A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, January 3, 2014
3 dead after Cambodian police fire on protesters
Cambodian
riot police with guns prepare to confront with garment workers throwing
stones and bricks near a factory on the Stung Meanchey complex on the
outskirts of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Friday. Pic: AP.
By AP News Jan 03, 2014
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — At least three people were killed Friday
when police in Cambodia opened fire to break up a protest by striking
garment workers demanding a doubling of the minimum wage, police and
human rights workers said.
Chuon Narin, deputy chief of the Phnom Penh Municipal Police, said the
three were killed and two others were wounded in a southern suburb of
the capital when police fired AK-47 rifles after several hundred workers
blocking a road south of the capital Phnom Penh began burning tires and
throwing objects at them. The incident followed another clash
overnight.
Chuon Narin described the protesters as anarchists who were destroying
public and private property. They were cleared from the street, at least
temporarily, by early afternoon.
Chan Saveth, an observer from the human rights group Adhoc, said his
group had tallied three dead and 10 hurt, seven apparently with gunshot
wounds.
The violence comes at a time of political stress in the country, as the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party has protested daily for Prime
Minister Hun Sen to step down and call elections. Hun Sen won elections
last July that extended his 28-year rule in the poor Southeast Asia
nation, but opposition protesters accuse him of rigging the vote. Hun
Sen has rejected their demand.
Workers at most of the country’s more than 500 garment factories are on
strike, demanding an increase in the minimum wage to $160 a month,
double the current rate. The government has offered $100 a month.
Although the wage and election issues are not directly linked, the
opposition has close ties with the country’s labor movement. On Sunday,
many workers joined a massive political rally organized by the
opposition.
The workers represent a potent political force, because the garment
industry is Cambodia’s biggest export earner, employing about 500,000
people in garment and shoe factories. In 2012, the Southeast Asian
country shipped more $4 billion worth of products to the United States
and Europe.
Friday’s confrontation followed a similar violent one a day earlier at a
different location, in which elite troops broke up a demonstration
outside a factory, beating demonstrators and arresting 10 people,
including Buddhist monks, according to witnesses from human rights
groups.
In that case, according to the local human rights group LICADHO, “The
soldiers were seen brandishing metal pipes, knives, AK-47 rifles,
slingshots and batons.”
The standoff over wages presents Hun Sen with a dilemma, as increasing
violence could drive the workers into a tighter alliance with the
opposition, providing a vast pool of people for their increasingly
confident street demonstrations. But the government is also close to the
factory owners, whose export products are the locomotive for the
economy.
The Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia last week called for
factory owners to close their plants, ostensibly for fear of damage by
protesters. The situation puts pressure both on the workers, who go
without pay, and the government, which relies on garment exports to
power the economy.
In an evident effort to increase the pressure on Hun Sen, the
association on Thursday sent a letter to the government asking that
their members be allowed to export capital equipment to other countries
because they were unable to operate in Cambodia. There was no immediate
response from the government.
