PHNOM PENH - Cambodian villagers threatened with eviction
staged a rally Sunday with "SOS" banners urging US President Barack
Obama to press the government on land rights during his upcoming visit.
About
100 protesters gathered at a well-known forced eviction site in the
heart of the Cambodian capital carrying large black banners emblazoned
with the word "SOS" next to photos of Obama and Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton.
"We are asking Obama to save our lives," said Tep
Vanny at the rally, held on a large plot of sand once home to her
lakeside Boeung Kak community before a private company filled in the
lake and displaced about 4,000 families. "We are demanding that Obama
and Hillary help push the government of Cambodia to respect human
rights, democracy and put an end to forced evictions and land disputes
with villagers," she told AFP.
Tep, who is among a small number of
residents still living on the site, has become a leading land rights
activist in Phnom Penh. Obama will on Monday become the first sitting US
president to visit Cambodia, where human rights groups accuse the
government of stepping up a crackdown on dissidents and on protests,
many linked to land disputes.
Clinton will accompany Obama on the trip.
The
White House said Obama would raise "grave concerns" over the human
rights situation in bilateral talks with Cambodian Prime Minster Hun
Sen, who has kept a firm grip on power for 27 years.
The latest
protest comes just days after eight residents facing eviction near Phnom
Penh airport were briefly detained for painting "SOS" on their roofs
next to portraits of Obama.
Rights groups say the government is
working overtime to suppress criticism ahead of and during the
high-profile East Asia Summit, which brings together leaders of 18
countries for talks on Monday and Tuesday.
Despite official
warnings that no protests would be allowed during the meetings, Sunday's
event went ahead without police interference and in view of the Peace
Palace where Southeast Asian leaders were already holding talks.
National
police spokesman Kirt Chantharith told AFP the authorities would only
force the activists to disperse if they took to the streets.
"Actually they are wrong. But the government forgives them," he said.
"The government respects human rights but needs to keep public order for the summit."
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