Cambodia PM Wants Official Protest Venue Moved out of Town
AP / ABC News | 6 December 2016
Cambodia's leader has taken a poke at pro-democracy activists and a slap
at the United States, suggesting that if the capital's designated
political protest venue is not moved out of town, it might be situated
in front of the U.S. Embassy.
Hun Sen
said Tuesday that he plans to have Freedom Park — also known as
Democracy Square — moved to a location six kilometers (3.6 miles) out of
Phnom Penh. He said the existing park has become a site for anarchistic
activity, which was inappropriate because of its central location and
proximity to the historic Wat Phnom temple.
He said, perhaps tongue-in-cheek, that if local advocacy groups
supported by the United States objected, the park could be situated in
front of the U.S. Embassy. The embassy is already quite near the park's
present site.
Human rights groups and community organizations are among Hun Sen's
biggest critics, and he has moved in recent years to place legal limits
on their activities.
Hun Sen said that even if the new location is a bit far away, people could watch the protests on Facebook.
Hun Sen has been the country's autocratic ruler for three decades, even though Cambodia has a framework of democracy. He has pushed back against criticism by human rights groups and Western governments.
In remarks at the opening of a Coca-Cola
bottling plant, he suggested that the United States was misguided to
complain about Cambodia's treatment of protesters when anti-Trump
demonstrators had been arrested in the United States in post-election
protests, U.S. government-supported Radio Free Asia reported. Hun Sen
had expressed his preference for Trump before the election.
Cambodian security forces are often brutal in suppressing demonstrations, and on occasion have killed protesters.
Accustomed to having his ruling Cambodian People's Party control the
levers of power, Hun Sen was shocked when the opposition Cambodia
National Rescue Party staged a surprisingly strong showing in the 2013
general election.
Opposition leaders have faced legal cases against them over the past
year in what is generally regarded as a government effort to weaken them
ahead of nationwide local elections in 2017.
Freedom Park, set up in 2010, has been the site of demonstrations over
labor rights and land grabs, as well as more general protests against
Hun Sen's rule, especially by the Cambodia National Rescue Party.
Despite being the designated venue for protests, it has been closed on
occasion to demonstrators, leading once to brutal beatings by
pro-government thugs of demonstrators defying a closure.
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