Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Cambodia Forms New Government, Extending Hun Sen's Grip on Power

Prak Chan Thul
September 7, 2018 | 3:00 am
SHARE
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen attends the first plenary parliament session at the National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Wednesday (05/09). (Reuters Photo/Samrang Pring)
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen attends the first plenary parliament session at the National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Wednesday (05/09). (Reuters Photo/Samrang Pring)

Phnom Penh. Cambodia's lawmakers on Thursday (06/09) voted in a new parliamentary leadership and government, led by Prime Minister Hun Sen's ruling party, after a July general election that was derided internationally because it was largely uncontested.

Hun Sen, 66, said his government would serve "the nation and the people" after the vote extended his 33-year rule by five more years. The few changes he made to his cabinet highlight his family's growing political influence.

His son, Hun Manet, became joint chief of staff, while his youngest son Hun Many chairs the parliamentary commission on youth and sport. The National Assembly president, Heng Sarin, continues in his post.

Hun Sen's Cambodian People's Party (CPP) won all 125 parliamentary seats in the vote, which the United Nations and some Western countries have said was flawed because of the lack of a credible opposition, among other factors.

The main Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), which was dissolved by the Supreme Court last year and 118 of its members banned from politics for five years, has called the July election a farce.

"The election was illegitimate, so the National Assembly and government is also illegitimate," Kem Monovithya, the daughter of its leader Kem Sokha, who was jailed on treason charges last September, and remains in pre-trial detention, told Reuters.

"Unless there is a reversal of course, Cambodia is heading into isolation."

With his grip on power assured, Hun Sen has begun to relax a campaign against critics and opponents kicked off in the days before the election.

Fourteen government critics were freed from jail last month in a move some see as aimed at appeasing foreign criticism of the election.

Reuters

Tags: Keywords:
SHARE

POPULAR READS


News 3 hours ago

President Jokowi Urges Global Restraint as Tensions Rise in the Middle East

President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo emphasized the importance of diplomatic efforts to prevent the escalation of conflict in the Middle East
News 4 hours ago

KPK Identifies Sidoarjo Regent as Suspect in Corruption Probe

KPK has identified Ahmad Muhdlor Ali as a suspect in a corruption case involving the Sidoarjo Regional Tax Service Agency
News 5 hours ago

Economic Concerns Overshadow Security Worries for Indonesians in Iran

Indonesian citizens currently in Iran are more concerned about rising inflation than the security situation in the country.
Lifestyle 5 hours ago

'Siksa Kubur' Review: Indonesian Horror with Solid First Act

The beginning part of "Siksa Kubur" is incredibly solid across many fields, including the visual storytelling. 
Business 5 hours ago

IDX Slides 2 Percent as Geopolitical Conflict Rattles Market Confidence

The IDX attributed the subdued performance of the index at the start of the week to the escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East
COPYRIGHT © 2024 JAKARTA GLOBE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED