In Cambodia, Dozens of Security Guards Are Hurt in an Opposition Crackdown
Three opposition MPs-elect were also arrested in the melee in Phnom Penh's Freedom Park
Bloody clashes broke out
in central Phnom Penh’s Freedom Park on Tuesday morning as security
personnel met with stern resistance while attempting to break up an
antigovernment demonstration. Three opposition MPs-elect were arrested
in the ensuing melee.
Protesters sporting banners and T-shirts reading “Free the Freedom
Park” were confronted by dozens of baton-wielding security guards, but
officers were soon overwhelmed and many were savagely beaten with
improvised weapons.
At least eight district security guards were severely injured, reports the Phnom Penh Post,
including one who had a large rock smashed on his skull while lying
prone. Smoke bombs were then deployed to disperse the crowd.
Cambodia has been wracked
by political tensions since elections a year ago that returned
strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen but were widely condemned as
fraudulent.
Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party has now clung onto power for more
than 29 years. Officially, it won 68 out of 123 legislative seats in
last July’s elections. However, the opposition Cambodia National Rescue
Party (CNRP) maintains it was cheated out of eight seats that would have
swung the balance of power.
CNRP MPs-elect have refused to take their seats in protest and have
been spearheading ongoing demonstrations, including the one at Freedom
Park, where three of them — Mu Sochua, Keo Phirum and Men Sothavarin —
were detained
“So far, police have arrested three CNRP lawmakers,” says Khuong
Sreng. “Whenever there’s violence, the leaders of demonstration must be
immediately arrested for questioning and investigation.”
A ban against public protests was enacted in Phnom Penh after violent
clashes involving striking garment workers — many of whom backed the
CNRP — broke out in January with the loss of at least six lives. Freedom
Park was closed and surrounded by razor wire to deter demonstrators.
“There was every indication from the government that they would not
tolerate any attempt to protest, particularly at the Freedom Park,” Ou
Virak, president of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, tells TIME.
“But it’s within the rights of the people to protest and push the
boundaries.”
CNRP spokesman Yem Ponhearith told the Cambodia Daily that
the organization was “sorry for the violent clash today.” However, he
maintained that “it was the security guards who started the violence and
attacked the protesters as they often have done before.”
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