Cambodia PM's party to win 'all seats' in flawed election

AFP  |  Phnom Penh 

Cambodia's flawed elections are set to hand the ruling party of strongman all 125 parliamentary seats, a told AFP today, an outcome that would turn the country into a one-party state after a vote devoid of an opposition.

Yesterday's ballot has prolonged Hun Sen's 33-year rule, but observers say questions of legitimacy may haunt the wily political survivor as frustration sets in over lack of change.

The ruling (CPP) "will take all seats across the country," told AFP at party headquarters, hailing "a landslide victory".

In response the National Rescue Party (CNRP), the country's only real opposition who were disbanded before the poll, issued a statement lamenting "the death of democracy" and a "new, dark day" in Cambodian history.

Some 8.3 million people registered to cast their ballots in the vote -- Cambodia's sixth since United Nations-sponsored polls were held in 1993 after decades of conflict.

said the predicted clean sweep was based on initial results. Final figures are due August 15.

Asked about the country turning into a one-party state, the CPP said it was "the decision of the people," adding that Cambodia's constitution allows for a multi-party system.

But the ballot lacked any serious challengers after cracked down on the opposition last year, leading to the arrest one of its leaders and then the dissolution of the party by the

Opposition figures had urged a boycott of the poll.

But election authorities warned they would take action against those pressing for a "clean-finger" campaign and pointed to an 82 per cent turnout as evidence that the boycott call had failed.

Experts say high turnouts are common in authoritarian states where voter intimidation is more widespread.

Yet in a sign of a kickback from unhappy voters, around 600,000 ballots -- around 10 percent of the total -- were spoiled, according to a preliminary count by the

came to power in 1985 in a country still plagued by civil war and his CPP has won every election since 1998.

But wearied by a culture of impunity and corruption, more than 44 per cent of voters backed the opposition CNRP in 2013 polls, creating the most serious challenge to Hun Sen in years.

This time the Cambodian leader ruthlessly moved against his critics in the election run-up, corralling civil society, independent media and political opponents.

That led many western governments to pull their support from the vote. It was "neither free nor fair and failed to represent the will of the Cambodian people," the said in a statement.

The US would consider a "significant expansion" of visa restrictions introduced last year against some senior Cambodian officials, it warned.

The said the outcome of the vote "lacks credibility" and does not reflect the will of the people.

In contrast China, a key ally which has provided cash and soft loans to without raising questions over human rights and democracy, offered its "sincere congratulations" on the poll, according to

The 65-year-old Hun Sen is also seen as a stabilising force in the eyes of many in a kingdom with a bloody and bitter recent history that spans civil war, the horrors of the and occupation by

Hun Sen has cultivated his support base through and investment schemes that have added malls and condos to the skyline of the once sleepy capital

The also adroitly turned to Cambodia's garment sector, which employs about 750,00 people, showering cash gifts on workers in the months ahead of polls.

"I am happy that the won overwhelmingly, more than previous mandates," said supporter Sang Kimson, 38, the morning after the election.

But many other Cambodians are despondent at the idea of yet another term for Hun Sen, who is among the world's longest-serving leaders.

"It is him again," shrugged one man sitting outside a coffee shop who asked not to be named and who said he felt "hopeless" watching the results come in.

Phil Robertson, deputy director of the division at Human Rights Watch, predicted simmering discontent.

"I think what we will see here in is continued passive resistance and anger by the Cambodian people, they weren't given the opportunity to vote for the people they wanted," he said.

Hun Sen has held onto power through political and family alliances in the police, military and media.

He was installed as during the Vietnamese occupation of the 1980s after defecting from the Khmer Rouge, which killed a quarter of Cambodia's population from 1975 to 1979.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, July 30 2018. 18:45 IST