Tuesday, 22 May 2012
By May Titthara
Phnom Penh Post
Villagers detained during a bloody crackdown in Kratie province last week in which a 14-year-old was shot dead have accused security forces of brutal acts of cruelty, including forcing pregnant women to stand naked in the sun for hours.
The
villagers from Pro Ma village in Chhlong district’s Kampong Damrei
commune have alleged that military police and police forced men and
women to strip naked, handcuffed them and left the females in broad
daylight for hours while the males were not freed until the end of the
day.
Almost 1,000 police and military police officers stormed the village, where residents have a longstanding land dispute with the company Casotim,
at about 8:30am last Wednesday in an operation they said was to arrest
the ringleaders of a group attempting to create a mini autonomous state.
Sotheavy, a 19-year-old who requested her real name be
concealed, said she had “never seen such brutality” as the violence the
forces employed while storming the village of about 1,000 families –
which led to the death of 14-year-old Heng Chantha.
“It is so
difficult to forget the event. They pointed their guns at me and ordered
many women to take their shirt and underwear off, then seized our money
and tied our hands behind us and ordered us to stand in broad daylight
for two or three hours,” she said.
Sopheap, 63, who also
requested her real identity be concealed, said the villagers would file a
complaint against the perpetrators.
“I experienced Pol Pot’s
regime, but it was not as cruel as this. Now that I’ve tasted being
handcuffed and bound in the hot daylight, if I had land in another
place, I would not live in the area,” she said.
Kratie
provincial governor Sar Chamrong – who took the post on Friday,
replacing recently deceased governor Kham Phem – said the forces had
only been authorised to search for weapons.
“If the forces hit, harassed and forced people to undress, it is not a policy,” he said.
The operation, ordered by a joint committee of the Ministry of Interior,
the national police and the provincial governor, was launched under the
pretext that a group called the Democratic Association, led by Bun
Ratha, was provoking a separatist movement.
But villagers have
repeatedly said Bun Ratha, who evaded arrest along with the four other
alleged ringleaders of the group, was merely helping them stand up to
the company Casotim.
Eight people have been arrested as a result of the crackdown.
Touch
Sok, 52, alleged that during the operation, forces had also confiscated
rice and gasoline as well as slaughtered their poultry.
“I
seem defeated, but if I am not allowed to live in the area, where can I
live to farm and feed myself? I have to return to the area when the
situation becomes normal,” he said.
Sar Chamrong said forces had
begun pulling out of the area but that some would remain to protect the
safety of some 200 families that had lived in the area since 2006.
Others
who had migrated to the area from Kampong Cham and other provinces
after being tricked by Bun Ratha had been sent home, he said.
But a 2010 Phd thesis suggests their migration there had been economically motivated.
Titled The Geographies of Evasion: The Development Industry and Property Rights Interventions in Early 21st Century Cambodia,
the thesis found that significant numbers of migrants, most from
Kampong Cham, had moved to Chhlong district after Casotim was awarded a
logging concession there and in Snuol district.
Part of the thesis, by Robin Biddulph of Sweden’s University of Gothenburg, examines the impact that Casotim’s 124,000-hectare logging concession, granted in the 1990s, had on the local population.
The
thesis found the concession had led to industrial-scale logging in
Chhlong and Snuol districts where officials responsible for the forest
became “far more ambivalent”.
“Anyone with a tractor or truck
that could carry felled trees from the forest to the Mekong was able to
pay a fee to Casotim to go into the forests, cut wood, and then sell it
to the company. As many as 50 locally owned tractors and trucks
participated in this business,” the thesis reads.
Villagers had developed the perception that the military and the Forestry Administration, which had become the equivalent of informal regulators and tax collectors, worked for the concessionaires, the thesis found.
“For
the villagers, these soldiers were known simply as the ‘Casotim
soldiers’,” it says, referring specifically to the military.
Ly Hout, a representative of Casotim declined to comment yesterday.
To contact the reporter on this story: May Titthara at titthara.may@phnompenhpost.com
4 comments:
That bastard in uniform walking in the front line looks so stupid and dumb.
Slave to foreigner employed to kill their own fellows khmers is beyond my comprehension.
People with the right mind wouldn't do such things to their own country-men/women/ childrens.
These Cpp thugs created more brutality and chaotic than their comrades PolPott in the name of profits [$$$$$] All Cpp thugs got rich by stolen land and sold to foreigners,regardless of who is living on the land.
All the rich people in this generation were robbers,thieves, using power and connection to robed and forced to evicted without mercy.They stole from poor people and the country as a whole for their comrades/cronies to enrich themselves.
That is including Hun Sen himself,Hun Sen forgot that he useto eat food from Watt lork now he trying to destroy lorks (monks) that is sad to read all these evictions of the century Hun Yuon Sen style.
Stop this insanity Ah kbott jeat slave YuonCpp.
Khmer
To me, I would never make any comparison to anyone or any regime is worse than Comrade Pol Pot or regime of Pol Pot. I’m now 55 and you know how old I was at that time.
Please! Don’t get me wrong, I’m not a member of any political party.
khmer peoples, are not too smart,
they always opposed , own leaders
never loved each other,.,
that's why, they had lost territories in the past,, history was wrote
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