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| Sarim Sarun, a freelance reporter, walks through a crowd with blood on his face yesterday after being hit by the authorities at a World Habitat Day march. Heng Chivoan |
The Phnom Penh Post | 11 October 2016
A march by 300 villagers from 99
communities to mark World Habitat Day was marred by violence yesterday after
Daun Penh district security guards beat up five people en route to the Ministry
of Land Management, including an observer from human rights group Licadho.
The march, which
consisted of villagers affected by land disputes and supporting NGOs, started
at Phnom Penh’s Chaktomuk Theatre and was headed towards Freedom Park, when the
group decided to change course to the Ministry of Land Management to deliver
petitions.
The brawl started
when the Daun Penh guards – notorious for numerous bloody crackdowns in the
wake of the 2013 elections – snatched a drum from a villager, with a tussle
ensuing between both sides. Security guards then started beating up Boeung Kak
community representative Chan Puthisak, when Licadho’s monitoring manager Am
Sam Ath attempted to defuse the situation. “I saw the man being beaten and
thought it could get serious, so I asked them to stop beating him,” Sam Ath
said. “I just said that and then security guards started to beat me.”
Sam Ath received injuries
to his mouth and face, and has lodged a complaint with the Chey Chumneah
commune police station in Daun Penh district. “I want the police to take legal
action on this case,” he added.
Additionally,
freelance reporter Sarim Sarun was left bleeding from his head after being hit
with a walkie-talkie, and former Boeung Kak resident Sat Pha received injuries
to her shoulder and face. “They just beat us without saying anything,” Pha
said. “The government never cares about our concerns – we just want justice.”
According to a City
Hall notice dated October 8, the group had permission to assemble at Freedom
Park, with only 10 land representatives allowed to deliver petitions to the
Land Management Ministry.
City Hall spokesman
Mean Chanyada said the group had violated their agreement by conducting the
march and that officers were only trying to stop them from changing their
route.
“The security
guards did not beat them. We do not know who started the trouble first,” he
said. In the afternoon, ministry official Heu Chanda met with the protesters at
Freedom Park to accept their petitions, saying that the ministry was working to
find a solution to their disputes but that it would take time.

Licadho staffer Am Sam Ath tries to defend himself from daun penh authorities yesterday morning in phnom penh during a World Habitat Day march. Heng Chivoan
A statement signed
by 60 groups yesterday condemned the attack on the peaceful march, calling it
another example of the government’s “restrictive environment for the peaceful
exercise of fundamental freedoms”.
Sia Phearum,
director of the Housing Rights Task Force, said the government’s lack of
accountability and transparency had let land disputes spread like a “cancer”
across the nation. And their inability to address these issues had forced
villagers to take to the streets, he added.
Soeung Saran,
advocacy manager at Sahmakum Teang Tnaut, meanwhile, said little progress had
been made to address disputants’ grievances. “They [the ministry] have solved
some problems in the provinces, but in Phnom Penh there is not much noticeable
difference,” he said.

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