CNRP arrests continue
An opposition party youth activist was arrested and sent to
Prey Sar prison yesterday, becoming the second Cambodia National Rescue
Party member to be picked up this week. Some say this renewed crackdown
is aimed at winning concessions from the CNRP in stalled election reform
talks.
Roughly a dozen opposition activists and lawmakers have been arrested
in total since a July 15 protest at Freedom Park that saw demonstrators
attack district security guards.
Most have long since been released on bail, but four, including Tep
Narin, the CNRP youth wing leader arrested yesterday, and party
information head Meach Sovannara, arrested Tuesday, are behind bars.
Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak did little to undercut those accusations yesterday, telling the Post
that whether Sovannara – who has been charged with leading an
insurrection – was hit with a lengthy prison sentence or not would
depend on how flexible the opposition party is with the CPP.
“I know that it will be not 30 years as analysts have said. I believe
that it will not be long. If both parties come together [like family],
it can be separated from the law,” Sopheak said.
Narin, the CNRP youth activist jailed yesterday, was accused of
participating in violence in the aftermath of the July protest and
placed under court supervision. This required him to regularly check-in
with police twice a month, said Mon Phalla, the party’s executive
director in Phnom Penh.
“He had failed to show up [once], because he was busy in the
provinces. So the court ordered police to arrest him this morning when
he went to clarify with them,” he said.
Two other opposition youth activists are also under court
supervision, but said yesterday that they were not scared of also being
arrested.
San Seyhak and An Paktham said they will both check in with police on
Saturday as required. Paktham, 35, said they had been “charged
unfairly.”
Separately, activists in South Korea – where tens of thousands of
Cambodian migrants work – have threatened to hold protests during an
ASEAN-Korea summit next month in Busan that Prime Minister Hun Sen is
scheduled to attend. Last week, Suth Dina, the Cambodian ambassador to
South Korea, came under fire for warning workers there to avoid
political activity.
Yim Sinorn, president of a CNRP-aligned group called Youth Movement
in Korea, claimed that 3,000 Cambodian workers would demonstrate unless
Sovannara, who apparently founded the group, was released.
“If we hold a demonstration the government will be shamed on the international stage,” he said.
Although opposition leader Sam Rainsy and Interior Minister Sar Kheng
held talks on Wednesday to negotiate Sovannara’s release, details of
what was discussed remained elusive yesterday.
Rainsy has left the country for France for “personal reasons”,
according to CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann, who didn’t confirm a return
date.
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