 30 years, is set to go to the polls in
2018, with commune elections a year earlier.
During a visit to Japan
yesterday, Rainsy called on the international community to ensure that the
upcoming elections are truly democratic.
Having observed the Myanmar
elections, Cambodia’s current leaders “want to avoid the democratic process,
any democratic elections in the future”, he said in Tokyo.
“They [the international
community] should insist that democratic elections will be held as scheduled,”
he told reporters. “The free world has a very high leverage so they should not
be complacent nor lenient” on the Hun Sen regime.
Sok Eysan, spokesman of the
ruling Cambodian People’s Party, dismissed Rainsy’s remarks, while saying the
CPP, too, applauded the NLD’s democratic success.
“We congratulate the victory of
the real patriotic democratic party of Myanmar and we respect the Myanmar
people’s resolve throughout the election,” he said.
But, he added, comparisons
between the CNRP and NLD were misplaced.
“The opposition party in
Myanmar has a clear patriotic spirit. Every activity of the opposition party is
in the Myanmar people’s interest. But the opposition party in Cambodia is
completely different . . . It is 180 degrees different,” he said. “The
opposition party in Cambodia does not have patriotic ideals but ideals of
revenge, to block powerful countries from offering aid to Cambodia.”
Observers agreed yesterday that
the outcome of Myanmar’s most democratic election in 25 years would inevitably
have a bearing on Cambodia’s political future.
“It’s already had an impact on
Cambodia. Politicians on both sides have been paying very close attention,”
said Ou Virak, founder of the Future Forum think tank.
Virak drew comparisons between
fears in Myanmar of a military coup in the case of an NLD victory and recent
threats from Hun Sen that a CNRP victory in 2018 would lead to civil war.
Support for the opposition in the face of those fears, he said, could inspire
Cambodians to do the same.
But Virak said that while the
NLD’s success would have a “huge impact on the momentum of the opposition”, it
was important to remember that the election here is still more than two years
away.
Political commentator Ok Serei
Sopheak said that while it was “legitimate for the CNRP to be hopeful, I would
recommend a lot of caution”.
“The situation is completely
different” in the two countries, he said, explaining that the CNRP could not
expect to mirror the journey of the NLD.
But, he added, the Myanmar
election had undoubtedly captured the thoughts and imaginations of people
across the country.
“Everyone in Cambodia is
following the election,” he said. “On Facebook, a lot of the youths are talking
about it. It’s the primary news that has been commented on.”
Political blogger Ou Ritthy
said the election was being discussed on social media “as if it is Cambodia’s
political issue”.
On Rainsy’s post, hundreds of
opposition supporters joined him in congratulating the NLD and expressing hopes
for change.
“Next will be Cambodia to
change leader,” wrote one user. “We want the change [here] in Cambodia as
well,” another said.
However, Ritthy said both the
CNRP and the CPP could stand to learn lessons from the Myanmar election.
“I urge that the CNRP leaders
Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha study Aung San Suu Kyi’s soft approaches to fight for
a democratic change,” he said. In the “last election [in] 2013, Sam Rainsy
shamed the three top CPP leaders time and again as the losers in their three
respective constituencies; such political rhetoric should not happen again for
the election [in] 2018”.
As for the ruling party, Ritthy
said that it should learn “to have a peaceful election, rather than threatening
civil war”.
ADDITIONAL
REPORTING BY AFP
Contact
authors: Alice Cuddy and Meas Sokchea
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