Police Link PM’s Nephew To Club Attack

Police have accused a gang led by Nhim Pov, a nephew to Prime Minister Hun Sen, for the beatings and stabbings of three Ja­panese men outside a Phnom Penh dance club Saturday night.

Police in Daun Penh district said Nhim Pov and five oth­ers ordered the tour­ists to leave a food stall table out­side the Holi­day Night Club. When the tour­ists, all men between the ages of 27 and 30, refused to move a fight followed.

Two of the men were seriously injured after being stabbed in the stomach by broken bottles, while the third received minor injuries after being hit with a teapot, police said. The two seriously injured men, one with a punctured liver, were sent to Calmette Hospital for surgery, Municipal Immigration Police Chief Pol Pithey said.

Municipal Penal Police Chief Khuon Sophon said the 2:45 am attack was not reported until two hours after it occurred and the at­tackers es­caped. He said “gang­sters” were suspected, though he would not say if po­lice were look­ing for Nhim Pov.

Japanese Embassy officials Sunday refused to comment on the attack, but Phnom Penh Gov­ernor Chea Sophara said the em­bassy is concerned “be­cause two of the injuries are very serious.”

City officials, in­cluding Chea Sophara, have admitted that several violent gangs operate in Ph­nom Penh, but critics have said little is done to confront these gangs because they are of­ten associated with the children of senior government officials.

Nhim Pov’s older brother, Nhim Pisey, was arrested but re­leased in August 1999 for a shoot­­ing outside the Holiday Night Club that injured two. The father of both is Cam­bodia’s ambassador to Burma.

(Addi­tional reporting by Seth Meixner)

Related Stories

Latest News