FLASH INFO

Seven Years On, Families Demand Justice for Veng Sreng Shootings

Published on 3 January 2021
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In Leakena, mother of missing worker Khem Sophath, prays in front of pictures of the victims of the Veng Sreng Boulevard shootings during an event marking the seventh anniversary of the crackdown.

About 80 unionists, land activists, and CSO members gathered at the office of Solidarity House in Phnom Penh this morning to mark the seventh anniversary of the shooting on Veng Sreng Boulevard, in which security forces opened fire on striking workers, leaving at least four dead, dozens wounded and one missing.

A Buddhist ceremony and memorial service was held to remember the January 3, 2014 shooting, and several family members of killed and missing workers continued their call to find justice for their loved ones.

The four workers who were killed are Kim Phaleap, Sam Ravy, Yean Rithy and Pheng Kosal. Khem Sophath, another worker, has been missing since the shooting, and was last seen in the custody of security forces with a bullet wound in his stomach.

In Leakena, the mother of Sophath, called on authorities to find justice for her son. “It’s been 7 years that I’ve been waiting for my son, but it’s no use. I ask all NGOs, outside and inside the country, please find justice for my son.”

Chhiv Sarun, wife of Yean Rithy, echoed the please, saying, “I would like to ask all the organisations, both international and local, please find justice for my husband.”

The day before the Veng Sreng Boulevard shootings in 2014, armed soldiers from Special Command Unit 911 beat workers and arrested 10 workers and union leaders in front the capital’s Yak Jin factory. Protesters were demanding a $160 minimum wage. The crackdown on Veng Sreng, which occurred as the opposition boycotted parliament due to a contested election result, left 38 people hospitalized, in addition to the four dead and one missing.

As part of the crackdown, twenty-three union leaders and activists were also arrested, charged and imprisoned for five months. No member of the security or armed forces has ever been suspended or prosecuted for the deaths of the workers.

Resources

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