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Authorities on Thursday arrested eight villagers for plastering the U.S. president’s picture on their rooftops beside spray-painted messages of “SOS.”
Their community of about 400 families lives in rickety homes with
corrugated tin roofs adjacent to the Phnom Penh airport’s only runway.
Villagers say they were ordered in July to vacate their land so the
airport could enlarge its runway and build a security buffer zone.
“We are being forcibly evicted from our land without proper
compensation,” said 23-year-old villager Sim Sokunthea. “We didn’t mean
any harm. We just wanted Obama to help us.”
Dozens of police
arrived at the village early Thursday morning. They ordered villagers to
remove the rooftop artwork, which was deemed illegal, and they arrested
those responsible, said Long Kimheang, spokesman for Housing Rights
Task Force, an advocacy group that works with villagers facing eviction.
Land
disputes have become a critical social and political issue in Cambodia,
which Prime Minister Hun Sen has led for nearly 30 years. Powerful
companies with influential connections take over land and evict
villagers, who receive little or no compensation. The problem has
sparked unrest nationwide, with deadly force sometimes employed by
security forces to evict villagers.
Obama’s visit to Cambodia on
Monday and Tuesday will be the first by a sitting U.S. president. He is
to attend an East Asia summit in the Cambodian capital.
More than
10,000 security forces have been assigned to keep order during the
summit as part of Hun Sen’s determined effort to show Cambodia’s best
face to the outside world.
National police spokesman Kirt
Chantharith confirmed that eight people — six women and two men — were
arrested at the village. He declined to say what charges they face.
Human
rights groups have urged Obama to demand that Hun Sen address human
rights abuses and implement genuine reforms. Obama will also visit
Thailand and Myanmar on his first overseas trip since winning
re-election.
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