Bloodstains on the floor of the factory led Sovann to suspect the people taken inside were further battered after their arrests, he said.
Strike violence erupts
Authorities
yesterday injured dozens of union leaders, garment workers and monks,
arresting at least 15 of them, in a series of crackdowns against
demonstrators protesting the industry’s minimum wage.
Garment workers and their supporters who were gathered yesterday in front of the Yakjin factory, off National Road 4 in the capital’s Por Sen Chey district, said tensions between demonstrators and soldiers from a local military base guarding the factory boiled over at 9am when soldiers began unprovoked attacks on them.
The demonstration occurred amid a
national garment worker strike that began last week when the Ministry
of Labour’s Labour Advisory Committee set this year’s minimum monthly
wage for workers in the garment sector at $95 – $65 less than unions
demanded. The ministry this week tacked another $5 onto the minimum
wage, which will now rise to $100 next month.
As the groups stood
face-to-face on the dirt road just off the main road, soldiers began
throwing water bottles at demonstrators, who picked up the bottles and
threw them back at soldiers, said Chean Kongkea, a 20-year-old employee
at Korean-owned Yakjin.
The groups then exchanged volleys of
projectiles, with soldiers using slingshots to fling rocks at
demonstrators, said Sophorn, a witness who asked to be identified only
by his first name.
During that first melee, soldiers also
attacked people with batons, seemingly at random, Kongkea said. Soldiers
grabbed two men off their motorbikes and three women from the crowd,
heavily beat them and dragged them inside the grounds of the factory –
which had dismissed workers for the day shortly before.
A second
outburst came at about noon, when four monks who approached soldiers
were allegedly severely beaten with batons and three also dragged
inside, Sophorn said.
The fourth monk was beaten unconscious and taken by witnesses to the Choam Chao clinic and treated for his injuries.
Soon
after the monks were beaten, which coincided with more throwing of
projectiles from both sides, a group of about three soldiers surrounded
Van Peuv, an employee with the NGO IDEA, unprovoked, and pummelled him
severely, dragging him inside along with the others, said Uch Serey
Juth, who was standing next to Peuv.
During Peuv’s beating, Serey
Juth pleaded with soldiers for them to stop to no avail, he said. “They
said only, ‘My boss ordered me to,’” Serey Juth said.
The scene
remained tense for hours after the arrests, with Chab Sophorn, the
soldier giving orders to the others, shouting for the demonstrators and
onlookers to back up and initially refusing to allow UN peacekeepers
inside the factory to see the injured arrestees.
Authorities
eventually allowed a group of people, including Cambodia National
Rescue Party member David Sovann, inside the factory, but those arrested
had already been taken to the nearby base of the Special Forces
Airborne 911 Unit, where they were being held, Sovann said after
emerging from the factory.
Bloodstains on the floor of the factory
led Sovann to suspect the people taken inside were further battered
after their arrests, he said.
A statement from rights group
Licadho and the Community Legal Education Center described the incident
as “unprecedented” and a “violent crackdown” by soldiers armed with a
number of weapons.
“The conduct of the authorities is a flagrant
attack on the freedom of association of Cambodian workers and a blatant
and illegal attempt to break a legal strike,” the statement says.
The
two NGOs believed 10 people had been arrested, including at least four
monks, Independent Democracy of Informal Economy Association president
Vorn Pao and Coalition of Cambodian Farmer Community coordinator Theng
Savoeun.
In all, 15 people, including five monks were arrested, according to the National Police’s website.
“We
are gravely concerned for the safety of those still held, especially in
light of recent threats to leaders of unions and informal
associations,” Licadho director Naly Pilorge said.
At the scene,
Chab Sophorn defended actions taken against demonstrators. They posed a
threat to Yakjin’s property, which they were charged with protecting, he
said.
“I was ordered by my boss to protect the factory, so I have
to protect the factory,” Chab Sophorn said. “They threw a lot of stones
at us.”
Women from the Boeung Kak community, including Yorm
Bopha, joined in, at times kneeling in prayer in front of soldiers
standing in formation and at other times shouting at them. Monks
standing in the front of a crowd of onlookers about 50 metres away from
soldiers linked arms, refusing to leave as Sophorn ordered.
According
to a press release issued by its partner firm last week, Yakjin Trading
Corp, which also operates factories in Vietnam and Indonesia, makes
clothes for Gap, Walmart and Old Navy, among other big brands.
The
protesters strategy changed at 4:45pm, when about 400 people walked
into National Road 4, blocking traffic on both sides with their bodies,
tuk-tuks and motorbikes.
Just over an hour later, after several
speeches made over loudspeakers attached to a tuk-tuk, the group
mobilised, marching about a half-kilometre down National Road 4, and
blocking it right in front of the street leading to the military base.
Demonstrators soon blocked the base’s road as well, demanding
authorities release the people being held.
Traffic on the main
road backed up with headlights going back far in the distance.
Demonstrators blocked attempts by several people on motorbikes to get
past the human barricade in front of the military base road.
As
he helped block the road, Sieng Sovannara, chief of the Khmer Krom monk
community, said he did so because five of his monks were being held
inside the base, accused of being “fake monks”.
“I decided to
block the road because I want authorities to release the monks,” said
Sovannara, who added that the monks there had been defrocked.
Chan Soveth, a senior investigator for rights group Adhoc, also decried the military response to an initially peaceful protest.
“It
was very wrong, because they are soldiers,” Soveth said. “They have to
protect the nation, not the factory, but they protect the factory and
beat monks.”
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan defended
soldiers’ role in detaining the monks and union leaders, comparing their
role to that of the National Guard in the US.
“They have a job to protect the nation,” he said. “This is not a demonstration … this is a rebellion.”
Asked
whether monks involved could be said to be a threat to national
security, Siphan claimed they were “fake monks” who had destroyed public
and private property.
“They are abusing the law. If you have the uniform, you need to own the ethics … the monk should be in the pagoda.”
At about 7pm, demonstrators left on their own accord.
Authorities later released the five monks at about 11:30pm.
Nearby,
at the Canadia garment factory, authorities also carried out an
unprovoked attack on peaceful demonstrators armed only with speakers,
injuring 10 people, said Phoeun Chhorn, a 21-year-old worker at Canadia
whose foot was injured during the crackdown.
A doctor at Ekreach
Clinic said three people came in for treatment. Two were sent home and
one was transferred to the Cambodian-Russian Friendship Hospital. In the
wake of that incident, a group of protesters estimated at more than 200
strong blockaded the street and set large bonfires.
After
midnight this morning, an estimated 500 police in riot gear moved in to
remove hundreds of remaining protesters from outside the factory.
At
the sign of movement, most of the crowd scattered, though a few
remained, throwing rocks from a distance, as police fired warning shots
into the air.
At least one man was seen being dragged from a nearby building after attempting to hide from the police.
Earlier
yesterday, members of the six unions leading the strike announced they
would suspend the strike if the government and the Garment Manufacturers
Association in Cambodia begins negotiations with unions within three
days.
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