Despite illness, no bail for labour activist
Labour activist Vorn Pov, who is facing serious health issues
while being held in pre-trial detention in Kampong Cham’s Correctional
Centre 3 prison, has been denied bail by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court.
His NGO-provided lawyer, San Sokunthear, immediately filed an appeal
against the bail denial yesterday, saying that her client’s health is
deteriorating.
“He was already sick, but since he was beaten, his illness has become more serious.”
The other 22 detainees will apply for bail today, according to lawyers.
The court denied Pov’s bail on the grounds that the court was still
investigating and could not release him while it continued its
procedures, Sokunthear said.
Prak Sovanary, Pov’s wife, who visited her husband at the prison yesterday, confirmed his condition was worsening.
“My husband told me he is in so much pain at night. He cannot sleep,
and he may be in so much pain because he was kicked [by soldiers],” she
said.
Along with inflicting head wounds, soldiers hit Pov in the kidneys
when beating him during and after his arrest, according to Sovanary. The
activist underwent kidney surgery last year.
“If anything happens to my doting husband, I will file a complaint
against the government to hold them responsible, because they have not
released my husband on bail for his health. Where will my husband run
to? He has not done anything wrong. I would like to ask the prison
guards to allow NGO doctors to check his health and other [detainees].
[Khmer Rouge] leaders killed a lot of people, but when they were
arrested [even they] got medical care,” she said.
Vorn Pov was one of 10 arrested by RCAF’s elite 911 paratrooper
brigade on January 2 during protests outside the Yakjin garment factory
in Por Sen Chey district. Thirteen others were arrested and at least
four shot dead by security forces the following day after clashes
erupted in and around Canadia Industrial Park.
All have been charged with intentional aggravated violence and
intentional aggravated property destruction. The 23 suspects remain
detained in the remote CC3 prison near the Vietnamese border.
Chear Sovana, director of CC3, could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Amnesty International representative Rupert Abbott said yesterday
that his organisation remained concerned that Pov had even been
arrested.
“This man is a peaceful activist, so it seems as though he shouldn’t
have been arrested in the first place, let alone kept in detention,” he
said.
Naly Pilorge, director at rights group Licadho, called the bail
denial “shocking” given Pov’s documented health condition and numerous
guarantees given to the court that he would appear for further
questioning if requested.
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