The Phnom Penh Post

CNRP holds ceremony to mark grenade attack

-

senior leadership.

Meanwhile, in an ironically timed announceme­nt, a Phnom Penh judge yesterday convicted Rainsy in absentia of incitement and defamation over his allegation­s that the assassinat­ion last year of political analyst Kem Ley was “state-backed terrorism”.

Party president Sokha yestserday struck a conciliato­ry note, asking supporters to not replicate any acts of violence or insults they may face.

“Justice can take place only when we reduce or eliminate mistreatme­nt, the use of insults or violence,” he said.

On March 30, 20 years ago, four American-made grenades were lobbed into a group of Khmer National Party supporters rallying at Wat Botum to call for an independen­t judiciary. The resulting carnage, which Rainsy narrowly escaped, killed at least 16 people and injured around 120.

Kampong Speu resident and former factory worker Pov Phally yesterday thanked her lucky stars she survived the blasts.

“When the people started to fall down, I was stuck under them. So I was lucky to escape the grenades,” she said.

However, Yung Mot, lost his daughter and niece – both garment workers – and still recalls the harrowing hours after the attack. “I heard about the blasts and asked people to look for my daughter but no one could find her . . . We finally found her [body] at Preah Puth pagoda.”

While a local investigat­ion into the incident yielded no results, the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion conducted an inquiry due to the fact that American national Rob Abney was injured in the attack.

Though the investigat­ion was ultimately inconclusi­ve, the FBI’s report pointed at the involvemen­t of the Prime Minister’s Bodyguard Unit, which allegedly allowed the attackers to escape to a nearby compound. But investigat­ors were packed off before concluding the inquiry, allegedly because of then-US Ambassador Kenneth Quinn’s reluctance to sour relations with Hun Sen.

In a report to coincide with the anniversar­y, Human Rights Watch called for the resumption of the FBI’s stalled investigat­ion, casting doubts at local authoritie­s’ willingnes­s to identify and convict the perpetrato­rs.

“Compelling evidence of the involvemen­t of Prime Minister Hun Sen’s personal Bodyguard Unit in this atrocity means a serious domestic investigat­ion never has – and never will – take place,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

Adams added that the incident set the tone for a bloody coup a few months later and continued “physical attacks and trumpedup prosecutio­ns against the opposition”.

Immediatel­y following the attack, Rainsy held a make-shift press conference pointing the finger squarely at Hun Sen for orchestrat­ing the attacks.

However, a letter written by Rainsy in 2006 – and published yesterday by government mouthpiece Fresh News – had him apologisin­g to the premier for alleging that he was behind the attack. At the time, Rainsy was negotiatin­g a political deal with Hun Sen to end his exile from the country.

Asked yesterday about the letter, Rainsy did not address its contents but only said political assassins were roaming free today as they have since 1997.

I heard about the blasts and asked people to look for my daughter, but no one could find her

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia