Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Why Are So Many Cambodian Protesters Getting Shot These Days? [-They have been shot all along except that nobody pay attention!!!]
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| "I shoot": Chhouk Bandit shooting in Bavet |
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| "We shoot": TTY Guards shooting at peaceful protesters |
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| Hun Xen setting the example for others to follow |
March 13, 2012
Faine Greenwood
UN Dispatch
It’s becoming increasingly dangerous to be a
peaceful protester in many parts of the world, and impoverished,
corrupt Cambodia is no exception.
Since November 2011, gun
violence against peaceful protesters has been on the rise in this
troubled Southeast Asian nation. Local NGO Licadho has found that five
land-dispute protests turned violent between November and January of
2012, while a city governor has been personally involved in a February
garment factory dispute. Almost no arrests have been made in these
incidents, and the police seem markedly disinterested in pursuing
prosecution.
In what has become perhaps the
most widely publicized case, a city governor personally fired into a
crowd of 1000 garment factory protesters in Bavet, seriously injuring a
21-year-old woman and wounding two others. Bavet city governor Chhouk
Bandith promptly disappeared after the shooting, although he allegedly
showed up at the woman’s hospital to ask her not to press charges in
exchange for money.
Even Cambodia’s deputy prime minister has
jumped into the fray, after local police, at his request, offered the
21-year-old victim $500 if she did not press charges. The
young woman, who is nursing a serious chest injury, refused the money,
committing a noble act that may come to haunt her later under Cambodia’s
current leadership. As for the governor, he has lost his job – although
he will
still retain a provincial government post of some kind.
Why did the garment factory
workers take to the streets? Compared to the rest of the region, they
are poorly paid, with a minimum wage that is the lowest in the region
according to Licadho, despite the considerable profits Cambodia is
drawing from their efforts. Western consumer tastes are also at least
indirectly implicated in these Cambodian workers plights: the Kaoway
Sports company targeted by the protesters sources to a number of popular
shoe brands, including Puma, Clarks, New Balance, and Ecko.
Protesters have also been shot
attempting to protect their villages and ancestral forests from rampant
development and logging. On March 8, the deputy governor of Kampong Thom
told members of the activist Prey Long Forest Network that he won’t
take responsibility if they are shot while attempting to prevent
logging.
His threats probably aren’t
idle: on January 18th, the general manager of a development company
allegedly ordered security guards to fire into a crowd of 400 villagers
protesting the demolition of their cassava crops in Kratie province,
seriously injuring one man and wounding 3 others. The general manager
was finally arrested on March 5th, and judging from recent history, it
seems unlikely he will receive more than a slap on the wrist.
The recent outbursts of violence
seem to overwhelmingly
feature a powerful Cambodian
with a vested business interest—in the private or public
realm—ordering the shooting of peaceful protesters because they can, and
because they know that it is unlikely they will be punished harshly for
their actions.
Cambodia receives a large amount
of international aid and NGO assistance, and these violent incidents
against protesters asking only for the basic necessities of life may
make international observers wonder if all the money that’s been
invested in Cambodia’s democratic process is really doing much good. It
may fall to international policy-makers and businesspeople to push the
Cambodian government to treat its own citizens with the basic respect
they deserve.



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