Beehive rally violently broken up
A peaceful rally led by Beehive Radio president Mam Sonando
outside the Ministry of Information on Monivong Boulevard this morning
was dispersed at about 10am after more than 100 military police charged,
unloading volleys of smoke canisters and swinging batons to clear away
stragglers.
Daun Penh security guards – the untrained, helmeted men that have
been prominently used to violently enforce the ban on public assembly in
recent weeks – also joined in, clubbing those, including some
journalists, who failed to get away quickly enough.
Sonando and his supporters – who are routinely critical of the ruling
Cambodian People’s Party – were rallying for licences for increased
radio bandwidth and a TV station. Many joining the protest also offered
scathing comments about Prime Minister Hun Sen and the state of human
rights in Cambodia.
Huon Phannary, assistant to Sonando, told the Post that the activist
had escaped safely and was unhurt. At least three protesters were seen
with injuries by Post staff, including two with bleeding head wounds.
Permission for the protest had been rejected by the Ministry of
Interior and City Hall, though Sonando’s group had pledged to defy the
ban, despite clashes yesterday between security guards and union-led
protesters at Freedom Park.
About 500 people had gathered at the Naga Bridge near the park by 9am
this morning, when Sonando arrived to cheers. After delivering a
speech, the radio broadcaster joined hands with an activist monk and
Boueng Kak land rights protester Yorm Bopha to lead a march around Wat
Phnom and then to the Ministry of Information.
As the group – which quickly swelled in size – approached the Sunway
Hotel, they encountered dozens of police and Daun Penh security guards
blocking the road. The protesters surged to the next street and began
running towards the Ministry of Information past City Hall, where
hundreds of gendarmes were waiting.
Protesters then grouped outside the ministry, with many holding signs
calling for the licences and sitting on the road. As gendarmes were
ordered onto the road, about 100 metres away from them, a tense standoff
ensued until finally a five-minute warning was given.
Sok Penh Vuth, deputy governor of Daun Penh district, was heard
shouting through a loudspeaker that the demonstration was illegal and
Sonando would be arrested before the charge.
City Hall had previously stated in a letter to Sonando: “If there is a
gathering which affects security, safety and public order and there are
any clashes, you will be responsible before the law.”
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