CNRP meet halted amid intimidation
The opposition party yesterday cancelled a planned public
meeting in Kandal province to avoid possible violence, its leaders said,
after supporters arrived to find hundreds of intimidating plainclothes
men allegedly sent there by the ruling party, along with riot and
military police.
Inside the grounds of Koh Touch pagoda, hundreds of civilians, many
wearing matching red wristbands, riot police armed with tear-gas
canisters, military police armed with shields and batons, and an
assortment of other police forces had gathered.
Eng Chhay Eang, the CNRP’s head in Kandal, told reporters at a press
conference that the ruling party had sent hundreds of security forces
and what he called the “third hand” to threaten and intimidate
opposition supporters.
“The ceremony was postponed due to almost 1,000 third hands of the
government, who came to disturb [us]. They asked [if they could] attend
the ceremony, but we did not allow them to join [because] they will
cause a dispute [with us],” he said. “This is a trick that was played to
arrest us and jail us. We do not play this game, [so] we decided to
postpone.”
Chhay Eang added that police forces took no action to disperse the
gathered civilians from the pagoda area despite requests from the
opposition.
A police officer who evicted journalists and monitors from the venue
at about 3pm said he was acting on the orders of his “general” but could
not explain why the forces had been assembled in the pagoda.
“My answer is I don’t know,” the man said. A number of other military
police and police officials declined to speak to the Post at the scene,
while the gathered civilians – one of whom shouted that the CNRP
shouldn’t be trusted – also were reluctant to explain what they were
doing there.
Kirth Chantharith, national police spokesman, declined to comment in detail on allegations of political intimidation.
“My competence only has measures to protect [the CNRP’s] security.
Police have always defended [Sam Rainsy’s] group. In the past, even
though he has held a small demonstration, a big demonstration, a
marching demonstration, a non-marching demonstration, the police have
always defended him,” he said.
Neither Minister of Interior Sar Kheng nor ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak could be reached for comment yesterday.
Speaking to reporters at CNRP headquarters in Meanchey district,
Rainsy suggested that Prime Minister Hun Sen was “afraid” of
embarrassment in Kandal, where he was elected.
“But I wonder whether [they were trying] to pull CNRP leaders … into
their trap, because [we talked] to [Interior Minister Sar Kheng],” he
said.
According to Rainsy, he called Sar Kheng yesterday morning, telling
him that the situation was tense and security forces had gathered en
masse. The minister reportedly called him back half an hour later and
said the meeting could go ahead with “no problem”.
“On March 30, 1997, I also received a letter of permission from Mr
Sar Kheng telling me, when I asked permission to hold a demonstration in
front of the old parliament, ‘No problem!’ [But] my god, [we were]
attacked with four grenades,” Rainsy told reporters, referencing an
attack on an opposition rally that killed 16 people.
The opposition leader added that the government’s ban on public
assembly “will be lifted only if the CNRP takes [our] seats in the
National Assembly”, a decision he said was illogical.
“We count on pressure. Internal pressure and external pressure on the
government to force it to lift this ban, and only once this ban is
lifted will we demonstrate again.”
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