Cambodian forces disperse opposition rally
Phnom Penh police were not visibly armed but acted forcefully and were joined by plainclothes men carrying iron pipes.
Al Jazeera | 4 Jan. 2014
Cambodian authorities have forced opposition protesters to evacuate
their rally base in the capital, a day after police launched a deadly
crackdown on striking garment workers.
Dozens of anti-riot police armed with shields and batons flooded into
the area in central Phnom Penh, causing about a 1,000 protesters to
flee, according to an AFP photographer at the scene.
They beat us like they beat animals. I am very scared. |
"They won't be allowed to rally, to protest, or to hold any political
activities at the park any more," military police spokesman Kheng Tito
told AFP, adding that police had not used force.
About 500,000 Cambodians are employed in the garment industry, which
is worth $5bn a year to the economy in exports. The government has
offered $100 as a minimum monthly wage, short of a $160 wage pledged by
the opposition CNRP.
Lang Rith, a 29-year-old demonstrator from southern Takeo province, said he was hit with baton on his back as he tried to run away from the park.
``They beat us like they beat animals. I am very scared,'' Lang Rith said.
At least four striking garment protesters were killed on Friday in
what rights campaigners condemned as the country's worst state violence
against civilians in more than a decade.
Friday's crackdown marks a violent turning point in what has generally been peaceful protests since the elections.
Strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen may be facing the biggest challenge
to his 28-year rule, amid mounting pressures from textile workers and
opposition supporters demanding that he steps down and calls for a new
election.
Hun Sen, who last month ruled out holding new elections or stepping
down, was given parliamentary approval for a new five-year term in late
September. The opposition decried that as a "constitutional coup".
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