Questions are being raised over police tactics after a 12-hour
standoff with a man who took his 6-year-old nephew hostage on Tuesday
ended in the tragic killing of the child.Locals yesterday slammed the police’s seeming reluctance to use
lethal force on the perpetrator until after the boy had been stabbed,
while officials said they had followed protocol and tried to minimise
harm to both the boy and his captor.“The authorities have all kinds of guns. Why didn’t they use them?”
said Meas Sophea, one of many capital residents who saw the tale
reported on TV. “And why did they use them after the boy had already
died in their hands?”
However, military police spokesman Kheng Tito said that the mixed forces responding to the scene in Tbong Khmum province may have been caught off-guard.“Military police are trained to save people in emergencies, such as
catastrophes or natural disasters. We have intervention units,
especially in cases of terrorism or kidnapping. We have demolition and liberation teams who are trained daily,” he said.Provincial police chief Mao Pov said that throughout the standoff
police tried a number of tactics to end the situation without resorting
to deadly force.“We have to look at the real situation, whether or not the
perpetrator will listen to us. And if he does not, we have to shoot to
defend ourselves, and there is no law banning us from shooting him,” he
said.
“It is not that we are not trained. We already tried all kinds of techniques.”Police attempted to incapacitate Him Sokna, 22, using smoke guns and
an energy drink laced with sedatives. When the smoke caused Sokna to
move away from his nephew, Pha Chharan, police tried to rescue the boy,
only to find he was tied to a pillar.Officers then retreated as Sokna, whose family had noticed his mental
health deteriorating, advanced brandishing knives. Though Sokna was
clearly a risk to the child, himself and the authorities, police
refrained from shooting him, because “he is still a human being”, Pov
said.After officers retreated, Sokna stabbed the boy. Moments later, he
was shot dead in a hail of bullets. Chharan died in his mother’s arms on
the way to hospital.
Chan Soveth, a senior monitor with rights group Adhoc, said that when
young children are involved, the police should be prepared to take any
action necessary to protect the life of the child.
“In this case, the perpetrator was a madman and they should have
taken all necessary measures to save the boy’s life . . . but the case
has shown that our officers are careless and irresponsible,” he said.
“It demonstrates that our authorities are short of skills.”Contingents of provincial and military police were dispatched,
arriving at the scene in Tbong Khmum province at about 11am. A
detachment of police from the Ministry of Interior was also present.John Muller, managing director of local security company Global
Security Solutions, said the forces should have been prepared to respond
to the situation.“The police and military police are well trained, so whether they had the right people there or not, I don’t know,” he said.Officials yesterday would not confirm which units from the ministry
it had deployed and gave no indication that an investigation into police
actions would be conducted.
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