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Cambodia’s Military Police Suspends Six Officers For ‘Torturing’ Villagers
Cambodia’s National Military Police Department on Friday suspended six
officers from neighboring Tbong Khmum and Prey Veng provinces who
allegedly shot at and tortured four villagers last month after they
tried to avoid paying a fee for driving an overloaded vehicle.
The
decision to suspend the officers, including a district chief and the
head of a commune police department, was made by National Military
Police Commander in Chief Sao Sokha after an investigation into the case
concluded that the six had acted in breach of the law.
Deputy
Commander in Chief Sin Sophani told a press conference in Phnom Penh
that the officers, who had been drinking when the incident occurred, had
“abused their status as military police” and ignored internal police
regulations.
He said the policemen had used unnecessary force in
firing their weapons at the villagers and lied about what occurred when
confronted by their superiors.
“They all acknowledged that guns were fired, but they denied torturing the victims,” Sin Sophani said.
“They
refused to confess tying up the victims and torturing them, but what
they did was a form of torture. It is unacceptable, so we must take
action and send the case to court for prosecution.”
He said the six officers are being held in detention pending trial.
The
military police on March 22 had established a committee to investigate
the incident which occurred three days earlier when four villagers
transporting 31 tons of unmilled rice on an overloaded truck refused to
stop at a weigh station manned by three of the accused officers.
Three
additional military police joined in the pursuit of the villagers, who
hit another vehicle during the chase, causing two people to suffer
injuries.
The driver of the truck eventually pulled over after officers fired several shots at the vehicle, blowing out its windshield.
According
to the investigation, the military police officers then stripped the
villagers down to their underwear, tied them up and proceeded to beat
them.
Pictures of the incident, which were posted on social
media, purported to show the villagers bound and lying on a road while a
military police officer stepped on their heads.
‘Rampant impunity’
Am
Sam Ath, an investigator with local rights group Licadho, welcomed the
decision to suspend the officers Friday and called on the court to
refrain from showing them leniency if they are found guilty.
“This
is a positive sign that will ensure officers carry out their work
according to the law and do not act arbitrarily,” he said.
In
September, the Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR) urged Prime
Minister Hun Sen’s government to end “the rampant impunity for law
enforcement officials in Cambodia” after authorities had failed to
launch a probe into the killing of a man who was shot dead when police
opened fire on opposition-led protests in Phnom Penh a year earlier.
CCHR
urged the government to ensure that Cambodia’s security forces adhere
to the country’s legal obligations according to the U.N.’s rules on use
of force and punish those who are found to violate them.
Reported by Yeang Socheameta for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.