May Day rallies demand reform; 5 hurt in Cambodia
PHNOM
PENH, Cambodia (AP) — May Day demonstrators denounced low wages and
called for reforms on Thursday during rallies that turned violent in
Cambodia and in Turkey, where police cracked down on participants
defying a ban on public protests.
Security forces in Istanbul's
iconic Taksim Square pushed back demonstrators with water cannons and
tear gas. Protesters retaliated by throwing objects at police.
In
Phnom Pehn, witnesses said civilian auxiliary police, armed with clubs
and often used by the government to break up protests, turned on the
demonstrators after opposition leaders spoke to the crowd and left the
rally site. The assaults appeared to be random and limited, and were
over in less than an hour.
At least five people were hurt, said Om Sam Ath, an officer of the human rights group Licadho.
"These
security forces seem to be addicted to beating people," he said. "Every
time they disperse protesters, they beat people, and not one of them
has been arrested."
Nearly 1,000 factory workers and supporters of
the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party gathered outside the
city's Freedom Park, which had been sealed off with barbed wire with
hundreds of police on guard. The event was held both to mark the labor
holiday and kick off the opposition's campaign for local elections.
Cambodia is formally democratic, but Prime Minister Hun
Sen's authoritarian government has been in power for almost three
decades while his opponents have complained of intimidation.
Opposition
leader Sam Rainsy, speaking before the violence, condemned the
government for banning workers from holding a May Day rally. He said he
supports labor's demands for a higher minimum wage for garment factory
workers. Textile exports are Cambodia's main foreign exchange earner.
In Moscow, about 100,000 people marched through Red Square, the
first time the annual parade has been held on the vast cobblestoned
square outside the Kremlin since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.
In
keeping with Soviet-era traditions, Thursday's parade was organized by
trade unions and honored the working man. But it also celebrated
Russia's annexation of Crimea and was seen as part of President Vladimir
Putin's efforts to stoke patriotic feelings.
Marchers held up signs saying "Let's go to Crimea for vacation" and "Putin is right." Russian flags fluttered through the crowd.
In the Philippines, thousands of workers marched peacefully in
Manila to protest low wages and employers' practice of replacing regular
employees with temporary hires who get low pay and little or no
benefits. They also decried what they said was the failure of President
Benigno Aquino III to deliver on his anti-corruption and pro-poor
reforms.
The Philippine economy grew 7.2 percent last year despite
a string of natural calamities. Still, data show 24.9 percent of
Filipinos were considered poor in the first semester of 2013, down from
27.9 percent in the same period in 2012.
"Raise wages, bring down
prices!" members of labor groups chanted as they marched under the
sweltering sun toward a historic bridge near the presidential palace,
carrying colorful steamers. One of the banners said: "It is not moral,
it is not right, it is unjust if progress is only for a few!"
"There is growth in this country but none of the working class
has actually benefited from this growth," said Joshua Mata, one of the
rally leaders.
Thousands of Malaysians held a peaceful protest in
downtown Kuala Lumpur against a looming goods and services tax that they
fear will increase the cost of living.
The government has said a 6
percent tax will be implemented from April next year to boost revenue
and curb rising debt. There are however, mounting public concerns that
prices of goods will soar and further burden the poor after the
government last year cut subsidies on fuel and electricity.
Opposition
leader Anwar Ibrahim, who heads a three-member alliance, said that the
rally was a clear message that the people are against the new tax,
"which is only going to make the cronies richer."
Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani told thousands of laborers gathered to
celebrate International Workers' Day in the capital, Tehran, that he
supports the establishment of unions "free of any interference by the
state."
Rouhani's predecessor, Ahmadinejad, had dissolved many unions, leaving only a few perfunctory and powerless organizations.
"Workers'
organizations and unions should be formed freely," Rouhani said. "The
government should not interfere in these associations."
Dozens
of people, mostly members of the Iraqi Communist Party, held a rally
near the party headquarters in downtown Baghdad, raising Iraqi flags and
those of the former Soviet Union.
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