|
PHNOM PENH, June 16 (Xinhuanet) -- Cambodian police
on Thursday successfully ended the six-hour long hostage crisis in the
northwestern city of Siem Reap.
Four hostage-takers were arrested, but one Canadian
boy were killed.
|

|
| Cambodian soldiers wait in front of
the Siem Reap Int'l School.
(Reuters) | Four masked men, believed
armed with gun, entered a private-run international school at about 9:30 am on
Thursday in Cambodia's northwestern tourist city of Siem Reap and took about 70
students hostage. About 30 students were released later, leaving some 40 still
at the hand of hostage-takers.
"A three-year-old Canadian boy was killed by the
hostage-takers, others were free," government spokesman Khieu Kanharith told
Xinhua.
The gunmen killed the boy when government did not
meet their demands to offer 30,000 US dollars, weapons and a 12-seater vehicle
for making their escape to the Cambodia-Thailand border. "They threatened to
kill the children one by one if the demand did not meet," Khieu Kanharith added.
|

|
| Cambodian authorities sit outside
the Siem Reap Int'l School. (Reuters) |
Police then stormed into the school at about 3:00
p.m. Police opened fire at the hostage-takers when they attempted to escape with
several children and arrested the four.
"The hostage incident ended now, but government needs
to carry out further investigation on it," said Khieu Kanharith, who is also the
minister of information. "It is still not clear about the motivation and the
real identity of the hostage-takers though they are all khmer," he added.
|

|
| Cambodian authorities are seen
outside the Siem Reap Int'l School.
(Reuters) | According to
an eyewitness, the children are aged between two and six and from some foreign
countries and region, including Australia, Japan, Canada and China's Taiwan
province. They are the children of expatriate workers living and working in the
tourist city of Siem Reap.
Siem Reap, located more than 300 km northwestern of
Phnom Penh, is home of world famous Angkor temples.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen on Thursday
condemned the hostage-taking, calling the government and relative authorities to
strengthen the security measures in Siem Reap.
The hostage-takers were security personnel hired from
a security company in Phnom Penh, Hun Sen said. He also said it was not a
international terrorism. Enditem

(Xinhua/AFP) |