Bavet arrest tally swells
Fri, 25 December 2015 ppp
Mech Dara
Authorities talk with garment factory workers in Svay Rieng province yesterday in an effort to maintain peace in the area. Photo supplied |
Six
alleged protesters in Svay Rieng province’s Bavet town were arrested on
Wednesday, provincial police confirmed yesterday, risking a fragile
peace as garment workers return to work this morning after more than a
week of unrest.
Since
last week, thousands of protesting garment workers in Bavet have
clashed repeatedly with police over demands to increase the minimum
wage. The fresh arrests come amid demands from protesters to release
four garment workers arrested last Friday for allegedly pelting a
factory with rocks.
Kim
Lai, provincial penal police director, said the six were arrested for
damaging a fire truck during the worst of the clashes, which occurred on
Tuesday and resulted in two police officers being injured by
rock-throwing protesters.
“We
knew clearly that they were involved because I was standing there
watching them,” he said, adding that the six were all truck drivers who
drive garment workers to their factories and that there was video
evidence of their involvement.
Rights
group Licadho identified the men as Loek Vicheat, 29; Pen Sambath, 28;
Keav Pros, 33; Lang Phally, 20; Sous Yeat, 43; and Teav Phalla, 47.
Som Sophy, the 38-year-old sister of Loek Vicheat, confirmed that her brother was arrested Wednesday morning.
“Commune
police asked him to come learn about the Traffic Law at the commune
police station at about 11am, but he did not come home after that,” she
said, proclaiming his innocence.
Thousands
of garment workers from Bavet’s Manhattan and Tai Seng special economic
zones began striking last week, demanding next year’s minimum wage for
the sector be raised to $148 rather than the $140 mandated by the
government in October.
The apparently leaderless protests, marred by allegations of violence on both sides, quickly spiralled out of control.
In
a bid to smooth tensions, local authorities ordered on Tuesday night
that all garment workers stay home from work on Wednesday and Thursday.
They also promised to free four workers arrested last week on condition
of bail.
But the latest arrests have raised concerns that violence could flare once again.
“These
[arrests] contradict the agreement that unions, factories and the
authorities made to improve the situation; it will pour gasoline on the
fire, because authorities have not yet released the four workers, but
now they have arrested six more, so workers will get even more angry,”
said Nouth Bopinnaroath, provincial coordinator for Licadho.
Chea Oddom, provincial representative of the Cambodian Union for the Movement of Workers, had similar concerns.
“If they want the situation to be calm, they have to release the four and stop arresting more workers,” he said.
“The workers will be unhappy when they learn their drivers got arrested, and they will go on strike to demand their release.”
However,
Ken Loo, spokesman for the Garment Manufacturers Association in
Cambodia, brushed off concerns that the situation in Bavet could
re-escalate due to the latest string of arrests.
“If
they broke the law, then they should be punished,” he said. “I think
that it is a small group organising and inciting the workers. If this
small group is identified and arrested, then the situation will go back
to normal.”
Additional reporting by Charles Rollet
1 comment:
THAT THE ONLY WAY TO STOP PEOPLE FROM PROTEST AND CRITIC HUN SEN {{KILL; ARREST AND JAIL}} TO SCARE ALL KHMERE. WE SEE AGAIN AND AGAIN AND IT LOOK HUN SEN GET SUCCESS BY DOING THAT OVER 30 YEARS AND I THINK NO ONE CAN DO OR STOP HUN SEN FROM DOING THIS. THERE BEEN A LOT OF PEOPLE GET KILL AND JAIL BY COMPLAIN AND CRITIC HUN SEN. HE KNOW THE WORLD WILL NOT TOUCH HIM BECAUSE HE IS {{ THE KING OF THE CORNER }}
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