Youth Support for Protests Cools as Fears Mount
The Cambodia Daily 14-08-2013: One of the most significant and
memorable aspects of the fiercely contested July 28 national election was the
explosion of youth engagement during the campaign season, with hordes of young
Cambodians driving through the streets on motorbikes calling for change.
The youth vote has been widely
credited as one of the reasons the opposition CNRP made major gains, with
preliminary results giving them 55 parliamentary seats to the CPP’s 68.
But with the country in limbo as a
dispute over the results drags on and the CNRP threatens to call mass protests,
the mood among the youth has dampened.
There has been a visible military
buildup in Phnom Penh following the vote to ensure security in the eventuality
of demonstrations, and its impact around Phnom Penh university campuses on
Tuesday was evident.
Twenty-two-year-old Ung Kanha, an
English literature student at the Institute of New Khmer, said he would like to
participate in protests against the election results, but would refrain from
doing so due to the fear of reprisals from authorities.
“I do not think that the CPP
bringing in the army is a good idea because it is intimidation to make people
afraid,” she said. “I would like to join demonstrations but I will not as I am
worried about violence, and also my parents will not let me.”
In the run-up to the election, the
fearlessness of young campaigners was clear for all to see, perhaps as they
were unable to remember the political turbulence of the past.
But interviews with students Tuesday
showed how much more wary they have become in recent days.
“I have heard that most students are
in favor of the demonstrations, but I am not sure how many will really go,”
said 20-year-old Leam Sovannrathana, an accounting student at the Cambodian
Mekong University in Sen Sok district.
“Some of my friends said they want
to go home to escape and my parents asked me to leave university but I said I
will wait and see,” he said.
“The election was a fraud and the
CPP know this, so it is very important to demonstrate,” Mr. Sovannrathana
continued, adding, however, that he was unsure if he would join in as he too
was afraid of violence.
Outside the Royal University of Law
and Economics, students gathered in clusters preparing to take exams.
One group of three women—all law
students aged 20 who were too afraid to give their names because a security
guard was standing close by speaking into a walky-talky—said that the election
was neither free nor fair and they hoped that any opposition demonstrations
would draw large numbers.
Yet only one of the three said she
would attend.
“People will get angrier after the
election and this is why the government brings out the army and tanks because
they are afraid of the people who voted against them,” one of the university
students said.
“However, the problem that the CNRP
has is that any demonstration will draw two groups wanting different things—one
protesting the unfair election and asking for an investigation, and those who
think we won the election calling for [Prime Minister] Hun Sen to go,” the law
student said, before the reporters were escorted off the premises by university
authorities and security guards because advanced written permission to enter
the grounds had not been received.
Ou Rithy, a political blogger, said
that the problem the CNRP faces is that previous to the election, the message
was simple: Change.
Now, it is more complicated.
“Sam Rainsy is calling for mass
demonstrations but no one else in the CNRP is asking people to do this, they
are talking about peaceful responses, so even inside the CNRP they cannot agree
which way to protest,” Mr. Rithy said Tuesday.
CNRP candidate Mu Sochua said
Tuesday that the party continues to engage its youth supporters because this
was their election.
However, she stressed that mass
demonstrations were definitely a last resort.
“The people have spoken, the change
has been made and they won’t accept less than that,” Ms. Sochua said.
“However, we won’t jump into a mass
protest—that is the last resort.
“First, we must address the
irregularities, then sit down together and resolve our differences.”
But even if demonstrations were to
occur, there was still no reason for the government to respond with such a show
of strength, she said.
“We had many demonstrations before
the election with many thousands of people, and was there any violence then?
No—so by bringing in the tanks it is clear whose side the government is on,”
she said.
“The people ask for change from this
style of leadership and then this leadership brings tanks onto the streets.
“Is this the change they think
people wanted?”
Still, for 21-year-old law student
Bou Veasna, joining the protest is far from certain.
“It is the opposition’s right to
protest because even though the National Election Committee announced the
result, we cannot believe it yet, but [I] don’t want to join because I can’t
predict what will happen,” Mr. Veasna said outside the Institute of Technology.
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