Phnom Penh Post
By Phak Seangly
Five men working for Ratanakkiri rubber concessionaire DM Group,
including a soldier, have been arrested for allegedly beating a villager
and his children – one of whom, doctors say, may not survive – in a
scuffle over their family’s land, the father said yesterday.
Police
confirmed the beating and said the soldier would be sent to court
today for questioning, while the four non-military suspects would be
sent to be charged.
The father, 52-year-old Ry Sarun, said that
on Saturday two bulldozers and 30 DM Group workers came to his land in
Ratanakkiri’s Andong Meas district – which had previously been measured
and titled by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s youth volunteers – and began to
clear it.
When his children tried to intervene, the workers
began to hit them, Sarun said. The workers, he alleged, slapped and
kicked his 12-year-old daughter, struck his 21-year-old son in the face
and on the arm with a wooden stick, and viciously beat his 14-year-old
son on the head and ribs with an iron bar, leaving him with such serious
injuries that he had to be taken for treatment in Vietnam, where
doctors say blood pooling on his brain makes a recovery unlikely. Sarun
said another male villager, 21, who tried to cool the workers’ tempers,
was himself beaten over the head with a stick.
“It happened
because I did not agree to sell my land to the company, because the
youth volunteers measured it for me already,” Sarun said, accusing a DM
Group chief of staff named Bul of the attack.
However, Bul, who declined to give his full name when contacted, denied his involvement.
“I
know nothing of this problem. I did not order a fight, because I was
not at the scene,” he said, maintaining that the family had attempted to
set fire to the bulldozers before declining to comment further.
Andong
Meas district police chief of staff Kim Channa reinforced at least part
of Bul’s version of events, maintaining that the victims had “intended” to set fire to the bulldozers when DM Group workers persisted in clearing the land over the siblings’ protests.
“The
landowners could not stop the clearing and got furious, and intended to
burn down the bulldozers, and the brawl started,” he said, adding that
the four detained workers were being held at the Ratanakkiri provincial
police station, and the soldier had been arrested by military police.
Phen
Dyna, deputy provincial police chief, said police were questioning the
four men and planned to send them to court today to be charged with
intentionally causing injury.
Provincial military police commander Kim Rasmei, however, maintained that the soldier had not been involved in the fighting.
“The
soldier is also a driver for [DM Group’s] Uk Nhea, who is the boss of
the company, but he knew nothing about the fight. We arrested him
because he was armed,” he said, adding that the soldier would be sent to
court for questioning today regardless.
DM Group has been
implicated in a slew of alleged abuses in its long-running land disputes
in Ratanakkiri. Villagers have claimed to have been intimidated by the
concessionaire, and observers have suggested that the company has used
lawsuits to stifle dissent.
In 2011, a man was shot in the leg by
a soldier working for DM Group when he went to guard his soybeans
harvested from a nearby plot leased from the company.
Chhay Thy, provincial co-ordinator for rights group Adhoc, called the latest incident a serious human rights violation.
“They
tried to force the victim to sell the land, but he refused. It’s a
gross violation of human rights. The perpetrators and the one who
ordered the fight must be brought to court,” he said, adding that Adhoc
would investigate the case on Tuesday and file complaints to the court
against any other people found to be involved.
2 comments:
Barbaric viciously indeed! Why this barbaric's acts still exist in Cambodia today? Who is to blame for all these vicious acts of violent against unarm civilians? Hun sen' s govt?
this is the result of hun sen's economic concession policy - helping the rich at the expense of the poor. Very barbaric indeed.
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