Rally for 23 sees arrest tally grow
Riot police arrested an NGO leader near the Royal Palace on
Phnom Penh’s Riverside yesterday in an apparent bid to enforce an
ongoing ban on public gatherings.
Police in the back hopped out of one of the trucks and shoved their
way towards Sok Chhun Oeung, who has served as acting president of
Independent Democracy of Informal Economy Association (IDEA) since the
NGO’s president, Vorn Pov, was arrested during a demonstration at the
Yakjin garment factory on January 2.
“I think their primary reason [for the arrest] is complete
intolerance of gatherings,” Naly Pilorge, director of rights group
Licadho, said. “[Demonstrators] did nothing except sing and ask for the
release of the 23 people.”
The group of about 50 people – including members of IDEA – had
originally planned to hold a small vigil at Wat Ounalom, where they
would pray for their comrades still detained at Correctional Centre 3 in
Kampong Cham and release balloons.
When people arrived at the pagoda at 4pm, a group of about 35 Daun
Penh district security guards were already standing in front; some in
security guard uniforms, some in plain clothes, but all wearing black
motorcycle helmets and carrying police batons.
As a mix of NGO workers, journalists and bystanders curious about
what was going on in one of the capital’s busiest areas gathered,
security guards blew whistles and shouted at people while walking back
and forth in front of Wat Ounalom, clearing out the gathering crowd.
Before he moved from the pagoda to the sidewalk across from the Royal
Palace, where he was arrested, Oeung said the government’s recent
limiting of citizens’ ability to hold public demonstrations is diluting
Cambodia’s freedom of expression.
“I think authorities taking measures to break us up shows us that
freedom of expression in Cambodia today is very narrow,” Oeung told the Post
less than an hour before police arrested him. “Cambodia has respect for
democracy, but when we’re not allowed to gather, it means the
government does not have respect for democracy.”
Security guards followed people, who gathered across from the palace,
corralling the group into a small herd and pushing them along the
sidewalk in a series of scuffles, as the group intermittently sang and
linked arms.
Licadho and the Community Legal Education Centre each sent a lawyer
to the Phnom Penh Municipal Police Department after Oeung’s arrest,
Pilorge said. But police would not allow access to him.
The government will likely face international backlash in the wake of yesterday’s arrest, Pilorge added.
“This government needs to change its behaviour,” Pilorge said.
National Police spokesman Kirth Chantharith and Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan could not be reached last night.
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