A balloon seller set up his bike, bearing a helium tank, beside Sihanouk Boulevard in Phnom penh, Cambodia on Wednesday September 7, 2016. District officials in the capital announced they would prohibit balloon sellers from the area over fears that their tanks could explode, despite the fact that helium is an inert gas. |
Fearing fiery stampede, Cambodia bans helium balloons
Governor warns helium tanks for inflating balloons could 'cause explosions,' but helium does not burn
Anadolu Agency | 7 September 2016
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
More than four years after roadside barbecue spits were
outlawed in Cambodia due to fears they could encourage violence, municipal
officials have taken aim at another unlikely menace: helium balloons.
The English-language Cambodia Daily said Wednesday that
a district governor in the capital Phnom Penh had warned that the helium tanks
used to inflate balloons would “cause explosions that will frighten people,”
risking “a stampede and the gas explosion would burn and injure others”.
Helium is a non-combustible gas.
Wednesday's incident was not the first time officials
have accused something seemingly innocuous of having the potential to cause
chaos.
In the late afternoon, balloon sellers typically set up
their operations along Sihanouk Boulevard, a main thoroughfare where the prime
minister’s opulent mansion is situated, as well as near the Royal Palace and
along the riverside.
On Wednesday evening, a few balloon-sellers remained
dotted along the boulevard with their wares, both with and without helium
tanks.
Balloons festooned with cartoon characters such as
Despicable Me’s Minions fluttered in the breeze as a small group of armed
police stood watch near the premier’s house.
City Hall spokesman Mean Chanyada could not be reached
for comment.
The district governor's targeting of balloon sellers
came just hours before a grenade was lobbed into the middle of a street before 8 p.m. (0100GMT)
Tuesday, injuring three people and damaging two cars.
On Monday, authorities barricaded a road leading to the
headquarters of the opposition and deployed armed police to street corners.
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