By Associated Press,
Updated: Wednesday, May 2, 2012
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Witnesses
said Cambodian riot police hit and kicked protesters as they marched in
the capital Wednesday to demand compensation for being evicted from
their homes to make way for a luxury development.
At least five protesters were injured, all of them women.
Police in Phnom Penh blocked about 100 protesters from marching to the
local offices of the World Bank and the European Union.
Their dispute is a high-profile example of the evictions and land
grabs that have become a volatile social problem nationwide, with deadly
force sometimes employed and allegations of corrupt deals.
The
protesters said they were residents of Phnom Penh’s Boueng Kak lake area
whose land was awarded by the government to a Chinese company for
commercial development with a hotel, office buildings and luxury
housing.
The protesters demand land titles they said had been
promised by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government. The city government
resettled some families, but did not include them, they claimed.
More
than 200 police had been deployed to keep watch on the protesters
Wednesday. They had ordered them to stop their march to the offices, but
the protesters continued, insisting they had the right because they had
informed city officials of their plan.
Witnesses said riot police
then hit and kicked them; nurses from a human-rights group treated the
injured. Police ultimately allowed two protesters to enter the EU and
World Bank offices.
No comment was available from senior police officers, who did not answer their phones.
Phan Chhun Reth, 52, whose foot was injured after being kicked by police, said she would not give up the struggle.
“I am so upset with the brutal acts of the police. Why have they beaten
us, who are only women and marching peacefully to demand our land?” she
said.
The protesters have said they will demonstrate all week to get attention for their cause.
The EU and World Bank did not comment.
Cambodia
is largely dependent on foreign assistance for its development budget,
and the EU is a major donor. The World Bank several years ago had funded
a $24 million program to strengthen property rights, but to little
effect.
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