Cambodia Security Forces Shoot Protesters Dead in Land Dispute
March 8, 2018 - Authorities in Cambodia’s Kratie province on Thursday opened fire on a
group of people protesting over a long-running land dispute with a rubber plantation,
killing as many as eight people and injuring dozens of others, according to sources.
More than 400 residents of 2 Thnou commune, in Kratie’s Snuol district, blocked National
Road 76A for three hours, beginning around 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, after workers from the
Memot Rubber Plantation and security forces burned down the huts and razed the farms of
300 villagers locked in a dispute over ownership of the land, witness Tin Pheak told RFA’s
Khmer Service.
The demolition came a day after Kratie provincial authorities met with the villagers in a
bid to resolve the dispute with Memot — which leased the land around the same time
residents settled in the area — but were unable to come to an agreement, she said.
Around 150 soldiers, police and military police were deployed to remove protesters from
National Road 76A, Tin Pheak said, and security forces fired on residents during the
ensuing confrontation.
“When authorities opened fire on the protesters, I saw two people were killed right away
and another two injured,” she said.
“As of now, I know that six people were killed and 40 injured. All the six dead are men.
Some of those who were killed are from nearby villages.”
Tin Pheak said that the authorities “confiscated our smart phones and destroyed them,”
apparently in a bid to prevent video of the incident from being made public.
“We tried to help victims by sending them to hospitals and we are still searching for some
missing people,” she said.
“I saw six dead bodies being dragged from a creek inside a forest ... So far two bodies
have been claimed by relatives, but the other four bodies have not been taken from the
forest yet.”
An official with a local civil society organization, who spoke to RFA on condition of
anonymity, also confirmed that six people had been killed and “several others injured.”
Unarmed villagers
Tin Pheak stressed that the clash occurred after “the company sent authorities to demolish
and burn down our houses.”
“We residents asked them to stop the demolition, but they didn’t listen to us,” she said,
adding that the villagers were unarmed and only resorted to throwing sticks and stones at
authorities after they opened fire.
“Had they not opened fire on us first, we would not have thrown anything at them. The
authorities were all well armed.”
Authorities later confiscated our smart phones and destroyed them as they were afraid that
we used them to record the incident.”
The Phnom Penh Post also quoted Tin Pheak as saying that she had seen a woman and man shot
dead by the authorities, and had helped move the bodies away from the road. After
returning from calling for help, “the police already put [a] body in a car,” she added.
Tin Pheak said that she had also been hit in the face by a police official’s gun.
The Post quoted another villager at the clash, who requested anonymity, who said he saw a
man fall over after being shot in the chest.
Death toll rises
Later on Thursday, witnesses told RFA they had discovered two more bodies, bringing the
total of number dead to eight.
One of the sources, who declined to provide her name, said that the eight dead included
one woman, and echoed Tin Pheak’s claims that around 40 people were injured, adding that a
number of villagers remain missing.
She said Kratie provincial authorities ordered security forces to fire on the protesters,
adding that two people were killed on the spot, and that many of those injured suffered
bullet wounds to the arms and legs.
“The authorities warned me [not to talk to media], but I will speak, because even if I
die, it will be worth it, as long as all the residents can get their land back and not
have their homes burned down,” she said.
“I feel so sorry for them, since some of them have many kids. Myself as well — I have five
children. If they shoot and kill me, that’s fine, but I just want to make sure that I can
get the land back for my children.”
Another resident who asked to remain unnamed told RFA that the incident had led to “pure
chaos.”
“Now it happens that some people are missing and we are still searching for them,” she
said, adding “I don’t know how many people were arrested.”
A video of the confrontation, circulating on Facebook, shows villagers with sticks and
machetes arguing with authorities, including soldiers carrying rifles. In a later segment,
dozens of shots can be heard as the villagers run away, and a separate video purportedly
shows a man shot in the thigh receiving medical treatment from fellow protesters.
Claims dismissed
In the hours following the confrontation, authorities offered a significantly different
account of what happened in 2 Thnou commune, with Major General Nay Toeung Loeung, the
deputy commander of Region 2 and commander of Kratie sub-military operations, telling
government-aligned Fresh News Media that “reports by The Phnom Penh Post and Radio Free
Asia are totally incorrect.”
“There was no death toll and only two people were injured—one in his buttock and another
one in his thigh—and they were sent to the hospital right away.”
Fresh News also quoted Kratie provincial governor Sar Chamrong dismissing reports that
residents were killed and that several others had been injured by police firing on
protesters. He said a man and a woman had suffered minor injuries, while another villager
was arrested for sparking the confrontation, in which protesters wielded “homemade guns.”
The Kratie provincial government also released a press statement denying the claims and
calling earlier reports “fake news.”
Provincial authorities “conducted a security and safety exercise … surrounding company
land so as to prevent encroachment from a group of people,” the statement said, adding
that a confrontation occurred after “residents gathered and blocked the National Road 76,
whereby a provincial working group tried to compromise for reopening the road, but was
rejected by protesters.”
“Protesters then employed violence against our working group by throwing knives, axes,
stones, missiles from rubber slingshots, arrows, and Molotov cocktails, causing injuries
to seven members of our provincial working group,” it said.
“As a result, our working group decided to fire into the air, so as to protect our members
and protect the safety of the whole working group. No one was killed during the clash,
although nine people were injured—seven of whom are authorities.”
Information lockdown
The Phnom Penh Post quoted rights group Adhoc coordinator Be Vanny, who it said initially
reported the shooting deaths, as saying he was simply passing on information he had
received, and that he was “wanted” by police.
The Post cited Soueng Sen Karuna, land rights coordinator at Adhoc, as saying that he had
been contacted by a Kratie Provincial Court official demanding his group retract its
statement and that “if not, you’ll have a problem.”
A doctor at the district referral hospital and the director of the provincial hospital
declined to provide details when asked by the paper about the incident.
Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Sovannarith Keo. Written in English by
Joshua Lipes.
View this s tory online at:
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/cambodia/protest-03082018150029.html
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