Police gather at an assembly point near the CNRP headquarters in Phnom Penh’s Meanchey district yesterday morning. Hong Menea
Hundreds of police posted near CNRP rally for Sokha
Wed, 15 June 2016 ppp
Meas Sokchea and Ananth Baliga
As
CNRP acting president Kem Sokha once again refused to heed a summons to
appear in court yesterday, government forces and Sokha’s supporters
amassed in the capital just streets away from each other.
Hundreds
of riot and traffic police – equipped with guns, shields, batons and
truck-mounted barriers – were deployed on Hun Sen Boulevard, only a few
streets away from the CNRP’s headquarters where hundreds of CNRP
supporters had congregated in anticipation of an attempt to arrest
Sokha.
However,
Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak cited increased traffic on
National Road 2 and protection of the CNRP supporters as reasons for the
heavy police presence.
Sopheak denied that police were there to arrest Sokha.
“Crowding
[around the CNRP office] is why we deployed the police. If anyone
throws a grenade then what do we do? We were defending this [CNRP]
group,” he said.
Last
month, following Sokha’s refusal to appear in court, police had
attempted to arrest him but were deterred by party supporters outside
the CNRP headquarters. Sokha has been holed up in the building ever
since.
Meanchey
district authorities yesterday issued a statement saying that the
gathering – including a tent – outside the headquarters had been
disrupting traffic and was illegal. The tent would have to be taken down
within a week, it said.
Speaking
to supporters at the party’s office on National Road 2 yesterday, CNRP
lawmaker Eng Chhay Eang said that the group had congregated only to
monitor the situation, reiterating that there were no intentions to hold
a march.
“We would like to tell the authorities not to worry, the supporters here will not march anywhere,” Chhay Eang said.
Supporters
gather in front of the CNRP headquarters yesterday morning in Phnom
Penh, where acting party leader Kem Sokha has been holed up for nearly
three weeks. Hong Menea
Following
yesterday’s court hearing, Sam Sokong, one of Sokha’s four lawyers,
said they had informed the judge of the legal rationale behind Sokha’s
refusal to respond to the court’s summonses. “Our client is protected by
Article 80 [of the constitution], and our client’s immunity has not
been suspended or stripped,” Sokong said.
A
one-party vote in the National Assembly allowed for the prosecution
against Sokha to continue under a constitutional loophole, but did not
strip his immunity.
Sokong
added that the investigating judge had given no indication of whether
their request to drop the case would be upheld or not.
However, court spokesman Ly Sophanna said the four lawyers appearing in place of Sokha was “useless”.
“Lawyers
cannot answer instead of their client who is the accused man,” Sophanna
added. “Therefore, there is no use for lawyers to appear before the
investigating judge.”
He said the investigating judge would continue to take action based on judicial procedures.
Later in the day, CNRP lawmaker Mao Monyvann decried the charges, and asked supporters to keep vigil at party offices.
However,
following his speech, supporter numbers thinned to less than 100, with
the police deployment also leaving Hun Sen Boulevard.


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