Friday, October 14, 2011

With Floods Come a Crime Wave, Officials Say

Thursday, 13 October 2011
Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh
One Phnom Penh resident, who asked to remain anonymous for her safety, said killing a person in the capital was as easy as “killing a bird.”
Police and human rights groups say violent crime has spiked in the period since severe flooding began in August, as criminals take advantage of a distracted security force.

The capital and many other places across the country have been inundated in recent weeks. Kheng Tito, a military police spokesman, said criminals are taking advantage of the floods, which slow police, to commit crimes.

“These cases happen when we are busy with floods and natural disasters,” he said. “So the criminal takes this opportunity to commit a crime. But these crimes are very small. Most of these are robberies that cause minor injuries.”


However, not all of the crimes are small. An apparent surge in violent crime has come in with the floodwater.

On Monday, a young woman was seized by gunman as she drove along Russian Boulevard in Phnom Penh, according to witnesses. Two men broke the window of her luxury Lexus and took her, witnesses said. A police spokesman said the crime has not been reported.

On Friday, the son of So Phon, an undersecretary of state of the Ministry of Interior, was kidnapped near his home in Phnom Penh’s Russei Keo district. Police said four kidnappers armed with AK-47s and pistols took him and demanded a $1 million ransom for his release. So Phon declined to comment further, but he said police are now investigating the crime.

And last month, at least two people were shot by unknown gunmen in Dangkor district, one a young woman and the other a market vendor.

Police officials said the crime surge belies steadily declining numbers. Year-on-year numbers show a decrease in crime for the first nine months of 2011.

Chan Saveth, an investigator for the rights group Adhoc, said in the first six months of 2011, security was better than the year before. But recently, there have been cases of killings and kidnappings, he said.

One Phnom Penh resident, who asked to remain anonymous for her safety, said killing a person in the capital was as easy as “killing a bird.” “We are worried about our safety when we go out to work,” she said.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is this because Hun Sen country? or Country for sale?

I'm glad that I'm out of this country. I want to help but they don't want to help themselves. What can we do?????

Anonymous said...

No need, you run away already, just stay safe.This is our destiny, we don't complaint. We are rock, struggle and die in our country, if they take our land, they die and bury body in our land, they will see our khmer bone beneath.

Anonymous said...

2:33 AM

We cant do anything, unless they want to help themself. But they dont want to help themself, they always blame Youn, China, US and UN. They dont realised that noone can help them but themself. IF Khmer people wants change then they need to stand up and say ENOUGH is ENOUGH.

Cambodia will always be the poorest country in Asia, and Hun Sen will always be the richest PM in the world.

Anonymous said...

backward and primitive thinking this person has! try it and when authority catches you, don't go cry for human rights, or whatever, you scum bag! cambodia don't need your type of primitive mentality, you know! i heard that before, it is stupid, negative, backward individual like this anonymous that bring forth the outdated tradition of stupidity, you know! stay overseas forever, cambodia is better off without individuals like you, ok!