Prosted 18/07/2014
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) -
Cambodian police arrested two more opposition members of parliament on
Thursday on charges of leading an insurrection, taking to eight the
number of government opponents being held on accusations that rights
groups say are politically motivated.
The arrests are the latest
twist in a year-long political crisis over a disputed election which has
exposed a rift between long-serving authoritarian Prime Minister Hun
Sen and many young, urban voters yearning for change.Six members of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), five of them members of parliament and one an activist, were ordered detained in prison pending trial on Wednesday on charges of leading an insurrection, which carries a penalty of up to 30 years in prison.
Two more members of parliament for the party were picked up on Thursday.
"Police surrounded their houses and they were arrested," CNRP lawmaker Yim Sovann told Reuters.
The arrests came after
violent clashes on Tuesday in which dozens of people were hurt after
opposition lawmakers led a rally calling for the reopening of a Phnom
Penh protest site.
Freedom Park was the only place where protests
were legally allowed until it was closed in January following
demonstrations aimed at toppling Hun Sen, who has been in power since
1985.
City security guards
confronted the protesters as they tried to string up banners calling for
the park to be reopened, sparking a melee. Some guards were attacked by
protesters and at least 37 of them were injured, according to the
government.
The New
York-based Human Rights Watch condemned the charges against the
opposition supporters, saying they were trumped-up and that Cambodia's
big aid donors should demand Hun Sen's government drop the cases and
release those detained.
"These charges against CNRP leaders call
for a unified response from donors, who shouldn't play the game of
saying they hope the legal process will be fair," the group's Asia
director, Brad Adams, said in a statement.Surya Subedi, U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in Cambodia, called for an end to the ban on political gatherings.
"Tolerance is crucial for the future of democracy," Subedi said in a
statement. "I regret that a peaceful act of hanging a banner on the
barbed wire should have led private security guards to take out batons
to beat protesters, while the police looked on, which in turn led to
acts akin to mob violence."
Hun Sen, 61, has in recent years imposed political order and overseen
economic growth after decades of conflict and turmoil that began when
the country was sucked into the Vietnam War in the 1960s.
But now the former Khmer Rouge guerrilla and self-styled "strongman" of
politics is facing social-media-savvy younger voters hungry for change.
Some analysts say Cambodia's population, 70 percent of whom were born
after the 1970s and 1980s "Killing Fields" years, is no longer willing
to put up with venal, authoritarian rule in the name of peace.
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