Khmer Krom protest arrests
By Phak
Seangly
The
Phnom Penh Post
26 June
2013
More
than 100 monks and other demonstrators railed against the Vietnam government’s
continued incarceration of two monks for their alleged affiliation with
Kampuchea Krom organisations yesterday.
Protesters at Phnom Penh’s Freedom Park held banners and portraits of three
monks – one of whom was released – who, their supporters say, were arrested and
tortured, by Vietnamese police on May 21 in an area of southern Vietnam that was
once part of the Khmer empire and is referred to by some as Kampuchea Krom.
“We need freedom to live, like Vietnamese people and other nations on the
world,” Thach Setha, Executive Director of the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Community
said at the rally. “Living without freedom is meaningless.”
On May 21, Kleang provincial police forces in Vietnam surrounded the Prey Chhop
and Serei Tasek pagodas, arresting five monks and two members of the pagodas for
allegedly associating with foreign Khmer Krom Associations. All were released,
except monks Liv Ny and Thach Thoeun.
“Police forces defrocked the monks and put them in rice sacks and then loaded on
a truck,” a petition the group handed over to a Phnom Penh Municipal Hall
employee for delivery to the Vietnamese embassy says. “Monk Ly Chenda who was
freed lost memory . . . we suspect that he was punished [with] drugs that cause
him lose memory.”
Signs held by demonstrators bore slogans including “Vietnam has to show respect
toward Kampuchea Krom indigenous people” and “Vietnam authorities have to stop
threatening Kampuchea Krom monks and people.”
“[We] are ready to sacrifice our lives for protecting our religion and race,”
venerable Seang Sovannara, 38, shouted to the crowd through a microphone.
Ket Che, administrative director of Phnom Penh Municipal Hall, said the group’s
petition will be sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which will then
forward the document to the Vietnamese embassy.
The Vietnamese embassy could not be reached for comment.