Capital bans marches for Labour Day and beyond
The stage is set for a potentially violent confrontation today
as opposition leaders and union representatives are vowing to carry out
planned marches, while government officials and authorities loyal to the
ruling party are making it very clear they intend to use force if
necessary to contain the groups.
A ban on assembly has been in place at Freedom Park since December.
Authorities yesterday, however, upped the ante, blocking all entrances
to the park with razor-wire fences and barricades and reinstituting a
citywide ban on assembly that authorities say will take effect today, on
International Labour Day, and last the entirety of the council election
campaign period, which begins on Friday.
An announcement released on the Phnom Penh Municipality website on Tuesday evening says Phnom Penh Governor Pa Socheatvong informed officials from all nine districts of the capital in a meeting that public assembly will be completely banned in the city from today until the end of the campaign on May 16.
“From May 1, all gatherings on the street or at public places will be
prohibited, except at [party] headquarters and private locations,”
Socheatvong is quoted as saying in the statement.
The Cambodia National Rescue Party began daily rallies at Freedom
Park in December. Those rallies came to an abrupt end on January 4 when
authorities, turning their attention from violently quelled union
protests the two proceeding days, drove opposition supporters out and
banned all public assembly.
While the general ban was lifted in February, it remained in place in
the park, the capital’s designated protest area. But the latest
decision marks a return to the blanket ban on gatherings across the
capital.
Last Labour Day, as in numerous years before, thousands of workers
marched in routes throughout the capital, rallying for better pay and
work conditions. But in a letter sent yesterday to union leaders, Phnom
Penh Deputy Governor Khoung Sreng said City Hall would not grant a
request for gatherings in the park because the area is “still under
investigation” over deadly violence in early January.
“The confederations, unions and associations can organise Labour Day
at [their own] offices or a private place without marching,” he said.
He added that “cooperation with authorities” was vital to ensure the day ran “smoothly”.
City Hall spokesman Long Dimanche told the Post yesterday that the “authorities will strongly take action against those [union leaders] who still abuse the ban”.
But representatives of the Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers
Democratic Union (C.CAWDU), Cambodia’s largest independent garment
worker union, said its members would be out in force today.
“They’re going to come even if the government and police aren’t going
to allow them,” said Sun Lyhov, assistant to C.CAWDU leader Ath Thorn.
Pav Sina, president of the Collective Union of Movement of Workers
(CUMW), last night said he and other union leaders had agreed to meet in
front of the National Assembly to hold the May Day demonstration.
As of Friday, City Hall said, it will take further measures to enforce the ban.
In order to “strengthen security and public order”, 500 police and
military police will be deployed in every district from Friday – the
start of the election campaign – onwards, including the election date of
May 18, Socheatvong told officials.
In a letter to the Phnom Penh Provincial Election Commission
yesterday, the governor also warned that authorities would arrest anyone
who defied or insulted authorities during the campaign.
Aside from not being allowed to rally or march along public roads in
Phnom Penh, Socheatvong also told political parties to seek permission
from authorities before putting up election propaganda in public places.
“A big election campaign is not appropriate to the current situation,” he said.
He also warned that election rallies had been used in the past as a cover for “demonstrations”.
But despite the announcements, Cambodia National Rescue Party
spokesman Yim Sovann said his party would hold rallies during the
campaign, including a march in the city on Friday, which he expects will
draw at least 10,000 supporters.
“What we have planned to do is legal. The ban made by the
municipality authority violates the law of the election. So we do not
respect this decision made by the municipality,” he said. “According to
the law of election made by the NEC, we have the right to conduct the
peaceful campaign through the country … We must proceed with what we
have planned … We will gather and march throughout the city.”
Sovann added that the march would be led by CNRP leader Sam Rainsy,
who arrived back in Cambodia from Europe yesterday, and his deputy, Kem
Sokha.
Speaking to supporters near Freedom Park yesterday morning, Rainsy
said: “On International Labour Day … and on the first day of the council
election campaign, we will come back again in order to take back
Freedom Park in the public interest.”
His announcement came shortly after CNRP lawmaker-elect Mu Sochua,
who has been on a campaign to bring “freedom back to Freedom Park” since
the beginning of April, failed to break through the wall of razor wire
and shields that surrounded the area.
Speaking to a crowd of about 40 supporters, NGO workers and
journalists, Sochua said the anti-riot police guarding the area were
breaking the law.
“[The law states] that each city must create [a] Freedom Park where
people can come and demonstrate peacefully and express their freedom of
expression peacefully, receive information peacefully and assemble
peacefully,” she said. “We are using the law to protect our human
rights, our freedom of expression. This is the truth.”
The ban was condemned in a statement released last night by the Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR).
CCHR “strongly condemns the reiteration of the ban on assemblies in
Phnom Penh and urges security forces to refrain from using excessive
violence against protesters,” it read.
Ou Virak, CCHR chairman, said the government’s “blanket ban on [gatherings] should only be in place in a state of emergency”.
“I think the government will do the best they can to prevent or
threaten. But I think, yes, a violent crackdown is [more likely] now.”
Following yesterday’s blockade, senior Licadho official Am Sam Ath
said “right now, Freedom Park is becoming Prison Park”, adding that the
action taken by authorities is a violation of people’s legal right to
freedom of assembly.
But Sochua said that she and the “nearly 200” youths who supported her at the park yesterday “will not be deterred”.
With plans to address issues in the garment sector, including calls
for a monthly minimum wage of $160, Sochua said she expected a larger
turnout for International Labour Day.
Sochua and CNRP leaders Rainsy and Sokha, along with more than 100
workers, were due to offer prayers for the people killed in the January 3
clash on Veng Sreng Boulevard in a ceremony early this morning.
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