Rally violently dispersed
Amid the haze of smoke grenades and swinging of batons
yesterday, authorities sent a violent message to would-be protesters and
activists in the Kingdom: The ban on public assembly imposed earlier
this month, while sporadically enforced, can and will be brutally
upheld.
A peaceful rally led by Beehive Radio president Mam Sonando outside
the Ministry of Information on Monivong Boulevard was dispersed at about
10am yesterday after hundreds of military police charged in formation,
unloading volleys of smoke canisters and liberally using their batons to
clear away stragglers.
Security guards hired by Daun Penh district authorities – the same
untrained, helmeted men employed against protesters at Freedom Park on
Sunday – also joined in, clubbing anyone, including some journalists,
who failed to get away quickly enough, then chasing bystanders down side
streets.
Sonando himself escaped unscathed and was whisked away to safety by supporters.
Long Dimanche, City Hall spokesman, said that authorities only clashed
with protesters because they had “disrupted social order” after defying a
ban on the protest.
“We do not want to clash violently. That’s why we denied [them] and
sent a formal letter to Mam Sonando explaining the reasons for the
rejection. But he insisted and disobeyed the authorities’ orders,” he
said.
“[Yesterday morning’s] march was going to lead to the worst chaos,
because the protesters were incited to curse and clash with the
authorities violently.”
The protesters had peacefully, albeit vocally, set up on the road
directly outside the closed gate of the ministry, snarling traffic for
more than half an hour after authorities blockaded parts of the
boulevard in response.
Sonando and his followers were calling for increased radio bandwidth
as well as a TV licence, requests that were shot down by the Information
Ministry earlier this month due to an alleged lack of frequencies
available.
Beehive claims it has been singled out for unfair treatment due to its critical stance towards the government.
A video of yesterday’s crackdown obtained by the Post shows
Sok Penh Vuth, deputy district governor of Daun Penh, dressed in office
attire and hitting a civilian over the head with his bullhorn during the
crackdown.
Penh Vuth, who was seen at the protest directing district guards and
calling for Sonando’s arrest, in the video points to a helmeted man
sitting on his motorbike, accuses him of protesting, then hits him hard
on the side of his head with the bullhorn before allowing guards and
plainclothes men to beat him viciously with batons.
The man, bloodied 35-year-old motodop Sok Ny, is not seen retaliating in the video.
“The security forces and civil officials hit me with their fists and
batons many times until my head was bleeding and I fell to the ground.
But they did not stop even when they saw me fall,” Ny, who says he was
only in the vicinity because he had dropped off a police officer, told
the Post at the scene.
Government spokesman Phay Siphan said yesterday that he “did not see anything wrong” with Vuth’s actions.
“They represent the public power, the local authority down there.…
Without cooperation, they can [take] any kind of forceful means to
restore [public order],” he said.
Siphan added that anyone remaining in the vicinity of a protest could
be considered a protester, apart from the press. “If I were there, I
[would be] kicked out too,” he said.
An assistant answered Vuth’s phone yesterday and said the deputy
district governor was unavailable for comment, while Daun Penh Governor
Sok Sambath could not be reached.
After fleeing the scene, Sonando said he would keep urging the
government to meet his station’s demands, but added it would be useless
to condemn the authorities’ actions yesterday.
“I do not criticise this crackdown, because there is no point. If we
criticise them but they still do not obey the laws and use their power
against us, it means the condemnation is not useful, because they won’t
change,” he said.
Surrounding streets were quickly cordoned off and cleared following
the baton charge, with protesters retreating or being chased down side
streets. Many regrouped in parkland near Wat Phnom and the US embassy
before being moved on again by authorities.
The rally was intended to begin at Freedom Park, the site of clashes
between district guards and union-led protesters a day earlier, but, due
to the presence of security forces there, about 500 people had gathered
at the nearby Naga Bridge by 9am, when Sonando arrived.
After delivering a speech, the radio broadcaster led a march to the ministry.
As the group approached Sunway Hotel, it encountered dozens of police
and Daun Penh security guards blocking the road. The protesters surged
to the next street south and began running towards the Information
Ministry past City Hall, where hundreds of gendarmes waited.
As gendarmes were ordered onto the road, about 100 metres away from
them a tense standoff ensued until finally a five-minute warning was
given and the military police charged.
Following the crackdown, with an outlet needed to vent their anger at
authorities, protesters and bystanders targeted a man found with a
slingshot and ball bearings – a possible government-placed provocateur –
as a Vietnamese spy.
Cambodia National Rescue Party security tried to frogmarch the man
away from the crowds to a safe place but were soon mobbed by those
trying to attack the man, deemed to be a “yuon, not a Khmer”. He was
eventually spirited away on a motorbike to the offices of rights group
Licadho.
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