A CAMBODIAN woman miscarried after police beat her and another
pregnant protester during a crackdown on a land rally in the capital, a
local rights group said.
The 33-year-old woman, who was 10 weeks' pregnant, miscarried after
being hit during a "heavy crackdown", the Cambodian Human Rights and
Development Association (ADHOC) said in a statement.
She was among
around 100 people who blocked the road outside a municipal building in
central Phnom Penh, in the second protest of its kind to be broken up
with violence.
Police initially tried to drag the protesters from
the road but they resisted, prompting officers to beat them, an
eyewitness said on condition of anonymity.
"The pregnant women
were kicked and beaten," Ny Chakrya, of ADHOC, said, adding they were
taken to hospital where the miscarriage was confirmed.
In the statement his group said the crackdown "seriously violated the law and human rights".
Phnom Penh's police chief declined to comment about the alleged incident.
The
protesters -- from Phnom Penh's lakeside area -- are demanding more
compensation or the return of land given by the government to a Chinese
company for a commercial development.
In May three people from the
same group of demonstrators were knocked unconscious after police fired
water jets at them during a rally at the same location.
The land belonged to the government and was handed to the Chinese firm, which has so far left it unused.
The dispute is the latest in a series of high-profile cases of alleged forced evictions and land grabs by powerful interests.
Activists say land conflicts are Cambodia's most pressing human rights issue and protests have intensified since last year.
Forced
evictions across the country have displaced thousands of families and
prompted protests and violent clashes between residents and armed
security forces.
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