A Cambodian protester carried a wounded worker in Phnom Penh |
Military officers in Phnom Penh kept guard during Friday's clashes |
Electric wires burned as armed officers prepared to block protesters |
Garment workers threw stones and other projectiles at the officers. |
Friday's clash marked a sharp escalation in the unrest in Cambodia. |
Garment workers held petrol bombs as the police opened fire. |
Cambodia Cracks Down on Protest With Evictions and Ban on Assembly
International New York Times | 4 Jan. 2014
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Seeking to quash one of the most serious challenges to the nearly 30-year rule of the country’s authoritarian leader, Cambodian authorities evicted antigovernment protesters on Saturday from a public square and banned all public gatherings as a court summoned two opposition leaders for police questioning.
Mr. Hun Sen’s party claimed victory in July elections,
which the opposition and independent observers say were riddled with
irregularities. Since then, the opposition has called for him to step
down.
In a country with a history of violence against opposition figures, the
two opposition leaders wanted for questioning, Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha,
appeared to go into hiding.
“They are in a safe place,” said Mu Sochua, an opposition politician who
was elected as a lawmaker in July but has boycotted Parliament along
with the rest of the opposition.
Last weekend, the opposition staged a protest march
of tens of thousands of people through the streets of Phnom Penh, an
act of defiance on a scale rarely seen during Mr. Hun Sen’s more than 28
years in power. After the crackdown Saturday, the opposition announced
it was canceling a march planned for Sunday.
In a statement, the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party urged its
followers to remain calm “while the party seeks alternative ways” to
continue its campaign against Mr. Hun Sen’s government.
Many parts of Phnom Penh were unaffected by the crackdown, including the
main tourist area along the Mekong River. But elsewhere, hundreds of
police officers and soldiers blocked roads, broke up crowds of
bystanders and cordoned off the public square, known as Freedom Park,
where the protesters had been gathering.
The dispersal of demonstrators from Freedom Park by the police and
others was highly symbolic. In 2009 the government officially designated
the square as a place where Cambodians could express themselves freely,
roughly modeling it on Speakers’ Corner in London. The square has been
the center of protests led by the opposition since the elections in
July. Protesters who have camped out there since mid-December have
included Buddhist monks, elderly farmers and human rights advocates.
The Cambodian Center for Human Rights,
an independent advocacy organization, accused the government on
Saturday of a “violent clampdown on human rights” and said protesters
were chased out of the square by “thugs dressed in civilian clothes” who
were armed with steel poles and other makeshift weapons, an observation
corroborated by journalists who were present.
A number of protests during Hun Sen’s time in power have been broken up
by shadowy groups. In 1997, a grenade attack on a protest led by Mr. Sam
Rainsy left at least 16 people dead.
On Saturday, Cambodia’s Ministry of Interior issued a statement saying
that the eviction of protesters “was conducted in a peaceful manner
without any casualties.” Recent protests, the statement said, “led to
violence, the blocking of public roads and the destruction of public and
private property,” an apparent reference to the clashes between garment
workers and soldiers on Friday, among other recent episodes.
The statement said all protests and public assembly were banned “until
security and public order has been restored.” It also advised “all
members of the national and international community to remain calm and
avoid participating in any kind of illegal activity that could have
negative consequences on the national interests.”
Mr. Hun Sen has been credited with stabilizing the country after the
brutality of the Khmer Rouge, whose genocidal policies led to the deaths
of 1.7 million Cambodians. But in recent years he has accumulated
highly centralized power, including a praetorian guard that appears to
rival the capabilities of the country’s regular military units.
Economic growth that has brought modernity and prosperity to Phnom Penh
has exposed stark inequalities in the country, where well over a third
of children are malnourished. Only one-quarter of the Cambodian
population has access to electricity. The streets of Phnom Penh are
shared by luxury cars and families of four squeezed onto dilapidated
motorcycles.
Garment workers, who number in the hundreds of thousands, have been the
most aggressive in seeking higher wages. Striking workers are demanding a
doubling of the monthly minimum wage to $160 from $80, an increase that
the industry says will make it uncompetitive.
In the clash on Friday, garment workers confronted officers with rocks,
sticks and homemade firebombs. The police fired into the crowd with
assault rifles, witnesses said. In addition to the protesters killed, at
least 20 people were injured.
To paraphrase someone smarter than I; "A government that makes peaceful revolution impossible makes violent revolution inevitable".
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