Sam Rainsy told The Associated Press that the Supreme Court ruling was the death knell of democracy and presented a credibility test to world powers that had sponsored a 1991 peace accord in the Southeast Asian nation, which committed them to supporting an open political system there.
He called for governments to drop their recognition of the prime minister and "delegitimise the Hun Sen regime."
Rainsy used to lead the Cambodia National Rescue Party but went into exile last year because of the threat of prison in legal cases against him that are widely regarded as politically motivated. He and a half-dozen CNRP lawmakers are in Washington to lobby US lawmakers and State Department officials.
"The international community must not do business as usual with Hun Sen following his very undemocratic and shocking move to dissolve the only opposition party," Rainsy said in an interview. "It is a matter of credibility for the international community following Hun Sen's violation of an important international treaty."
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The White House released a statement yesterday night expressing "grave concern" and promising to "take concrete steps to respond to the Cambodian government's deeply regrettable actions."
The United States and 18 other governments signed the 1991 Paris Peace Accords, which ushered in democracy after the genocidal rule of the Khmer Rouge regime in the late 1970s, then occupation by Vietnam and civil war.
Yesterday's court verdict, read by a judge who is member of the ruling party, came amid an intense push by Hun Sen's government to neutralize political opponents and silence critics ahead of July 2018 elections.
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