Protests ‘degrading security’
High-ranking government officials expounded on the detrimental
effect political and labour demonstrations are having on Cambodia’s
security during an annual meeting of police officials yesterday.
In a speech to about 500 police in leadership positions, Interior
Minister Sar Kheng said demonstrations, which have exploded since July’s
national election, are breeding opportunistic extremists who incite
violence, destroy property and create situations that lead to deaths and
injuries.
After Kheng’s speech, Ministry of Interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak
noted six deaths as a result of clashes between police and “anarchists”.
“Regrettably, six people were killed in clashes,” Sopheak said,
noting one man who was killed in a clash at the Kbal Thnal overpass in
September, one woman killed during a demonstration-turned-riot near the
Stung Meanchey bridge in November and four people killed during a
demonstration supporting a national garment worker strike on Veng Sreng
Boulevard last month. “Eighty police and military police were …
wounded.”
All six deaths to which Sopheak referred occurred when authorities opened fire on demonstrators with live ammunition.
Upon hearing of Sopheak’s comments, Cambodian Center for Human Rights
president Ou Virak noted that demonstrations are protected under
Cambodia’s right to free expression. The fact that police enforce laws
based upon the whims of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party rather than
what is on the books, however, does harm social security, he said.
“There’s the demonstration law and there’s the ruling party deciding
whatever they want,” Virak said, observing that laws on demonstrations
seem to be enforced in an ad hoc fashion. “That’s a recipe for
disaster.”
Cambodia National Rescue Party spokesman Yim Sovann also decried
Kheng’s comments, arguing that the country was not necessarily stable
before the elections and demonstrations that followed.
“We found that in the heart of Cambodian people, it was fake
political stability, because it occurred through intimidation,” Sovann
said.
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