By
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - A Chinese factory supervisor who caused an uproar by tearing up a poster of Cambodia's late King Norodom Sihanouk
was transferred Tuesday to a city court where she could face formal
charges for insulting the monarchy and inciting public disorder.
The
supervisor had accused garment industry employees of shirking work
during a week of official mourning for Sihanouk. When she seized the
portrait from one worker before a shift and destroyed it, more than
1,000 irate workers protested Monday, eventually marching to the Royal
Palace to demand she be punished.
Factory manager Khuch Osaphea expressed regret over the supervisor's actions, dismissed her and handed her to authorities for possible legal action.
It
is a crime in Cambodia to insult the royal family, but the law does not
mandate any specific punishment and prosecutions are almost unheard of.
It was not clear Tuesday what charges prosecutors would pursue.Sihanouk, who led Cambodia through peace and war, died Oct. 15 in Beijing at age 89. China's government was a steadfast friend of the late monarch, and it arranged the plane on which his body was returned last Wednesday to his home country.
Garment exports are Cambodia's major foreign exchange earner, and as many as 400,000 people work in hundreds of factories in the Phnom Penh area.
The government tries to strike a balance between workers'
demands for higher pay and employers' desires to keep wages low. Many
factories are subcontractors for large Western brands. The factories
involved in Monday's incident produce trousers for U.S. and European
markets.
Phnom Penh police
chief Lt. Gen. Chuon Sovann said Monday that if police had not arrived
on time, the woman would have been in danger of being physically
attacked by the workers, "but after receiving assurances from the police
that she would face justice for what she did, they were fully
understanding."
One worker, So
Sareth, said she did not understand why China's government had honoured
Sihanouk and yet the Chinese supervisor could act so disrespectfully.
"Today
this woman dares to tear up the picture of our king, next time she will
commit a crime against us workers if she is not punished now," So
Sareth said.
The workers
travelled by foot and truck to the palace, carrying another portrait of
Sihanouk. When they arrived, they all knelt before a giant portrait of
the late king on the palace wall, to which they expressed regret for his
portrait being destroyed.
A food vendor who sells meals to the workers in front of the factories said he also stopped business to join the protest.
"She had insulted our king. Her act cannot be tolerated," Sokun Theara said.
3 comments:
Why wasn't she deported back to China?
som mok.ber nov thai you brakot jea slab mong.
Its enough punishment for her already because she lost her job and bow down to apologized from the dead king picture already,what more do you want from this poor Chinese woman? Have some compassion and mercy for her.Don't put her in jail deport her back to her country to live with her old mother and childrents.Be nice the dead king picture was useless as he himself once was.....
She paid the fine,she apologized ,she lost everythings because this Sdach Komrook useless death king of gook! Your govt forgave Siamese Thapanee worse offend than the Chinese woman done,your gov't should forgive Chinese woman as well.what's a double standard!!!!
Yobal Khmer
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