Showing posts with label Hun Xen's police brutality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hun Xen's police brutality. Show all posts

Thursday, March 18, 2010

27 hurt as police try to evict Cambodian villagers

2010-03-18
By SOPHENG CHEANG
Associated Press


Police and villagers clashed Thursday in Cambodia, when authorities tried to evict residents of land awarded to a Taiwanese man by a court, leaving 27 people injured.

Brigadier Gen. Keo Pisey, chief of Kampong Speu province's police, said 100 police officers charged with the eviction were met by some 400 villagers, who attacked the officers as they arrived at the disputed land and wounded 14 of them.

"We were assigned to implement court-ordered eviction proceedings by asking those villagers to move out of the disputed land but once we arrived, we were welcomed by stones, sticks and slingshot," Keo Pisey said.

A representative of the villagers, Son Bun Chhuon, said police arrived with AK-47 rifles, shields and electric batons and beat them. He said 13 villagers were hurt, including a pregnant woman and a 12-year-old boy. He said four of them were in critical condition.

All 13 injured people are being treated at their homes because they fear that if they go to the hospital, the police will return and succeed in ousting them from their land, he added.

In recent years, land disputes have become frequent occurrences in Cambodia, usually pitting poor farmers against developers. Several people have been killed and wounded. Human rights groups have charged that several thousands of urban and rural dwellers have been illegally and inhumanely evicted from land that has been appropriated by corporations and influential individuals.

Keo Pisey, the police official, said he ordered his forces to withdraw from the disputed area - 160 acres (65 hectares) of rice paddies and houses 25 miles (45 kilometers) west of the capital, Phnom Penh - to avoid further violence.

Keo Pisey said the villagers had lost a lawsuit in which a court award the land to the Taiwanese man, but the villagers claimed the land belonged to them and the court just favors the rich and powerful.

Son Bun Chhuon said the land had been owned by the villagers since the collapse of communist Khmer Rouge regime in 1979, but a decade later a senior police officer and the Taiwanese man staked a claim to it and asked the villagers to move away.

"I have only a small piece of land for my home and planting rice; if I lose that land, it means that I will lose my life," he said by telephone. "I would became a beggar and my children will die if our protest is not successful."

Friday, August 07, 2009

4 August 2009 – Another Dark Day For Justice And Democracy In Cambodia



Cambodian Center for Human Rights

PRESS RELEASE
Phnom Penh - 7 August 2009

4 AUGUST 2009 – ANOTHER DARK DAY FOR JUSTICE AND DEMOCRACY IN CAMBODIA

The Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) regrets the verdict of the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on 4 August 2009 in the case of Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) lawmaker Mu Sochua, and condemns the police’s treatment of SRP members and supporters that followed this verdict. This verdict provides further proof that the Cambodian judiciary is a political tool of the Royal Government of Cambodia (RGC) used to silence opposition voices. Moreover, the violent scenes that followed the verdict are testament to the RGC’s hostility towards democracy and the freedoms of expression and assembly.

The verdict against Mu Sochua was the culmination of four months of political strong arming by Prime Minister Hun Sen, during which time Cambodians and the international community were given the opportunity to witness the extent to which the Cambodian judiciary and legal system is under the control of the RGC. During this period a campaign against the pillars of democracy; lawyers, politicians, journalists and NGOs, has been conducted through the medium of the Cambodian Court system with charges of criminal defamation, disinformation and incitement being initiated against, to name just a few; Hang Chakra, Soung Sophorn, Moueng Sonn, Dam Sith and Ho Vann.

On 24 July 2009 Mu Sochua stood before the Phnom Penh Municipal Court with no legal representation, her original lawyer having withdrawn from the case as a result of threatened disciplinary action against him by the Bar Association of Cambodia. In her opening statement and closing remarks, Mu Sochua called on the Municipal Court to prove its independence and to avoid making a political decision. The SRP parliamentarian exercised her right to silence when questioned by the Presiding Judge, the Prosecution and the Civil Party Lawyer, seemingly protesting against her lack of legal representation. Article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which is part of Cambodian law by virtue of the Constitution, guarantees the right to a lawyer of one’s own choosing, a right that had already been denied in this case.

On 4 August 2009, the Phnom Penh Municipal Court delivered its verdict finding Mu Sochua guilty of having defamed Prime Minister Hun Sen and sentencing her to pay a fine of 8 ½ million riel and a further 8 million riel in compensation. This verdict represents a nadir for the Cambodian political and judicial systems and any supposed separation thereof.

Upon hearing the verdict, Mu Sochua and her followers attempted to walk to the SRP headquarters on Sothearos Boulevard. The scenes of violence that followed, whereby members of the various police forces that were present attempted to intervene and prevent a peaceful march, evince an absolute disregard for democracy and the freedoms of assembly and expression. During these scenes the following incidences are reported to have occurred:
  • Mr. Chan Cheng, 52, SRP lawmaker in Kandal province was first hit with a baton by a policeman at the corner of Olympic Market, and later kicked in the chest in front of Langka pagoda;
  • Mr. Yon Tharo, another SRP lawmaker, was hit three times with a police baton;
  • Ms. Mu Sochua’s hair was pulled, and she received bruises and cuts to her body;
  • Ms. Seng Theary, former Executive Director of the Center for Social Development, was forcibly removed from the crowd;
  • Mr. Seng Cher, 45, from Kandal province and Mr. Ly Ne, 33, were arrested and released one hour later.
  • Mr. Yon Tharo’s bodyguard was also arrested. Before his arrest, he was hit on the head, kicked and kneed by up to 10 police officers. He has since been released.
  • Ho Sirin, 42, SRP activist was grabbed by the throat, kicked and kneed. He said a policeman in black uniform flashed a gun at him so he decided to stay still.
  • An old woman, aged 70, was beaten from behind on her back and around her waist.
The violent scenes of 4 August 2009 that followed a politically motivated verdict by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court capped what will be long remembered as another dark day for justice and democracy in Cambodia. The CCHR regrets the verdict and condemns the manner in which the police handled a peaceful procession.

For more information, please contact:
Mr. Ou Virak, President, CCHR
Tel: +855 12 404051
Email: ouvirak@cchrcambodia.org

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Police brutality against Mu Sochua supporters (RFA)


RFA posted this video clip showing Hun Xen regime's police brutality against Mrs. Mu Sochua supporters following her guilty verdict handed down by the CPP-controlled Phnom Penh Municipal Court.