PHNOM
PENH, Sept. 20 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia's long-time opposition leader Sam
Rainsy reiterated on Friday that his party's elected lawmakers would
boycott the opening session of new parliament scheduled for next Monday
if no appropriate solution was found to the disputed July 28 election
results.
"Our
party's last stance is that we will not attend the opening session of
new parliament on Sept. 23 if there are no more talks with the ruling
Cambodian People's Party (CPP) in order to resolve the contested
election results," Sam Rainsy, president of the Cambodia National Rescue
Party (CNRP), said at a press conference at the party's headquarters in
Phnom Penh. "The opening session of parliament should be postponed," he
said.
He
also called for the resumption of talks with the CPP in order to find
the truth for voters, or there could be another mass protest against the
opening of the new parliament.
The
official election results showed that the ruling CPP of long-serving
Prime Minister Hun Sen won 68 out of the 123 parliamentary seats, and
the CNRP of long-time opposition leader Sam Rainsy got 55 seats.
The
CNRP rejected the results, claiming serious vote fraud and demanding
the formation of an independent poll probe committee, but the CPP ruled
it out, saying it was against the country's constitution and the
election results were already ratified.
King
Norodom Sihamoni last week invited all the 123 elected lawmakers for
the opening session of the new parliament on Sept. 23. On Wednesday, he
urged the opposition party's 55 elected lawmakers to attend the session
in order to show "unification and national unity."
The
ruling CPP announced on Thursday that the party's elected lawmakers
were ready to attend the opening session of the new parliament despite
opposition warning of a boycott.
"The
CPP would like to announce that all the 68 elected lawmakers comply
with His Majesty's invitations and are ready to take part in the opening
session of the fifth legislature of the National Assembly under the
auspices of His Majesty on Sept. 23," the CPP said in a statement.
On
Friday morning, Prince Sisowath Thomico, an opposition party 's senior
member, went on a hunger strike at the capital's historical Wat Phnom
site in order to call for a political solution over the contested
election results.
"I
will go on a hunger strike until there is a way to find justice for
voters," Thomico, former personal secretary and nephew of the late King
Father Norodom Sihanouk, told reporters at the site.
The
prince ran as an opposition party's parliamentary candidate for
Southwestern Preah Sihanouk province in the July 28 election, but won no
seat.
On
Thursday, more than 100 pro-opposition monks marched to the Royal
Palace and called on the King to delay the opening session of new
parliament, saying that political dispute over the election results has
not been resolved.
On
Sunday, the opposition staged a three-day mass demonstration in the
capital and led to two clashes between police and protesters, leaving
one protester dead and several injured.
During the clashes, the police had fired tear gas, smoke bombs and water cannons to disperse protesters.
The
leaders of the two parties--Prime Minister Hun Sen and Sam Rainsy--had
held talks on Monday and Tuesday, aiming at finding a way to break
through the political impasse, but reached no any remarkable agreement.
Hun Sen has said that his party has enough lawmakers to override any opposition parliamentary boycott and form a new government.
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