After strikes and protests, Cambodia's Hun Sen cracks down
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| Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Sun Savorn was handing out food on Saturday at an ongoing opposition rally when the trucks pulled up. Men wearing motorcycle helmets and carrying crude truncheons jumped off and started running in her direction, yelling 鈥淕o! Go away!鈥
They kicked the woman to the ground and she tumbled over, hurting her knee. She pulled herself up and ran as fast as she could from the area, which was legally enshrined as a free-expression zone in a 2009 law. Locals call it Freedom Park, or Democracy Square. Since Cambodia鈥檚 disputed election in July, the rectangular meeting ground in the middle of the city has served as a staging point for the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party. Not any more.
鈥淲e did this forum without causing any violence or problems, so why did they remove it?" Savorn asked.
After taking tentative steps towards opening up the political system in recent years, Prime Minister Hun Sen鈥檚 government slammed on the brakes late last week. First, by arresting activists and protesters on Thursday evening. Then, by unleashing military police on garment workers striking for a higher minimum wage, which resulted in the shooting deaths of at least four people on Friday. And finally, and perhaps most symbolically, with the clearing on Saturday of Freedom Park, located mere blocks from the US Embassy.
The government also banned opposition protests, and the court summoned the party鈥檚 two leaders, Kem Sokha and Sam Rainsy, to court in mid-January to answer questions about causing "serious turmoil." Hun Sen and his ruling Cambodian People鈥檚 Party have sent a message that dissent, be it economic or political, will not be tolerated. And for the moment it looks like he will get his way.
Democracy?
鈥淩ight now, there鈥檚 no democracy at all,鈥 said Kem Ley, an independent political analyst. 鈥淥ne party, one person manages everything. The court, the legislative branch, even the Royal Palace.鈥
For months, Freedom Park had played the role it was designed for. The opposition used it for rallies, demanding redress after an allegedly fraudulent election in July, and the government adopted a hands-off approach to the ensuing marches. But in December, after unions announced a nationwide strike, and teamed up with the opposition in one of the largest shows of people power in recent memory, something changed.
Within the leadership of Hun Sen's Cambodian People鈥檚 Party, or CPP, there were probably always debates about how to handle the swelling demonstrations, says Ou Virak, president of the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights.
鈥淚t just basically tells me that hard liners within the CPP are winning the day,鈥 he said. Virak helped work on a guide to the 2009 law that created Freedom Park. He can鈥檛 remember a similar incident occurring in the designated area since it was established.
But the government makes it seem like a routine decision, disconnected from a larger quashing of dissent.
Mok Chito, who heads up the department of central justice inside the Ministry of Interior, said the protests violated the law, even if they had been going on at the same exact place, on and off, for months.
鈥淭he demonstration and protests are illegal. And it caused damage to properties of individuals, the state and companies, so we stop it for a short time,鈥 he said.
It was certainly a well-coordinated stoppage. Various departments pitched in. After the initial clearing, city garbage trucks arrived, and workers hopped off to sweep refuse to the side, pick up tarps and remove plastic bags. Water trucks hosed down the park. Police trucks hauled off part of the stage. Authorities provided the vigilante squad with free juices, and gave cokes to the riot cops. By nightfall, everybody not associated with a security force was kept out.