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Military personnel in riot gear participate in an exercise last week at a police training facility. Youtube |
Army’s intro to riot control
Phnom Penh Post | 27 September 2016
Raised riot shields in their left hands, batons ready in their
right, the line of several dozen soldiers advanced toward the crowd of
“protesters” who, armed with sticks and placards, lunged forward now and then
to strike out at the shields.
Then, officers in
the rear lobbed smoke grenades in an arc overhead, the soldiers suddenly broke
into a charge and the mock mob, numbering in the dozens, scattered across the
National Police’s training facility in Kampong Speu province.
The scenes, relayed in footage released online by Cambodia
National Police News on the weekend, show a slice of the recent three-month protest-control training
delivered by the National Police and Vietnamese experts to police officers as
well as soldiers from five units of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces.
The
exercises come amid threats by Prime Minister Hun Sen and top RCAF commanders tocrack down on mass
demonstrations pledged by the opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party in response to a flurry of legal cases against their members and
top leadership.
In a speech on
Thursday marking the conclusion of the course, National Police Commissioner
Neth Savoeun said the exercise showed that the 270 participants from nine
provinces were ready to confront demonstrations.
Savoeun said the
curriculum covered ethics, strategy, weapons usage, protest prevention theory,
as well as “taking a stand to fight”, “arresting targets” and “fighting with a
shield”.
He called
dispersing crowds and arresting the demonstration’s leaders “key issues”, and
said military personnel had faced “a little difficulty” with the course, given
they were trained for the battlefield.
“For this course,
the confrontation with demonstrations, it is another issue,” said the police
chief, who is married to Hun Sen’s niece.
Since threatening demonstrations after CNRP deputy president Kem Sokha
was handed a five-month prison term on September 9, the party has offered few
details on its plans.
Party officials
have said the arrest of Sokha – who is holed up in the opposition headquarters
– would trigger protests. However, no such attempt has been made since May,
when he first went into hiding.
Meanwhile, Hun
Sen – who says he will “absolutely not” allow protests – last week declared a
Pchum Benh “ceasefire” and signalled that the ruling CPP was open to talking at
the National Assembly.
Senior CNRP
spokespeople were unavailable to comment yesterday, although one lawmaker, who
requested anonymity, said protest preparations were ongoing.
Given the current
climate, said Kevin Nauen, a senior research fellow at the Cambodian Institute
for Cooperation and Peace, the added indication of military involvement in
domestic affairs was concerning.
“This training is
not a sign that the government is concerned with minimizing human rights
abuses, but rather that the military is currently unprepared for crowd control
and dispersion efforts,” he said in a message.
In his speech,
however, Savoeun rejected that Cambodia was in a political crisis, and instead
accused individuals, NGOs and “political parties” of “poisoning the
atmosphere”.
He said the
police had to be ready to “sacrifice everything” to protect the government.
He added people
should “look at the TV” and compare Cambodia to “Yemen, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan
and Syria”, where they were “dropping bombs and shooting missiles” before
saying the Kingdom was in crisis.
Boo! I have not seen much baton in action lately. The begin of 2014 was the best, there were so many brutal baton in action, right after Scam Rainsy incited the garment workers to burn the factories.
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