‘Black Monday’ should be quelled, says CHRC head
Phnom Penh Post | 24 June 2016
The head of the government’s
Cambodian Human Rights Committee (CHRC) said the civil society-backed “Black
Monday” campaign needs to be quelled given that it had the potential to flare
up like the violent Veng Sreng Boulevard minimum wage protests in 2014.
The campaign has so far involved small, nonviolent
gatherings calling for the release of rights workers jailed in a case widely
criticised as politically motivated, with participants wearing black to “mourn
the death of human rights in Cambodia”. Several of the gatherings have been
forcibly disrupted by police, resulting in the brief detention of several
attendees.
Keo Remy [the serial defector], who was appointed as the CHRC’s president in
early May, told reporters after a lecture at the Royal University of Law and
Economics that while the campaign seemed small now, there was potential for it
to get bigger if the authorities didn’t “keep it quiet”.
In January of 2014, with mass garment-wage protests
coming to a head at Veng Sreng Boulevard, state security forces opened fire on a rioting crowd, killing
five. About six months later, an opposition rally near the Naga Bridge turned violent, and several Daun Penh
district security guards were viciously beaten. The beatings followed months of
brutal crackdowns by the guards on nonviolent opposition gatherings.
Remy yesterday went on to take a veiled jab at the
opposition – whose acting president Kem Sokha is currently holed up to avoid arrest on charges
stemming from an alleged affair – saying it was the government’s role to
enforce the law if there was any wrongdoing.
“There are politicians who committed wrong and there are
no political prisoners,” he added.
The rights group Licadho, however, says there are
currently 29 political prisoners in Cambodia.
Am Sam Ath, a senior coordinator at rights group
Licadho, said the “Black Monday” campaign did not bear any resemblance to the
violent examples cited by Remy.
“They [protesters] want to express their views and find
justice in peaceful way.”
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