Khmer Circle:
It's clear that this neo-Khmer Rouge Hun Sen regime will do whatever it takes to cling on to its illegitimate power. For the older generations of Khmer people the memories of such ill-treatments and state-sponsored abuses remain raw and, are being rendered even more so by what is happening before their eyes and to their fellows; not on the same scale or at the same intensity as had happened in the seventies but, humans with scarred memories of any experience of that nature will need no direct physical encounter with the same experience today to recognise the underlying malicious forces or the evil intents constituting the common threads or denominators of the mindset of the offending perpetrators of the past and present.
To even think - as some Cambodians and non-Cambodians do - that the man responsible for such callous acts is a "moderate" in the country's violent and unlawfully framed polity is adding further insult to injury.
While the rest of the world wait and watch, innocent Khmer people are being subjected to random instances of harassment and violation of all sorts, ranging from being brutally attacked to being sexually molested in broad daylight by the regime’s “security” personnel unleased onto the streets “to keep the peace and order”. Yet, the regime would like the nation to know through its ubiquitous public banners that it “does not practise false human rights observation”!
Fellow CNRP activists’ wives help Seng Chanthorn after security personnel slammed her to the ground in Phnom Penh, Sept. 4, 2020.
RFA
Seng Chanthorn, the wife of Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) activist Sun Thun, was admitted to the hospital after authorities from the city’s Prampi Makara district threw her to the street, causing her to pass out, as they broke up the wives’ weekly “Black Friday” campaign in front of the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, fellow CNRP wife Prum Chantha told RFA’s Khmer Service.
After undergoing an examination, doctors determined that Seng Chanthorn had suffered “internal injuries” during the crackdown, said Prum Chantha, who took part in the protest peacefully demanding the release of the 17 CNRP activists from Prey Sar Prison.
A video of the assault was published to Facebook later on Friday, which purportedly shows a security guard slamming a woman onto a paved street, after which she appears to faint.
Prum Chantha told RFA that the security personnel “intended to kill” her and the other CNRP wives to “put a stop to further protests.”
“It was extremely brutal—we are weaker and unarmed women, but they pushed us around like animals,” she said.
“They dragged and hauled us. I am very sad that Khmers would assault their own kind like this.”
According to Prum Chantha, in addition to Seng Chanthorn’s serious injuries, four other women also suffered scrapes and bruises when security guards broke up the protest.
Phnom Penh Municipal Police spokesman Seng Sokseiha told RFA that both the protesters and security guards “pushed one another” and denied that the guards had violently assaulted any of the CNRP wives, despite the video of the alleged assault.
He said the women had held an “illegal protest,” without elaborating.
“The authorities must protect [the court],” he said. “Protesters displaying banners must first seek consent from the Phnom Penh authorities.”
In past years, protesters in Cambodia’s capital—particularly activists demonstrating over land disputes—have been given relatively free rein to air their grievances, in some cases even being permitted to hold gatherings demanding justice outside of the home of Prime Minister Hun Sen.
However, after the CNRP received more than 3 million votes—accounting for nearly half of the country’s registered voters—and narrowly lost Cambodia’s 2013 general election to Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP), protesters took to the streets amid allegations of voter fraud, prompting more restrictive regulations in the name of maintaining public order.
‘Inappropriate force’
Ny Sokha, head of the human rights unit for Cambodian rights group Adhoc, told RFA that Friday’s protest was “peaceful,” legal, and complied with the country’s constitution. The actions of the security guards, however, constituted a “human rights violation,” he said.
“What we have observed is that the guards used inappropriate force to crack down on the protesters,” Ny Sokha said.
“I believe their intention was to intimidate the protesters, in contravention of the law. Their actions had nothing to do with protecting security, peace, and social order.”
The CNRP was disbanded by Cambodia's Supreme Court in November 2017 for its alleged role in a plot to overthrow the government.
The move to ban the CNRP was part of a wider crackdown by Hun Sen on the political opposition, NGOs, and the independent media that paved the way for the CPP to win all 125 seats in parliament in the country’s July 2018 general election.
After being dispersed from in front of the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Friday, the CNRP wives petitioned the German Embassy to intervene in their husband cases.
NGO raids
Also, on Friday, authorities in the capital carried out a second day of raids on the offices of local nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) under the pretext of examining their registration compliance, according to Vorn Pov, president of the Independent Democracy of Informal Economy Association (IDEA).
Vorn Pov told RFA that authorities in Meanchey district visited his NGO’s office and informed him they will return to “register and record our staff, including foreign staff, and examine the organizational structure” on Sept. 10.
He said he had already submitted his NGO’s registration to the Ministry of Interior, as required by law, and that he is under no requirement to submit a report to local authorities, adding that police had already conducted an inspection of his organization last year.
“This [new] inspection, without any consent from the Ministry of Interior, is against the law and amounts to a threat [against NGOs],” he said.
Meanchey District Police Security Section Chief Phin Phal told RFA the inspection will “allow authorities to easily manage” NGOs and is necessary to “register their location” within the district’s jurisdiction.
‘Another threat’
Friday’s raid came a day after Ouk Chhayavy, president of the Cambodian Independent Teachers Association (CITA), said local police carried out a search of her office, claiming they were “conducting a census” and demanding information about the group’s registration and activities.
She called the move “yet another threat against the CITA” over its repeated calls for the release from detention of the group’s former leader and current president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions (CCU) Rong Chhun. The union leader was arrested on July 31 and charged with “incitement” after he criticized the government’s handling of a border dispute with Vietnam, prompting near daily protests by supporters.
Ouk Chhayavy said she will continue her campaign to demand social justice, despite police intimidation.
“I appeal to all teachers not to worry because what we have done is legitimate,” she said.
“We should stand up to carry out good deeds and not allow ourselves to be defeated by threats. Our struggle will succeed.”
Adhoc spokesman Soeung Sengkaruna told RFA that laws regulating NGOs don’t require inspections, calling the actions by authorities “illegal and a threat to NGO staff.”
Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
5 comments:
Chicken khmers, you need to wake up and rise up against dictatorship before it's too late. Hun Sen is turning Cambodia into a second Khmer Rouge regime. Silence is not the answer, it will not bring change.
Hun Sen picks up where Pol Pot left off the work to destroy Cambodia.
They [the Viet,and the Chinkies] will kill us Khmer [systematically or otherwise] to the last one on this planet earth:
[ពេលនេះតទៅមិនចប់ទេម៉ែ ក្នុងក្រុងក្នុងស្រែគេសំលាប់យើង]!!!
S2
KHMER PEOPLE NEED TO STEP UP THEIR COURAGE IF THEY WANT TO HAVE SOCIAL JUSTICE
It is crystal clear that the stupid habit of "Som Teh Sok" of Khmer people has not been working and furthermore destructive to their lives and their livelihoods. Millions of young Khmer workers have fled the country under financial hardship to find work.
We knew that Yuon wanted to swallow Cambodia a long time ago. Yuon had manipulated the situation in Cambodia and killed millions of Khmer people through its Khmer Rouge disciples.
Now, Yuon put a ruthless Hun Sen to control Khmer people. Yuon took Khmer land, this worst Khmer traitor Hun Sen threatens Khmer people not to say anything to avoid conflict with the evil Yuon.
Are we continuing to let this animal Hun Sen suppress us at will?
How many Khmer people did this animal Hun Sen kill during his reign in power? Just the execution of the K5 project alone, resulting of hundreds of thousands of Young Khmer men dead, made this crazy dog Hun Sen the worst Khmer traitor in history.
Khmer people need to wake up and ready to sacrifice their lives for Cambodia's survival.
In response to the wrongful imprisonment of Rong Chhunm we must make a mass peaceful protest demanding for his release. And if Ah Chor Phnek Muoy Hun Sen violently suppresses us, more people must participate and ready to make their ultimate sacrifice for Cambodia. We must not back down if we want to see a fruitful outcome.
Nothing is free in this world. The international community has no reason to help us if we don't help ourselves first. Just remember that we had lost about 3 million people under Yuon's tricks and unfortunately, we are presently under Yuon's control.
If we lose a few thousands maybe 3 thousands people during the peaceful protest at this time, Cambodia will survive because the members of the 1991 Paris Peace Accord will have no choice but to reconvene to resolve Cambodia's problems once more. The members of the 1991 Paris Peace Agreement would not stay idle facing the killings of this magnitude committed by the autocratic regime of Hun Sen. We revive the 1991 Paris Peace Accord through our noble efforts trying to free Rong Chhun. The road to success must start from somewhere. We let Dr Kem Ley die in vain.
Yuon and Hun Sen kept killing our Khmer heroes because they had never suffered any consequences from their crimes.
Rong Chhun has sacrificed so much for the teachers and the workers in Cambodia. Now, he is wrongfully imprisoned. Khmer people need to do something back for him. Inaction and "Som Teh Sok" will make him very disappointed and demoralized.
Bun Thoeun
Hun Sen and the other traitors should be dealt with. They are puppets of the evil Yuon. They arrest and attack Khmers on their own homeland, destroy rivers and let evil Yuon steal resources and land. Who will protect and defend the homeland? Not the traitors. Khmers need to find their strength to fight.
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