At Least 10 people were injured yesterday when about 30 district
security guards attacked a peaceful crowd of journalists, NGO workers
and supporters of opposition lawmaker-elect Mu Sochua after she ran into
the middle of Freedom Park on her sixth attempt to draw attention to
the government’s blockade of the designated protest space.According to Am Sam Ath, chief monitor at rights group Licadho, three
journalists and seven Cambodia National Rescue Party youth supporters
were injured when baton-wielding Daun Penh district security guards, who
have become infamous for their violent behaviour at protests, were
ordered to attack the crowd at about 8:30am.
Three youths were left with head injuries, while the other four where badly kicked, kneed, stomped on and beaten, Sam Ath said.
The three journalists, two of them foreigners, were not seriously injured.
Lim Kim-Ya, a CNRP lawmaker-elect from Kampong Thom province, said he
was slapped across the face when he tried to stop the guards from
beating a female youth activist.“The actions of the Daun Penh district authorities and the Phnom Penh
Municipal Hall violates national and international human rights laws
which the Cambodian government is a signatory to,” he said.City Hall spokesman Long Dimanche denied the characterisation of the violence as a crackdown on freedom of assembly.“This was not a crackdown, it was law enforcement,” he said.“Mu Sochua, other parliamentarians from the CNRP and their activists
are trying to provoke [the authorities] to react and are inciting people
to create violence.
Then she takes all the problems that result [from her incitement] to use for political gain.”
According to Sochua, who began her crusade to “bring freedom back to
Freedom Park” at the beginning of this month, the violence broke out
after she was forcibly removed from the park by her hands and legs.As a crowd gathered around her, district authorities gave the orders to attack, she said.
“They started going after people with iPhones, with cameras,
foreigners or [locals], they went after [everyone]. It was clear that
they wanted to prevent reporting and get rid of evidence.
I think that . . . starting today they are not going to be soft [anymore].”Pen Sunsavoan, Sochua’s assistant, said he required 10 stitches to the head after being attacked by guards.“I will file a lawsuit against [Daun Penh Deputy District Governor]
Sok Penh Vuth, who directly ordered those security forces to beat us and
the other reporters,” he said.A video of Penh Vuth bashing a man over the head with a bullhorn
during a protest in January went viral and led to calls for his ouster.
Vuth could not be reached for comment.
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