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Monday, June 10, 2013
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PHNOM PENH, June 9: About 10,000 Cambodians protested in the capital
on Sunday to show their anger at an opposition leader who allegedly
described a notorious Khmer Rouge prison as a Vietnamese invention,
reports AFP.
The rally came two days after parliament passed a law
banning the denial of atrocities committed by the hardline communist
regime-a move which the opposition claimed was politically motivated
before elections in July.
In a recording posted on a government
website last month, the deputy head of the Cambodia National Rescue
Party (CNRP), Kem Sokha, purportedly said that Tuol Sleng prison in the
capital Phnom Penh was staged by Vietnamese soldiers who ousted the
Khmer Rouge in 1979.
The CNRP has said his remarks were doctored to
cause "political trouble" before the July 28 elections, when Prime
Minister Hun Sen is seeking to extend his nearly three decades in power.
Survivors from Tuol Sleng, also known as S-21, urged Kem Sokha to
apologise as protesters gathered in a park in Phnom Penh before marching
to the headquarters of the CNRP.
"I won't allow anyone to distort
history while I'm alive. We demand that Kem Sokha lights incense sticks
and apologises before the souls of the dead," said 83-year-old survivor
Chum Mey, who led the protest.
Local media reported thousands of people also came out in many provinces across the country Sunday to protest at the remarks.
Around 15,000 men, women and children from Tuol Sleng were tortured and executed during the "Killing Fields" era.
The former head of the prison, Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, was sentenced last year to life in jail.
Protesters
carried banners reading: "Kem Sokha is the first person who dares to
insult the souls of all victims from Pol Pot's regime" and "Kem Sokha is
more cowardly than Duch".
"I feel very hurt and I am angry with
what he said," said Nov Sorn, 61, who lost her husband, father and a
brother under the communist regime, which oversaw the deaths of an
estimated two million people.
Hun Sen has repeatedly said that the
country risks civil war and even a return of the Khmer Rouge if the
opposition wins the election.
His main opponent Sam Rainsy is barred from running due to convictions which he contends are politically motivated.
Under
the new law, which was approved Friday by a parliament controlled by
lawmakers from Hun Sen's ruling party, anyone denying Khmer Rouge
atrocities risks a prison sentence of up to two years.
Led by
"Brother Number One" Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge from
1975-79 wiped out nearly a quarter of Cambodia's population through
starvation, overwork or execution in a bid to create an agrarian utopia.
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