22 Oct 2012
By SOPHENG CHEANG, Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Factory managers expressed regret and dismissed a Chinese supervisor on Monday after angry Cambodian garment factory workers demanded that she be punished for tearing up a poster of their late former king.
More than 1,000 workers marched to the Royal Palace after the head of
the sewing section of two related factories ripped in half a portrait of
former King Norodom Sihanouk she had seized from a worker before the
morning shift began. She accused the employees of shirking work.
Sihanouk, who led Cambodia through a half-century of peace and war, died
Oct. 15 in Beijing. His body was returned last Wednesday to Cambodia,
where a week of official mourning was declared.
Factory manager Khuch Osaphea said the management of the Chinese-owned
factories expressed regret over the incident and dismissed the Chinese
supervisor and handed her over to authorities for legal action.
Garment exports are Cambodia's major foreign exchange earner, and as
many as 400,000 people work in hundreds of factories in the Phnom Penh
area.
The government tries to strike a balance between workers' demands for
higher pay and employers' desires to keep wages low. Many factories are
subcontractors for large Western brands. The factories involved in
Monday's incident produce trousers for U.S. and European markets.
Phnom Penh city police chief Lt. Gen. Chuon Sovann said the supervisor
was arrested on charges of insulting the king and inciting public
disorder, and would be brought to court Tuesday where she could be
formally charged by prosecutors.
He said that if police had not arrived on time, the woman would have
been in danger of being physically attacked by the workers, "but after
receiving assurances from the police that she would face justice for
what she did, they were fully understanding."
One worker, So Sareth, said she did not understand why China's
government had honored Sihanouk and yet the Chinese supervisor could act
so disrespectfully.
"Today this woman dares to tear up the picture of our king, next time
she will commit a crime against us workers if she is not punished now,"
So Sareth said.
The workers traveled by foot and truck to the palace, carrying another
portrait of Sihanouk. When they arrived, they all knelt before a giant
portrait of the late king on the palace wall, to which they expressed
regret for his portrait being destroyed.
A food vendor who sells meals to the workers in front of the factories said he also stopped business Monday to join the protest.
"She had insulted our king. Her act cannot be tolerated," Sokun Theara said.


7:37 PM
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