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POST TIME: 30 July, 2018 00:00 00 AM / LAST MODIFIED: 29 July, 2018 11:56:43 PM
CAMBODIA ELECTION
Polls close as ruling party eyes landslide victory
Compatriots have chosen the democratic path and used your rights, says Hun Sen
AFP

Polls close as ruling party eyes landslide victory

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen (C) casts his vote during the general elections at a polling station in Phnom Penh yesterday as his wife Bun Rany (centre L) looks on. AFP PHOTO

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s ruling party predicted a landslide win in yesterday’s one-horse election, an expected outcome after the main opposition was banned, paving the way for its leader Hun Sen to prolong his 33 years in power, reports AFP.

Hun Sen, who came to power in 1985 in a country still plagued by civil war, has cracked down on dissent in the run-up to the poll, pressuring civil society, independent media and his political opponents. The National Election Commission said voter turnout was 82 percent, surpassing the final figure in 2013 of roughly 69 percent.

The 65-year-old prime minister, a one-time defector from the brutal Khmer Rouge regime, has pointed to stability and growth as the fruits of his rule—a message that resonates with his base.

“Compatriots have chosen the democratic path and used your rights,” Hun Sen said on his official Facebook page in an apparent swipe at the opposition, which called for a boycott.

A ruling party spokesperson forecast a huge victory. But there were also signs of despondency and indifference, and an expert on elections in Southeast Asia said the high turnout was misleading.

“With one-party rule election turnout is generally higher, not lower, because the party, in this case the Cambodian People’s Party, relies on voter intimidation more, relies on vote buying more, and turnout should be inflated that way,” said Lee Morgenbesser from the school of government and international relations at Griffith University.

Pictures of spoilt ballots circulated on social media though they could not be independently verified. AFP correspondents saw dozens of blank ballots set aside during counting.

“I did not go to vote. I slept at home,” said Khem Chan Vannak, a former commune chief elected with the now-banned opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP).

“A lot of my friends did not go to vote.”

Western governments have withdrawn their assistance from the election, citing its lack of credibility. Nineteen small—or hitherto unknown—parties competed against Hun Sen’s ruling CPP in the absence of the CNRP.