Cambodia edging toward civil war?
New clashes between troops loyal to rival leaders
July 3, 1997
Web posted at: 3:31 p.m. EDT (1931 GMT)
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (CNN) -- Cambodia's capital was tense on
Thursday after new confrontations between troops loyal to the
country's rival leaders.
The clashes, including gunfire that left three dead,
escalated tensions in an already uneasy coalition between
First Prime Minister, Prince Norodom Ranariddh, and Second
Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Differences between the two -- who have been in a power
struggle for more than a year -- also have derailed talks
with Khmer Rouge rebels who reportedly are ready to trade
their longtime leader, Pol Pot, for peace.
In the latest friction, troops loyal to Hun Sen's formerly
communist Cambodian People's Party (CPP) blocked a convoy of
20 pickup trucks carrying senior officials, police and
soldiers aligned with Ranariddh's royalist party.
Hun Sen's supporters claimed the royalist troops were making
unauthorized movements. A one-hour standoff ensued at the
checkpoint, 25 miles north of Phnom Penh.
Armored personnel carriers and soldiers armed with rocket
launchers and heavy machine guns were deployed at the
roadside.
The royalist partisans were all disarmed, said Maj. Gen. Tum
Sambol, the prince's security adviser.
"If the CPP continues to move troops against us we think
there's going to be a problem, civil war," said Serey Kosal,
another of Ranariddh's security advisers.
Thursday's standoff came a day after fighting between the two
factions at the Preak Taten naval base on the Tonle Sap
River, about 20 miles northwest of Phnom Penh.
Sok Phal, chief of the Interior Ministry's information
department, said three people were killed and three were
injured. It was not clear on which side the victims were
fighting.
It was a second time in two weeks the two sides had
exchanged gunfire. On June 17, two of Ranariddh's bodyguards
were killed in street fighting in the capital.
Reporter John Raedler and Reuters contributed to this report.
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