Another protest turns bloody
Land protesters from Preah Vihear province who came to Phnom
Penh seeking a resolution to their disputes were brutally beaten by
security forces yesterday as they attempted to deliver petitions to
Prime Minister Hun Sen.
About 100 people representing 333 families in Choam Ksan district’s
Kantuot commune and Tbeng Meanchey district’s Palhal commune marched
yesterday morning to the Chinese, Russian and Australian embassies
before attempting to deliver a petition to Hun Sen’s cabinet.
Within metres of the premier’s home, the protesters were met by
barricades guarded by dozens of police and district security guards,
armed with batons, stun guns and shields.
“I do not have a house to live in, there is no school or hospital to
go to; they have been cleared. Please give land to all of us,”
5-year-old Mey Kanha shouted tearfully through a loud speaker.
When the group attempted to break through the barricades, the
security forces chased them away, violently attacking men, women,
children and monks, and destroying a tuk-tuk and protest paraphernalia.
“When disproportionate violence of this kind is used against peaceful
protesters, it perpetuates an atmosphere of fear and intimidation in
which people are afraid to claim their rights,” said Licadho director
Naly Pilorge.
But City Hall spokesman Long Dimanche defended the security guards’ actions.
The protesters “did not get through the barricades normally; they
mixed pure water with acid and threw it on the authorities, which is
against the law”, he said. “A handful of people who were not the real
victims used bad language to insult the top leaders. It was not a
protest, it was an incitement to topple [the government], so we had to
strengthen the law.” he said.
No security guards were reported injured and Dimanche was unable to
explain his allegations of acid-throwing, which were quickly dismissed
by the protesters.
“We did throw water at them but without any acid … and we also did
not scold [Hun Sen]; we only asked him to help intervene in the land
disputes for us,” said community representative Phan Phoeun.
In a more peaceful protest, more than 200 people from eight
communities in danger of losing land due to a railroad project funded by
the Asian Development Bank (ADB) protested outside of its offices.
“We will help bring all of your questions or issues that come through
ADB to the government and companies involved [so they can be] discussed
and resolved,” said ADB country director Eric Sidgwick.
No comments:
Post a Comment