Arrests lead to sit-down request
Oppostition Cambodia National Rescue Party deputy president Kem
Sokha is seeking a meeting with Interior Minister Sar Kheng following
the arrest of three more CNRP activists this week.
Ou Chanrith, a CNRP spokesman, said the request was made on the sidelines of a ceremony to open an elderly care centre at the Khmer-Soviet Friendship Hospital in Phnom Penh yesterday, which was also attended by Prime Minister Hun Sen and King Norodom Sihamoni, among other dignitaries.
“We would like to appeal [to the Cambodian People’s Party] to continue the culture of dialogue.
We want to meet and talk again about that agreement, because the
agreement also stated that there would be a political resolution,”
Chanrith said.
Just two days after Hun Sen called for more arrests over a July 22,
2014, Freedom Park protest that turned violent and resulted in dozens of
injuries, on Tuesday and Wednesday three more CNRP activists were
detained.
Yea Thong, 23, was detained on Wednesday, while Yon Kimhour, 28, and Roeun Chetra, 33, were arrested on Tuesday night.
They became the latest CNRP supporters to face charges over that
day’s violence. Eleven other party members and activists, arrested
months earlier, have already been sentenced to between seven and 20
years in prison for their supposed role in the “insurrection”.
Several opposition lawmakers, including Sokha, were also charged for
their alleged involvement, but no legal action has been taken against
them since the July 22 agreement last year that ended the opposition’s
boycott of parliament.
Chanrith said Sokha yesterday met face-to-face with both Hun Sen and
Kheng at the hospital ceremony, but only talked politics with Kheng, who
he said did not give a definitive answer to the request.
Khieu Sopheak, spokesman for the Interior Ministry could not be
reached. Suos Yara, a CPP spokesman, said the new arrests should not be
viewed as increasing the political tension, as the “court procedures are
independent”.
“The arrests are the court’s business, so if both leaders meet, they
may discuss the interests of the country, but that is up to [Sar
Kheng],” he said.
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