Saturday, 11 April 2009

Thailand, Cambodia to Cooperate Over Overlapping Sea Areas

Dow Jones Newswires Friday, April 10, 2009

PATTAYA (Dow Jones Newswires), April 10, 2009

Thailand and Cambodia will push for greater cooperation in developing overlapping sea areas along their shared border which are believed to be rich in oil deposits, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said Friday.

Abhisit said he and his Cambodian counterpart Hun Sen agreed that energy security has become critical, hence the need for greater cooperation.

The area in the Gulf of Thailand is believed to have enormous potential for petroleum, but exploration has been limited because who has control over parts of the seabed along their shared border has never been clearly defined.

Thailand, Cambodia promise to mend fences

Earth Times

Fri, 10 Apr 2009
Author : DPA

Pattaya, Thailand- Thailand and Cambodia Friday agreed to strengthen cooperation and make greater efforts in future to prevent violent incidents along their common border. Thailand's prime minister, Abhisit Vejjajiva, and Cambodian leader Hun Sen met at the sidelines of a regional summit of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) at the resort town of Pattaya.

It was the first high-level bilateral meeting since clashes between Thai and Cambodian troops near a disputed temple area that left several soldiers dead earlier this month.

"We agreed that the accidents [last week] were the result of a misunderstanding that it should not be allowed to affect our relations and cooperation," Abhisit told journalists after the meeting.

Mechanisms are now in place to resolve the conflicts along the border and prevent problems flaring up again, the Thai government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn told the German Press Agency dpa.

The Cambodia-Thailand Joint Border Committee met earlier this week and approved significant steps to defuse the tension along the border near Preah Vihear temple, among them an agreement to establish a joint military monitoring group.

The 11th century Hindu Preah Vihear temple, or Khao Phra Viharn in Thai, is situated on an escarpment that forms part of the natural border between the two countries and has been a source of tension between Cambodia and Thailand for generations.

The International Court of Justice awarded the site to Cambodia in 1962, but the ruling did not determine the ownership of some 5 square kilometres of scrub land next to the ruins.

Fighting erupted along the border last year after the temple was declared a World Heritage site by UNESCO despite Thai objections.

The border had been quiet for months as the neighbours sought jointly to demarcate the jungle area around the temple. But tensions rose again last month when Thai troops crossed into a disputed area near the temple and were stopped by Cambodian soldiers.

"Both countries agreed to exercise extreme caution in future and not allow such incidents to re-occur," Abhisit told journalists.

The two prime ministers discussed several major projects which involved substantial Thai investment, including improving the highway that connects the two countries and the construction of hydro-electric dam that would provide electricity in Cambodia and provide water to parts of south-eastern Thailand.

The Thai prime minister is scheduled to visit Cambodia later this month
.

François Bizot at Duch trial: "Trying to understand is not trying to forgive"

CAMBODIA. Kambol (Phnom Penh). 9/04/2009: Testimony of Francois Bizot, author of Le Portail (The Gate), on 7th day of Kaing Guek Eav trial at the ECCC. ©John Vink/ Magnum.



Ka-set

By Stéphanie Gée
10-04-2009

he fact that Frenchman François Bizot, who is currently the first witness to come forward at the trial of former Khmer Rouge torturer Duch, became aware of the duality of the S-21 head does not stain the nice image he described about the man who detained him for nearly three months at M-13 in 1971. The EFEO (Ecole Française d'Extrême-Orient - French School for East Asian studies, Paris) researcher, however, insisted on Thursday April 9th on clearing any misunderstanding before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), and was careful not to set himself up as another lawyer for Duch. After him, a Cambodian survivor from the same detention camp painted a much darker picture of M-13 and its supervisor.

“There is no forgiveness whatsoever”
François Bizot may be approaching the trial with the aim of understanding the complexity of the human soul and, beyond that, of the Khmer Rouge tragedy, but he does not for all that allow himself to claim the status of victim. “Trying to understand is not trying to forgive”, the Frenchman stresses. “It seems to me that there is no forgiveness whatsoever here. Forgiving in the name of whom? Of those who died? I don’t think so. And the horror of what has been done to Cambodia, which is unfortunately not exclusive to this poor country, is unspeakable horror. And the cry of victims must be heard without ever thinking of it as excessive, the hardest words we may use against the accused are words which will never be hard enough. This is not about willing to forgive what was done, but it is about, from my own approach – which has no reason for being that of victims – trying to understand the tragedy which took place in the forests of Cambodia...”

According to the researcher, forgiveness is not accessible, but relief for victims proves as hard to find. “If I try to put myself in the place of survivors and those who died under or after torture [as a Civil Party lawyer asked him to do], I think that the mechanism that might be mine in order to relieve my constant suffering, my hatred, would be to feel even, to be able to see that I get something out of the suffering which is today inflicted on the accused. However, I wonder about the possibility for victims to find any relief today, within the realms of possibility...”

Release was achieved via human bonds
François Bizot owes his life to Duch. And this is here a part of his own tragedy. During the hearing, François Bizot mentions again the process which according to him allowed a happy end for his detention by the Khmer Rouge. “If I myself got from that ordeal of incarceration a shock that I cannot forget, which is to have seen the man behind the executioner, I think that [Duch] did with me what no torturer should do, and in a way, this is also because he was led to see the man behind the spy, the man behind the prisoner. And one of the reasons which led Duch to consider my case with the attention he did not have for other cases of prisoners who were presented to him in the camp might also be that those interrogations lasted for so long that they created a sort of human bond between us. By doing so, sending someone to death became a lot more difficult than sending to death people he did not want to humanise.”

Duch’s room for manoeuvre was “null”
The international co-Lawyer for Duch particularly worked on pointing out in the defendant’s written declarations, quotes which in a certain way minimised the liability of the former director of M-13 and later S-21 supervisor, by presenting him as an element in a machinery which he could not escape. In his book entitle The Gate, as Mr. Roux recalls, François Bizot indicates that “Duch only obeyed orders given by Angkar. Similarly, you told Investigating Judges: ‘I think his room for manoeuvre was absolutely null. His only job was to collect information from people who were arrested and on whom he drafted reports. These people were from then on condemned and the point was to make them talk before executing them, so as to as to show that their arrest was worthwhile.” You also said: ‘the Khmer Rouge regime was a terror regime and it was probably very difficult for those who had a position within it to backtrack’”.

The witness, echoing excerpts from the Statement of Offence, repeated that it was “not his business any more to prove or show that this Khmer Rouge regime was a regime of terror, and as far as I am concerned and about my release, there was not a single moment when I saw that this type of decisions was taken at Duch’s level as he had to refer them to his superiors”.

Cynicism on the part of Duch...
Opposite, for his part, the international co-Prosecutor emphasises extracts in François Bizot’s book which betray the perverse nature of Duch. He quotes two anecdotes from The Gate which are to him an account of the mental torture inflicted on prisoners. In his book, the EFEO researcher recounts that Duch allowed himself to make a tacky joke by announcing him that he had been unmasked as a spy. The Frenchman, distraught and angry, fell down on his knees in front of him and the camp supervisor then told him it was a joke and that he was going to be released soon… Co-Prosecutor Robert Petit then quotes another similar example he found in the book, thus taking François Bizot by surprise and having him say: “I should have read my book again before coming here; I can’t remember what I wrote!”

The second witness is called up. Ouch Son, 72, was detained at M-13 for a year and also describes the cynical trend of Duch. He recounts having once seen Duch beating a female detainee with a whip, slapping her posterior and starting to laugh in front of the sight of the woman lying on the ground, writhing in pain. “I was very scared of Duch”, he later declares, “I did not dare come into contact with him, I did not dare look at him. [...] But I am not scared of him any more today, he is a toothless tiger!”

The 72 year-old, during his moving account, told about the M-13 detention centre, where “not a day went by without prisoners dying”, where dogs dug bodies up – they had not been buried deep enough underground as prisoners were too weak physically to dig deep - , and scattered bones and human remains around the camp, where he witnessed summary executions of prisoners, and particularly that of a woman who suffered blows that were supposed to be deadly. She passed out and was eventually buried alive in a grave dug up especially for that purpose...

Duch, impassive and unshaken
At the beginning, Ouch Son finds it hard to see the accused. The camera zooms on Duch and he recognises him, at last. As for Duch, he does not remember the face of the former detainee. The survivor concludes his testimony by saying he is “very happy that this tribunal tries to establish the truth and the responsibilities of the crimes committed during the era of Democratic Kampuchea”. “I wish justice to be given to Cambodians who survived this horrible tragedy!”

Duch is then invited to confront the testimony of the former detainee. “Of course I did not know him before and I see him for the first time today; I understand his testimony is the reflection of his suffering.” He reckons the witness’ account is “essentially true” generally speaking, but adds that it is not exempt of inaccuracies or mistakes. Thus, he denies having beaten a female detainee, having “spanked” her or having laughed at her pain. “When I beat, I made sure that no detainee could see me. Then, I never hit a woman...” The witness confirms he did see the scene and makes the account of it once again. Duch puts his hands before him and shrugs out of surprise, his face showing wincing incredulity, at which the audience laughs. Dogs digging up bodies? Duch points out that dogs were not very numerous in that area... Is the number of deaths in the camp claimed by the witness correct? Duch assures that figures given by Ouch are excessive...

The trial ends and will only resume on Monday April 20th, as Cambodia will celebrate next week the coming of the Khmer New Year.

The fate of François Bizot’s assistants
François Bizot’s two Cambodian assistants, who were arrested at the same time as him and were also transferred to M-13, did not come back alive from the Khmer Rouge hell. The researcher could not obtain their release when his own was pronounced. Duch explained to him that they were free, but as they were Cambodian, they must stay within the Khmer Rouge area. They died in a camp other than M-13.

Students at Phnom Penh French high school demonstrate against eviction of Cambodian families

Phnom Penh (Cambodia), 09/04/2009. Students asking for “fair” compensations for families living on the Rene Descartes high school premises and now facing eviction©Vandy Rattana



Ka-set

By Duong Sokha
09-04-2009

This is a first: on the morning of Thursday April 9th, some thirty Cambodian and French students at the international Rene Descartes high school in Phnom Penh demonstrated in favour of housing rights for around 30 families living in a building on the premises of the school and now facing eviction. In a lively and peaceful manner, beating drums and chanting the motto of the French Republic “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity”, students put up banners and called for a “blockade”. They aimed at showing their solidarity towards those families so they can obtain fair compensations failing the possibility for them to stay on the plot of land and avoid eviction as it often happens in Cambodia in this type of conflict.

The building where 37 families currently reside is located in the heart of Cambodia’s capital on the premises of the French high school René Descartes, which used to be home to the National Institute of Affairs. The authorities then entrusted the council in charge of the management of the school with the responsibility for that structure, in exchange for the financing of the construction of a new building in the Steung Meanchey area.

Cambodian families live on the ground and top floors as access to the first, second and third ones has been blocked for renovation by the school head as the latter wishes to use these premises fully.

Recently, authorities from the Daun Penh section and from the Phnom Penh municipality reminded those residents that they had already asked them to leave the premises a few years ago and claimed they were squatters living in an illegal situation. San Lim Sreang, who lives on the fourth floor of the building, rejects the wording: “We settled there in the 1980s. Back then, the authorities of the state of Cambodia even gave us family record books in 1985. And in 200, we were given a residence book”, San Lim Sreang points out. The former civil servant at the National Bank of Cambodia refuses to leave as he estimates that the compensations offered by the authorities, “between 5,000 and 10,000USD”, are not enough to resettle and buy a plot of land or a decent apartment in the centre of Phnom Penh.

Reached on the phone, Daun Penh section deputy governor Sok Penh Vuth, in charge of the dossier, told Ka-set that the Phnom Penh authorities did not intend to implement any forced eviction against those residents. According to him, the students demonstrators – who fear a scenario similar to that suffered by the Dey Krohom residents, violently evicted by a private company as the Phnom Penh authorities adopted a soft attitude towards the matter – “did not understand” the situation “very well”. “There is no plan for any eviction. We are still looking for a peaceful solution”, he says. “More than half of the families, i.e. 13 homes [actually thirty-seven families still live in that building at the time of writing – Editor’s note], accepted our leaving offer in exchange for a sum of money and a 4x8 metre plot of land in the Boeung Tompong area, in the mean Chey section, in the city. Six other families are currently going through paperwork to move out”, the Daun Penh deputy governor explained.

Despite the crisis, Cambodians will still be going away massively for the Khmer New Year

Prasat Preah Vihear (Cambodia, Preah Vihear). 09/04/2008: Photographer with Cambodian banner photographing a Cambodian tourist visiting the Preah Vihear temple. ©John Vink/ Magnum

Ka-set

By Ros Dina
09-04-2009

Despite the economic crisis, Cambodia’s Ministry of Tourism forecasts important movements of population within the Kingdom for the celebrations of the traditional Khmer New Year, which will run from Tuesday 14th through to Thursday April 16th. The number of foreign tourists has been going down since the beginning of this year compared with 2008, but many Cambodians should still be going away during those three days, especially to celebrate the coming of the New Year 2553BE with their family in their home province.

In its annual report, the Ministry of Tourism counted more than 6.7 million national tourists in 2008, i.e. half of the total population of Cambodia. The main destination for those travellers remains Phnom Penh (1.78 million national visitors in 2008), followed by Siem reap and the coast. Numbers of Cambodian visitors have but increased over the past few years: in 2008, there were four times as many tourists as there were in 2002.

According to Minister of Tourism Thong Khon, Cambodian “tourists” are still many this year despite the crisis: indeed, an almost 15% increase in the number of travellers is expected. Thus, the Minister asked provincial departments to make twice as many efforts to prepare the massive arrival of local visitors and make sure security and hygiene standards are maintained on the odd 1,000 touristic sites officially registered in the country, out of which 200 are highly popular.

The Minister also announced the organisation of New Year celebrations on O'Chheuteal Beach in the Preah Sihanouk province: famous male and female singers will perform; beach sports and traditional popular games are also on the agenda. “The main goal for this operation is to spread information on the potential of the Cambodian coastal area, in parallel to the site of Angkor and activity linked with eco-tourism in other regions. We want to establish connections with the West and South and with the eco-touristic sites in the North-West in the Steung Treng, Kratie, Ratanakiri and Mondulkiri provinces”, Thong Khon explained. These connections do not work in the most efficient way yet, as over the first two months this year, more than 12,000 tourists stopped off in the port of Sihanoukville on the occasion of a coastal trip, but only 35% of them decided to visit Angkor as well due to a lack of air plane connection linking the coastal town and Siem Reap.

Besides, the Minister of Tourism also announced the elaboration, soon, of national standards regarding the quality of sites, services, tourism activities and cooking, as well as a plan to emphasise regional traditions.

Japan grants 5.6 million USD to Cambodia

Technology Marketing Corp
April 10, 2009

Phnom Penh, Apr 09, 2009 (Asia Pulse Data Source via COMTEX) -- The Japanese government has granted 5.6 million USD to support mine-clearance activities in Cambodia, local media reported.

The agreement was signed early this week at Cambodian Mine Action Center (CMAC) headquarters by CMAC Director General Heng Ratana and Project Manager Yukio Kohsaka, the Cambodian news agency (AKP) said.

The grant will be used to buy modern mine-clearance equipment, Heng Ratana said at the signing ceremony, adding that the new equipment will increase the de-mining activities, ensure de-miners safety and increase the work efficiency.

Escaping the Khmer Rouge --- and building a new life

Mary Blatz (center), has built a strong relationship with older and younger Cambodian generations.


The Tidings
Friday, April 10, 2009

By Doris Benavides

To Mara Doung it seems it was yesterday when he told God he was not ready to die, but in reality 33 years have passed.

"It was 7 p.m.," Doung clearly recalls. The then-15-year-old boy had been hiding for three days at a coconut farm in his native Cambodia. He was separated from his family by the Khmer Rouge, the communist forces led by Pol Pot that took over in April 1975.

Doung's great grandmother Prak Him, with whom he lived from the ages of 5 through 12, had taught him that there is only one God --- and he was not Buddha, as most Cambodians believed.

Doung is one of a very small number of Catholic Cambodians. Most of his countrymen practice Theravada Buddhism, their country's state religion before Pol Pot's rule. He is a parishioner of St. Anthony Church in Long Beach, a city that is home to the largest Cambodian community outside Southeast Asia (more than 100,000, including about 17,000 Cambodian-American).

Thousands of Cambodians, including Doung, fled to the United States in the late 1970s and early 1980s, escaping a communist regime that oversaw what is regarded as one of the worst genocides in human history. Its victims included Doung's father and a sister.

Growing community
About 95 percent of Cambodia's population of 12 million is Theravada Buddhist. Only 19,000 are Catholic. But though most immigrants to the U.S. adhere to the Theravada Buddhism of their homeland, the percentage of Christian (and Catholic) Cambodians is growing.

The genesis of this conversion locally took place in the 1970s, as Sister of Charity Lucille Desmond led an effort to establish an outreach program to newly-arrived Cambodians who settled in Long Beach. With the growth of this immigrant community, in 1992 a group of Catholic lay men and women started Our Lady of Mount Carmel Cambodian (parochial) Mission, to provide spiritual support to Southeast Asian citizens.

The majority of these refugees had arrived in Long Beach with nothing more than what they were wearing. They had been drawn here by family and friends, the potential for jobs, the coastal climate, and the Port of Long Beach's Asian imports.

Most of them, like Doung, had lost at least one close relative during the four years of the Khmer Rouge's genocide, and after the Vietnamese invasion in 1979 (by which time an estimated 2 million people had died).

Today, at Our Lady of Mount Carmel, a few blocks away from St. Anthony Church, recently-arrived Cambodians learn to adjust to the American way of life. Mary Blatz, the mission's coordinator and one of its cofounders, helps them navigate through the immigration, health and educational systems, and teaches English as a Second Language.

Blatz, a Columbia University graduate in International Education Development, helped begin the parochial mission in Long Beach at the request of Cambodian Bishop Yves Ramousse (whom she had met in previous years while he was living as a refugee in New York,) and with the sponsorship of the late San Pedro Region Auxiliary Bishop Carl Fisher.

Blatz had started working with refugees in 1979, training teachers who taught English to other refugees. In the early '80s she traveled to Hong Kong and Indonesia, where she continued working with refugees.

She still teaches ESL, advises on employment and refers people to a network of employers and attorneys she has built throughout the years. Her services, she said, are available to everyone, regardless of their faith.

But her main task is to provide spiritual and emotional support to the people with whom she has a special bond.

"It is my concern they know about God and the faith," Blatz said. "Most of the Cambodians, especially the elderly, fell in a strong depression as a result of the atrocities against them by the Khmer Rouge and during their stay in refugee camps in Thailand or Indonesia."

To help alleviate their burden, Blatz let the elderly build a Cambodian-style vegetable garden in the mission church's backyard that keeps them busy and helps them with their tight household budget.

Since its 1992 founding, the mission has grown, funded through grants, fundraisers and financial support of parishioners of St. Mary Church, Blatz's home church in her native Colts Neck, New Jersey.

Traumatic memories
Many times Blatz has also served as an intermediary between the oldest generations and the younger generations, Cambodian-Americans who only speak English and only know about the genocide through the stories told by their parents or grandparents. Some others barely remember their stay at the refugee camps.

"A vast majority of Cambodians lost a close relative, which left them with emotional wounds difficult to heal," Blatz noted. Many children lost one or both parents from the genocide which targeted religious people, professionals and intellectuals, those considered threats to the government.

Those who were not assassinated left the country and established in Long Beach, Boston, Virginia, Texas, Rhode Island and Washington. (A smaller percentage settled in Canada, France and Australia.) Locally, Catholic Cambodians are scattered in Long Beach, San Diego, Santa Ana, Pomona, San Bernardino and Los Angeles.

David Hort, now 33, arrived in the U.S. with his parents when he was 8 years old after living in a refugee camp in Thailand for several months. The family was among the few Cambodian Catholics.

Now a parishioner at Our Lady of the Rosary in Paramount, Hort recently married Sothea Keov, in her 20s, a Cambodian Buddhist he met in his native country. Marrying her fulfilled a dream, he says. Another is his desire to maintain Cambodian values and traditions, including close family relationships and respect for the elderly, values he fears may be vanishing among the younger generations.

Better days?
Today's Cambodian immigrants celebrate the church's "restart" in Cambodia, which began in the early 1990s, thanks to a youth wave that is changing the face of the church. There are struggles: the majority of catechists are between the ages 18-35, and they do not have any formal catechetical certification, because the local church has no official catechism school. But the situation is better overall.

Mara Doung has observed the change in trips he has made to his homeland, and is trying to help it along. With the support of his family in Cambodia, the businessman (he is a former owner of two restaurants and an importing sports business) started a nonprofit that helps the poor in Cambodia and helps law students to stop corruption, which is high in the Southeast Asian country.

He says he learned this from his great grandmother, who woke him up early every weekend to go feed the poor in a neighbor village.

"She woke early to cook noodles and rice," he said. "I used to ask her 'Why do you do this for no money?' She would answer me, 'When you grow up you will understand.'"

The father of five is now trying to instill the same values and beliefs on his children. Three of them attend St. Anthony Elementary School.

Still, the scars left from his years of hiding and escaping the communists affect on him. He remarried after two divorces, but had to quit his job due to sporadic panic attacks for which he is receiving psychological treatment.

In the meantime he went back to culinary school. He started Bible study with other Cambodians. And he hopes, he says, to become a deacon.

For more information about Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Cambodian Mission, call Mary Blatz at (562) 394-2216.

Bangkok gripped by pro-Thaksin protests

Photo by: AFP
Supporters of Thailand's ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra shout slogans during a demonstration Thursday in front of Government House in Bangkok. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has refused to resign, pitting his shaky coalition government against tens of thousands of protesters.

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by AFP
Friday, 10 April 2009

On the second day of mass demonstrations against PM Abhisit, the marchers vow to halt regional summit, while taxis block the streets in Bangkok.

BANGKOK - Thai protesters threatened Thursday to stop a summit of Asian leaders going ahead this weekend, opening up a new front on the second day of mass street rallies against Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva.

Abhisit's four-month-old government faces its biggest challenge after more than 100,000 loyal supporters of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra gathered Wednesday in Bangkok to demand that he quit office and call fresh elections.

Police said about 25,000 protesters were left Thursday outside the house of a royal aide whom they accuse of orchestrating the 2006 coup that toppled Thaksin, as well as at Abhisit's office and Bangkok's royal plaza.

The demonstrators later vowed to target the coastal resort town of Pattaya, where leaders from ASEAN and partners, including China and Japan, are due to meet.

"If we have to shut down the whole town then we have to, and it's a warning to friendly countries that the meeting may not happen," protest leader Nattawut Saikuar told reporters in Bangkok.

Security has been beefed up in Pattaya for the April 10-12 meet since Thaksin's so-called "Red Shirts" attacked Abhisit's motorcade in the town on Tuesday, smashing one of its windows.

Photo by: AFP
On the second day of mass demonstrations against PM Abhisit, the marchers vow to halt regional summit, while taxis block the streets in Bangkok


The summit has already been postponed from December, when protesters opposed to the previous, pro-Thaksin government shut down Bangkok's airports.

Those protests ended when a court forced Thaksin's allies from government, allowing British-born Abhisit to come to power but triggering a furious reaction from the billionaire's supporters.

Abhisit has reassured foreign leaders there would be no further disruption to the summit and remains defiant.

"I will not resign," he told reporters in Bangkok before travelling to Pattaya. "This is not the game, they cannot play like this... If they are sincere, the government is open to political reform."

Around 5,000 police and 2,000 soldiers have deployed to the resort, officials said.

In Bangkok, tensions escalated Thursday when about 100 taxi drivers sympathetic to Thaksin left their vehicles and blocked a key intersection in response to an appeal on the Red Shirt movement's radio station.

Traffic jams several kilometres long built up at the capital's Victory Monument. The government said it was negotiating with the cabbies but would use lifting equipment to remove the vehicles if the talks failed.

'Groups urge more ECCC graft talks

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Vong Sokheng
Friday, 10 April 2009

UN, government should not abandon efforts to tackle court corruption

LEADING legal and civil society groups Thursday urged the government and the United Nations not to abandon attempts to establish anti-graft measures at Cambodia's war crimes court, a day after the two sides walked away from corruption talks empty-handed.

"The government of Cambodia and the United Nations must continue in good faith to resolve the previous corruption allegations as soon as possible and immediately agree on [a] joint mechanism to deal fully and independently with future corruption allegations," the six groups said in a statement.

The groups added that protection for whistleblowers must also be ensured so that "the integrity of the proceedings is restored".

The Cambodian side of the hybrid court has been under suspicion since allegations surfaced in 2007 that some employees were being forced to kick back portions of their salaries to their bosses.

The claims prompted several audits, including a UN review, and have resulted in the freezing of funds to the Cambodian half of the tribunal.

In three days of discussions earlier this week, Deputy Prime Minister Sok An and the UN's Assistant Secretary General for Legal Affairs Peter Taksoe-Jensen failed to reach an agreement on how best to address corruption at the court.

Taksoe-Jensen said this round of negotiations would be the last.

Sok Sam Oeun, the executive director of the Cambodian Defenders Project who co-drafted the NGO statement, told the Post Thursday that the government should be less aggressive in its talks with the UN.

"I believe that the talks between the UN and the government will not hit a stalemate if [the government] considers the interests and the need for justice of the victims."

Sok Sam Oeun warned that the delay in reaching an agreement on anti-corruption mechanisms for court staff, and the inability to resolve existing corruption allegations, would affect the credibility and independence of the court.

The group also called on the international community to support the UN's efforts to protect it from executive interference.

"We are in no doubt that a failure to successfully complete the ECCC process would lead to deep disappointment and anger amongst victims of the Khmer Rouge regime and the wider Cambodian and international communities, and urge all stakeholders in this process to work to avoid this occurring," the group said.

Phay Siphan, a spokesman for the Council of Ministers, said political will was needed in the talks with the UN.

"Our government had requested the UN come to help bring justice for the victims of the Khmer Rouge regime, and so we have never closed the door for talks," Phay Siphan said. "It is too early to resume talks because each side has drafts in hand to consider."

Youk Chhang, the director of the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, on Thursday wrote a letter to Taksoe-Jensen asking him to speak to Ambassador Thomas Hammarberg to learn of his experiences in negotiating with the government.

Hammarberg was the former UN human rights envoy to Cambodia and was deeply involved in negotiations to establish the tribunal. "In my view, the difficulties [Hammarberg] faced in reaching an agreement with the government were much more severe than those faced today," Youk Chhang wrote.

He told the Post Thursday: "It is clear that the ECCC administration is incompetent and needs to be reformed and replaced. During these recent negotiations, the teams have faced political, legal and networking challenges."

M-13 survivor tells of horrors

Photo by: AFP
French anthropologist and M-13 survivor Francois Bizot shown here in a video screen grab from Thursday's proceedings.




The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Georgia Wilkins
Friday, 10 April 2009

Ouch Sorn recounts to tribunal an incident in which Duch beat a woman into a seizure - and laughed. Duch denies the claim.

CAMBODIA'S war crimes court Thursday called on its second witness in the trial of former prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, uncovering more details of the brutal acts carried out under his command.

Ouch Sorn, a survivor of M-13 prison, told a near-empty courtroom how he survived incarceration by the former schoolteacher by quietly obeying orders to dig pits for the dead.

"I saw the torture activities and ill-treatment of prisoners in all forms. It's hard to describe.... Every day I saw prisoners die, every single day. Not a day went past without a prisoner dying," he said.

He described one incident in which the 66-year-old defendant, known as Duch, was laughing while he slapped a woman whom he had beaten so badly that she suffered a seizure.

"One day I saw [Duch] beating a female person with a whip ... then the young guards came and beat the girl. After she became unconscious, he slapped her backside and he laughed because she was having a seizure on the ground," he said.

Duch denied the event happened.

"He is talking more than the truth," he told judges. "I interrogated women, but when I did so I never let any detainee see it," he added.

However, Duch did admit that another incident, described as the execution of one of several prisoners tied to a pole, was not a fabrication.

"It's true," he said.

‘Terror was everywhere'
The cross-examination followed further questioning of Francois Bizot, the only Westerner to survive imprisonment at M-13.

The French anthropologist, who wrote about his ordeal in a bestselling memoir The Gate, described in more detail an incident in which he thought he would be executed.

"I can't recall M-13 without recalling the terrifying atmosphere of fear and death, or how much this atmosphere was embodied in Duch. Terror was everywhere," Bizot told the court Thursday.

However, he said that he had formed some sort of bond with Duch, though he said he would still would classify him as a cruel individual.

"The interrogations were able to create some sort of bond, some sort of humanity between us. Therefore, sending me to my death became something more difficult than when you send people that you did not seek to humanise to their deaths," he said.

"I don't see how else he could be perceived [other than cruel]. A person in charge of a camp where prisoners are taken in, interrogated, beaten, can hardly elicit any other feeling but fear."

Although crimes occurring at M-13, a secret prison in the jungle, are not part of the court's jurisdiction, judges say evidence from the camp will assist in ascertaining Duch's personality and his broader relationship to the regime.

When Ouch Sorn was asked if he was still afraid of Duch, he said no, as the prison chief was now "a tiger with no teeth".

The 72-year-old survivor finished his testimony by thanking the chamber.

"Nothing else is more valuable than this process," he said.

Land protest draws students

Photo by: HENG CHIVOAN
A passerby stops in front of the Lycee Francais Rene Descartes during the protest on Thursday.


The Phnom Penh Post

Written by May Thittara
Friday, 10 April 2009

Some 20 youths from Lycee Francais Rene Descartes join residents of community near the intl school to voice discontent over what they say are forced evictions.

ABOUT 25 students from the Lycee Francais Rene Descartes joined with 20 residents facing eviction in a protest outside the international school.

Together, they demanded that the French embassy respect the rights of the residents - some of whom have been on the land for 30 years, students said.

Raimondo Pietet, a student and protest organiser, said that people were being forced out with insufficient compensation and would be unable to construct new homes.

"The government has never released a paper to evict people. They just use rumours and fear to evict the community," he added.

"Today we are distributing information so that everyone in the lycee can know about the situation happening in the building right here," he said.

Sok Chenda, 54, who has lived on the location since 1979, said, "I am really proud of the French students. They are very young, but they know what is right and wrong."

Another resident, Khil Seur, 56, said that the local residents had become part of the school community and that is what galvanised the student protesters.

"The students joined the protest because they know that it is an injustice to evict us. Some of them have studied here since they were children, and they always saw us."

Sok Penh Vuth, the deputy director of Daun Penh district and the official that ordered a fence blocking residents from their old houses, dismissed the protests, saying the students were too young.

"The students that protested this morning are too young, about 15 years old. They do not understand much about this area, and they misunderstand that we are forcing residents to leave," he said

The president of the school's parent association said the French embassy was not responsible for the eviction methods undertaken by the Cambodian authorities.

Evicted residents are to move to Thnot Chrum village, Boeung Tumpum commune, which many of the residents from near the international school say is constantly flooded.

A spokesperson at the French embassy was unavailable for comment on Thursday because she was travelling abroad.

PREAH VIHEAR: Thais must pay for armed clash

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Vong Sokheng
Friday, 10 April 2009

PREAH VIHEAR

ABOUT 100 members of the Khmer Civilisation Foundation (KCF), a local nationalist civil society group, have appealed for the government to request compensation from the Thai government after armed clashes damaged Preah Vihear temple and destroyed a nearby market. "We have to call for compensation from the Thai government," KCF President Meoung Son said Wednesday, saying the Thais damaged the Cambodian and world heritage site. Meoung Son said the $50 million in reparation paid to Thailand after the 2003 anti-Thai riots was a suitable precedent for a legal claim. Phay Siphan, spokesman of the Council of Ministers, said he had not received any official complaint from civil society Wednesday.

PM to local officials: Don't sell state land

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Cheang Sokha
Friday, 10 April 2009

PRIME Minister Hun Sen on Thursday warned commune councillors and village chiefs not to do deals involving state property, saying the government would not recognise them.

Delivering the closing speech at an agricultural conference, he told commune councillors and village chiefs - "even powerful people" - to stop signing agreements to sell state property such as flooded forests.

"The government has never authorised councillors and village chiefs to sign away land titles. Illegal land grabs will be punished by law, no matter who you are," he said, adding that failure to crack down would lead to further land disputes. He said land clearances must also be monitored.

Khun Sokhem, the commune chief of Prek Dambang in Kandal province, said some villagers who farmed rice on a local lake bed during the dry season had sold that land.

"When we learned it was state land, we refused to sign," she said. "The parties agreed to the sale without the recognition of the local authority."

She said the problem had been exacerbated by the rapid rise in the price of land in recent years, but that had dissipated as land prices had dropped.

Ny Chakrya, head of monitoring at the local human rights group Adhoc, said Hun Sen's comments might prevent further disputes, but said the government should have acted five years ago. "This is not a new issue. He may recognise it, but it seems too late."

Ex-monk meets with officials

Photo by: HENG CHIVOAN
Khmer Krom monks are chased by riot police during a December 2007 demonstration at the Vietnamese embassy in Phnom Penh.


The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Chrann Chamroeun and Sebastian Stangio
Friday, 10 April 2009

UN, rights groups lobby govt in a bid to secure Tim Sakhorn's citizenship rights.

FORMER monk Tim Sakhorn and leading Khmer Krom activists met with government officials in Takeo province Thursday in an attempt to resolve the status of his nationality and allow him to settle in Cambodia permanently.

Tim Sakhorn, a rights activist who was arrested and defrocked in Cambodia before being jailed in Vietnam, arrived in Cambodia to visit family Saturday, but is scheduled to return to Vietnam April 17.

"We met with local authorities in Takeo this morning in order to apply for a legal Cambodian identity card for Tim Sakhorn to enable him to live in Cambodia," said Ang Chanrith, executive director of the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Human Rights Organisation (KKKHRO).

He added that the local authorities were receptive to Tim Sakhorn's requests to remain in Cambodia permanently, but could not issue the documents without formal permission from the Ministry of Interior.

"The provincial deputy police chief with whom we met was willing to issue an identity card for Tim Sakhorn, but said he would wait to see a formal letter from the ministry," he said.

He added that KKKHRO and officials from the UN's Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) - who also met with Tim Sakhorn on Tuesday - had both contacted the ministry to request a letter confirming Tim Sakhorn's citizenship.

OHCHR representative Christophe Peschoux said his office was working to clarify the matter ahead of the Khmer New Year, but confirmed provincial authorities were "reluctant" to issue identity papers for Tim Sakhorn without approval.

He said that OHCHR, which has already been in contact with Ministry of Interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak over the issue, had contacted the ministry again to request that it give the necessary permission.

"[Tim Sakhorn] is a Cambodian citizen, so he should have the right to stay legally, and with the protection of the Royal Government," he said.

Khieu Sopheak could not be reached for comment Thursday, while Khun Sophea, police chief of Takeo's Phnom Den commune, said he did not wish to discuss the issue over the phone.

In June 2007, Tim Sakhorn was arrested by Cambodian police and extradited to Vietnam's An Giang province, where a People's Tribunal sentenced him to one year in prison on charges of subverting the country's friendship with Cambodia.

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[tim sakhorn] is a citizen, so he should have the right to stay legally...
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Thach Setha, general director of the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Association, said Monday that since his release from prison in June 2008, the former activist has lived with an uncle in An Giang, where he has been subject to constant police scrutiny and has been banned from saying "anything that impacts the Cambodian or Vietnamese governments".

Back to Geneva
Meanwhile, the plight of southern Vietnam's ethnic Khmers - also known as Khmer Krom - is set to again come under the spotlight when Vietnam comes before the UN Human Rights Council on May 8 for a regular review of its rights record.

In its submission to the council, the US-based Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation has highlighted the "human rights violations, confiscation of ancestral lands and [the] economic and social deprivations" of the Khmer minority.

It also cited Tim Sakhorn's case as an example of how Vietnamese laws "only work for those who are in power and not for those who are powerless".

The Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation (UNPO) also presented a submission noting the "numerous incidents of religiously motivated violence and discrimination" against Khmer Krom populations.

It also termed Tim Sakhorn's continuing house arrest, which it claims is in violation of a ruling by the tribunal that sentenced him, is an attempt by Vietnamese officials to "further intimidate" Khmer Krom both in Vietnam and Cambodia.

Rights groups say the public accounting could put pressure on Vietnam to liberalise its policies towards ethnic Khmers living in the country's south.

"An open accounting at next month's review of Vietnam's rights record will put pressure on the Vietnamese government to address serious human rights abuses throughout the country, including the Mekong Delta," Brad Adams, Asia director of the US-based Human Rights Watch, said by email.

But Kek Galabru, president of local human rights group Licadho, said there was a possibility Tim Sakhorn's release was in fact timed to precede the UN rights review.

"[The UN review] could also be a factor," she said Monday, when asked what prompted his visit to Cambodia.

"The Vietnamese government knows pretty well that the UN will ask these questions."

Cambodia’s Prime Minister says ICC’s decision damages Sudan peace efforts

SudanTribune
Friday 10 April 2009

PHNOM PENH) – The Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen slammed the International Criminal Court (ICC)’s decision to arrest the Sudanese President Omer Hassan Al-Bashir on Darfur crimes saying it hiders international efforts to end the six years conflict.

"The arrest warrant for the Sudanese President issued by The Hague court will remains without effect as you can wait and see" said Hun Sen in a speech at the Royal University of Agriculture in the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh.

The ICC issued last month an arrest warrant for the President Omer Al-Bashir on crimes against humanity and war crimes. However the court dropped the three counts of genocide that had been filled by the prosecutor in his request of July 14, 2008.

The issue of genocide committed by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia is still raising controversies in the country. Hun Sen had been criticized for undermining effort to call to account the surviving members of a regime which killed 1.7 million from 1975 to 1979.

Critics allege that Cambodian Prime Minister has sought to limit the tribunal’s scope because other potential defendants are now loyal to him, and that to arrest them could be politically awkward.

"The Sudanese people and troops with weapons in their hands will not allow the court to arrest their leader," said Hun Sen.

The ruling Sudanese president has his privilege in leading the country, he said, adding that "I do not know why ICC did like that."

Further Hun Sen stressed that ICC cannot follow suit in Cambodia to arrest the surviving leaders of the former Khmer Rouge regime. Those leaders "now stay in a place here and we ourselves can arrest them for tribunal," he added.

Currently, five senior leaders of the Khmer Rouge are under custody of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, which was co-installed by UN and the Cambodian government two years ago to put these people on trial on charges of crimes against humanity and war crimes.

(ST)

Police in nighttime helmet crackdown

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Mom Kunthear
Friday, 10 April 2009

PHNOM Penh traffic police have begun to enforce the wearing of helmets after dark, said city officials, who say the lack of nighttime patrols had promoted reckless and illegal driving.

Chev Hak, deputy chief of the city's Traffic Police, said Thursday that there were 446 nighttime accidents in 2008, more than half of the 700 recorded by the municipality.

"We will do more work to encourage the wearing of helmets at night because the number of traffic accidents has increased more than in the daytime," he said.

"Motorbike riders do not pay too much attention to their safety when they ride at night."

He added that many people understand the importance of wearing helmets, but that they slackened their vigilance at night because of the lack of police checkpoints.

"When I fine them they tell me that they don't wear [helmets] because no police are there and that they don't care about wearing a helmet," he said.

Prum Pov, provincial chief of Preah Sihanouk's Traffic Police, said 60 percent of those who died in traffic accidents in 2008 did not wear helmets, and that the local police ran patrols until 8pm.

Battambang Traffic Police chief Sath Kimsan said barely a third of drivers wore helmets at night. "At nighttime, only 20 percent to 30 percent of people wear helmets because they don't see the police standing along the road," he said.

"I haven't taken any measures to enforce the wearing of helmets at night yet. I want to enforce them during the day until 100 percent are complying, and then I will work hard for nighttime enforcement."

Financial crisis shows gender bias

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Christopher Shay
Friday, 10 April 2009

Women and children hit hard by shrinking export sector, says the UN.

WITH 60,000 job losses in the garment sector, women - who are the main employees in the industry - are being disproportionately affected by the global economic crisis, and this could have severe consequences for Cambodia's families, according to a press release on Wednesday from the Office of the UN Resident Coordinator.

Though nearly every industry has been affected by the crisis, the most vulnerable jobs are those in the exports sector; and in Cambodia, this mostly means garment factories that are staffed 90 percent by women, said Sukti Dasgupta, a specialist on employment and labour markets for the International Labour Organisation in Bangkok.

"The crisis in Cambodia definitely has a female face to the extent that it affects the garment industries," Dasgupta said.

Compared to the downturn a decade ago, this financial crisis could be far worse for women, added Dasgupta.

"The downturn in the late '90s had an effect on women, but the drivers were different.... They were not stemming from a sector where mainly women were employed."

Many of the laid-off garment workers are returning home to the provinces and have few options beyond subsistence agriculture, says the UN.

With less money, women may choose to spend less on food, healthcare and education, putting Cambodia's long-term economic gains in jeopardy, warned UN Resident Coordinator Douglas Broderick.

"Deterioration in these areas not only sets back the country today, but also long into the future, long after Wall Street has recovered," Broderick said in the press release.

Tuomo Poutiainen, the chief technical adviser of the ILO's Better Factories program, said, "Because women socially have more responsibility in the household, it [a job loss] will affect the whole family."

A 2008 National Anthropometric Survey shows an increase in acute malnutrition in children - evidence of the unhealthy coping measures of families run by underemployed women, says the UN.

Dasgupta says that any response to the economic crisis that is being discussed needs to be gender-sensitive.

Broderick said: "Investing in women and children in the long term is the best way to ensure long-term prosperity."

Mine clearance needs time

Photo by: HENG CHIVOAN
A mine identified and cordoned off by CMAC deminers prior to its destruction in Battambang province last week.

The Phnom Penh post

Written by Sam Rith
Friday, 10 April 2009

Cambodia will ask for additional time to meet the 2010 deadline for mine clearance, saying ‘only a divinity ... could possible know where all the mines are'.

CAMBODIA is to submit a request to the Mine Ban Convention Implementation Secretariat in Geneva, asking for demining assistance extending beyond the 2010 deadline for mine clearance set in the Ottawa Treaty, officials said this week.

The 1997 mine ban agreement, to which Cambodia is a signatory, gives states four years to dispose of anti-personnel mines and 10 to clear mines already on its territory.

"We will submit documents to the committee in Geneva at the end of April," Heng Ratana, director general of the Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC), said Wednesday.

"We will ask for 10 more years to clear Cambodia's land mines after the deadline ends next year."

Prak Sokhon, a secretary of state at the Council of Ministers, said he expected the request would be approved by the committee.

"We have a team in Geneva that is helping us prepare the legal basis for the request," he said, adding that such requests can be made according to Article 5 of the Ottawa Treaty.

Prak Sokhon said the documents presented by Cambodia will explain the reason why the country could not clear all its mines within the 10-year window.

"I've told development partners, donor countries and people working in the demining field that only a divinity in the sky could possibly know where all the mines are located in Cambodia," he said.

Heng Ratana estimated that following the 2010 deadline, around 4,000 square kilometres of land would require clearing.

Between 1992 and 2008, local and international demining teams have cleared land mines from 486 square kilometres, destroying 820,000 anti-personnel mines, 20,000 anti-tank mines and 1.77 million pieces of unexploded ordnances, Prak Sokhon said.

The number of people suffering from mine injuries has dropped from 450 in 2006 to 266 in 2008, according to a CMAC statement released on Saturday, the International Day for Mine Awareness.

Prak Sokhon said the priority areas for clearance were Battambang, Pailin, Banteay Meanchey, Preah Vihear, Oddar Meanchey and Pursat provinces.

NEC warns media to follow laws for election

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by kHouth Sophak Chakrya
Friday, 10 April 2009

THE National Election Committee (NEC) on Wednesday warned media outlets to closely follow the rules stipulated in the election law during the upcoming municipal and provincial election campaigns.

Tep Nytha, the secretary general of the NEC, said in a meeting about the purchase and sale of political advertisements on television and radio that companies can sell airtime at market price, but they needed to follow the law.

"The private radio and television owners who want to sell their airtime to political parties without obeying the regulations and procedures of the NEC will be fined or have their station closed temporarily," he said.

Cambodian embassy ignored exploited workers, says NGO

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by KHuon Leakhana And Christopher Shay
Friday, 10 April 2009

But diplomats in Kuala Lumpur say they did everything they could to help, adding that the whole spat was a just a 'misunderstanding'.

AN NGO that works with Cambodian migrants blasted the Cambodian embassy in Malaysia on Wednesday for refusing to help a family of six Cambodians in need of help, but the embassy says that it did all it could to aid the illegal migrants.

CARAM (Coordination of Action Research on AIDS and Mobility) accused the embassy of turning away six migrant workers who had been working illegally at a coffee factory under harsh conditions.

"Diplomats have to protect their people when they have problems, take care of them, support them, and they should not expel them from their own embassy," Ya Navuth, the executive director of CARAM, said.

He worried that the incident would deter exploited workers in the future from seeking help from the Cambodian government and called on the Cambodian government to take a close look at whether that embassy was fulfilling its duties.

"Labourers will be afraid to go to the embassy if they have a similar problem.... The Cambodian government should re-examine its embassy in Malaysia," he said.

Pov Chansarath, one of the six illegal migrants, said on Wednesday after returning to Phnom Penh with the help of CARAM that, when they travelled to Kuala Lumpur, they requested shelter at the embassy but were denied because of their lack of papers.

"As we had nowhere to stay, we decided to ask Vantha [an embassy employee] to allow us to stay in the embassy for a short time, but he rejected us, saying ... he was afraid of getting involved with illegal immigrants, so he told us to go away."

The embassy in Malaysia confirmed that the family had sought help from them but said the family refused to work with them after they asked the family to report the coffee factory to the Malaysian authorities.

The family rejected their help, according to the embassy, because "they worried the police would arrest them".

But the embassy says they "always find assistance with the Malaysian authorities", and that they work well together.

"If an employer makes a mistake we will take action, but the victims have to cooperate with the embassy," the embassy said, adding that the whole spat was just a "misunderstanding".

The embassy said that it simply did not have a place for the family to stay but that it was able to secure a special pass from the Malaysian government, allowing them to return home lawfully even though they entered illegally.

Oum Mean, a secretary of state at the Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training, said the family's story should be a warning to Cambodians thinking of emigrating and encouraged the victims to share their experience,

"Because they crossed the border illegally ... it was difficult for the embassy to help them. Therefore, everybody must be aware that to look for a job in another country through brokers and to cross the border illegally is a big risk for them," he said.

Energy plan to focus on rural Cambodia

Photo by: TRACEY SHELTON
An electrician mends power lines on Street 240 in Phnom Penh.




The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Kay Kimsong
Friday, 10 April 2009

International partners look to national grid alternatives in bid to bring energy to the countryside and boost business

THE Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy, the World Bank and United Kingdom's Department for International Development (DFID) are working on a major initiative to boost rural renewable energy programs and electrify rural areas, officials said this week.

The government hopes the project will help address chronic power shortages that increase the cost of doing business in Cambodia and make the country reliant on imported fossil fuels. The program is funded by international grants to supply rural areas with solar panels, biodigesters, mini-hydroplants and biogas generators.

"We are trying to use any domestic resource in [rural] communities to produce energy or gas for cooking," said Victor Jona, deputy director general of the ministry's General Department of Energy.

The absence of a nationwide power grid is leading policymakers to look to decentralised power generation, such as small-scale electricity production at the village level.

"If every family raises five or six cows, they will be able to produce enough biogas to cook food," said Ith Praing, secretary of state for the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy at a renewable energy conference in Phnom Penh ending Tuesday.

The two-day workshop introduced new technologies for generating energy from animal wastes and special stoves that use 20 percent less fuel compared with normal stoves.

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We are trying to use any domestic resource in [rural] communities.
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Ith Praing said the project will allow the government to electrify up to 70 percent of villages by 2030. Only 20 percent of villages have access to electricity, he added.

Another issue is price - electricity costs about 600 riels (US$0.15) per kilowatt-hour in urban areas, compared with 1,000 riels per unit in rural areas.

Ith Praing said the policy would not only quicken the pace of electrification, but would also help reduce the number of trees felled for fuel.

"New technologies, such as one that allows farmers to convert animal waste into electricity, would cost US$400 to $600, but could save money in the long term," he said.

World Bank figures showed that 75 percent of diesel energy could be replaced with biomass gasification. The program hopes to supply 12,000 solar power generators as well as 6,850 hydro generators.

The government said that only 35 percent of power is supplied outside the capital.

Businesses and international organisations have identified electricity shortage as a major impediment to commerce in Cambodia.

International Business Club Deputy Chairman John Brinsden told the Post that a lack of access to cheap electricity is the No 1 complaint for many companies in Cambodia.

The World Bank's most recent annual report on Cambodia released in February said government efforts to electrify the country are still falling short. "Supply amounts to some 350MW of installed generation capacity, including 115MW of imported power," said the report.

ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY GEORGE MCLEOD

Travel sector offers bargains in hope of New Year revival

Photo by: SOVANN PHILONG
Foreign tourists outside the National Museum in Phnom Penh


The Phnom penh Post

Written by May Kunmakara
Friday, 10 April 2009

Tourism Ministry and industry groups attempt to boost visitor numbers during the holiday by slashing prices

THE Cambodian Hotel Association (CHA) and the Cambodia Association of Travel Agents (CATA) will cooperate with the Ministry of Tourism to give special discounts to domestic and international tourists during the coming Khmer New Year, officials said Wednesday.

The effort comes as tourism authorities adopt a more hands-on strategy to promote the sector in the face of declining arrivals and stiff competition from other countries in the region that have offered incentives to boost arrivals.

"Tourists will receive discounts. If they spend two days in a hotel, they will get an extra day free or other discounts from ... hotels, restaurants and guesthouses," said CHA President Luu Meng, adding that the discounted rates had been posted on the association's website to attract tourists.

The strategy, which kicked off at the beginning of April, is part of an attempt to boost domestic and foreign tourist numbers during the financial downturn. "While the crisis lasts we will try to keep the number of tourists fixed, but I hope that domestic tourists will increase by around 10 percent this year," Luu Meng said.

CATA President An Kim Eang said one of the main aims was to broaden the scope of Cambodian tourism by promoting local culture during the New Year in addition to the well-trodden destination of Angkor Wat. "I can't say the campaign will increase the number of tourists. We just want to promote our traditions to foreign tourists in addition to Angkor Wat," he said.

Se Cheng, sales executive of Prince d'Angkor Hotel and Spa in Siem Reap, said occupancy rates had declined by 15 and 20 percent in 2009 because most customers were from Western countries that have been hit by the financial crisis. He said the shortfall had prompted the hotel to offer "special promotions" during the New Year that include lower rates for visitors staying more than two days and food and drink discounts.

Luu Meng said the scheme is being adopted by most CHA member hotels, but he was not sure if other establishments were offering similar deals.

"Members of my association always offer discounts during the New Year, but I can't say whether other hotels will take this chance to increase prices," he said.

Tourism Ministry officials said that they are pushing for more regional and domestic tourists to offset the decline in visitors from Europe and North America.

"We are trying to attract tourists from countries in the region, like Vietnam and Laos, that are also big tourist destinations, and we are urging local tourists to spend their money in their own country," said Minister of Tourism Thong Khon.

An Kim Eang said that tourist arrivals dropped 6 percent in the first two months of 2009, but that the sector is still in better shape compared with neighbouring countries.

NGO plans facilities to store and mill rice in bid to boost exports

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Chun Sophal
Friday, 10 April 2009

CEDAC says storage houses will lead to higher rural incomes with construction underway in Kampot and Takeo

A local agricultural development organisation plans to build nine paddy storehouses and rice mills with US$200,000 in funds from international donors, the group said this week.

Yang Saing Koma, president of the Cambodian Centre for Study and Development in Agriculture (CEDAC), said an increase in storage facilities and rice mills on community farms would help boost the country's export capacity.

"I want to build at least 30 paddy storehouses and rice mills in provinces with rice-producing potential over the three years," he said.

"We expect that the storehouses and the mills will be able to help communities produce enough rice to meet market demand and target the amount of rice they produce for those who wish to engage in large-scale exports."

By allowing them to stockpile unsold quantities of rice, storehouses can help community farms sell their products at higher prices, ensure local food security and help create job opportunities for local villagers, Yang Saing Koma added.

He said that farmers have struggled to get high prices for the sale of unhusked rice paddy because they are set by buyers, and that the export of rice in large amounts also posed difficulties because rice production is not usually organised collectively.

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The building of paddy storehouses and rice mills is a first step.
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Nevertheless, paddy was selling for an average of 1,100 riels ($0.27) a kilo on Thursday at Phnom Penh's markets, up 10 percent since the beginning of the year.

"I think that if Cambodia has more places to store paddy and more rice mills, it will be easier for the country to export rice abroad," Yang Saing Koma said.

He said CEDAC was in the process of building paddy storehouses and rice mills in both Kampot and Takeo provinces, which would allow local producers to store 400 tonnes of rice and produce up to a tonne of husked rice per hour.

The first storehouse and rice mill, built in Kampot's Dang Tung district, had a price tag of more than US$10,000.

The second, in Tram Koak district of Takeo province, costs CEDAC around $46,000.

Ministry of Agriculture's Chan Sarun said that Cambodia currently has 3 million tonnes of rice stockpiled for exports, but that most was still in farmers' hands and that there was no means of collecting it for mass export.

"I think that the building of paddy storehouses and rice mills is a first step for communities to continue enlarging the rice industry," he told the Post.

He added that increased market information from the government would also help spur exports.

Cambodia has nearly 300 community farms formally registered with the Ministry of Agriculture, consisting of about 20,000 family members.

Russian market hit by travel slump

Photo by: Sovann philong
Tourists shopping for souvenirs at the Russian Market in Phnom Penh



The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Soeun Say
Friday, 10 April 2009

Clothing and fabric vendors at the major tourist market say the global economic slowdown and recent slump in the tourism industry have hit sales as travellers reduce spending on souvenirs

FOREIGN visitors to Phnom Penh's premier tourist market have fallen off as the global economic downturn continues to squeeze the tourism industry, according to market vendors who spoke to the Post.

Vendors estimated that the number of foreign customers entering Tuol Tumpong Market - popularly known as Russian Market - have dropped by at least a third in the first three months of 2009 compared with the same period last year.

"Almost 80 percent [of vendors] aim to attract foreign tourists," said Chan Heng, 47, who sells souvenirs at the market. "If they stop coming, our income will drop off."

She added that her earnings had shrunk since the onset of the economic crisis, falling from an average of US$950 to $600 per day.

Vendor Heap Oun, 34, said that her business had declined between 20 and 25 percent because of the downturn. "In 2008 many foreigners came shopping here and I earned $700 per month. But now I earn only $400 to $450 per month," she said.

Phan Vannary, 28, a cloth seller at the market, noted that 2008 saw a steady stream of visitors from the United States, England, Germany, France and the Philippines, but that arrivals to her stall had nearly halved.

"Now I get only 10 people per day. Last year and in 2007 I got 15 to 20," she said, adding that her income had fallen from $1,500 to $2,000 per month previously to as little as $1,000 - a similar situation to other cloth vendors.

A Russian Market manager, who asked not to be named, confirmed that the number of foreigners shopping at the market had decreased by around half over the past three years, falling from 1,500 to 2,500 people per day in 2006 and 2007 to around 600 to 700 per day currently.

"The number of foreigners shopping here has dropped sharply since the beginning of the year, but I hope there will be more foreign visitors in the next few months," he said.

He added that the market's food stalls were still crowded.

Ho Vandy, co-chair of the government private sector working group on tourism, said that the tourist low season and the world financial crisis had affected visitor numbers to markets and shopping centres across the country.

"We are waiting for the high season in August, September and October, but I am concerned that during that time there will be low tourist numbers," Ho Vandy said.

Cambodia aims to boost Russian trade

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Kay Kimsong
Friday, 10 April 2009

A COMMERCE Ministry trade official said the Cambodian government had been meeting with Russian officials to work out ways to boost bilateral trade and investment on Wednesday.

Cambodia's bilateral trade with Russia still does not match the level of past trade with the Soviet Union when economic cooperation was greater.

In 2007, Cambodia imported US$6 million worth of goods from Russia, which increased to $9 million in 2008, with trade tipped to rise further in 2009.

Cambodian Commerce Ministry statistics say Cambodia ran a $21.34 million trade surplus with Russia in 2009.

"There have been some major multi million-dollar Russian investments in Sihanoukville," said Thon Virak.
He said Cambodian exports mostly garments to Russia and imports machinery.

The main barrier to Russian trade is the long distances involved, say officials.

"Russian products are good, but the challenge is that shipping them is difficult," said Thon Virak.
The Russian embassy could not be reached for comment.

In June last year, the Russian-owned firm Koh Pous Cambodia Investment Group, a subsidiary of Vironia Enterprises, invested $300 million in a tourism project in Sihanoukville.

The Cambodian garment industry is also considering sending a trade delegation to Russia to promote exports and diversify away from the US market.

Khmer version of reality TV transfixes Kingdom's youth

Photo by: Sovann Philong
Cellcard Star finalists Neov Ratanak (second from left); Sorn Kayady (centre), who was voted out of the competition on Sunday; and Nheim Sokhonthear (second from right) .


The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Zoe Holman
Friday, 10 April 2009

An amalgamation of American Idol and Big Brother, Cambodia’s Cellcard Star features contestants who advocate good will and moral virtue

Wholesome values are not a selling point of reality TV in the West. Quarantine a bunch of randy young people, provide them with an endless supply of booze, make them compete for fame and money, and sit back and watch the ratings soar, the production logic seems to go. However, the most recent Cambodian take on reality TV, which has transfixed the Kingdom's youth, is a distinct contrast to the likes of Big Brother, Temptation Island and The Bachelor.

An amalgamation of American Idol and Big Brother, in which audiences vote for contestants via SMS, MyTV's Cellcard Star is modelled on Mexico's La Academia and is the Kingdom's first house-based reality TV program. After 12 weeks on air, the local adaptation of this global franchise could see tens of thousands of viewers on the edge of their sofas as the two remaining contenders vie for US$2,500 in this weekend's grand finale.

"For such a new network, the program was a big risk," said MyTV Executive Producer Aaron Leverton. But it seems Cambodians have embraced this novel format. "We've gone from having to explain to people what the show was, to turning hundreds of people away from Chanla Studios every Sunday."

However, it is not the manufactured debauchery characteristic of Western reality TV that has drawn viewers en masse to Cellcard Star. Rather than efforts to flaunt sexuality and alcoholism, it seems that it is the moral rectitude of finalists Nheim Sokhonthear and Neov Ratanak that has won viewers' loyalty.

"As a traditional Khmer girl, it's important to be able to conduct myself in a good way," 24-year-old Nheim Sokhonthear told The Post Monday on the program's live weekly two-hour in-house broadcast. "Women should keep their behaviour honourable, avoid drugs and think about their reputation and that of their family," said the former garment factory worker-turned-celebrity who lists housework as one of her favourite activities.

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Young people should never do anything that's illegal or harmful.
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While her 21-year-old rival appears to prefer reading to domestic upkeep, he is equally keen to promote upstanding morals. "Young people should never do anything that's illegal or harmful to themselves or to society," said Neov Ratanak.

So if not unadulterated hedonism, what message would these candidates hope to instill in young Cambodians as the nation's idols?

"As a role model, I will keep the good character and personality that I've shown in the house," said Nheim Sokhonthear. "Even though my life has changed completely, I'm still friendly and polite to all my friends and family and all the fans who've supported me."

Neov Ratanak was quick to advise youth to think about their future. "It is your own to create, and only you can decide whether it's good or bad. You should try to satisfy your parents and create your future to be bright and successful."

And it would seem this diligence and virtue has paid off in the high promise of success for both the pair's futures - not to mention that of MyTV.

"The program has done for the contestants exactly what we hoped it would," said Cellcard Star's executive producer, Matthew Robinson. "As well as great educational outcomes in maths classes we've given them in the house, we've seen a fantastic blossoming of confidence and personality in self-development classes," he said. "They've been confronted with great adversity, disappointment, loneliness, excitement and happiness, a range of emotions that most adults don't experience until they're thirty."

Far from responding to these challenges with catfights, contestants have impressed Robinson with their maturity. "They've all been really supportive and cooperative to one another and as a result, they've formed tremendous friendships and been genuinely sad when someone's left," he said.

And so, it seems that despite the program's imported format, producers wish to retain the Khmer firmly in their pop idol. "Both the finalists make such great role models because they combine the best elements of modern young people with traditional Cambodians," said Robinson.

So could this Cambodian model of good will and restraint provide the missing ingredient in Europe's next big reality TV hit? Perhaps not, but it could certainly lighten the load of more than a few overburdened content censors around the world.

The Cellcard Star grand finale airs on MyTV this Sunday at 2pm.

Police Blotter: 10 Apr 2009

The Phnom Penh Post

Written by Lim Phalla
Friday, 10 April 2009

PROSTITUTE NABBED FOR STEALING CASH
A sex worker was arrested by police Monday on charges of stealing from a client at Heng Heng Guesthouse, in Phnom Penh's Tuol Kork district. Seng Horn, 27, was alleged to have taken US$1,400, a cell phone and 350,000 riels from 40-year-old Morn Phally while in a room at the establishment.
KAMPUCHEA THMEY

MAN ARRESTED FOR BEATING FATHER
Police arrested a 26-year-old man, Ath Ol, in Kbal Chroy village, Leuk Daek district, after he beat his father unconscious Monday morning. Mom Ath, 62, was taken to a nearby hospital suffering serious head wounds. Ath Ol maintained the violence was brought on by his father.
KAMPUCHEA THMEY

PETROL TRUCK KILLS TWO, INJURES ONE
Two people were killed and one seriously injured Wednesday morning in a hit-and-run between a petroleum truck and motorbike on Monivong Bridge in Chhbar Ampov commune. Chum Cheit, 45, and Lim Kheng, 40, of Kandal province were killed on impact, while Siem Chheng, female, 29, of Phnom Penh was taken to hospital with serious injuries. The truck driver escaped before police arrived at the scene.
RASMEY KAMPUCHEA

ECCC STAFFER ROBBED OF JEWELS
A diamond-encrusted necklace, bangle and ring along with 25 Pailin gems, three passports and US$2,000 were among the booty of a burglar who broke into a house in Boeung Keng Kang 1 commune, Phnom Penh this week. The victim, Ching Bunleng, 37, who works at Cambodia's Extraordinary Chambers, was at work Tuesday morning when the thief pilfered the valuables from his home, leaving no trace.
KOH SANTEPHEAP

GERMAN FOUND DEAD IN S'VILLE
A German man was found dead in his rented room in Sun Set Bungalow Villa in Sangkat 3, Sihanouk onTuesday evening from a suspected drug overdose. The body of 35-year-old Andreas Siegfried Hartl, who arrived in Sihanoukville a week earlier, was discovered by the hostel owner and handed over to police.
KOH SANTEPHEAP

The Phnom Penh Post News In Briefs

In Brief: Sudan icc warrant 'damages peace'

Written by Sam Rith
Friday, 10 April 2009

Prime Minister Hun Sen predicted that the International Criminal Court's (ICC) arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir would not bring peace to Sudan. "The warrant issued by The Hague just destroys the efforts of Sudan [to have peace]. It will have no result," he said on Thursday. "Just wait and see." Hun Sen said the ICC could not arrest Bashir, who is still in power: "They have their armed forces and they won't allow his arrest." Bashir was indicted March 4 by the ICC on seven charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity, and is the first sitting head of state to be indicted. In response, he expelled more than a dozen NGOs that were providing humanitarian aid to millions of refugees in Darfur.


In Brief: Hun Sen to Asean+3 in Thailand

Written by Cheang Sokha
Friday, 10 April 2009

Prime Minister Hun Sen will lead a high-level delegation to attend the ASEAN+3 summit that runs today through Sunday in the Thai resort town of Pattaya. ASEAN+3 sees the 10 members of ASEAN joined by China, Japan and South Korea. Koy Kuong, undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said Hun Sen would leave Cambodia today, while Foreign Minister Hor Namhong was to leave Thursday. A ministry press release issued on Tuesday noted that India would also be present for some meetings, and stated that the thhird ASEAN-UN summit would be held during that time as well. Phay Siphan, secretary of state at the Council of Ministers, said the Hun Sen would meet his Thai counterpart, Abhisit Vejjajiva, during his visit for bilateral talks and would discuss last week's clashes near Preah Vihear temple.


In Brief: Betty Ford and THE GT Falcons reunite

Written by Eleanor Ainge Roy
Friday, 10 April 2009

Betty Ford and the GT Falcons will be playing a reunion gig at Talkin’ to a Stranger at 9pm on Friday night. The band first formed in 2005 and were brought together by their love of classic rock and roll bands such as The Rolling Stones, AC/DC and Cheap Trick. They have been on a yearlong hiatus and will be performing every song they ever played on Friday, as well as a number of covers. Melanie Brew, who plays guitar, says she promises a “rockin’ good night” and that the driving force of the band is to “have fun and entertain”.


In Brief: Hun Sen calls for more rice crops each year

Written by Nguon Sovan
Friday, 10 April 2009

PRIME Minister Hun Sen has called on farmers to grow two to three rice crops per year in order to boost the country's exports. "Our country has a good climate for agriculture, so we have to push for more agricultural development in order to promote exports," said Hun Sen during the closing of the Ministry of Agriculture's annual conference Thursday. He said that output needs to be boosted by better farming methods and through increasing the number of crops per year, rather than increasing the total amount of farmland. "Cambodia's population is growing, but we should not clear more forest for farmlands.... We have to educate farmers to use the rice intensification system," the prime minister said, adding that Cambodia produced just over 7 million tonnes of rice in 2008.


In Brief: New crossing with Laos could boost trade

Written by Chun Sophal
Friday, 10 April 2009

CAMBODIA has agreed to a deal with Laos that will allow a fixed number of vehicles to cross the border each day, a move aimed at boosting trade. Minister of Tourism Thong Khon said that 40 properly insured vehicles would be allowed to enter Cambodia each day from Laos. "We hope that more vehicles will cross from Laos into Cambodia in the future, and that there will be more tourists as well," he said at a press conference at the ministry. The only legal crosssing between the two countries is at Stung Treng. Last year, Cambodia signed a memorandum of understanding with Vietnam that allows the entry of 150 transport vehicles into the Kingdom each day.