Cambodian protesters call off rally after bloody crackdown
ABC Radio Australia | 5 January 2014, 1:02 AEST
Anti-government demonstrators say they have called off a
mass rally they had planned to stage in the Cambodian capital on Sunday
after a bloody crackdown on garment workers allied with the protest
movement.
The decision to call off the rally came hours after
security guards and city workers, watched over by riot police,
dismantled a camp occupied by anti-government demonstrators.
Friday's
clashes, during which police shot dead four people, have stoked a
political crisis in which striking workers and supporters of the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) are challenging a
government they say cheated its way to power and is depriving them of a
fair wage.
He also condemned Friday's violence and demanded a thorough investigation.
"The
Cambodia National Rescue Party would like to inform all national
compatriots that the party will suspend the (planned) protest," the CNRP
said in a brief statement.
Hundreds of CNRP supporters had been
camped since December 15 in tents around a stage in Freedom Park, the
only place in Phnom Penh where protests are allowed
Unions
representing garment workers want better pay and support the CNRP's
demands for a re-run of an election in July it says was rigged to allow
long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen to remain in power.
Friday's
clashes took place at Canadia Industrial Park, also in Phnom Penh, which
is home to dozens of factories that make clothing for Western brands
such as Adidas, Puma and H&M Hennes & Mauritz.
In Germany,
Puma said in a statement production at some of its plants in Phnom
Penh had been halted for now but gave no other details.
Puma's sporting goods are made in about 400 factories worldwide, 13 of them in Cambodia.
An
Adidas statement sent to Reuters said the group was concerned about
recent events in Cambodia and was in contact with its suppliers there.
It gave no further details.
On
Saturday, many CNRP supporters grabbed their belongings and fled, some
clutching babies, when they saw riot police approaching Freedom Park,
Reuters witnesses said.
Riot police, however, held back from the
main site while security guards and city workers in plain clothes, some
carrying axes and steel pipes, moved in to dismantle the stage and
tents.
Three helicopters flew low overhead, while riot police carrying batons kept journalists away from the site.
The CNRP accused "forces in civilian clothing" of beating demonstrators and urged its supporters not to retaliate.
"Destructive demonstrators"
Phnom
Penh municipality spokesman Long Dimanche said CNRP leaders had been
sent a letter telling them protests would no longer be tolerated.
"Their
protests have been peaceful at the park but their supporters have
marched out of the park, destroying private and public property, closing
down roads and causing social instability," he said.
Mr Rainsy called for both sides to exercise restraint.
"We
deplore and condemn the violence that the armed forces under the
instruction of the current government has used against workers," Mr
Rainsy, a former finance minister, told a media briefing before the
protest camp was cleared.
"So we have made an appeal to both
sides, workers and armed forces to withdraw to stop using any form of
violence so we can find a peaceful solution," Mr Rainsy said.
Amnesty International joined Rainsy and Cambodian rights group LICADHO in demanding an investigation into the violence.
"The Cambodian government has to rein in its security forces," said Amnesty's Cambodia researcher Rupert Abbott.
Friday's
violence followed a crackdown a day earlier outside a Yakjin (Cambodia)
Inc factory in another part Phnom Penh, when armed troops hit
protesters with batons, wounding 20 people.
Yakjin makes clothing for Gap and Walmart.
The
CNRP has won the support of some 350,000 garment workers from nearly
500 factories across Cambodia by promising to nearly double the monthly
minimum wage to $160 if it wins a re-run of the July election, which Hun
Sen is refusing to hold.
The government is refusing to raise the
wage beyond $100 dollars a month and has ordered factories to reopen to
prevent damage and job losses in an industry worth $5 billion a year.
Garment manufacturing is Cambodia's biggest foreign currency earner and a major employer.
Many Western brands outsource footwear and apparel to Cambodian factories, in part because labour is cheaper than in China.
A
senior official at the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia
has said it was too soon to assess the cost of the strikes but estimated
each factory could be losing $20,000-$30,000 a day.
I, woould like to people protesters to reunion to do it agnin , if we quick this time they estimates on us that chicken
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