Wednesday, 10 September 2008

Processor could hurt shrimp supplies

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Nguon Sovan
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

A NEW shrimp processing plant slated to begin operations early next year has raised concerns that local shrimp stocks won't be adequate to supply the facility, Sam Peou, president and CEO of Nautisco Seafood Manufacturing, told the Post.

The Canada-based firm broke ground on the US$4 million Sihanoukville plant, capable of processing 30 tonnes of shrimp daily, in January and expects construction to finish in January 2009, Sam Peou said.

"We are very concerned about the availability of shrimp in Cambodia," he said Sunday. "We can't fish 30 tonnes of shrimp per day from local waters, so I expect to buy farmed shrimp from neighbouring countries."

He said the plant expects to get only 20-25 percent of its supply from local sources and the rest will be imported from Vietnam, Thailand and China, depending on quality and price.

Sam Peou said he hopes local aquaculture farmers can also help supply the plant. "We want the government to encourage farmers to raise more shrimp," he said.

But one government official said an increase in local production was unlikely.

"We have no plans to promote shrimp farming," Nao Thuok, director general of the Cambodian Fisheries Department, told the Post Sunday. "If we tried, then people would cut down the mangrove forests and devastate the environment."

Nautisco plans to export between 300 and 500 tonnes of shrimp monthly in its first year of operations to markets in Japan, Canada, the US, Russia and Eastern Europe.

Illegal bottled-water makers face closure

HENG CHIVOAN; A shop vendor checks her stocks of bottled water in Phnom Penh on Monday.

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Kay Kimsong
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Safety rising concern as most producers fail to meet standards

MORE than 100 bottled-water companies could be closed for failing to meet minimum production quality standards, the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy has said, adding that Cambodia's markets are being flooded with potentially dangerous drinking water.

Only 24 of the 130 enterprises are compliant with the ministry's Department of Industrial Standards, department director Ping Sivlay said. "We know that some of these enterprises don't even tell the ministry where their factories are located or what kind of water they are using to make their product," he told the Post.

Bottled water that meets the ministry's standards is currently given a "CS900" stamp, but enforcing quality control in the markets is difficult. The Commerce Ministry's Cam-Control can report suspect products to the Industry Ministry, but it is unclear by which criteria they are judged and what action can be taken against violators.

Ping Sivlay said that the Industry Ministry was working to establish an Institute of Standards that would set quality-control guidelines for all products manufactured in Cambodia. Once this is set up, the ministry would begin banning subpar products, he said.

"We will take action against any drinking-water enterprises that do not reach national standards for quality," he said.

Ser Viseth, manager for Hi-Tech Pure Drinking Water, said his company brings samples of their product to both Cam-Control and the Industry Ministry each month for testing in order to obtain the CS900 stamp. Others, however, are not so diligent, said Ith Praing, secretary of state at the Industry Ministry.

"For those bottles of water with no [CS900] stamp, they are illegal and the water is not guaranteed to be good to drink," he said.

The overarching concern is the health impact on a public that largely relies on bottled water, health officials say.

Dr Veng Thai of the Phnom Penh Municipal Health Department said unregulated production methods are to blame for the varying quality of water.

But the bottled-water issue also extends to other products, in the interest of fair competition, said Mao Thora, undersecretary of state for the Commerce Ministry. "We need standards for all products," he said.

Say "Om"

VANDY RATTANA

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Vandy Rattana
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Two monks pose in front of Phnom Penh's Royal Palace while another monk snaps their photograph last week. The square opposite the Royal Palace is a popular photo-opportunity spot for both Cambodian and foreign tourists alike.

KR trials and tribute museums

A visitor walks through the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh last week. The government has just applied for the museum to be listed as a Unesco site.

KRT SUSPECTS
- Kaing Guek Eav (Duch), 66 Former director of S-21. Charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes.
- Nuon Chea, 82 Former Brother No 2. Charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes.
- Khieu Samphan, 77 Former KR head of state. Charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes.
- Ieng Sary, 82 Former KR foreign minister. Charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes.
- Ieng Thirith, 76 Former KR social affairs minister. Charged with crimes against humanity.

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by May Titthara
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Despite recent judicial progress, for many KR survivors, returning to the scene of the crime is more cathartic than waiting for the wheels of transnational justice to grind forward

WHEN I am here, it is as if I were back in Pol Pot's time, said Ly Sideth. Around him were the horrors of Tuol Sleng prison, the Khmer Rouge torture centre turned genocide museum where the Phnom Penh teacher recently spent two hours walking among the memories of Cambodia's apocalypse - the tortured photo-flashed faces captured in stark black-and-white, the rusting shackles and glass-lined cases full of skulls.

More than two years on, Cambodia's UN-backed genocide court is making tangible progress towards justice. Five of the regime's leaders have been arrested. Tuol Sleng's own commandant, one of the five, has been indicted and is to stand trial later this year.

But many Cambodians like Ly Sideth have only a subdued support for the tribunal, saying it is more redemptive to return to these killing places than to rely on the stuttering wheels of justice.

"My memories are so vivid. At the time I was 10 years old, my parents and relatives all died and when I come here it seems to me that Pol Pot's era happens again," Ly Sideth said, surrounded by almost reverent quiet of Tuol Sleng, or S-21 as it was known to the Khmer Rouge.

Legal justice, he said, "is related to political problems, so it cannot be fast because it serves politicians' benefits".

"Every society has law to limit human ambition," he said, quick not to dismiss the tribunal. But the limitations of the court - to try only "senior leaders and those most responsible" for Cambodia's suffering between 1975 and 1979 - are frustrating, he added.

"I saw a lot of Chinese come to transport our rice [while] the Cambodian people ... could not get enough food to eat," Ly Sideth said.

Artist's impressions

For painter Vann Nath, whose artistic skill kept him alive after his arrest and incarceration in S-21, justice delayed is justice denied.

" WE WANT OUR YOUNGER GENERATION TO UNDERSTAND CLEARLY ABOUT THEIR PARENTS’ HARDSHIPS. "

"The ECCC is coming too late because of my seven comrade survivors [of S-21], four have died already," Vann Nath said.

Earlier this year in a macabre judicial twist, S-21 chief Kaing Guek Eav, who is better known as Duch, was brought back to the prison where he recounted for court officials and a few witnesses, including Vann Nath, how he administered the regime's most notorious death machine.

"I absolutely didn't want to go there because I don't want to revive my bitter memories," Vann Nath said of the re-enactment. But this was the duty of the survivor, he added.

"I have been [to give evidence at the court] several times now and I always go to tell them the truth," he said.

But whether this - the re-enactments, indictments or likely convictions - will provide closure for the 63-year-old is unclear.

"We have to wait to see the outcome together because we are ordinary people," he said."We don't have the right to interfere in their [legal] affairs."

A torture museum

S-21 was opened as a museum on August 17, 1979, as a monument to the regime's cruelty, just months after a Vietnamese-backed force drove the Khmer Rouge from power, said Chey Sopheara, deputy director in charge of the facility.

"Today S-21 is used keep victim's photos, skulls and handcuffs to show the ECCC when they require this for their [judicial investigations]," he said, apparently pleased that the museum had been instrumental in charging Duch for the crimes he allegedly committed while in charge of the prison.

Like Vann Nath and Ly Sideth, he said he was happy that the tribunal had materialised after so many years and appeared on track to put at least a few top cadre in prison.

But it is places like S-21 where Cambodians will come to terms with their grief, he said.

Chey Sopheara added, however, that only around 40 Cambodians visited the museum each day, saying that he wanted the high school-turned-prison to once again be a place of learning, although of a different kind.

"I plan to promote this issue with the education sector because we want to bring at least 50 or 60 students per week from schools and universities," he said.

Cambodia's younger generation needs to learn about the history of their country, of their mothers and fathers, Chey Sopheara said. He hoped that school visits to the museum would provoke younger people to talk to Cambodia's older, devastated generation.

"We want our younger generation to understand clearly about their parents' hardships ... so they never follow Pol Pot's footsteps," he said.

Officials vow to fight terrorism at seminar on extremism

RECENT CONVICTS
Five Khmer Kampuchea Krom men were sentenced to between 15 and 17 years in prison in connection with an attempt to bomb the Cambodian-Vietnamese Friendship Monument on July 29, 2007.


The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Chun Sophal and Cheang Sokha
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Senior government and police officials affirm their commitment to preventing domestic attacks and helping in the global 'war on terror'

THE Cambodian government is determined to enforce its new anti-terrorism law in cooperation with other regional countries, government officials said at a seminar on combating extremism held Monday.

"Anti-terrorism requires the collaboration from all countries in the region," said Deputy Prime Minister Sok An at the opening of the two-day seminar at Phnom Penh's InterContinental Hotel.

"Cambodia will not step back in regard to anti-terrorism," he added.

Anti-terrorism legislation adopted by the National Assembly in July 2007 with legal assistance from the Australian government has linked Cambodia into the international community's efforts against extremism, Sok An said.

Officials from the Ministry of Justice, police and the National Committee for Anti-terrorism received additional training in Australia in May, Sok An added. More than 50 officials from ministries with anti-terror duties were called to Monday's seminar to improve their knowledge of extremist movements.

" ...ANTI-TERRORISM REQUIRES COLLABORATION FROM ALL COUNTRIES IN THE REGION. "

"It is necessary to have laws on anti-terrorism as it links Cambodia to other countries in a fight against terrorism," said Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak, adding that terrorism is both a regional and global issue.

Cambodian terrorism

Cambodia is not a stranger to terrorist attacks, Khieu Sopheak said, adding that the country experienced a bloody coup attempt in November 2000 against Prime Minister Hun Sen's government led by Chhun Yasith, leader of the Cambodian Freedom Fighters.

Chhun Yasith, a US citizen, was sentenced to life imprisonment by a US court in April.Om Yentieng, who is also a member of the National Committee for Anti-terrorism, said that Cambodia used to be a haven for terrorist groups.

"We have a duty to prevent terrorism from happening in Cambodia," Om Yentieng said.

Others, including foreign diplomats, have raised concerns over the alleged presence of radical groups in Cambodia.

Australian Ambassador Margaret Adamson said that Cambodia is the first Asean country to adopt anti-terrorism legislation.

"Australia welcomed this determination," Adamson said. "Australia stands with Cambodia on the issue of anti-terrorism."

Golden Days

Photo courtesy of the michael hayes collection

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Michael Hayes
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Former managing editor of the Phnom Penh Post, Alan Pearce (right), and contributing photographer Philip Blenkinsop at the Phnom Penh Post offices on Street 264 in late 1993. On Sunday night, Blenkinsop was awarded the prestigious Visa d'Or award for news photography in Perpignan, France.

Poultry vendors educated about bird flu, sanitation

HENG CHIVOAN; The government is urging poultry vendors to implement good sanitation practices.

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Khoun Leakhana
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Cambodia's widespread trade in live chickens and ducks poses a health risk; it is the easiest way for bird flu to spread

THE sixth market forum to educate poultry vendors about bird flu prevention and to encourage good sanitation practices was held on Friday at Phnom Penh's O'Russey market by the government and 14 NGOs.

Mok Chanthol, an official at the National Veterinary Research Institute (NAVRI), said that the number of cases of bird flu in Cambodia could increase in the future if poultry vendors, particularly those selling live chickens and ducks, did not follow good sanitation practices.

"Our purpose is to urge business people, rural doctors and farmers to have more understanding of bird flu and good sanitation," he said.

"Sanitation is a necessary factor [in bird flu prevention]," said Mok Chanthol.

He added that the campaign was held at O'Russey Market because it is a popular place to buy and sell live chickens and ducks.

Sok Touch, director of the Communicable Disease Control Department at the Ministry of Health, said that after distributing information about bird flu in a number of provinces, his department is planning to implement an educational program to help prevent human-to-human infection.

"We are planning programs to prevent human-to-human infection because we currently only have measures to prevent transmutation from birds to people," he said.

Sixteen educational forums on bird flu have now been held in provinces across the Kingdom, according to a report of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.

The report says that 40 percent of Cambodians have a good understanding of sanitation, but the remainder still need to be educated about clean practices and bird flu.

According to NAVRI's research, seven people have already died from bird flu in Cambodia. Four people died in 2005, two people died in 2006 and one in 2007.

Thai FM commits to border timetable

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Brendan Brady and Thet Sambath
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

THAILAND's third foreign affairs minister in seven months, Saroj Chavanavirat, was royally endorsed today, allowing the 66-year-old to replace Tej Bunnag, who resigned last week due to political pressure after just two months in office.

Saroj told Thai media that he was committed to following his predecessor's Joint Border Commission (JBC) timetable, under which he and his Cambodian counterpart, Hor Namhong, are supposed to meet next month following pledged troop redeployments around Preah Vihear temple.

But political turmoil in Thailand - which has included the reshuffling of government and military posts and recently culminated in a state of emergency being declared in Bangkok - led Thai authorities to postpone a border-demarcation meeting that was planned for August 29 in Siem Reap.

Cambodian authorities are downplaying the difficulties of negotiating with a government in disarray.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Sin Bunthoeun said the new appointment would not change the negotiations because both sides were still working with the same facts, adding that the only real difficulty was bringing the new appointment up to speed with the relevant facts.

While Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan insisted the reshuffle was merely "inconvenient" and would not prevent the two sides from reaching an agreement, he added that the "complicated power-sharing" situation in Thailand would not let them off the hook for any missteps. "We will see aggressive acts on our border as an act by the (entire) nation."

Reeling in the illegal anglers

Vandy Rattana; Fishermen in Phnom Penh’s Chruoy Changvar district last week using illegal nets that are made of very fine mesh.

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Thet Sambath
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Provincial authorities say this year's rise in illegal fishing is linked to the belief that the government would be too busy to crack down during elections

Government officials say they have cracked down on more than 700 cases of illegal fishing in the Kingdom between the months of June and August.

"We have burned more than 80,000 metres of illegal fishing nets countrywide and saved more than 10 million fish that we've released back into Tonle Sap Lake and the Mekong River," Nao Thuok, director of the Fisheries Administration at the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, told the Post Monday.

Current figures show a rise of nearly 30 percent in illegal fishing cases over the same period last year, he added.

"We're seeing a large increase in illegal fishing compared to last year. Illegal fishermen have used July's elections as cover for their activities," he said, adding that they choose times when they believe government officials are too busy to pay attention to ramp up their illegal practices.

"We prosecuted seven men in court," he said. "We've also arrested several others but released them after warning them to stop."

He said cracking down is difficult because illegal fishermen will stop when they are caught but simply re-start operations when authorities are gone.

"We need better cooperation from local authorities and residents," he said.

The southern Tonle Sap lake is prime territory for Cambodia's illicit anglers, local officials say, adding that July's national polls made it difficult for authorities looking for votes to make any serious effort to halt illegal fishing.


" We are seeing a large increase in illegal fishing compared to last year. "

"We are now cracking down in the Tonle Sap area and in three provinces because of the fishing ban season," Hong Hy, director of the Tonle Sap Southern Fisheries Administration Inspectorate, told the Post Sunday.

Cambodia prohibits non-subsistence or commercial fishing from June 1 to the end of September to allow fish populations time to replenish. Some areas impose the ban until the end of October.

Most offenders of the ban are local fishermen using small-mesh nets to increase their catches for family consumption or to sell at markets.

"We would have started cracking down before the elections, but we were worried that politicians would criticise us for doing so," Hong Hy said.

Uy Sarun, also with Southern Fisheries Administration Inspectorate, said authorities have confiscated nearly 3,500 metres of fishing nets in the southern region of the lake, as well as more than 5,000 fish.

The nets were burned and the fish have been returned to the lake, Uy Sarun said.

He said authorities have been conducting the crackdown principally in Battambang and Pursat provinces since last month, but that raids in Kampong Chhnang and Kampong Speu provinces have produced good results.

"They never stop their illegal activities," Uy Sarun said.

"They just wait until we're finished and then begin again," he added. "We're trying to do what we can for the sake of preventing the destruction of our fish resources."

Thomico to create new party

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Meas Sokchea
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Prince says royalists must unite or they risk irrelevance

CAMBODIA can expect a new royalist party following this month's meeting of the National Assembly, Prince Sisowath Chakkrey Noukpol told the Post Monday.

Prince Sisowath Thomico will establish the yet-unnamed party following the announcement of a new government, expected on September 24, Prince Noukpol said.

"We have many members of Funcinpec, the Norodom Ranariddh Party, retired members of the Cambodian People's Party and even some members of the Sam Rainsy Party who will join us," he said.

Prince Thomico will not serve as president of the party, though another member of the royal family has already been tapped for the position.

Prince Noukpol declined to say which one, adding that further details will be clarified after a new government is in place.

Prince Thomico told the Post Monday that divisions within the royal family have weakened the royalist vote in recent years and that steps must be taken to heal the rifts if a royalist movement is to survive.

"We are waiting to see if a new government will regard royalism as a way of pointing the country in the right direction. If so, we will cooperate with them," Thomico said.

"If they don't, I will not allow royalism to lose votes," Thomico added.

Prince Thomico previously served as president of the Sangkum Jatiniyum Front Party, which he founded after being ousted from Funcinpec in 2006 before it became part of the NRP a year later.

NRP spokesman Suth Dina said no members of his party plan to defect.

"He is [doing this] only to serve his and his group's interests in government," Suth Dina said. "I don't believe anyone will join with him."

CPP spokesman and Minister of Information Khieu Kanharith could not be reached for comment Monday.

Sam Rainsy Party member Son Chhay also said no members of the opposition were defecting to the new party and that Prince Thomico has tried this unsuccessfully in the past.

"I don't know why he's doing this, but I wish him success," Son Chhay said.

Villagers hold third protest

Heng Chivoan, Boeung Kak villagers hold their third protest Monday at City Hall against a large scale development plan for the lake.

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Chhay Channyda and Sebastian Strangio
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Lakeside residents demand a halt to the filling of the lake

ABOUT 50 Boeung Kak villagers gathered Monday morning at City Hall for the third protest against a large-scale development project that will see them evicted from their lakeside homes.

Police officers were deployed to prevent violence during the demonstration, but the protest was subdued, with residents holding placards with pictures of Prime Minister Hun Sen and his wife, Bun Rany.

Last week, residents from Village 4 submitted thumbprints and petitions to City Hall and local developer Shukaku Inc, asking that they halt the filling of the lake until fair compensation is paid to the villagers.

Protester Phan Sopheap, 45, said that she was demonstrating for the first time to demand legal recognition of her land and a halt to the reclamation of the lake, which began August 26 in preparation for a proposed 133-hectare housing and commercial development.

"We want to sell [our land] according to the market price," she said.Noun Thol, a resident of Village 4, said those who protested last week were awaiting a reply from the municipality, and held out hope for a suspension of the construction. "The company stopped pumping sand into the lake on Friday when around 300 villagers protested at the company's office," he said.

So far, 700 of the 4,250 families living at Boeung Kak have agreed to accept replacement housing and US$500 cash or a lump-sum payment of $8,500 in return for relocating. But David Pred, country director of legal advocacy group Bridges Across Borders, said the government was legally bound to provide fairer compensation to the evictees.

"The [2001] Land Law and the Constitution state that you cannot be deprived of ownership without being paid a fair and just compensation in advance ... the universal standard is market value," he said.

Phnom Penh Deputy Governor Mann Chhoeun said that City Hall is still working to resolve the case brought by the protesters. "They have protested, but we are still working on the case," he told the Post Monday.

Monday, 8 September 2008

Passion a primer for success

The Times

Harvard Report
Published:Sep 07, 2008

Enthusiasm for a job ensures your company attracts like-minded people who have similar objectives

When my future husband , Roger Brown, and I graduated from the Yale School of Management in 1980, we postponed job offers in management consulting to run emergency programmes in Cambodian refugee camps. The Vietnamese had recently invaded Cambodia and ousted the Khmer Rouge, and thousands of refugees fled to the Thai border. I managed a programme for malnourished children, and we saw a lot of very ill babies. Yet, with food and basic medicine, most completely rebounded. Roger and I had always been moved to make a difference, but this experience gave us focus. If you intervene by age five, we realised, you can positively change the whole course of a child’s life. Later, after a few years in management consulting, we went to Africa to become co-country directors in Sudan for Save the Children.

Our humanitarian work engaged us 24/7 — so we gave absolutely no thought to long-term careers. But when we came back to the US in 1986, we had to make some tough decisions. By then, Roger and I had met James Rouse, who co-founded the Rouse Company to turn blighted urban areas into vibrant public spaces. Rouse became our mentor, and one weekend he invited us to his summer cabin on Chesapeake Bay. During one of our wonderful conversations, he said to me: “Linda, your passions don’t have to be extracurricular. They can be central to your life. Unleash them, and you’ll help other people unleash theirs.”

Like most entrepreneurs, I’m loath to follow anyone’s advice, but Rouse’s words immediately clicked. Millions of parents in the US wanted and needed to work, but they had little access to affordable, high-quality child care. It was a national tragedy. We decided to put our passion for giving children the best possible start in life at the forefront of our careers and at the core of a new company.

Don’t get me wrong — building this company was one long, hard slog. We faced a lot of scepticism, including from our financial backers, who had never seen a successful husband-and-wife team before. And when we struggled during our start-up years, some of our initial investors couldn’t understand why we paid higher-than-average salaries, or why we spent precious time founding a non-profit organisatio n to help children of the homeless. But putting our passions first — and backing them up with good financial numbers — gave us a real business advantage.

Through this passion we helped to create an entirely new sector: high-quality, workplace-based child care as a benefit for employees. During our IPO road show in 1997, we talked about the Bright Horizons mission first, before the financials — and witnessed rooms full of tired-looking asset managers, many of them parents of young children, snap right to attention.

Today, Bright Horizons has more than 600 child care and early education centres, and we have made the transition to our second generation of mission-driven senior executives. Our annual leadership conference of more than 1000 managers feels like a cross between a political rally and a tent revival meeting. When you put passion first, you attract the right people, who all naturally head in the same direction. — Linda Mason is chairman and founder of Bright Horizons Family Solutions © (2008) The New York Times

Cambodian Orphans Visit Hawaii

Written by KGMB9 News - news@kgmb9.com
September 06, 2008

Dozens of orphans from Cambodia are in Hawaii. Learning about our culture and getting a check up on their health. The children are all part of the program, "Email Foster Parents International."

They are in the islands to meet and stay with their foster parents for the first time. On Saturday, optometrists at Dr. Tyrie Jenkins' office in Honolulu performed free eye exams for the children who don't always have access to good health care.

"They were seeing below what is necessary to be able to function very well seeing at distance so we were able to provide them with a subscription for new glasses and that should really help them," Dr. Loretta Ng said.

The children will be staying in Hawaii for two weeks before heading back to Cambodia.

Smiling on history

boston.com
September 7, 2008

On a rutted road in sun-drenched jungle, a man named Kola thought back 30 years to Cambodia's murderous Khmer Rouge regime.

In 1975, at 13, Kola was marched by Khmer soldiers from the capital, Phnom Penh, to the fields.
How did he, who survived to raise a family and fight for democracy, navigate those dark days?

It was simple, he said: He talked to no one. He worked in rice fields. Each morning he saluted his rulers' flag.

"I acted stupid," he said.

To illustrate this prior life, Kola screwed his face into a demented twist, then released it back to a grin.

TOM HAINES

Five killed, three wounded by anti-tank mine in Cambodia

www.chinaview.cn
2008-09-07

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- A truck carrying rice to a mill hit an anti-tank mine in Koun Kreal commune, Sam Rong district of Oddar Meanchey province of Cambodia, killing five people and injuring three, including a baby boy aged eight months, national media reported Sunday.

The place is the last battlefield of civil war and local people were warned not to travel on that old road because it was planted with heavy mines, Khmer-language newspaper the Rasmey Kampuchea quoted Men Ly, police chief of Oddar Meanchey province, as saying.

But they do not have other choice of road and the accident occurred Friday, Men Ly added.

In the past years, the number of mine casualties stood at over 800 people each year in Cambodia, one of the world's most-heavily mined countries with an estimated of 4 million to 6 million of such "hidden killers" buried underground.

According to statistics of Cambodian Center of Mine Action (CMAC), 1,640 of 13,913 villages of Cambodia were seriously suffered from mines.  

Editor: An

Former ambassador, lawmaker help raise $60,000 for musical

Stephen Spillman / Amarillo Globe-News
Danielle Fehr and Glenn Campbell of the Randall County Sheriff's Posse take part in the Rider on the Rim Trail Ride in Palo Duro Canyon on Saturday . More than 50 riders showed up for the fundraiser.

By Janelle Stecklein
janelle.stecklein@amarillo.com
Post a comment here

Amarillo.com

A former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, a state representative and a Scot were among 75 participants in the first Rider on the Rim Trail Ride fundraiser.

"That's a good turnout, and it's a beautiful day," said Bill Anderson, executive director of the Texas Panhandle Heritage Foundation, which sponsored the event.

The eight-mile ride through Palo Duro Canyon started at Pioneer Amphitheatre, the home of the musical "Texas," and raised more than $60,000 to help fund the musical.

Former Ambassador Sichan Siv joined state Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa, David Tidmarsh of Scotland and dozens of others along Palo Duro's scenic trails on horseback.

Siv, author of "Golden Bones - From the Killing Fields of Cambodia to a new Life in America," contributed signed copies of the book for an auction at the event. He is scheduled to speak at West Texas A&M University and the Amarillo Downtown Lions Club this week.

"Many of our facilities were in need of repair," said Doris Alexander, co-chairwoman of the event and chairwoman of the Heritage Foundation board.

"This fundraiser has raised more than any other fundraiser in the history of the stage play 'Texas.' "

Most of the riders paid $1,000 each to be the first to experience a new trail created for the event. The auction featured a variety of items, including paintings, jewelry and a truck.

For those who decided not to go on the four-hour ride, volunteers stayed behind to offer old-fashioned wagon rides.

Cole Cleveland of Claude lounged on a surrey as he waited to give free rides.

"It's a fun deal," he said. "It's like stepping back 150 years every once in a while."

Eddie Longhofer of Canadian spent his afternoon volunteering and driving an old-fashioned Conestoga wagon for people who couldn't ride.

His wife, Judy, rode in the back.

"I think it's neat," she said of the event. "I think it's really nice that they did this."

Cambodia’s ethnic Vietnamese cross the border to go to school

Ethnic Vietnamese primary school pupils living in Cambodia cross the border into Viet Nam to go to school. — VNS Photo Doan Tung

06-09-2008

by Le Hoang Vu

AN GIANG — Schools in Khanh An Commune, An Phu District, An Giang Province are welcoming hundreds of new Vietnamese-Cambodian students from Kan Dal Province, Cambodia this academic year.

The majority of the students hail from Pec Chay Commune, Koh Thum District, Cambodia, where many ethnic Vietnamese are living.

Khanh An Commune’s Primary School B has more than 600 Vietnamese-Cambodian students, according to principal Nguyen Tan Tai. All of the school’s new first graders are Vietnamese-Cambodian.

Vietnamese-Cambodians made up 60 per cent of Khanh An Commune’s Primary School A’s 930 students, said principal Nguyen Thi Sanh.

According to Le Van Be, Khanh An Secondary School principal, 30 per cent of the 800 new students this year live in Cambodia.

More and more of Khanh An Commune’s student body is Vietnamese-Cambodian because many cannot afford to send their children to schools in Cambodia.

The Vietnamese-Cambodian students’ parents, many of whom are illiterate, also hope their children learn to both read and write their mother tongue.

Thus, many of these overseas Vietnamese cross the border into Viet Nam to take their children to school every day.

Bui Minh Hung of Koh Thum District, Cambodia sells fish at An Giang Province’s Khanh Binh border gate, and brings his child to a Khanh An school every day. After all his stock is sold, he takes his child home at 12 a.m.

Despite a difficult commute, Nguyen Thi Xuan of Koh Thum District, Cambodia still makes her children to go to school in Viet Nam so they would speak Vietnamese.

Educational authorities in An Giang Province are assisting Vietnamese-Cambodian students to go to school by waiving school infrastructure fees and giving gifts.

For preparation of this school year, Khanh An Commune Primary School A gave away 878 packages of school bags and other classroom necessities worth VND100,000 (US$6) each.

Residents at the border also help out the students by ferrying them across the river for free.

Thanks to local authorities and residents’ help, many overseas Vietnamese students have beat the odds to succeed. For example, Le Duy Phuong, Nguyen Van Lanh and Diep Hoai An, all former Vietnamese-Cambodian high school students, have gone on to university.

Danh Thi My Non, a Vietnamese-Cambodian An Phu High School alum, just entered her junior year at An Giang University, said her vice principal Ngo Thai Can.

Nguyen Quang Tuu of Koh Thum District’s Vietnamese Association said many ethnic Vietnamese in Cambodia were happy their children could learn their mother tongue and keep some Vietnamese cultural traits. — VNS

Sunday, 7 September 2008

News : Boeung Kak Lake

Sacravatoons : "The Monkey-High Qualities "

Courtesy Sacravatoon

Thai Prime Minister Nominates Third Foreign Minister in 7 Months

By VOA News
06 September 2008

Career diplomat to added to current administrationThai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej nominated a retired career diplomat as the country's new foreign minister today (Saturday), the third in seven months.

The Bangkok Post reports Saroj Chavanaviraj would replace Tej Bunnag who resigned earlier in the week amid the political crisis and street protests surrounding the current administration.

He had replaced Noppadon Pattama who resigned July 10th after backing Cambodia's bid to have an 11th century temple on the countries' shared border declared a World Heritage Site.

Saroj is a former ambassador to France and has held several positions in Thailand's foreign ministry.

He must be endorsed by Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej before becoming Foreign Minister.

Mr. Samak is under added pressure to fill the open post because Thailand is hosting a regional summit of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in December.

Some information for this report provided by Reuters.

So Far, It Just Isn't Looking Like Asia's Century

Washington Post

By Joshua Kurlantzick
Sunday, September 7, 2008
So much for the Asian century. The Thais are bickering with themselves, and when they're done doing that, they'll bicker with the Cambodians -- again. China may be Japan's biggest trading partner, but they hate each other anyway. Malaysia and Indonesia? Two countries divided by the same language.

I've spent a lot of time in Asia over the past decade, as an expat and a traveler. From where I stand, the place is a geopolitical mess. Hogtied by nationalism and narrow self-interest, the countries of the East won't be banding together to replace the West as the seat of global power -- at least not anytime soon.

Asia's troubles have been on prominent display in recent weeks as anti-government demonstrations, fueled in part by anti-Cambodian nationalism, rocked Bangkok. Earlier this summer, Thailand and Cambodia moved onto war footing because of a dispute over a mountaintop temple -- not exactly a living example of the Beijing Olympics' motto: "One World, One Dream."

Of course, an Asian version of the European Union isn't out of reach, as many Asian leaders know. But today, the continent battles a kind of split personality. On the one hand, many cultural, economic and political trends suggest that Asian nations are becoming more integrated than ever before. But on the other, a virulent nationalism is spreading in the region, one that feeds on reinterpreted -- or even imaginary -- history to gin up hatred and push small-minded agendas.
Elites in Asia clearly understand the benefits of integration, and businesses and officials together are promoting the trend. In 2004, China replaced the United States as Japan's biggest trading partner. Chinese yearly trade with the ten Southeast Asian nations will likely surpass $200 billion by 2010.With the expansion of satellite television, Asian airlines and regional hiring by Asian conglomerates, businesspeople watch the same news, cool their heels together in a slew of space-age international airports and mingle at cocktail parties and pan-Asian business summits. Fads that start in Tokyo or Seoul, such as drinking red wine or dying hair blond, sweep through the region. At summits of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), I've seen packs of diplomats gathered at bars swapping stories in fluent English about their hijinks during graduate school at Johns Hopkins University.

Despite all that love, most of the region's multilateral institutions do little more than meet for the sake of meeting. In Cambodia and Laos, local officials and fishermen despair that dams built by China on the upper portion of the Mekong River are blocking water flow -- and ravaging fishing in the southern stretch of that river that snakes through their countries. "But when we . . . try to bring this up at ASEAN meetings," Sokhem Pech, a leading Cambodian Mekong expert, told me, "no one even wants to talk about it." The committee officially monitoring the Mekong, which doesn't include China, is so feeble that it rarely speaks out on the issue.

The problem: Calls to nationalism and an obsession with sovereignty are drowning out calls for cooperation. The passage of time since World War II, when nationalism led to catastrophe, has allowed politicians to wield it more freely for short-term gain. "The Chinese are ignorant, so they are overjoyed," Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara quipped after China launched a manned spaceship in 2003. "That [spacecraft] was an outdated one. If Japan wanted to do it, we could do it in one year."

This sort of nationalism isn't the stuff of a few firebrands. Across the continent, populist politicians have scrubbed school textbooks, whether to minimize Japan's atrocities in South Korea and China during World War II or to erase the memory of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia -- perhaps because Prime Minister Hun Sen was an officer in the genocidal regime before he turned against it. Traveling to Cambodia, I meet teenagers who know practically nothing about what happened in their country in the 1970s. China, too, has whitewashed the memory of the Tiananmen Square crackdown of June 4, 1989. When a "Frontline" documentary crew went to Beijing University a few years ago and showed students the iconic 1989 photograph of the man who stopped a tank in its tracks, no one recognized it.

Politicians aren't the only ones embracing nationalism. In 2002, when Thailand was still recovering from its financial meltdown, government-backed filmmakers produced "The Legend of Suriyothai" to restore their country's wounded pride. One of the most expensive pictures in Thai history, it told the story of an ancient Thai queen who died fighting Burmese invaders -- and compounded Thais' hostility toward Burma, their neighbor to the west.

The Internet has further empowered Asian nationalists, allowing them to air their vitriol unchecked. On Chinese online bulletin boards such as the "Strong Nation Forum," which is run by the People's Daily, respondents compete for the most aggressive stance and ridicule Chinese leaders for compromising on issues such as relations with neighboring countries or Tibet or Taiwan. In Japan, the blogosphere helped spark sales of the manga comic book "Hating the Korean Wave." And in Indonesia, online writers helped fuel anger at neighboring Malaysia for the use of a supposedly Indonesian jingle in a tourism campaign and for the mistreatment of an Indonesian karate referee. These are petty grievances, but the Internet amplifies even the smallest outbursts, and reactions can be fierce. Just last week, Vietnam's foreign ministry called in China's ambassador to protest the appearance on Chinese Web sites of "invasion plans" that purported to detail the occupation of Vietnam by the People's Liberation Army.

Whenever I visit Asia, I meet young people who detest neighbors they barely know. "The Thais, all they care about is money. Nothing else," one Burmese acquaintance told me in Rangoon, despite the fact that he'd never actually been to Thailand. In one study taken last year by a leading Japanese nongovernmental organization, two-thirds of the Chinese polled said they had either a "very bad" or "relatively bad" impression of Japan.

As any politician can tell you, public opinion counts. In an open society such as the Philippines, rising anti-Chinese sentiment helped force the government in September 2007 to suspend China-funded projects valued at $4 billion. Even countries that have little history of animosity toward each other can be swept into a rage by the new nationalists. In 2006, after Singaporean state investment fund Temasek Holdings purchased Thai telecommunications giant Shin Corporation, Thai bloggers and online columnists condemned the deal, arguing that a Singaporean company would have control over sensitive Thai communications infrastructure.
Thousands of Thais marched to Singapore's embassy in Bangkok -- a move that left urbane Singaporean diplomats, more accustomed to managing business deals than bullhorns, a bit flat-footed.

All these problems don't seem to have resonated in the United States, where an entire industry has developed around predictions that the Asian century will replace the American one. And maybe it will -- a few centuries from now.

Joshua Kurlantzick is a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a fellow at the Pacific Council on International Policy.

Border talks with Cambodia to go ahead next month

The Bangkok Post
Sunday September 07, 2008

SAROJ TO DO HIS BEST TO MEND TIES, WILL STICK TO TIMETABLE SET BY PREDECESSOR

ACHARA ASHAYAGACHAT

Foreign Minister-designate Saroj Chavanaviraj has pledged to keep trying to mend ties with Cambodia and do his best to chair the Association of Southeast Asean Nations (Asean) meeting. Mr Saroj, 66, who said he would not give any formal interviews until his appointment is royally endorsed, stressed that he was committed to following the Thai-Cambodia meeting timeframe of the Joint Commission on Demarcation for Land Boundary (JBC).

Under the timeframe, agreed upon between his predecessor Tej Bunnag and the Cambodian foreign minister on Aug 19, both ministers would meet next month after the reduction of troops on the border near the Preah Vihear temple was completed.

Chairing the regional grouping would also be another main duty of the retired diplomat.
He said he would do his best in his new job.

Meanwhile, the commander-designate of the Second Army, Wiboonsak Neeparn, who is also the co-chair of the Thai-Cambodian Border Committee, said the political turmoil in Bangkok could be one of the reasons behind the indefinite postponement of the RBC meeting, which was to discuss the second phase of the troop redeployment in the controversial area around the Preah Vihear temple.

The meeting was to have taken place on Aug 29. Lt-Gen Wiboonsak conceded that Cambodia may not want to hold talks until the political conflict is resolved.

Another reason, he said, was the reshuffle and promotions within the Thai army. He will officially take over the post of Second Army commander on Oct 1.

Lt-Gen Wiboonsak stressed that both countries must honour the basic principle of the military reduction on equal terms.

Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong said Cambodia would withdraw all its military personnel from around the temple, which was listed as a World Heritage site on July 8, and install policemen instead.

Cambodia still has about 500 soldiers around the eastern side of the Preah Vihear foothill, while Thailand has deployed about 300 soldiers on the western side of the hill.

Foreign Ministry officials, however, predicted that progress in the Thai-Cambodian talks might not be as satisfactory as many would have hoped amid the political instability in Thailand.

The interim agreement to resolve the Preah Vihear border issues, which has to be endorsed by parliament to comply with the law on treaties, has not gone on the agenda of the cabinet meeting.

The interim agreement, prepared by the ministry with approval from the Cambodian side at a meeting in the resort town of Cha-am last month, was to provide a legal platform for officials to discuss the issues related to the border survey and demarcation under the terms of reference and master plan of the initial JBC agreement.

Cambodia, "environmentally sustainable" tourism to save Mekong dolphin


AsiaNews.it
09/06/2008

Overfishing, war, and pollution have decimated the dolphins, and only a few dozen of them are left. Environmentalists have begun a project aimed at contributing to the development of the villages and to saving the dolphins, but their numbers continue to diminish.

Phnom Penh (AsiaNews/Agencies) - Saving the few dozen freshwater dolphins still remaining in the Mekong River, and helping the local population by guaranteeing them a source of livelihood: this is the aim of the "ecotourism" project begun in the border area between Laos and Cambodia by the Cambodia Rural Development Team (CRDT), which has the twofold objective of protecting wildlife and providing an alternative source of income for the inhabitants of the villages.

For centuries, the waters of the Mekong River - which crosses China, Laos, and Cambodia, before reaching the ocean in Vietnam - were the uncontested habitat of thousands of freshwater dolphins. The Sino-Indian War and the increase of industrialization, together with high pollution levels, have decimated the species, only a few dozen of which survive; 71, according to the latest count provided by the World Wildlife Fund.

The village of Sambor, in the north of Cambodia, is one of the places selected by the CRDT as a model of environmentally sustainable development: tourists are given the opportunity to live in contact with the local population, to help the inhabitants protect the natural habitat of the dolphins, and to teach a little English to the children. The most frequently requested activities include well digging, sewer construction, and work in the fields.

The experiment promoted by the activists is intended to save the dolphins from extinction by radically changing the habits of the inhabitants of the village, who for decades have used aggressive fishing methods like explosives and high-capacity nets. Now the freshwater dolphins are seen as a resource to be "exploited" in order to attract foreign capital and tourism; the visitors pay 60 US dollars for three days in contact with nature, and the money is used to support the local population. In a country in which half the population lives on a dollar a day, the inhabitants of the village earn five dollars a day by providing food (two dollars) and lodging (three dollars) for the visitors.

But recent studies have demonstrated that if the benefit for individuals is beyond question, the same cannot be said for the dolphins: in spite of a small increase in their numbers in the initial phase of the project, it is not yet clear whether this is truly effective for preserving the species.

Scientists affirm that a new and not yet identified disease is spreading rapidly, killing the offspring. Researchers fear that the new virus - caused by pollution in the water, infested with chemical agents and the runoff from gold mining projects - could soon lead to the total extinction of the dolphins.

Saturday, 6 September 2008

Sacravatoons : " ECCC in the Action "

Courtesy Sacravatoon

SAcravatoons :" Hun Xen' School "

Courtesy Sacravatoon

Sacravatonns :" A Spirally-Tail Dog "

Embedded Travel Guide Cambodia: Phnom Tamao Zoo

JAUNTED
9/05/2008
Cambodian wildlife is difficult to observe in its native habitat. The jungles are thick, and because locals tend to kill and eat any creature that pokes its snout out of the forest, the animals have learned to keep to themselves.

If you want to see the vast menagerie of species that call Cambodia home, make a trip to the Phnom Tamao Zoo, an easy day trip from Phnom Penh.

The zoo, which doubles as a refuge for animals rescued from the illegal wildlife trade, is quite popular among Cambodians, but rarely makes the average tourist's itinerary. But if you ask me, a visit to Phnom Tamao is every bit as fascinating as a day at Angkor Wat, and more travelers should make the trip to see the animals.

Feed the Bears?
Phnom Tamao is totally different from any zoo you've visited in the US. Although there are hundreds of animals, including all the heavy hitters like lions, tigers, bears, leopards and elephants, there isn't a lot of money for their upkeep.

Cages are minimal, with nothing more than a simple wire fence separating you from the beasts inside. Instead of warnings prohibiting visitors from feeding the animals, local entrepreneurs set up shop outside the cages, selling visitors treats to pass on to the hungry critters.

Otters clamor for fresh fish, thirsty sun bears beg plaintively for green coconuts and at least one of the gibbons has developed a taste for local cans of beer. Other gibbons like to get scratched on the head.

Watch out for the elephants; they seem friendly and harmless, but get too close and they'll drench you in water or use their trunks to whack you with stalks of sugarcane.

Free the Bears!
Cambodia is home to two species of bears, Asiatic black bears and sun bears. Both species are often captured by poachers, and more than 70 rescued bears now live in a large enclosure at Phnom Tamao.

It's even possible to help care for the bears as a volunteer through the organization
Free The Bears.

The Bear Necessities:
Because the zoo operates on a shoestring budget, facilities are minimal, but there's plenty of space in the enclosures and most animals seem well cared for.

The area around Phnom Tamao is rural and impoverished, so many locals go to the zoo to try to make a little cash. Local English speaking guides will be happy to show you around and let you know which animals like to be scratched and which ones like to bite, but be sure to agree on a price in advance.

The road into the zoo is lined with beggars, many of whom are elderly nuns and monks. Cambodian visitors usually blow past the beggars in cars and throw a few bills out the window for them to scrounge from the dirt. You can do likewise, ignore the beggars altogether or stop and hand money to those who seem most in need.

Bear South:
A tuk-tuk ride to the zoo and back should cost around $20 and takes about 90 minutes one-way. The infamous Killing Fields memorial is about halfway to the zoo, so you can combine both destinations in a single trip.

TV show looks at Davik's journey

Davik Teng plays in the village of Svay Chrom in Cambodia before her trip to Long Beach to get lifesaving surgery. (Jeff Gritchen/Staff Photographer)

Press-Telegram Long Beach
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
09/05/2008
Davik Teng, the Cambodian girl brought to the United States for life-altering open-
heart surgery by a Long Beach nonprofit earlier this year, will be featured on network television this weekend.

She will be one of four children spotlighted Sunday at 3:30 p.m., on KABC-TV Channel 7 in a show titled "Imagine - A Celebration of Childrens Hospital Los Angeles."

The documentary, produced and paid for by Childrens Hospital, will examine Davik's journey from rural Cambodia to repair of a ventricular septal defect, or hole, in her heart.

Davik's journey was covered by the Press-Telegram. For these stories, photos of Davik's visit and the multimedia presentation, visit

To learn more about Hearts Without Boundaries, the nonprofit that helped Davik and is now working to get similar surgery for a young boy, visit www.heartswithoutboundaries.org.

Students shared hugs with rubbish tip kids

Helping hand: Staff and students from Trinity Academydesigned and painted this mural for these Cambodian children, who live and work at a local rubbish dump

The Star
Published Date: 06 September 2008
By Staff Copy

DONCASTER students who travelled to Cambodia are back home - and they reckon their trip has changed their lives.

Eight students from Trinity Academy in Thorne travelled to the far eastern country to help community projects and help out in schools and orphanages.

Among the projects the aid work they carried out took was a the designing and painting of a mural for the children who live and work at a local rubbish dump.

The group visited the capital Phnom Penh with local representatives of SAO Cambodia, one of the charities the Academy has supported since it opened.

SAO Cambodia is a UK-based, evangelical, inter-denominational mission and development agency, founded in 1973 by Major Taing Chhirc of the Cambodian Evangelical Church.

Its promotes the Christian faith and works to relieve poverty and distress amongst the people of Cambodia.

The students say they gained a real insight into the Cambodian way of life when they saw the giant municipal rubbish dump where many children work as litter pickers.

They paid a visit to a local orphanage, singing songs and painting with the children, and saw the work of the Bridge of Hope project which aims to give Cambodian youngsters a better and safer life.

The Trinity group also got a glimpse of the notorious Killing Fields, where tens of thousands of people were executed during the Khmer Rouge's reign over the country from 1975 to 1979.

Students said the expedition had made them appreciate what they had at home even more and gave many of them a desire to travel again.

Gemma Forshaw said: "The most significant thing I will take away from this trip is appreciation.

"From experiencing and observing many deprived lives within Cambodia, I now realise how lucky I am for the support I have and the opportunities at my feet."

Nathan Porter said: "We have seen a lot of chilling and traumatic things as a team in Cambodia and I feel grateful for every little thing I own, which I may take for granted. I value my life more now and I realise that small things make a big difference."

Jodie Pugh added: "I have learnt just how lucky I am to have just the small things we take for granted, such as food or a shower. I think whenever I want to moan about something, I will stop for a minute and think how lucky I am, and appreciate what I've got."

Trinity Academy Principal Ian Brew said: "I'm delighted that the trip to Cambodia has had such a positive impact on the students.

"It was a fantastic opportunity for them to experience a new culture, religion and way of life that is so dramatically different from their own."

US senator urges new approach to Asia trade policy

09.05.08

United States - WASHINGTON, Sept 5 (Reuters) - The United States must rethink its trade policy toward China and the rest of the Asia-Pacific region and adopt new models for negotiating trade deals, a senior Democratic senator said on Friday.

"We must develop a trade policy for the Asia-Pacific region as a whole," Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus said in the text of a speech in Seattle to the National Center for Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation.

The group works with the U.S. government on trade policy in the APEC region.

"Too often, China has been treated as a proxy for Asia," said Baucus, whose committee has responsibility for crafting and enacting trade legislation.

President George W. Bush, who will attend his last APEC summit meeting in Peru in November, has been criticized for focusing too much on security concerns within APEC at the expense of the forum's original emphasis on boosting regional trade, investment and development.

The 21-member group accounts for 60 percent of world economic output and brings together leaders of the United States, China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and other countries in North America, South America and Asia for annual talks.

Baucus called for a "reinvigorated APEC, one with a clear mission to expand trade between member economies."

The next U.S. administration should pursue a variety of trade pacts within the region, starting with one to liberalize just trade in services with Japan, Baucus said.

That would be break from the broader free trade agreement model followed by the Bush administration. However a pact that includes agriculture would be politically difficult for Tokyo and one that includes autos could be hard for Washington.

Baucus also urged stitching together existing free trade pacts with Chile, Singapore, Australia and South Korea into a regional accord and then expanding it to others like Malaysia, New Zealand, Taiwan and Vietnam.

He did not mention that Congress has yet to approve the South Korean agreement because many Democrats say its auto provisions favor South Korea too much.

Washington also should cut duties on goods from the poorest countries in the region, such as Cambodia, Baucus said.

The United States collects as much duties on $2 billion worth of imports from Cambodia as it does on $57 billion worth of imports from Britain, he said.

Much of Cambodia's exports are in sectors, such as clothing, where the United States has its highest tariffs.

(Editing by Xavier Briand)

Freedom of Press Increases, but Freedom of Expression in Public Declines

Posted on 6 September 2008
The Mirror, Vol. 12, No. 576

“Phnom Penh: The Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association – ADHOC – assessed that over the course of time, the freedom of the press has increased, but the freedom of expression in the public has declined.

“Mr. Thun Saray, the president of ADHOC, reported on 4 September 2008 to journalists in a meeting to sum up the results of the 2005 to 2009 strategic plans, that Cambodia goes through a high rate of economic growth and noticeable poverty reduction. As for the freedom of the press, ADHOC is not the evaluator, but different press organizations assessed that the situation is better than from 2005 to 2006. While the economy and the freedom of the press flourished, the freedom of expression in public went down.

“Mr. Thun Saray added that previously, the freedom of expression included the right to hold demonstrations in public, and so the poor were allowed to protest by marching in public places or in front of different embassies. But at present, their rights are almost completely eroded, while land disputes still exist without proper solutions; high ranking officials, the powerful, and the rich, still violate land rights of communities and of citizens.

“According to reports of ADHOC, observing the human rights situation in Cambodia, Cambodia gained a high rate of economic growth and achieved noticeable poverty alleviation during more than 15 years. However, the distribution of the benefits of the economic growth is not equal, which results in increasing inequality on the receiving side of the gains. One important reason for this inequality is that natural resources are not equally distributed, especially land. Based on reports of the United Nations Development Program – UNDP – in 2007, the rich, in total about 20% of the population, own between 59% to 70% of the land, while the land ownership of the poor, approximately 40% of the total populations, declined from 8.4% to 5,4% during 1999 to 2003 and 2004 (in a period of 4 to 5 years only). Inequality in owning important cultivation property, like land, leads to a major crisis, because it relates to the everyday living of almost 80% of the total populations who live in rural areas, and this will lead to continue to increase the inequality of production, of income seeking, and of land use in the future. Land grabbing and poor administration of natural resources (specifically, in the field of forestry and fisheries) are major factors for the increase of a status of having no land, of inequality of land ownership, and in the distribution of benefits from those resources.

“Land grabbing is mostly committed by the powerful and the rich, by using different tricks, and by private companies that had received economic land concessions from the government, but they do not properly implement what they contracted.”

Kampuchea Thmey, Vol.7, #1738, 5.9.2008
Newspapers Appearing on the Newsstand:
Friday, 5 September 2008

Vietnamese Christian escapes to Cambodia, repatriated to death threats

VietCatholic News

05/09/2008

Y Hning, an ethnic Degar or Montagnard, sought safety in a UN refugee camp; now he is under house arrest and cannot even go to work in his fields.

Spartanburg (AsiaNews) – Persecuted on ethnic and religious grounds, Y Hning (see photo) fled Vietnam for a UN refugee camp in Cambodia but was eventually shipped home. Back in Vietnam police forced his family to pay 100,000 dongs for his release and forced him to give up his Christian faith. Now he is under house arrest and in fear for his life.

Hning, 36, is an ethnic Degar, a minority living in Vietnam central highlands. The US-based Montagnard Foundation is appealing on his behalf to embassies and international agencies to spread the news so that he and his family can be spared further persecution.

In the Foundation’s appeal Y Hning is described as an ethnic Degar and a Christian from Ploi Todrah village, Bar Mah commune, in Gia Lai province, who has experienced persecution because of his ethnic affiliation, which is why he tried to flee the country.

After crossing the border with Cambodia he reached a refugee camp run by the UNHCR on 3 November 2008. Cambodian authorities repatriated him without allowing him to enjoy the protection of the UN agency.

Upon his repatriation the authorities detained him and forced his family to pay 100,000 dongs (only seven or eight dollars but a lot of money for Vietnamese farmers) for his release. Even though they raised the money and paid the fine, he was still placed under house arrest.

On 3 August the family was further required to “donate” a pig, the only animal it had left valued at 1.5 million dongs, for a party by local police.

On 8 August Hning was forced to sign a statement in which he formally renounced Christianity and pledged to stop attending the Degar church.

Under house arrest he cannot work in his family’s fields and received further threats if he dared to flee again

Blog: 'The bachelor' in Cambodia

Dara takes a dip: Its hoped his species of hairy-nosed otters will see an upturn in numbers


By CNN's Eunice Yoon

(CNN) -- When you first meet Dara, you can't help but fall for him.

He's cute, lovable, and managed to charm my entire crew when we visited him outside the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh.

OK. Dara isn't a hunky bachelor with his own reality TV show but a hairy-nosed otter who arguably has a higher calling: To revive his species from the verge of extinction.

If only he could find a wife.

Dara is the first of his kind to be bred in captivity as part of a plan by conservationists and Cambodian officials to save the hairy-nosed otter.

Up until the 1990's, it was believed the rare otter was extinct, driven into history by poachers who hunted -- and still hunt -- otters for their smooth, water-resistant fur pelts.

These pelts are sold on the black market for $150 a skin and shipped to countries such as China where the fur is used in traditional costumes.

Conservationists told us the underground trade of exotic animals is thriving and leading to what they call "empty forests".

They say certain species of turtles, bears, otters, and other wildlife are getting harder to find as the animals and their parts are illegally trafficked via third countries such as Vietnam.

Many of the animals are valued for medicinal purposes. Others are just kept as pets.

Even Dara was being kept at a home in a fishing village at the Tonle Sap Lake before he was rescued by local rangers.

Dara now lives in his enclosure at the zoo where he eagerly awaits the arrival of any female hairy-nosed otter.

Resident Protest Causes Halt in Lake Filling

Shukaku, Inc., ceased filling Boeung Kak lake Friday, as protesters demanded more talks over moving compensation .

By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
05 September 2008

Khmer audio aired 05 September 2008 (744 KB) - Download (MP3)
Khmer audio aired 05 September 2008 (744 KB) - Listen (MP3)

A Phnom Penh development company ceased filling Boeung Kak lake on Friday, following a protest of hundreds of lakeside residents in front of its office.

Protesters requested that Shukaku, Inc., stop filling the lake and resume direct discussion with residents over compensation costs for leaving the area.

More than 300 protesters staid in front of the Shukaku office, on the east side of the lake, for two hours Friday morning, before the company shut off a fill pump that had been throwing mud and water from the bottom of the Tonle Sap into the lake since last week.

The pump was still shut down Friday afternoon.

The protesters had two demands Friday: that the pump be shut off and that they have direct talks with authorities and Shukaku.

Sok Sambath, governor of Phnom Penh's Daun Penh district, and Chan Na, a Shukaku representative, told representatives of the protesters in a meeting Friday they would agree to temporarily stop filling the lake, until a resolution can be found with residents.

"We will forward your proposal to the government for discussion," Sok Sambath said.

Boeung Kak lake has been slated for development under a 99-year, $79 million lease between the city and Shukaku, but residents have proven reluctant to take a city buyout of $8,000 per home.

The development would include residential and commercial properties, as well as a hospital and university and other businesses.

"We agreed to accept the results of the first step, but we have not reached our request yet," said Be Pharum, a representative of the protesters said following the meeting. "We must wait for the final resolution."

Other residents warned they would continue to protest if their demands for a larger compensation package fail.

City Official Defends Lake Development

By Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington
05 September 2008

Khmer audio aired 04 September 2008 (6.09 MB) - Download (MP3)
Khmer audio aired 04 September 2008 (6.09 MB) - Listen (MP3)

Responding to concerns that a lake development project could damage the environment of Phnom Penh, a senior municipal official said Thursday a 10-year study had taken place before the plan was approved.

The company developing the lake, Shukaku, Inc., began filling Boeung Kak lake last week, angering residents who say a government buy-out effort is too low and raising environmental concerns.

But a 10-year study has shown the lake is no longer a reservoir and is not an important part of the city's infrastructure, said Pa Socheartavong, deputy governor of Phnom Penh, as a guest on "Hello VOA."

The lake is not being used for agriculture and cannot produce clean water, he added.

"This lake is just like a polluted bomb in town," where residents drain their waste daily, he said. "It's a dead lake. That means no activity."

The city decided to privatize the lake, offering a 99-year lease to Shukaku, which will develop the area into a long-term recreational area and reservoir, as well as a site for residential and commercial property.

The development will force more than 4,000 families to move, and many of them have proven reluctant to do so. The city has offered $8,000 per household to help people move, but residents say they want to be paid current market prices.

Around 1,000 families are still protesting the move.

But not all residents there are legal, Pa Socheartavong said. Following the 1993 election, many people moved from border areas and settled around the lake on public land.

The city has offered three options to residents, he said. They can either take the buyout, be moved to housing in another area, or wait for housing in the same place they now occupy.

The lake issue became politicized ahead of July's general election, he added.

Sudan Deminers Claim Missing Payment

By Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
05 September 2008

More than 130 Cambodian deminers who were sent on a UN mission to the African nation of Sudan have not received a segment of their pay, soldiers said Friday.

The 135 soldiers, who returned from their mission in June, are missing around $297 each, for a total of $40,095 in missing funding.

Defense officials said Friday they were waiting for money from the UN in New York.

"I'm missing nine days of payment from 380 days," said one soldier, who asked not to be named.

The UN had sponsored the mission, he said, had had given money to the Cambodian side. "Until now, we have not been paid."

All the soldiers had made a complaint to the Cambodian unexploded ordnance unit of the Ministry of Defense, he said. "But we have not received any solution."

Lt. Gen. Sem Sovanny, commander of the UXO unit, said Friday he had not yet received all the money from the UN, referring questions to Nip Sambath, an adviser to Minister of Defense Gen. Tea Banh.

Nip Sambath said he did not believe there was a problem. However, he said he would investigate further.

Designer teaches the power of 'WE' to women with HIV

COURTESY PHOTO; A member of MDSF displays the WE logo.


Photo Supplied; UNAIDS goodwill ambassador Bibi Russell, a designer and former model from Bangladesh, meets with women of the Modern Dress Sewing Factory (MDSF), a business initiative by women living with HIV.


The Phnom Penh Post

Written by CAMILLA BJERREKAER
Friday, 05 September 2008

Internationally-known fashion designer joins hands with HIV-positive women in Cambodia to create and market the 'Bibi for WE' line of accessories

Internationally-renowned fashion designer Bibi Russell has joined hands with the Modern Dress Sewing Factory, a women's business subsidiary of a network of people living with HIV in Cambodia, to launch a new designer label called Bibi for WE.

Russell, a succesful fashion model in the 1960s and 70s, is a UNAIDS goodwill ambassador and founder of Fashion for Development, a global movement seeking to help weavers and women across the globe.

"If you join hands with women living with HIV with affection and confidence, they can create magic with their fingers. Fashion is very important, and it makes you understand the culture of a country," said Russell. "Fashion is a part of culture, and textiles are a part of the history of Cambodia."

The products under the Bibi for WE label will initially consist of a range of accessories and bags with the intention of expanding the product range at a later stage. Markets in Bangkok and Canada will initially be selling the new brand.

"I will do a range of accesories and bags which are easy to sell. We are not doing fashion items like clothes and dresses just yet. That will come later," Russell said.

During her nine-day visit, Russell spent time getting to know the women at MDSF, an initiative started in 2006 by the UN Development Program that now employs 17 women living with HIV in the factory in Phnom Penh.

She also visited silk farmers in rural areas who will provide the raw materials for the products, making the finished products 100-percent made-in-Cambodia.

A positive-thinking girl

Russell was confident that the project would be a success and expressed her admiration for the women of MDSF.

"I am a very positive-thinking girl," said Russell. "I think the project will go very far. This is just the first step. Knowing these ladies and visiting the silk villages, I know that this project is going to be very successful."

Being with these 17 ladies I see a lot of courage, a lot of strength to continue our work.

They are earning a living, supporting their families, helping their children to have a better life. Charity I don't believe in, these women just want some support."

The smiles on the faces of the women of MDSF showed that the admiration went both ways and that the women were happy and excited to be part of this new initiative.

"We don't want sympathy, but support to live a life of respect and dignity," said MDSF business manager Pham Srim.

"Severe poverty and stigma and discrimination make our lives impossible. We have recurrent health problems and have to fend for our treatment, food and shelter; but the most crushing is the discrimination by society.

"This project helps us to stand on our feet, earn a living and stay unfazed by the stigma and discrimination staring in our face," Pham Shrim said.

In the initial stages, the new Bibi for WE brand will mean a more steady income for MDSF, which has been producing different kinds of uniforms and bags since 2006. It is hoped that in time MDSF will employ more people.

"The collaboration with Bibi Russell and MDSF is to enhance and extend the products made by the Cambodian women and as a result of Bibi's visit, we would like to take this project and extend it beyond Cambodia and take it to the world," said Douglas Broderick, UNDP resident representative in Cambodia, who urged the private sector and general public to support the initiative.

The new fashion label represented a new hope and empowerment for all women living with HIV in Cambodia, added Pham Srim. "With HIV, one can lead a normal and productive life - that is the message of WE," she said.