Effigy disaster averted: Sar Kheng
Thu, 17 September 2015 ppp
Meas Sokchea and Taing Vida
A
plan to burn an effigy of Prime Minister Hun Sen at a Cambodia National
Rescue Party rally in the capital two years ago would have led to the
deployment of heavily armed security forces had ex-US ambassador William
Todd not intervened to stop the stunt, Interior Minister Sar Kheng said
yesterday.
The demonstration in Freedom Park on December 18, 2013, passed peacefully and without an obvious security force presence.
However,
speaking at a meeting with private security firms at the
Intercontinental Hotel yesterday morning, Kheng said things could have
turned out differently.
He
said that he was in a meeting with Todd when he learned of the
demonstrators’ plans, and suggested that the ambassador instruct CNRP
president Sam Rainsy to call a halt to the burning.
“The
protesters planned to tie the neck of the effigy to pull it along
public roads and then step on it and burn it,” he said. “I met with …
[Todd] at about 9 or 10am and told him that this is not tolerable in
Khmer culture. If [the CNRP] is allowed to do this, Cambodia will have
problems.”
Kheng
said that Todd did as he was asked, saying that military police were at
the ready if Rainsy decided not to order the protesters to cancel their
plans.
“Maybe
in other countries [burning an effigy of the premier] could be
possible, but such a culture is impossible in Cambodia,” Kheng said.
However,
responding to Kheng’s claim, Rainsy said yesterday that he did not
“have the slightest idea [or] memory related to such an allegation”.
Less
than three weeks after the protest, ruling Cambodian People’s Party
loyalists and security forces violently broke up the opposition’s
protest camp at Freedom Park, a day after at least five people were
killed during a garment worker strike.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said Rainsy was expected to meet with Kheng next week.
However,
Sovann declined to confirm that the 14 CNRP activists imprisoned for
insurrection and jailed Sam Rainsy Party Senator Hong Sok Hour would be
on the agenda, saying only the topic of electoral reform had been locked
in.
Sok
Hour was jailed last month on treason charges after Hun Sen called for
his “urgent” arrest for posting a “fake” section of the Cambodia-Vietnam
border map to his Facebook account.
Sovann
said the last majority and minority team meeting also involved Keat
Chhon, Men Sam An and CNRP deputy president Kem Sokha, but he said it
was unknown whether they would also attend.
Also
at yesterday’s security meeting, Kheng said that authorities were
continuing to search for a suspect who allegedly threatened Sokha’s
life.
The
initial suspect, Interior Ministry official Pheng Vannak, had been
cleared after it was discovered that his Facebook account had been
hacked, Chantharith said.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY SHAUN TURTON AND DANIEL PYE

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