Cambodian protesters throw stones to police during clashes
in Phnom Penh on September 15, 2013. Photo: AFP
Police fired smoke grenades and water cannons in
clashes with hundreds of demonstrators on Phnom Penh's waterfront on Sunday
evening, leaving one protester dead and hundreds injured, amid heightened
tensions in the Cambodian capital over the country's disputed national
elections
Opposition supporters are threatening to continue mass rallies
ahead of the first scheduled session of parliament on September 23 which
opposition leaders have declared they will boycott.
Our vote is our life ... they stole our votes, it's like
stealing our lives.
Sam Rainsy, leader of the opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party (CNRP), told about 20,000 protestors at a Sunday rally that
opposition MPs will refuse to attend parliament unless the government of
strongman prime minister Hun Sen allows an independent investigation into
allegations of widespread vote rigging at the July 28 poll. "Brothers,
this is an important mission to rescue the nation," he said.
CNRP deputy president Kem Sokha told the crowd that "our
vote is our life...they stole our votes, it's like stealing our lives."
An attempt by King Norodom Sihamoni to broker talks between
Mr Hun Sen and Mr Sam Rainsy on Saturday failed to end the six week stand off,
one of the biggest political challenges Mr Hun Sen has faced during three
decades in power.
Further talks were planned for Monday as human rights
activists called for a power sharing deal that could see the opposition being
allocated several parliamentary leadership positions.
Deadly protests: The body of a protestor who died after
being allegedly shot by riot police on September 15, 2013 in Phnom Penh Photo:
Getty Images
Mr Hun Sen's Cambodian People's Party (CPP) took 68 seats at
the elections while opposition parties won 55, an increase of 29 seats for the
opposition from the previous election.
It was a humiliating result for Mr Hun Sen, 61, who has taken
credit for development and economic growth since the Khmer Rouge "killing
fields" rule of the 1970s.
The opposition claims it was cheated out of 2.5 million
votes to keep Mr Hun Sen in power for another five years and says evidence it
has been collecting proves it.
Cambodia's Constitutional Council ruled on Friday that
allegations of vote rigging had been investigated and no new investigation was
warranted.
Sunday's violence erupted about two kilometres from the
city's Freedom Park where Mr Sam Rainsy and other opposition leaders addressed
the rally.
Witnesses said the violence erupted when protestors ripped
apart police barricades and threw razor wire fences into the Tonle Sap river.
Police responded by firing the water cannons on them to
launching smoke grenades. Mr Sam Rainsy went to the scene and asked the
protestors to end the violence and leave the area.
Several people were injured including a policeman.
Opposition leaders distanced themselves from the violence as
protesters vowed to camp out in Freedom Park for another two days despite heavy
rain Sunday night. Fears of violence had escalated last Friday when a small
bomb and some grenades were discovered in city parks.
Thousands of security forces armed with riot guns, shields
and truncheons have been deployed in the city since the election.
Lindsay Murdoch-With
agencies Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/cambodia-violent-clashes-over-disputed-elections-leave-protester-dead-hundreds-injured-20130916-2tte7.html#ixzz2f08PF9NA
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