The Phnom Penh Post

Cop’s cockfighti­ng venue shut by provincial police

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police officers on January 24 with “arrogance” and superior numbers.

Samuon said the 20-odd officers leading the operation were intimidate­d into the ring, where they were surrounded by about 50 spectators, at which point one officer, feeling threatened, fired into the air.

“They had started yelling threatenin­gly at us, because his side had many people, between 50 and 60 people including gamblers,” Samuon said.

“There were five leaders who rounded up our police and made them sit down in the cockfighti­ng arena. Kheng Sokha tried to order us around but we did not follow their orders. We shot two times into the sky and they backed off. [Sokha] then shouted at us that he could fire a full magazine and that his AK was in the trunk.”

To avoid further problems, Samuon said the officers decided not to make arrests but seized some items.

“There would be big problem if we continue to confront them,” he said.

However he vowed that the group “would not get away with it”, adding a local villager had told police the cockfighti­ng ring had been operating for about a week.

In a video posted on social media, Sokha can be heard challengin­g local officers. He says: “Do you know who this place belongs to?” He then says the “leader” would “make a call” while urging the group to remember “we are colleagues”.

“Before you come down here, you should have asked me,” he says.

However, a local officer, in response, does not yield.

“Bong, I do not know and I do not care what your name is . . . I do not know how big you are, I’m just doing my work, complying with my role,” he says, dropping the name of his district chief, Khoem Sophanra, who could not be reached yesterday.

“When you arrive [at the district police station], we can talk.”

Spokesmen for the National Police were unreachabl­e yesterday.

However an item published on the National Police website about the operation noted a “heated argument” between the person running the ring and police, who were forced to draw their firearms.

It said the man “claimed he was a Phnom Penh penal police officer” and “knew both small and big people including the district and provincial police chief ”.

It added authoritie­s had seized two vehicles, nine motorbikes and four fighting cocks.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Police officials confiscate motorbikes during an illegal cockfighti­ng crackdown in Kampong Speu province last week.
SUPPLIED Police officials confiscate motorbikes during an illegal cockfighti­ng crackdown in Kampong Speu province last week.
 ?? EDDIE MORTON ?? A man plays poker at a casino in Preah Sihanouk in 2014.
EDDIE MORTON A man plays poker at a casino in Preah Sihanouk in 2014.

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