PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia's state election body said Friday it will postpone its announcement of final results from last month's general election, a move that could ease fears of violence over opposition protests.
The National Election Committee made the announcement after the government acknowledged moving armored vehicles and troops into the capital, Phnom Penh, to keep order if a threatened mass protest by the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party spins out of control.
The opposition has challenged the ruling Cambodian People's Party's claim of winning the July 28 election, saying there were widespread electoral irregularities. It has said it will reject the results unless there is an independent probe.
The NEC had planned to release the results on Saturday, but said it will delay their announcement because its own investigation of irregularities has not been completed. Final results were to be ratified four days later if not challenged, or on Sept. 8 if official protests were filed.
There were other signs Friday of a move toward compromise, as the NEC said it is willing to consider establishing a special commission to probe election complaints, and the two contending parties agreed in principle to accept such a body.
A similar arrangement was agreed upon a week ago, but was scuttled when the opposition declined to take part because it would not include representatives of the United Nations and civic groups. The NEC said then that such representatives could serve only as observers, not members of the commission.
Provisional results favor the ruling party's claim that it won 68 of the 123 National Assembly seats against the opposition's 55. Long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen has said he will take office again if those results stand.
The opposition says it won 63 seats. Both projections represent a substantial gain from the 29 seats the opposition had in the last assembly.