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Thousands of people take part in a funeral procession for Kem Ley in Phnom Penh.

Thousands in funeral march for slain Cambodia activist

Tens of thousands of Cambodians poured onto the streets of Phnom Penh Sunday for the funeral procession of a prominent political analyst murdered in a brazen daylight shooting that shocked the Southeast Asian nation.

Kem Ley, a popular pro-democracy voice and grassroots rights activist, was shot dead two Sundays ago while drinking coffee outside a petrol station in the capital.
The murder sent jitters across a country already brimming with political tension as premier Hun Sen faces accusations of clamping down on critics of his 31-year rule.
On Sunday a massive crowd of mourners, many carrying portraits of Kem Ley, trailed for kilometres behind Buddhist monks and a motorcade carrying the 46-year-old's body in a transparent casket.
Thousands of others lined the streets to watch the procession, which marked the end of a two-week mourning period that saw scores of people from across the country flock to the Phnom Penh temple where his body had lain.
Sunday's procession will deliver the activist's corpse to his home village some 70 kilometres south of the capital for burial.
"He was a mirror of society, a hero. His murder is a huge loss to democracy," Hul Chan, 39, told AFP while he was walking alongside other mourners.
Kem Ley, a popular radio commentator, was a regular critic of Hun Sen as well as the political opposition. He called for a new era of clean politics in Cambodia -- one of the most corrupt countries in the world.
He was also a major advocate for land and labour rights, travelling across the impoverished country to speak directly with villagers.
Oueth Ang, a former soldier and Buddhist monk, has been charged with the murder and is facing trial.
The 43-year-old, who first identified himself with an alias that translates as "Meet to Kill", claimed he shot Kem Ley over an outstanding debt.
But doubts about the motive persist in a country where the rule of law is weak and critics of the elite are easily silenced.
Shortly before his death Kem Ley gave a lengthy radio interview welcoming a report that detailed wealth amassed by Hun Sen and his family.
Rights groups say Hun Sen's government has deepened a crackdown on critics and political rivals in recent months as he eyes 2018 elections, using the courts to strongarm opponents.
The premier has ordered a thorough investigation into Kem Key's murder and urged people not to turn the case into a "political act".

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