By Luke Hunt
May 25, 2012
The-diplomat
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) have been on election footing
since the second half of 2011. The big test is still a year out, when
national elections will mark 20 years since U.N. troops oversaw the
first ballot that began this country’s transition to democracy.
However, commune elections will be held on June 3, and will provide
an important test for the CPP, which has trounced virtually all
opposition ranks in recent years. There are about 1,620 communes across
the country. Each represents a cluster of villages and the elections,
held every five years, aren’t unlike council or local district polls in
the West.
The CPP will head into the poll as overwhelming favorite, but how the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP), whose namesake leader lives in self-imposed exile following a conviction, fares will provide valuable insights into Hun Sen’s broader popularity.
His government has been beset by angry
protests over alleged land grabs, a yawning wealth gap coupled with
rising prices for everyday goods and high handedness and corruption
among government officials.
This could translate into a loss of votes, particularly in Phnom
Penh and provincial cities where Sam Rainsy has traditionally polled
well. Further complicating the issues this year are the royalists, who
have been a spent force at recent polls.
Funcinpec had for years played a political game of cat and mouse
with Hun Sen until its leader Prince Norodom Ranariddh, son of the King
Father and half-brother of King Norodom Sihamoni, was banished by his
own members for gross corruption and Funcinpec effectively split and
fell apart.
His banishment came after a court jailed him for 18 months in
absentia after he quietly sold off Funcinpec party headquarters as if
it was personal asset and then re-directed the fund to acquire a
private property.
Now, a deal has been struck
aimed at ending the animosity between the two main royalist parties.
This means the Norodom Ranariddh Party (NRP) will merge with Funcinpec
to form a single party under the Funcinpec name. However, Funcinpec has
a long and difficult road ahead if it’s to make any kind of return from
the political oblivion. At the 2008 national poll, the NRP and
Funcinpec won just two seats each in the National Assembly, while the
SRP improved its standing to 26; the CPP holds 90 seats.
Any gains could come at the expense of the SRP, but in Cambodia’s
remote villages, which have remained loyal to Hun Sen ever since he
ended the years of bloody conflict in 1998, Funcinpec are unlikely to
score much success.
As a result, Norodom Ranariddh should expect to remain where he has
been for the last four years, in the political wilderness. The SRP will
maintain its current standing while for the CPP it will be business as
usual once the commune elections are done.
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