Sen takes selfies in first appearance

Cambodian TV has broadcast live a walking tour by Prime Minister Hun Sen, where he took selfies with fans.

Hun Sen

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has taken selfies with admirers after his election win. (AAP)

Cambodia's long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen, whose party claimed victory in a general election on Sunday that many have said was neither free nor fair, has met with supporters for the first time since the vote.

The former Khmer Rouge commander, who has ruled Cambodia for nearly 33 years, took selfies with supporters and enjoyed a boat ride.

His Cambodian People's Party said it had won all 125 parliamentary seats, prompting condemnation from rights groups and some Western nations.

Authorities launched a sweeping crackdown in the lead-up to the vote targeting the opposition National Cambodia Rescue Party (CNRP), non-government organisations, rights groups activists and independent media.

As part of the crackdown, the CNRP was dissolved by the Supreme Court last year and 118 members were banned from politics for five years.

Its leader, Kem Sokha, was jailed on treason charges in September and remains in pre-trial detention at a prison near the country's border with Vietnam.

Mark Field, the UK's Minister for Asia and the Pacific, said in a statement that the election was "undermined by the authorities well before campaigning started and resulted in an election that was neither fair nor credible."

Germany, which suspended preferential visas for private travel by members of Hun Sen's government, urged Cambodia to return to democratic principles.

"The German government has noted that the parliamentary elections in Cambodia were conducted peacefully. However, that alone is not enough to lend the election results legitimacy," the country's Federal Foreign Office said.

Opposition members had urged voters to boycott the election. Invalid and spoiled ballots accounted for 8.4 per cent of the 7.64 million cast.

Hun Sen's appearance on Wednesday was broadcast live on national television accompanied by music praising his achievements.

The White House said it would consider steps, such as an expansion of visa restrictions placed on some government members, in response to the "flawed" elections.

The United States has imposed visa curbs on some Cambodian officials over the crackdown and levied sanctions in June on a high-ranking official close to Hun Sen.


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Source: AAP


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