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Cambodia ex-PM Hun Sen returns to front-line politics
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Cambodia ex-PM Hun Sen returns to front-line politics

AFP

PHNOM PENH—Cambodian officials voted in a Senate election on Sunday, setting the stage for ex-leader Hun Sen to officially return to politics after he stepped down as prime minister last year.After nearly four decades of hardline rule, Hun Sen handed power to his eldest son Hun Manet in national polls last July held without any significant opposition.

Hun Sen at the time made it clear that despite his resignation, he still intended to wield influence.

The 71-year-old lawmaker and chief of the ruling party cast his ballot near his home in Takhmao city on Sunday morning for a seat in the Senate, the country’s upper house.

Hun Sen has said that he intends to become president of the Senate, allowing him to act as head of state when the king is overseas.

Councilor Chhim Vanarith, voting at the same polling station, welcomed the move.

“If he leads the Senate, obviously our country will be further developed and peaceful,” he told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

King’s appointmentFour political parties, including Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP), the royalist Funcinpec Party and two small opposition parties are participating.

Of the 62-seat Senate, 58 seats will be voted on by 125 members of parliament and more than 11,000 local administrators. King Norodom Sihamoni will appoint two senators, while the National Assembly will appoint two others.

Member of parliament and former Prime Minister Hun Sen kisses the ballot paper as he casts his vote at a polling station during the Senate election in Takhmao city, Kandal province on February 25, 2024. (Photo by TANG CHHIN Sothy / AFP).

Most eligible voters are members of the CPP—who made a clean sweep of the Senate last election—making Hun Sen’s victory all but certain.

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“This is a sign of the Hun family’s further consolidation of power,” Sebastian Strangio, author of “Hun Sen’s Cambodia,” told AFP.“It is better to ensure that the position not fall into a potential rival’s hands.”

Becoming president of the Senate would protect his son and prevent the family’s control being undermined, Strangio added.

The National Electoral Committee is expected to take several weeks to publish official results.But voters in the capital Phnom Penh seemed keen to see Hun Sen back in a position of authority.

“He has a lot of experience, so if he leads the Senate, our country will be prosperous,” commune chief Oeu Siphon told AFP.The election follows lawmakers approving Hun Sen’s youngest son Hun Many as a deputy prime minister.


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