Six transport trailers carrying barbed wire sit on Street 19 next to Wat Botum park in Phnom Penh. Heng Chivoan |
Effectively vowing to avoid a repeat of two fatal police shootings at separate protests and strikes since September, National Military Police spokesman Kheng Tito said hundreds of military police will take to the streets only to “maintain security and order”.
“No
more than 500 troops will be deployed,” he told the Post. “They will
have no guns or ammunition. [And] if it’s not necessary, they will not
block the road.”
Likewise, National Police spokesman Kirth Chantharith said police officers were not allowed to open fire today.
“We’re not allowing them to use guns,” he said.
Asked if officers would be carrying guns and live ammunition at all, Chantharith said: “No, we don’t allow them”.
The opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party will lead three marches from different parts of the capital to Freedom Park this morning, where a mass demonstration will be held, while a group of activist monks and villagers will descend on the National Assembly to demand human rights be be respected after a 10-day walk from different parts of the country.
The Cambodian Human Rights
Action Committee, meanwhile, has been granted permission to use Wat
Phnom for a 5,000-person event at the same time that unions and other
NGOs will gather in parkland on the riverside opposite the office of the
Council for the Development of Cambodia.
Chantharith said a “lot
of police” would be deployed – the precise number of which he did not
divulge – but added that many of them would be traffic police.
“We’re
worried about traffic jams,” he said. “So far, we don’t have any plans
to block roads [with razor-wire] … but we are ready to respond to any
emergencies.”
After a CNRP mass demonstration on September 15,
police shot dead 29-year-old Mao Sok Chan at the capital’s Kbal Thnal
overpass, which had been heavily blockaded for most of that day.
With
that violence still fresh in many people’s minds, police opened fire on
workers on strike from the SL Garment factory in Meanchey district last
month, killing food vendor Eng Sokhom, 49, an innocent bystander.
A number of people in both incidents were treated in hospital after being shot by police bullets.
The
crackdowns have been widely decried but remain largely unexplained by
authorities, who have said both cases are being investigated.
Leading
up to today’s marches, six trucks carrying the same razor-wire used to
block major roads in Phnom Penh during previous CNRP mass demonstrations
were parked near Wat Botum yesterday.
Post reporters, however,
could see no other signs that police were planning to block roads near
Freedom Park, Wat Phnom, the National Assembly, Prime Minister Hun Sen’s
house or major roads leading into Phnom Penh.
The Ministry of
Interior has refused CHRAC and the CNRP permission to march to the
National Assembly, but CNRP deputy president Kem Sokha, arriving back in
Cambodia from the US yesterday, told reporters at Phnom Penh
International Airport that the opposition would still do so.
“We
have already informed the authorities, and they have an obligation to
protect the safety of demonstrators. We will walk as planned,” he said.
The
CNRP, which has permission to host 10,000 people at Freedom Park, also
has a demonstration planned for Siem Reap later in the day.
City Hall spokesman Long Dimanche could not be reached yesterday.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY MEAS SOKCHEA
Source: phnompenhpost
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