THE National Election Committee  ruled yesterday that three people accused of being illegal Vietnamese  immigrants have the right to vote, rejecting a complaint from the  opposition Sam Rainsy Party their names were fraudulently placed on  voter lists.
In a two-hour hearing at NEC  headquarters, Tep Chan Sokheya, an SRP councilor in Prampi Makara  district, said the three – named as Phang Mifan, Kang Tong and Kang Seng  – were placed on voter lists despite being illegal migrants.
She alleged the trio had rented a house from her for around 10 years, during which time they spoke Vietnamese among themselves. 
“At that time, I knew that their  family was Vietnamese,” Tep Chan Sokheya told the NEC. “I then told the  commune chief not to allow them to register to vote.” Their names were  registered on the electoral roll in 2006, she added.
After her attempt to have their  names removed was ignored by O’Russey III commune authorities in 2007,  she filed a complaint to the NEC last month seeking further action.
However, NEC president Im  Suosdey threw the complaint out, arguing that the three had enough  documents to prove they were Cambodian citizens. 
“The argument of Phang Mifan,  Kang Seng and Kang Tong, who said that they have the right to register  to vote, conforms to the argument of the [district] council president,  so the NEC must consider it,” he said. 
“In fact, the three individuals  have enough documentation, especially birth certificates showing that  the three individuals are Khmer.”
O’Russey III commune chief Buoy  Kosal testified that the authorities allowed the three individuals to  register to vote based on their nationality documents. “When they have  birth certificates, the clerk must register their names. We can’t sleep  and consider it,” he said. 
Koul Panha, executive director  of local election monitor Comfrel, said the authorities had mistakenly  issued Cambodian birth certificates to Vietnamese immigrants in order to  give them the right to vote. 
“The NEC and the authorities  should control this properly,” he said. He recognised, however, that a  significant number of ethnic Vietnamese had a legitimate right to vote,  though Comfrel did not have a specific number. 







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