[Background / related]
Riot 101: Vietnam Passes on Crowd Control Tips to Cambodia Police
Army’s intro to riot control
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.
![]() |
| How Vietnam "foil plots" (democratic elections) to keep its CPP puppet in power in its destruction of Cambodia |
...
Riot Police Told by National Chief to Fear Color Revolution
Cambodia Daily | 29 November 2016
Deputy National Police chief Kirth Chantharith on Tuesday closed a
45-day training course on riot control by returning to a favorite topic
of the government: dire warnings that Cambodia will be swept up by a
color revolution unless the country’s security forces remain vigilant.
Prime
Minister Hun Sen himself often conjures up the bogeyman of color
revolutions, either willfully or mistakenly conflating actual color
revolutions—peaceful popular movements for democratic change—with the
civil wars of the Arab world.

General
Chantharith continued the mislabeling on Tuesday in his closing speech
to the officers who had just finished their riot control training in
Kompong Cham province.
“The security situation in the world is
still complicated, involving terrorism, rebellion and crime around the
world,” he said. “We see countries in the Middle East with color
revolutions, such as Iraq, Syria, Libya and Ethiopia, countries that
[Mr. Hun Sen] always reminds us to watch and know what’s happening
there. Now those countries have been destroyed.”
None of the four
countries the general named have had color revolutions. When color
revolutions have taken place, predominantly in countries in Eastern
Europe, they have been peaceful—if disobedient—uprisings.
Gen.
Chantharith pressed on, blaming color revolutions on “incitement,” a
charge the government often throws at the opposition or other activists.
“I
believe that most of the people [who protest] believe their enticements
and incitement,” he said without actually naming the CNRP. “But our
country is a democracy, so it has many parties, including opposition
parties and pro-[government] parties.”
“We need to have the will
in our hearts, and our police need to understand that we have a duty to
protect the nation, the government and the people,” he concluded.
The
government claims to have its own nascent color revolution in Cambodia
in the “Black Monday” protesters—a band of a few dozen women who have
taken to wearing black every Monday to demonstrate peacefully against
forced evictions, the jailing of fellow activists and other causes.
Police have broken up a number of their events.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said that what Cambodians had to fear most was not a color revolution, but their corrupt government.
Cambodia
is regularly ranked among the most corrupt countries in the world,
thanks in large part to a judicial system in thrall to the ruling CPP,
which has remained in power for over 30 years partly due to elections
deemed less than free and fair by many observers.
“We do not want
to have a color revolution, and we also don’t want to have corruption
and human rights abuses,” Mr. Sovann said. “What the people fear most is
injustice.”

Aaaahah, now I know why there have been such a low fatality figure from the confrontation between the Cambodian police vs. the protesters. The Vietnamese trained the Cambodian police well to reduce fatality.
ReplyDeleteYou all know the Khmer folks are very hot temper and violent. Without proper training from the Vietnamese, a huge fatal brawl would quickly ensue every time from a confrontation.
Let's watch here...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_b_d3ubmomU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MM0IxFJwdMo
Wow, watch it here: Anti-Khmer Royal supporters battled Khmer Royal supporters.
It's so brutal, Khmer Vs. Khmer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nw3zpVPnoOM
I am going to watch it 5 times.
Hanoi planted its third-hand, Hun Sen.
ReplyDeleteThe Khmer people must cut that hand off
and go after the hand' s owner.