A blog site with news regarding Cambodia and its people.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Bangkok Post Breaking News

Phnom Penh (dpa) - Cambodian Buddhist monks have the right to vote in upcoming commune and national elections, acting head of state Chea Sim told a Buddhist congress in the capital Wednesday. His statement threatens to reignite a public debate which flared before the 2003 general elections when Supreme Patriarch of Cambodian Buddhists and leader of the Mahanikaya Buddhist sect in Cambodia, Tep Vong, declared monks should abstain from voting. Chea Sim, who is also president of the ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP) and leader of the nation's Senate, told the 15th Annual Congress of Cambodian Buddhist Monks that monks have a perfect right to vote in a speech that also extolled them to use their social position to teach morality and promote social development. "Cambodian Buddhist monks have the full right to vote," Chea Sim told around 500 senior Buddhist monks, officials, politicians and members of the country's Islamic community. Although Cambodian monks have the constitutional right to vote, debate has raged about their role in politics and whether they should be above political opinions. Some Cambodians remember as positive the role they played in the resistance against French colonial rule and other regimes, while others worry in the wake of protests involving Buddhist monks which turned violent after the 1993 and 1998 national elections. Still others maintain that monks visiting crowded polling booths are at risk of temptation and in danger of such taboos such as accidentally touching women. Supreme Patriarch Tep Vong is known to be a supporter of the CPP. Recently he has refrained from commenting on the issue of monks voting as commune elections loom for April 2007. National elections are scheduled for 2008. Cambodia, which is 95 per cent Buddhist, currently has more than 57,500 Buddhist monks and 4,135 pagodas across the country.

Bangkok Post Breaking News

People's Daily Online -- Over 70,000 Cambodians die of smoking annually

Cambodia loses 38 million U.S. dollars and over 70,000 lives each year due to cigarette smoking, according to a recent survey jointly conducted by Ministry of Health and World Health Organization.
From 1996 to 2006, 82 percent of rural men, 62 percent of urban dwellers, and 82 percent of youth nationwide were cigarette smokers, said the survey.
Meanwhile, 54 percent of men and seven percent of women in Cambodia were cigarette smokers, it added.
"The danger of cigarette smoking is not as cruel as that of rampant disease like cholera, but it goes into our body slowly, destroys our health and finally leads to death," Lim Thai Pheang, president of the Institute of Public Health of Cambodia, was quoted by local media as saying.
Pregnant women who smoke may have delivery failures and their babies can face various problems of health, said Pheang, whose institute was one of the major conductors of the survey.
Cigarette smoking can cause lung cancer and heart attack, while second-hand smokers may be harmed too, he added.

People's Daily Online -- Over 70,000 Cambodians die of smoking annually

People's Daily Online -- Hun Sen to donate money for Cambodian medal winners at Doha Games

Prime Minister Hun Sen has promised to award 5,000 U.S. dollars for each Cambodian gold medalist, 3,000 for silver and 2,000 for bronze medal winners at the 15th Asian Games in Doha, Qatar, local media said on Wednesday.
"We should have a real decree for athletes who win medals from the international stage," he was quoted as saying.
Cambodia sent 17 athletes and 17 officials to Doha. The team of 14 men and 3 women will take part in beach volleyball, swimming, athletics, judo, karate, taekwondo, wrestling and snooker competitions.
Wrestler, snooker and taekwondo athletes are hopeful to win Cambodia its first Asian Games medal in 36 years.
Cambodia has not won a medal since the 1970 Games in Bangkok.

People's Daily Online -- Hun Sen to donate money for Cambodian medal winners at Doha Games:

UNICEF - Cambodia - Cambodia’s religious leaders enlist in the fight against avian influenza

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, 28 November 2006 – Over the last six years, UNICEF has been collaborating closely with Cambodian monks, nuns and local elders in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Now that collaboration is being harnessed to fight avian influenza.
Since September, religious leaders from all over Cambodia have been partaking in a series of orientation sessions on bird flu, sponsored by UNICEF in partnership with the Ministry of Cults and Religions.
A series of 70 sessions have been held in 12 provinces throughout the country. Close to 6,000 Buddhist monks and nuns have attended along with many Muslim and Christian leaders. As influential people, they are in a unique position to help educate others about bird flu.
“These religious leaders disseminate information through their visits to communities and when people visit temples,” said UNICEF Representative in Cambodia Rodney Hatfield.

UNICEF - Cambodia - Cambodia’s religious leaders enlist in the fight against avian influenza

UNICEF - Cambodia - Cambodia’s religious leaders enlist in the fight against avian influenza

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, 28 November 2006 – Over the last six years, UNICEF has been collaborating closely with Cambodian monks, nuns and local elders in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Now that collaboration is being harnessed to fight avian influenza.
Since September, religious leaders from all over Cambodia have been partaking in a series of orientation sessions on bird flu, sponsored by UNICEF in partnership with the Ministry of Cults and Religions.
A series of 70 sessions have been held in 12 provinces throughout the country. Close to 6,000 Buddhist monks and nuns have attended along with many Muslim and Christian leaders. As influential people, they are in a unique position to help educate others about bird flu.
“These religious leaders disseminate information through their visits to communities and when people visit temples,” said UNICEF Representative in Cambodia Rodney Hatfield.

UNICEF - Cambodia - Cambodia’s religious leaders enlist in the fight against avian influenza

Báo Điện tử - Thời báo Kinh tế Việt Nam

Engineers in the southwestern province of An Giang have found it easy to export rice-plucking machines to Cambodia businesses who in turn make profit from reselling them to Thailand.
These machines which are made in An Giang fetch 5,000 USD each when exported to Cambodia and they are resold at between 9,000 and 10,000 USD to Thailand.
The province now boasts over 10 engineering workshops which can export some 500 machines a year, far from meeting demand.
The machine is not only able to pluck paddy but also usefull for soyabeans.
A local producer now offers multi-purpose tractors to these markets at a price of 8,000 USD.

Báo Điện tử - Thời báo Kinh tế Việt Nam

People's Daily Online -- Japan to donate 5 mln USD for Cambodia to hold national census

Japan Development Agency (JICA) will donate five million U.S. dollars for Cambodia to organize its national census from 2008 to 2010, local media reported Wednesday.
"The donation will upgrade the processing of national census and national statistics of demography of Cambodia," said Chhay Than, Minister of Planning, who signed the agreement with Mitsuko Kumagai, head of JICA, here on Tuesday.
These statistics are very important for the economic development of the country, he added.
Sorn Sithon, director general of the National Institute of Statistics, told reporters that JICA will first finance two million U.S. dollars in April 2007 and the rest of the donation will later be used to construct an office building for the institute.
For the national census in 2008, Cambodia plans to spend about six million U.S. dollars. Included are one million dollars funded by the government and other partners.
Cambodia started to hold national census in 1962. According its last national census in 1998, the kingdom had 11,437,656 people in all.

People's Daily Online -- Japan to donate 5 mln USD for Cambodia to hold national census

Ex-US president Clinton to visit Cambodia for HIV/AIDS talks - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Former US president
Bill Clinton is expected to arrive in Cambodia this week for talks on the country's
HIV AIDS problem, Prime Minister Hun Sen said.
"He has a plan to visit Cambodia to discuss this issue," Hun Sen said in a speech broadcast on national radio, adding that Clinton would arrive "in the next few days".
World AIDS Day will be marked around the globe on Friday.
In 2005 the Clinton Foundation HIV/AIDS Initiative established an official office in Cambodia, which still has the highest prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the region, with 1.9 percent of the population of 13.8 million suffering from the disease.
Despite some victories -- Cambodia was the first Asian nation to halt a spiraling infection rate -- only a fraction of HIV-positive Cambodians have access to affordable treatment, and are increasingly the target of discrimination.
The foundation has worked to improve facilities and training for medical personnel treating HIV/AIDS patients, and has increased the number of children with access to pediatric anti-retroviral therapy.
As of June 2006, there were 1,250 children on anti-retroviral therapy, according to the Foundation's website. As many as 2,000 children are hoped to be receiving treatment by the end of 2006.
The Foundation has helped increasing the number of adults on treatment from 6,000 to more than 13,000 in just over a year, its website said.

Ex-US president Clinton to visit Cambodia for HIV/AIDS talks - Yahoo! News

Khmer Rouge trial rules still not set - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Organizers of the Khmer Rouge genocide trials said Saturday they have been unable to agree on the judicial rules that will govern proceedings, but they still expect to convene the long-awaited tribunal in mid-2007.
The Cambodian and international judicial officials who will conduct the tribunal met last week to discuss 110 draft rules but encountered "substantive disagreement about several key issues," the officials said in a joint statement.
Hopes to adopt the rules within a week were "far too ambitious," the statement said. It gave no indication of when meetings would reconvene.
The tribunal was created by a 2003 agreement between Cambodia and the
United Nations' name=c1> SEARCHNews News Photos Images Web' name=c3> United Nations to seek justice for crimes committed when the Khmer Rouge held power from 1975-79. The radical policies of the now-defunct communist group led to the deaths of some 1.7 million people from execution, overwork, disease and malnutrition.
Prosecutors are expected to indict about 10 defendants, including the few surviving top Khmer Rouge leaders.
The disagreements centered on how to integrate Cambodian law with international standards and how the special tribunal will operate within the Cambodian court structure, under which the tribunal was established, the statement said.
The 110 draft rules under consideration cover every phase of the proceedings — preliminary investigations, judicial investigations, the trial and appeals. They also delineate the roles of all parties, including prosecutors, defense attorneys and defendants, the statement said.
Critics have often described the Cambodian judiciary as weak, corrupt and susceptible to political influence.
"All of us have a strong determination to succeed in our goal of establishing a firm foundation for the court," the statement said. "No one wishes to delay these long-awaited trials."
Reach Sambath, a tribunal spokesman, said the failure to adopt the rules will not affect plans to convene the first hearing sometime "before June next year."

Khmer Rouge trial rules still not set - Yahoo! News

Friday, November 24, 2006

Tourism boom brings hope, worry to Siem Reap - CNN.com

SIEM REAP, Cambodia (AP) -- Nineteen-year-old Ra Pheap is a garbage sweeper at Cambodia's world-famous Angkor Wat archaeological site, and is keenly grateful for the influx of tourists to the centuries-old monuments -- it's because of them she has her $50 a month job.
Suos Samnang, a 17-year-old souvenir vendor, also knows that her livelihood is closely linked to the busloads of camera-toting foreign visitors that arrive everyday.
But as they witness the frenzied construction of hotels and guest houses to tap the flow of visitors' dollars in this once-quiet town, even these two poor country girls realize that the blessings of tourism are mixed ones.
"I am worried that this will cause more pollution and migration to the town. The number of people living here just keeps growing. The streets are getting more crowded now," Suos Samnang said.
And some experts are even more concerned than that. They fear the unregulated development -- specifically, unrestricted local pumping of underground water to meet rapidly rising demand -- may literally be undermining Angkor's foundations, destabilizing the earth beneath the famous centuries-old temples so much that they might sink and collapse.
Tourism is a key moneymaker for cash-strapped Cambodia, about one-third of whose 14 million people earn less than 56 cents a day.
Last year, about half of the 1.4 million visitors who came to Cambodia went to see the Angkor monuments, architectural masterpieces built at the height of the Khmer empire from the 9th to the 15th centuries. Total tourist arrivals for Cambodia in 2005 were an impressive 34.7 percent above 2004's figures.
The steady boom has already transformed Siem Reap into a bustling town filled with luxury hotels and vehicles. Its streets are adorned with billboards promoting the latest mobile phones, pizza and burger joints and shopping malls. Several notable old buildings have been razed to make way for visitors' lodgings, and honky-tonk strips have sprung up catering to low-budget travelers.
"The identity Siem Reap had for centuries is gradually disappearing, or maybe almost disappeared," said Teruo Jinnai, director in Cambodia of the U.N. cultural organization UNESCO, and a 10-year resident of the country. "You have restaurants, massage parlors, hotels, and it's very sad to see that."
Culture shock aside, the health and quality of life of many of its 120,000 residents is imperiled by the boom, as is plain to see when traffic snarls the roads and streets get flooded by rain because of clogged sewers.
"This tremendous growth added to population increase has been exacerbating pressure on infrastructure," said a World Bank report on Cambodia's tourism sector last year. "Energy, water, sewage and waste are all significant problems."
It noted that hotels are not legally required to have sewage treatment facilities, though larger ones do have their own plants.
"But most guesthouses reportedly dump used water directly into the river, causing noticeable river pollution," it said, adding that E. coli, the bacteria found in human feces, has reportedly begun seeping into local wells.
At least as threatening over the long run is the uptake of water, with unrestricted pumping from the water table underlying the area.
"Water is being drawn from 70-80 meters (230-260 feet) underground by hotels and treated for use," warned the World Bank, noting that no one was quite certain how this affects the aquifers, or underground layers of rocks and sand, from which it is pumped.
Already though, "one of Angkor's temples is reportedly falling into a sinkhole, suggesting that the underground aquifers may be rapidly disappearing," said the report.
Japanese Ambassador Fumiaki Takahashi, whose country has drawn up a development master plan for Siem Reap to deal with the tourism boom, said most of its hotels are pumping underground water for their own use, "and there is no control."
It is the Cambodian government's "urgent task" to control the practice, he said, because "if you take too much water, it might affect the Angkor site. In the long run, the underground water will go down and the site would sink."
The plan of the Japan International Cooperation Agency calls for tapping underground water from near Phnom Kraom, a hill near the edge of the Tonle Sap lake about 7.4 miles south of the town, to avoid depletion of Siem Reap's underground water and reduce the risk of endangering the fragile temples, he said.
Deputy Tourism Minister Thong Khon said the government is ready to accept the master plan to address existing problems and accommodate future growth.
He sees a bright future for Siem Reap, in which the province won't just be a destination for touring the temples but will also become a hub providing air links for tourists to enjoy the sandy beaches of southwestern Cambodia and ecotourism in the jungles of the northeast.
He envisions that by promoting a diversity of destinations, the crowds will be distributed around the country, and the Angkor temples won't get "too jammed up."
Meanwhile, though, the tourist hordes continue to tramp through fabled Angkor Wat and its satellite temples of Angkor Thom, Bayon, Ta Prohm and Bakheng. Even at the lesser-known 10th-century Bakheng temple, an average of 3,000 tourists climb the 223 feet just in the two hours before dusk each day to view the spectacular sunset.
Ra Pheap, the 19-year-old sweeper, said she knows the onslaught could damage the delicate monuments.
She is employed by a Cambodian company that sells entry tickets to the temple site, and the visitors there are essentially paying her salary. With her earnings, she has reduced her family's reliance on rice farming and been able to help pay for Japanese-language classes for her younger brother and sister.
"I want them to become tour guides because I am confident more tourists will visit here," she said.

Tourism boom brings hope, worry to Siem Reap - CNN.com

Eight officials sentenced for illegal logging in Cambodia - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Eight people, including a former provincial governor, have been sentenced to up to 17 years in prison over a huge illegal logging scandal that saw tons of timber taken from a Cambodian national forest.
Former Ratanakkiri province governor Kham Khoeun was sentenced to 17 years in absentia Thursday for allowing a Vietnamese company to log large swathes of northeast Cambodia's Virachey National Park, judge Ke Sakhan told AFP.
Kham Khoeun has gone into hiding and is believed to be out of the country.
Five of the other seven defendants, including military officers, police officials and forest rangers, were also absent but received sentences of 13 to 15 years.
Of the two present in court, only one was detained to serve a 13-year sentence while the other had his two-year sentence suspended, court officials said.
Conservationists estimate that more than 5,000 hectares of parkland have been destroyed by the operation, and six of those convicted were ordered to pay a total of 15 million dollars for destroying the forest, the judge said.
In July, 11 people were also given stiff prison terms over the enormous logging scandal, although seven of them had not been detained and remain free.
Illegal logging remains a major environmental hazard in Cambodia, with vast tracts of forest coming under increasing threat since the country's civil war ended in 1998.
Only 30 percent of Cambodia remains forested, down from 70 percent in the early 1970s, environment officials say.

Eight officials sentenced for illegal logging in Cambodia - Yahoo! News

Row over foreign lawyers threatens KRouge tribunal - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - A growing row over foreign defense counsel is threatening Cambodia's
Khmer Rouge tribunal, as the International Bar Association (IBA) said Friday it was forced to abandon key legal training amid a power struggle with Cambodian lawyers.
After weeks of planning, the IBA abruptly pulled its support for a program meant to familiarise Cambodian lawyers -- who are often under-trained and inexperienced -- with international law.
It said the move came in response to threats by the Cambodian Bar Association to boycott the program and take "measures" against any members who participate.
"The prohibition by the Cambodian Bar is part of a wider scheme of opposition designed to obstruct the operation of the tribunal," the IBA said in a statement.
"In consequence, the IBA has cancelled the programme," it added.
The program was to be offered by the IBA and the tribunal's Defence Office, which was established to protect the rights of the accused but has come under fire from Cambodian lawyers who say it violates domestic laws.
The cancellation is the latest development in an apparent attempt by Cambodian lawyers to wrest greater control of the tribunal from the
United Nations and foreign counsel.
"We are being violated by foreigners," Cambodian Bar president Ky Tech told the English language Cambodia Daily Wednesday.
The escalation in this turf war comes as foreign and Cambodian tribunal judges meet to hammer out the internal regulations that will give shape to one of the decade's most anticipated international trials.
With the fate of the training program -- essential for lawyers wishing to practice before the tribunal -- now in question, the adoption of those rules might not happen Saturday, as expected.
As many as 10 former Khmer Rouge leaders could be put in the dock during the joint UN-Cambodian tribunal, legal experts say.
Co-prosecutors are expected to hand their first cases up to investigating judges by the end of the year, with the trial phase of the three-year tribunal set to start in mid-2007.
So far only two potential defendants have been arrested for crimes committed during the Khmer Rouge's brutal four-year rule in the late 1970s.
But one, military commander Ta Mok, died in July, raising fears that other elderly regime cadres would die before being brought to justice.
As many as two million people died of starvation, overwork and execution between 1975 and 1979 as the communist Khmer Rouge drove Cambodia's entire population onto vast collective farms in their bid to create an agrarian utopia.

Row over foreign lawyers threatens KRouge tribunal - Yahoo! News

Jolie jets to Cambodia, pledges new conservation scheme - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Hollywood star Angelina Jolie pledged to set up a new conservation project in Cambodia after making a surprise visit with her partner Brad Pitt, officials said.
Jolie and Pitt, whose adopted son Maddox was born in Cambodia, flew to the impoverished Southeast Asian country during filming for "A Mighty Heart" in Mumbai.
After arriving in the northern town of Siem Reap Wednesday, the couple travelled to the former
Khmer Rouge stronghold of Pailin and met for about 40 minutes with deputy governor Ieng Vuth.
"She has been interested in this area for a long time and when she came, she said it was necessary to immediately help this place," said Ieng Vuth, son of the ultra-left regime's former foreign minister Ieng Sary.
"The most urgent thing is to preserve the environment about Phnom Khieu (Blue Mountain)," he added.
Jolie later travelled to the capital, Phnom Penh, where she visited Tuol Sleng -- a former Khmer Rouge torture centre turned into a museum on the country's 1975-1979 genocide.
Airport staff who did not want to be named said she and her entourage left Cambodia late Wednesday.
Jolie came to know Cambodia while shooting "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" at the famed Angkor Wat temple near Siem Reap in 2001, and owns a home in the Samlot district of northwestern Battambang province.
She has campaigned for environmental reform in the impoverished country, which has rewarded her work with citizenship and last year gave her a Cambodian passport.
Jolie sponsors the Maddox Jolie-Pitt Project, named after her Cambodian-born son. She plans to give the charity 1.5 million dollars to build schools and health centers, provide training for health workers and construct public toilets and roads.
"She came to meet me to talk about the (new) project. There are big plans for the project," said Stephan Bognar, who managed Jolie's first conservation effort.
Jolie has been involved in a dispute with Cambodian Vision in Development, a local charity that had managed her original project.
Mounh Sarath, the group's director, has accused Jolie of breach of contract and has threatened to sue her in a row over missing funds.
Ieng Vuth said Thursday "she is trying to deal with the problem" of her dispute with Mounh Sarath.
Jolie and Pitt have been in Mumbai filming "A Mighty Heart," about US journalist Daniel Pearl's abduction and murder by Islamic militants in Pakistan in 2002. Jolie is starring in the movie and Pitt is a producer.

Jolie jets to Cambodia, pledges new conservation scheme - Yahoo! News

Jolie makes surprise visit to Cambodia - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -
Angelina Jolie has made an unannounced visit to Cambodia, a country where she is funding a nature conservation project, officials said Wednesday.
The 31-year-old actress briefly visited officials in Pailin, a former
Khmer Rouge stronghold in northwestern Cambodia, said Keut Sothea, a deputy governor for the Pailin municipality.
He said Jolie had a brief discussion about a forest conservation project near Pailin with Ieng Vuth, another municipality deputy governor and the son of former Khmer Rouge Foreign Minister Ieng Sary.
Kong Duong, head of the Pailin information office, said Jolie and her party arrived on two helicopters.
"They came very briefly before flying out. They seemed not to have much time for us," he said, declining to elaborate.
It wasn't clear when Jolie arrived in Cambodia or who had accompanied her. She has been filming a movie in India in recent weeks.
Jolie, who adopted her 5-year-old son Maddox from Cambodia, has promised up to $1.3 million over five years for a forest conservation program that was approved by the Cambodian government in 2003.
Stephan Bognar, executive director of the Maddox Jolie Project, couldn't immediately be reached for comment. Calls to his phone went unanswered.
Jolie has been involved in a dispute with Mounh Sarath, director of Cambodian Vision in Development, her former Cambodian associate in the conservation project.
Her philanthropic and political adviser, Trevor Neilson, told The Associated Press in New York last month that "hundreds of thousands of dollars" Jolie had provided for the conservation effort were missing.
Mounh Sarath, who has denied the allegation, said Wednesday he knew about Jolie's visit. Mounh Sarath said he wanted to talk to Jolie and could account for all the money he had received from her.
Scenes for Jolie's 2001 movie, "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider," were filmed at Cambodia's famed Angkor Wat temple.

Jolie makes surprise visit to Cambodia - Yahoo! News

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Cambodia opens huge culture expo with eye on tourism - Yahoo! News

SIEM REAP, Cambodia (AFP) -
South Korea's president was a guest of honor as Cambodian authorities launched their most elaborate cultural festival to date, in a bid to boost tourism by wooing South Korean visitors.
Accompanied by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and other senior officials, President
Roh Moo-Hyun arrived in Siem Reap, the gateway to the famed Angkor temple complex, to kick off the Angkor-Gyeongju Culture Expo, a joint cultural festival that runs through January 2007.
Amid swirling Korean dances and royal Angkorian processions, Roh -- who arrived Sunday on the first visit to Cambodia by a South Korean president -- hailed both countries' heritages.
"Korea and Cambodia are equipped with cultural capacities and assets acquired over many years," he said, according to the English text of his speech.
"Both countries have preserved their cultural identity while weathering numerous invasions and have accepted and transformed various cultures into something of their own," Roh added.
The 50-day expo, being held next to the Angkor archeological park, will highlight Cambodian and Korean products.
But its main aim is to allow visitors to linger, taking in exhibits and cuisine from both cultures.
Traditional Camdodian and South Korean games will also be played, including cock fighting in the Cambodian pavilion, which resembles a Khmer night market with its walls of woven reeds and florescent lights.

Cambodia opens huge culture expo with eye on tourism - Yahoo! News

Cambodia opens huge culture expo with eye on tourism - Yahoo! News

SIEM REAP, Cambodia (AFP) -
South Korea' s president was a guest of honor as Cambodian authorities launched their most elaborate cultural festival to date, in a bid to boost tourism by wooing South Korean visitors.
Accompanied by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and other senior officials, President
Roh Moo-Hyun arrived in Siem Reap, the gateway to the famed Angkor temple complex, to kick off the Angkor-Gyeongju Culture Expo, a joint cultural festival that runs through January 2007.
Amid swirling Korean dances and royal Angkorian processions, Roh -- who arrived Sunday on the first visit to Cambodia by a South Korean president -- hailed both countries' heritages.
"Korea and Cambodia are equipped with cultural capacities and assets acquired over many years," he said, according to the English text of his speech.
"Both countries have preserved their cultural identity while weathering numerous invasions and have accepted and transformed various cultures into something of their own," Roh added.
The 50-day expo, being held next to the Angkor archeological park, will highlight Cambodian and Korean products.
But its main aim is to allow visitors to linger, taking in exhibits and cuisine from both cultures.
Traditional Camdodian and South Korean games will also be played, including cock fighting in the Cambodian pavilion, which resembles a Khmer night market with its walls of woven reeds and florescent lights.

Cambodia opens huge culture expo with eye on tourism - Yahoo! News

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Leader, Cambodia firm in bid for power plant

PETALING JAYA: Leader Universal Holdings Bhd has entered into a 50:50 joint-venture agreement with a Cambodian company to bid for a project to build-own-operate (BOO) a 200-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power generation plant in Sihanoukville, Cambodia.
In a statement to Bursa Malaysia yesterday, Leader said the joint venture with MKCSS Holdings was in accordance with procedures set by Cambodia's Industry, Mines and Energy Ministry.
If the bid was successful, the project would run for 30 years and the electricity generated would be sold to Electricite du Cambodge (EDC) under a long-term power purchase agreement, it said.
A limited liability joint-venture company would then be set up, with each party becoming shareholders in the equity of the company.
Leader said the bid was in line with the group's plan to expand its power generation business in Cambodia.
It said the Cambodian ministry had invited “among others” Leader and MKCSS to bid for the project on Aug 2. The closing date to submit the bid is Dec 4.
Leader said a technicality and feasibility study on the project had been conducted and completed.
“At this juncture, the total project cost, equity contribution, and project financing details have yet to be finalised between Leader and MKCSS,” it said.
Leader, through its 60%-owned subsidiary in Cambodia, currently owns and operates a 35MW power generation plant in Phnom Penh and sells the electricity to EDC.
In a separate statement to Bursa yesterday, Leader reported a pre-tax profit of RM18.5mil for the third quarter ended Sept 30, an increase of RM4.45mil compared with the same quarter last year.
The company also registered higher revenue of RM688.7mil for the quarter against RM433.61mil previously.

Leader, Cambodia firm in bid for power plant

Crocs Found in Man's Bag at Airport

A Filipino man who flew home from Cambodia said he was carrying live fish in his carryon luggage, until a check of the bag at Manila airport revealed three 1.5-foot long crocodiles, officials said Wednesday.
The head of the Manila International Airport Authority said it wasn't clear how Enrique Yu Castillo, 50, was able to carry the Siamese crocodiles from Phnom Penh to Singapore to Manila on Monday night.
The crocodiles are on an endangered species list and their importation is prohibited, airport manager Alfonso Cusi said in a statement.
He said charges were being readied against Castillo, while the reptiles were turned over to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.
Castillo had earlier sought a permit to import the exotic animals but his application was denied, said Teddy Aguir, from the environment department's Wildlife Traffic Monitoring unit at the airport.
Airport authorities had been on a lookout for Castillo since last week, when the Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau alerted them on the possibility that Castillo might try to sneak in the crocodiles, Aguir said.

Crocs Found in Man's Bag at Airport

The Raw Story | Cambodia goes on alert ahead of South Korean president's visit

Phnom Penh- Cambodian authorities have sharply stepped up security ahead of a visit by South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, including sending more than 30 specially trained intervention police to the northern tourist town of Siem Reap, police said Wednesday. Roh is scheduled to attend an annual summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) in Hanoi on November 18 and 19 before visiting Cambodia from November 19 to 22. Roh's talks with the nation's top politicians, including Prime Minister Hun Sen, are expected to be aimed at increasing economic cooperation between the two nations. He is also scheduled to visit the Angkor Wat temple complex and inaugurate a cultural exhibition in Siem Reap. The chief of the criminal police section at the Ministry of Interior, Mok Chito, said 34 so-called Flying Tiger special police had been sent to Siem Reap Tuesday to begin securing the area. "They will ensure the security of people coming to join the visit and ensure stability," Mok Chito said. Additional motorbikes, police trucks and weapons had also been sent, he said. South Korea is a major donor and investor in Cambodia and has increasingly sought to strengthen bilateral relations with the impoverished nation in recent years.

The Raw Story Cambodia goes on alert ahead of South Korean president's visit

Press-Telegram - Seniors search for a lifeline

LONG BEACH - Phay Lok sits every day in his one-bedroom apartment and stares at the walls, alone with his fears and his regrets.
A once-affluent banker in the mineral-rich Pailin area of western Cambodia, a leader of men has been reduced to this.
It's not as if he has a choice. A stroke about four months ago rendered almost useless the right side of his 74-year-old body. So he sits on a ratty couch in his living room surrounded by his memories and a quiet broken only by the sounds of the outside world.
He doesn't listen to music or the radio. He doesn't watch television. He doesn't like to read. Occasionally he'll scan the mail that comes to his house. He mentions a campaign letter he received recently from President George Bush.
Lok has a nurse, Nary Duong, a Cambodian grandmother who comes to his home mornings and evenings. She receives about $1,000 a month from the state to provide in-home health care. She helps him bathe, prepares his meals, massages and treats his stricken limbs and provides companionship, a voice to fill the silence.
The rest of the day is given to long silent stretches of time alone.
Lok is one of thousands of elderly in Long Beach who struggle to make ends
meet. Because he receives Social Security benefits of a little more than $800 a month, Lok doesn't fit the U.S. Census parameters for poverty, defined as $9,367 a year for a person 65 years and older. As a practical matter, he is impoverished.
After paying his rent (he gets no housing assistance) there is barely enough left for food and utilities. His landlord has been giving Lok a break on the rent, but is also trying to get the old man to find another place.
According to Census data, about 9.4 percent of Long Beach's more than 43,000 people 65 years and older live below the poverty threshold. The national rate is 9.9 percent.
Thousands of others struggle with fixed incomes. Some, like Rosalyn Jones, house and take care of family members and have to pay off second mortgages on their homes. Others, like Dominic Vocino, take on extra work so they can help their families. Still others, like Tracy Serba, consider themselves lucky, despite having to live in run-down neighborhoods, and say they get by relatively well on government benefits that barely inch them over the technical definition of poverty.

Press-Telegram - Seniors search for a lifeline

KRouge tribunal misunderstood, officials say - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Debate begins this week on internal rules to shape Cambodia's
Khmer Rouge trials, but some fear the tribunal's efforts are being undermined by a misunderstanding of what the court seeks to do.
Foreign judges Monday will begin discussing with their Cambodian counterparts the more than 100 tribunal regulations seeking to find common ground between varied legal codes.
The adoption of this procedural framework, expected at the end of the week, will take the tribunal a significant step forward, officials say.
"It's a road map for everybody. Without these rules the court cannot function properly," said tribunal spokesman Reach Sambath.
But the man who will prosecute one of the 20th century's worst genocides said the trial on which Cambodia has pinned so many of its hopes for reconciliation is misunderstood by those it is meant to serve.
"We haven't done a good job of telling people there is a mountain of evidence and about the way we get through it," Robert Petit, one of two tribunal co-prosecutors, said in an interview last week.
"Obviously there is a need for better information sharing," he said.
He said that not enough money or effort had been spent on outreach programs explaining the complex court procedure to the Cambodian public, putting the tribunal's credibility at risk.
"If the court isn't understood by the general public, it will fail," added co-investigating judge Marcel Lemonde, saying discussions were underway to organise monthly update briefings.

KRouge tribunal misunderstood, officials say - Yahoo! News

Cambodia's Bar Association threatens to derail KRouge tribunal - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Cambodia's Bar Association has demanded greater control over the legal defence of former
Khmer Rouge leaders and has threatened to block foreign attorneys from participating in a tribunal to try top regime cadre.
In a scathing statement sent to tribunal staff obtained Friday by AFP, the association said draft internal regulations that would determine how the tribunal operates violate Cambodian law.
At the core of the Bar's complaints is the provision giving foreign lawyers the right to defend Cambodian clients.
Under the current proposed regulations, "lawyers admitted to practice outside of Cambodia shall work in conjunction with a lawyer admitted in Cambodia, as co-lawyers, with equal rights of audience".
Association president Ky Tech said that only the Bar can approve the list of defence attorneys for former Khmer Rouge suspects, oversee their training and mete out discipline.
The Bar has also said it would not approve any foreign lawyers whose home countries did not give Cambodian attorneys reciprocal rights to practice law.
Ky Tech said he would sue the tribunal -- known as the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia -- as well as the government and foreign bar associations if his organisation's demands were not met.
"Foreigners cannot represent clients. They can only accompany Cambodian lawyers," Ky Tech said in the Bar's statement.
"Foreign lawyers must be accepted beforehand by the Bar Association ... these regulations do not abide by Cambodian law," he added.

Cambodia's Bar Association threatens to derail KRouge tribunal - Yahoo! News

Monday, November 13, 2006

People's Daily Online -- Cambodia tightens security check at airports

Prime Minister Hun Sen had given an order to tighten the security check at all the airports in the kingdom in order to combat any form of terrorist acts, illegal import and export of weapons, smuggling of drugs, and trans-national crimes, government spokesman and Information Minister Khieu Kanharith told Xinhua on Monday.
"we have already strengthened the security and safety (at all the airports in order to meet international management standard). We need to have good security for all our people," he said.
The prime minister instructed all airport staff members to focus on high-ranking government officials and diplomats, said the spokesman, adding that anyone who wanted to escape check of luggage needed to have permission letter from Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Diplomats' luggage must have special stamp or logo from their embassies for easy identification, he said.
For the luggage without such stamp or logo, airport staff members could ask the owners to explain what was inside, he said.
"(After necessary inquiry,) if they still have suspicion over the packages, they can check them upon approval and in presence of the diplomatic owners," he added.
Ambassadors' packages also have to be X-rayed just as other passengers' belongings, but for the cases or bag that they took with themselves, there would be no checks, he said.
The government had requested all the embassies to Cambodia to send samples of their embassy stamps and logos to Ministry of Foreign Affairs in order to facilitate the passage of their staff members' packages at the airports, he added.
Meanwhile, Interior Ministry spokesman Khiev Sopheak told Xinhua by phone that the tightened check at the airports mainly aimed to deal with illegal acts.
"Prevention is better than cure," he said.
In early November, he said, six people were arrested for masterminding terrorist acts during the Water Festival and several others were still at large, which posed an ever urgent challenge for the government to cope with.

People's Daily Online -- Cambodia tightens security check at airports

Cambodia's slow recovery from Khmer Rouge - Eureka Street

"I want to make my country safe for my people," says Cambodian Aki Ra. It’s a nice sentiment but when the story behind those words is known, it takes on a whole new meaning.
Cambodia is littered with landmines. It is estimated that between six million and 11 million mines are still active and in the ground. Furthermore, countless unexploded ordnance (UXO) including bombs, mortars, grenades and bullets remains. Much of it was originally connected to trip wires and rigged as booby traps.
It is estimated that 800 people are killed or wounded as a result of this ordnance in Cambodia every year. Put another way, two or three people will step on a landmine or walk through a trip wire, every single day.
A living example of the continual plight affecting Cambodia is Sopphart, a man I met on my recent trip to Cambodia. Sopphart comes from Poipet, in Cambodia’s north. One day, while collecting firewood with his older brothers, Sopphart stepped on a mine that blew off his foot.
Hearing the explosion, his brothers, who were a short distance away, ran towards him to help. As they did, one of them ran through a tripwire connected to a fragmentation grenade. That grenade killed his brothers instantly and a fragment from the grenade blinded Sopphart in one eye. Within seconds, Sopphart had lost his foot, his eye and his two brothers.

Cambodia's slow recovery from Khmer Rouge - Eureka Street

Business Times - NagaCorp may invest RM400m in Phnom Penh

NAGACORP Ltd, a gaming and entertainment group controlled by Malaysian tycoon Tan Sri Dr Chen Lip Keong, may spend as much as RM400 million to develop NagaWorld in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia, says company officials.
Business Times understands that to date, close to RM120 million has been invested in NagaWorld, the firm's flagship project which is slated for completion in the fourth quarter of 2007.
As at May 31 2006, about RM221 million had been allocated as capital investment.
"We projected that the initial cost to develop NagaWorld would be around US$90.5 million (RM330 million). However, an additional US$5 million (RM18.3 million) will be incurred for the purchase and installation of casino related equipment," said a company official.
The official said higher cost is also expected due to unforeseen circumstances such as cost overruns due to faults or delays by contractors and unexpected additional structural works to be undertaken.
NagaWorld is aimed to be an international hotel-casino complex, a first of its kind in Phnom Penh, comprising an eight-storey entertainment wing with 124 gaming tables and 211 gaming machines and a 14-storey hotel wing with a gross area of about 80,552 sq m.
The official said NagaCorp aims to become a world- class casino operator comparable to casinos in Australia and the US.

Business Times: "NagaCorp may invest RM400m in Phnom Penh"

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Fallbrook church builds a greater hope in Cambodia - North County Times

FALLBROOK -- Instead of struggling to get by on the streets, five boys in Cambodia recently became the first of several children to benefit from an orphanage built with donations and direction from Calvary Chapel in Fallbrook, church officials said recently.Last week, the boys were moved into A Greater Hope Orphanage in the Cambodian province of Takeo. The structure was completed in August and dedicated in September, Calvary Chapel's Senior Pastor Patrick Herrell said.
Five girls are expected to move into the church-run orphanage in the weeks to come, he added.
Plans to provide educational instruction to the children are being considered on a wait-and-see basis, Herrell said.In all, the church spent about $77,000 on the project --- including $70,000 for the construction and related costs, and about $7,000 to buy the 3-acre property, according to Herrell."This orphanage will house 40 to 50 kids," Herrell said. "But honestly, this is just a drop in the bucket towards the need."We're talking thousands, maybe even millions, of kids who are on their own and fending for themselves for day-to-day survival," he added.Herrell said that many children in Cambodia are abandoned because their parents can't afford to feed them.

Fallbrook church builds a greater hope in Cambodia - North County Times

Tempo - National Day of Cambodia

The Kingdom of Cambodia celebrates its National Day today. On this day in 1953, King Norodom Sihanouk declared the country’s independence from French colonial rule.
As a close neighbor and fellow Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member, the Philippines, together with the international community, participated in the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) to help Cambodia achieve self-sustaining governance after decades of conflict. The Philippines continues to send agricultural experts to Cambodia to assist in its development under the Rural Development and Resettlement Project (RD&RP).
Since the reopening of the Cambodian Embassy in Manila in 1999 and the Philippine Embassy in Phnom Penh in 1995, the Philippines and Cambodia have enjoyed good bilateral relationships based on friendship and cooperation. They have concluded agreements on economic and trade relations, agricultural and agribusiness collaboration, and tourism cooperation.
Last year, the Cambodian Ministry of Labor entered into a labor pact with the Department of Labor and Employment, to ensure that workers from both countries are protected from abuse and substandard labor conditions. Preparations for the forging of a "Twin City" agreement between Bacolod City and Siem Reap City were also held last year. Cambodia’s full support for the candidature of the Philippines for membership in the United Nations Human Rights Council was acknowledged by the Philippine government.
We congratulate the people and government of Cambodia headed by His Majesty, King Norodom Sihamoni, and Prime Minister Samdech Hun Sen, and its Embassy in the Philippines, led by H.E., Ambassador In May, on the occasion of their National Day.

Tempo - National Day of Cambodia

Brudirect.com  - Royal Messages For Cambodia's Independence Day

Bandar Seri Begawan - His Majesty the Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam has consented to send congratulatory messages to His Majesty King Norodom Sihamoni of Cambodia and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen on the occasion of the Independence Day celebration of the Kingdom of Cambodia.
His Majesty expressed his satisfaction with the warm and friendly relations and deep understanding that had so long been established between Brunei Darussalam and the Kingdom of Cambodia especially at the ASEAN level.
His Majesty hoped that this would be maintained and enhanced in the future for the good of the two countries and peoples. His Majesty hoped that the King and Prime Minister of Cambodia would remain in good health and happiness, and for the people of Cambodia to enjoy continued progress and prosperity.
Meanwhile, HRH Prince Mohamed Bolkiah, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, sent a congratulatory message to Hor Namhong, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation of the Kingdom of Cambodia.
His Royal Highness said, "I would like to present my warmest congratulations and best wishes to you and the government and people of the Kingdom of Cambodia on your Independence Day.
"I much value the warm and friendly relations between our two countries and I look forward to continuing our work during the coming year to strengthen our bilateral relations and our partnership in ASEAN and the Asia-Pacific region." -- Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin

Brudirect.com - Royal Messages For Cambodia's Independence Day

Cambodia moves to save rare grassland bird - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Cambodia has set aside a large area of land to save from extinction fewer than 100 Bengal Floricans, believed to be the world's largest remaining group of the grassland bird, a provincial governor said on Tuesday.
The network of protected areas cover more than 100 sq miles near Tonle Sap, home to thousands of waterfowl and birds during the wet season when it swells into one of the largest freshwater lakes in Asia.
"This is a rare bird and if we fail to protect them, they will soon become extinct," Nam Tum, governor of the eastern province of Kampong Thom where the birds live, told Reuters.
The large bustards, mostly black in color with white wings, are threatened by the loss of their habitat due to industrial-scale farming, he said.
The Bengal Florican is restricted to tiny fragments of grasslands scattered across Cambodia, Vietnam, Nepal and India where fewer than 1,000 birds live.
Nam Tum said banners would be put up in the area and farmers educated not to kill the birds, listed as endangered on a "Red List" compiled by the conservation body IUCN.
Joe Walston, the World Conservation Society's country representative, said Cambodia's decision gave the species a fighting chance at survival.
"This population of Bengal Floricans represents the best hope for the entire species," Walston said in a statement.

Cambodia moves to save rare grassland bird - Yahoo! News:

Sunday, November 05, 2006

PPP 15/22: Conscription: 'unnecessary, unaffordable, unfair'

All Cambodian men between the ages 18 and 30 will have to register to serve in the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces (RCAF), and if they are called up, do 18 months compulsory military service, if the law on conscription passed by the National Assembly on October 25 comes into force.Once a conscript has finished his 18 months service, he will remain on the "reserves" list for an unspecified time and be liable for further compulsory service whenever the Ministry of Defence deems necessary.Anyone who fails to serve when summoned will be liable to two years prison in peace time and five years in time of war. Voted for by 74 out of the 82 lawmakers in attendance, after a brief but fierce debate cut short by National Assembly President Heng Samrin, the law has attracted serious criticism from military and social analysts, civil society leaders, and opposition politicians.Unnecessary, unaffordable, and unfair was the opinion of one military analyst. "[Cambodia] not only does not need this [law], it is hard to imagine how it can afford this," he said.Realistically, the RCAF's budget will allow for only a few thousand new conscripts a year, the analyst said. "This will make this law an extremely unpopular and, you could say, unfair one, due to its selective nature," he said. "How selection will be conducted is beyond me, but it will be a mess I would imagine."

PPP 15/22: Conscription: 'unnecessary, unaffordable, unfair': "Conscription: 'unnecessary, unaffordable, unfair'"

PPP 15/22: It's that Bon Om Tuk time again

To longtime residents and experienced riverside observers, the indications are immediate and unmistakable. Chanting boatmen knifing through pre-dawn waters, jostling throngs of onlookers crowding the river's edge and the mass mushrooming of vendor booths, wicker sellers and trinket stalls can only mean one thing - the madness of Bon Om Tuk is about to descend upon Phnom Penh. For three days the city will be transformed from capital to carnival; from a business center to a bacchanal. According to event officials and local authorities, roughly 2.5 million people from throughout Cambodia are expected to converge on Phnom Penh's riverside this year to celebrate the annual water festival, Bon Om Tuk, between November 4 and November 6. Last year's celebration peaked, on its second day, with two million revelers, Minister of Tourism Lay Prohas told the Post."There will be from two to three million coming to Phnom Penh to celebrate the water festival because this year our country is peaceful, has political stability, and many people have a better standard of living," said Min Khin, secretary-general of the National Festival Committee and secretary of state at the Ministry of Cults and Religious Affairs. Khin said his committee has worked with Phnom Penh Municipality to place 200 mobile toilets along the riverfront and other places for people who come to watch the water festival.

PPP 15/22: It's that Bon Om Tuk time again: "It's that Bon Om Tuk time again"

PPP 15/22: Record-high fuel prices defy oil's drop

As other countries enjoy the cheapest gasoline prices since 1991, economists and the opposition are demanding to know why the price for petrol in Cambodia remains a record $1 per liter.By November 2, the price for of crude oil had fallen to roughly $57 a barrel, a slide of more than 25 percent from a mid-July peak of $78.50, according to industry reports. In neighboring Vietnam and Thailand, the plummeting price has meant relief for motorists as the lower price has been passed on to the consumer.The standard industry procedure is to adjust retail prices according to the fluctuations of crude oil price on the international market, according to Sok Hach, dirctor of the Economic Institute of Cambodia (EIC)."Last year, when the international crude oil price was $60 for one barrel, the gasoline price in Cambodia was 3,800 riel per liter," Hach told the Post on November 2. "But now it [the international crude oil price] has fallen below $60 per barrel and the gasoline price in Cambodia has not fallen to 3,800 riel per liter - it remains between 4,100 to 4,200 riel per liter."Currently in the United States, the price for a liter of regular petrol is between $0.52 and $0.59 (2,200 riel to 2400 riel). In Vietnam a liter of petrol is down to about 2,600 per liter and in Thailand roughly 2,800 riel.

PPP 15/22: Record-high fuel prices defy oil's drop: "Record-high fuel prices defy oil's drop"

Xinhua - Fake medicines widespread in Cambodia

PHNOM PENH, Nov. 3 (Xinhua) -- Fake medicines are spreading throughout Cambodia, particularly in rural areas and provinces along the border with Vietnam and Thailand, bi-monthly newspaper Phnom Penh Post here on Friday quoted officials at the Ministry of Health (MoH) as saying.
So far this year, the MoH has identified 27 kinds of fake medicines, compared with 35 in 2004 and 26 in 2000, it reported.
Minister of Health Nuth Sokhom said that every country in the world has fake medicines, but he acknowledged that Cambodia has a higher proportion of fakes than other countries.
"We are worse than other countries because our people have only limited knowledge of the problem of fake medicines. There is a lack of cooperation from related organizations. The exercise of law is still weak and punishment of perpetrators too loose," he said.
In addition, Cambodia has only recently implemented measures to prevent fake medicines that other countries implemented many years ago, he added.
According to Heng Huot, director of the drug regulation bureau at the Drugs and Food Department of the MoH, most fake medicines are for everyday use such as Paracetamol and antibiotics.
They are made from flour and will neither do good nor harm if a person has a simple problem like headache, he said.
Cambodia now has 8,000 types of medicines, with 30 percent of them unregistered.
"Most of the unregistered medicines are fakes," said Huot.

Xinhua - Fake medicines widespread in Cambodia

Xinhua - Unsafe abortion threatens Cambodian women

PHNOM PENH, Nov. 3 (Xinhua) -- Over 70 percent of rural Cambodian women lack any understanding of effective contraceptive methods or safe abortion and each year 32,000 women nationwide need treatment after botched abortions, bi-monthly newspaper Phnom Penh Post reported on Friday.
Compounding the problem, in 2005 health centers turned away 24,000 women seeking legal first-trimester abortions, thus driving most women to try to terminate unwanted pregnancies by themselves, the paper quoted Chamreun Sosivann, Clinic Manager of Reproductive Health Association of Cambodia at Siem Reap Province, as saying.
"They try to induce an abortion by using pills rather than coming to a clinic. This is very dangerous -- and many of these women also don't know how to prevent pregnancy, for example, by using birth control pills," she said.
In fact, safe abortion services are not readily available in Cambodia, said Tung Rathavy, deputy director of the National Maternal and Child Health Center (NMCHC) and National Reproductive Health Program Manager.
"Only 47 percent of public hospitals and about 15 percent of health centers offer any kind of abortion services. We still lack health centers, medicines and qualified staff, even though the number of women seeking abortions is increasing every year," she said.
Maternal health has been made a priority in health sector but despite the government's efforts, results are lagging, said the paper.
However, efforts are made to improve the situation.
In December last year, the U.K. Department for International Development signed a 2.9 million U.S. dollar agreement with Ministry of Health to improve women's health and their access to lawful abortion. A further 725,000 U.S. dollars will be used to provide women with maternal health services.
According to a law adopted by the Cambodian government in 1997, first-trimester abortion is made more widely available and second-trimester abortion available if necessary in case of rape, fetal abnormality, or if full-term pregnancy might pose a risk to mother's life.

Xinhua - Unsafe abortion threatens Cambodian women

The Raw Story | Cambodia detains six for suspected terrorist plot

Phnom Penh- Cambodian authorities said Thursday they were still seeking an unspecified number of suspected terrorists after foiling an apparent attempted plot to bomb the capital's upcoming Water Festival. The claims came after authorities announced they had already arrested and were now holding six men at an undisclosed location after charging them with terrorism-related offences. Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak said he could give few details regarding the ongoing investigation, except to say that the men in detention were not the ringleaders. More than 1.5 million people are expected to stream into the capital for the annual festival starting Saturday, which features three days of boat races presided over by King Norodom Sihamoni and celebrates the end of the monsoon season. This year boats from Thailand and Vietnam will also compete. "We are still seeking the ringleaders," General Sopheak said by telephone, urging calm. "The actual plan looks like a fantasy. The Khmer Rouge had a stronger system than this and we broke them." He said all the men except one were members of the Kampuchea Krom ethnic group and all had previous criminal records as petty thieves and cattle rustlers and were likely just the tools of more organized leaders. He declined to comment on local media reports that at least one other suspect had fled into neighbouring Thailand.

The Raw Story Cambodia detains six for suspected terrorist plot

News Times Live A lesson beyond the textbook

DANBURY -- To truly understand another culture Jean Hatcherson believes you have to go and live with the people of that culture.
"When you go you learn so much first hand that you can't learn from a textbook," said Hatcherson, of Danbury, an adjunct professor of anthropology at Western Connecticut State University. She added, "no matter how much you read you can't really know until you've experienced it."
That's why the next WestConn course Hatcherson teaches will not use a textbook; instead students will travel with Hatcherson to Cambodia, a country still recovering from its tragic past. So far, eight WestConn students and one UConn student have signed on for the class. They will be joined by Dr. Darla Shaw, the coordinator of WestConn's Master's of Science program.
In Cambodia, students will work with the American organization Hearts and Hands for Cambodia. Students will assist in the day-to-day operation of a day care facility in Battambang that was set up by the Cambodian organization, the Sobbhana Women's Foundation in order to help educate extremely poor children. The WestConn group will also view some of Cambodia's historic Buddhist temples as well as visiting different orphanages and hospitals in order to observe organizations that give aid.
The class will leave on Jan. 1 and get back Jan. 18. In addition to the experience, students will receive three credits.
Between 1.5 and 3 million people were killed under the rule of the brutal dictator Pol Pot during the Khmer Rouge reign from 1975-79. Many of those killed were from the educated class, such as doctors and teachers. Three decades later the country is still struggling to recover.

News Times Live A lesson beyond the textbook

Cambodian activist who rescues sex slaves is honored in NYC

A Cambodian human rights activist who has dedicated her life to rescuing women and girls from sexual slavery said Monday she hopes that being honored as one of Glamour magazine's women of the year will help draw attention to her cause.
'We can help 10, but maybe 20 or 30 women they sell again to the brothel,' said Somaly Mam, president of AFESIP, the French acronym for Acting for Women in Distressing Situations. 'I want to stop trafficking. If we want to stop we need international voice to help us.'
AFESIP has 155 social workers in Cambodia, Thailand, Laos and Vietnam working to rescue women and girls _ some as young as 5 _ from forced prostitution. Mam says the organization has saved 3,000 women and girls since its founding in 1996.
Mam's compelling story _ she herself was sold into prostitution and managed to get out of the sex trade and help others _ was told in a September 2006 article in Glamour by Mariane Pearl, the journalist and widow of slain Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.
Some of the girls Mam's group rescues die of AIDS or are sold back into prostitution by their families, but others leave the sex trade for good.
'We see the victims and then one or two years later some of them got married,' Mam said. 'They have the children. They are happy. They have a business.'
Mam was to be honored as one of Glamour's women of the year at a ceremony at Carnegie Hall later Monday.

Cambodian activist who rescues sex slaves is honored in NYC

The Korea Times : Interview With Foreign Envoys (19) Angkor-Kyongju Expo Due This Month

The top envoy from Cambodia to Seoul said the most important event in the history of bilateral relations between Cambodia and South Korea will take place this month _ the Angkor-Kyeongju World Culture Expo 2006, which will be held in Siem Reap, Cambodia, from Nov. 21 to Jan. 9 next year.
``This will be the biggest cultural program of this kind since Angkor Wat emerged and drew attention from the world,’’ Cambodian Ambassador Lim Samkol said. ``It will be the most important event between Cambodia and Korea.’’
The 58-year-old ambassador said the 50-day event will include an opening ceremony attended by President Roh Moo-hyun, an Andre Kim fashion show, film screenings, exhibitions and Cambodian and Korean traditional dance performances.
The venue for the event is Siem Reap, where ancient Cambodian relics such as Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom are sited.
``I would like to mention that Angkor Wat is appointed a world cultural heritage site by UNESCO,’’ he said. ``On the other hand, Kyongju represents the thousand years old civilizations of Korea.’’
So the event is designed to show two great cultures of Asia, Lim said.
``The purpose of holding this event, in addition to promoting mutual understanding between Cambodians and Koreans, is to share it with the people of the rest of the world and let them experience our two cultures for the benefit of cultural understanding of the peoples around the world.’’

The Korea Times : Interview With Foreign Envoys (19) Angkor-Kyongju Expo Due This Month

Within SFPD, little surprise over allegations that officer visited Asia for sex with children

San Francisco police Officer Donald Rene Ramirez's alleged Asian pedophile jaunts -- which ended with his reported suicide in a Cambodian jail -- appear to have been an open secret for years in the Police Department.
"Everyone knew -- absolutely -- what he was going over there for,'' said Gary Delagnes, president of the Police Officers Association, echoing what a number of current and former cops have told us off the record.
Ramirez, 50, had been with the department for 25 years, and had been going to Asia on vacation for at least two decades, Delagnes said. That all ended last weekend when Ramirez, arrested in Phnom Penh for allegedly having sex with a 14-year-old girl, reportedly shot himself.
"He'd save up his vacation and go for weeks or months on end," Delagnes said. "At various times, it was rumored that he bought a brothel."
However, Delagnes said, "no one knew for sure" exactly what Ramirez was doing on his trips. "Obviously, something would have been done if he -- or anyone else -- admitted what was going on, but who's going to admit it?" Delagnes said.
The union chief said Ramirez's Asian trips had landed him in hot water once, but only for getting back to work late.
"Nothing was ever written up, but they called him on the carpet and told him to knock it off," Delagnes said. "His response was basically, 'It's my time and I can do whatever the hell I want.'

Within SFPD, little surprise over allegations that officer visited Asia for sex with children

Cambodia vows to become a 'hell' for foreign paedophiles - Yahoo! News

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Keo Thea has a mission -- he wants to reverse Cambodia's reputation as a haven for paedophiles and turn it into a "hell" for foreigners coming here to have sex with children.
The police chief speaks proudly of a recent crackdown in the kingdom, which has seen the number of arrests of foreign child sex offenders double so far this year compared to the whole of 2005, when there were five arrests.
Since the beginning of 2006, Cambodian police have arrested 10 foreigners, who have been involved in some particularly horrific cases -- including an American police officer who was charged this week with sexually abusing two Vietnamese girls.
The mother of one of the girls was also charged with human trafficking, because she allegedly gave her daughter to Donald Rene Ramirez.
Two days after he was charged, he swiped a gun from his guard and shot himself in the head while in his holding cell.
"Before, paedophiles thought that Cambodia was a heaven for them," said Keo Thea, deputy police chief of Phnom Penh's anti human-trafficking and juvenile protection unit.
"Now, if they still think the same, then they will find Cambodia is a hell for those paedophiles. This is my message to those paedophiles: Be careful, you guys will be thrown into Cambodian jails."

Cambodia vows to become a 'hell' for foreign paedophiles - Yahoo! News

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Vietnam latest news - Thanh Nien Daily

Vietnam earned more than US$600 million from selling goods to Cambodia in the first three quarters and expected the figure to hit $1 billion by the end of this year, a Trade Ministry official said.
Speaking at a conference on Vietnam-Cambodia border trade in south-western Tay Ninh province Wednesday, Deputy Minister of Trade Phan The Rue urged the provinces adjacent to Cambodia to actively manage business activities in border areas in line with international trade rules.
He asked the provinces to focus on building infrastructure facilities, developing services and creating jobs for local people in border areas.The trade official also called on relevant ministries and agencies to issue open, unified and transparent policies to facilitate the operation of border economic zones.At the meeting, many participants expressed concerns about matters involving administrative procedures, customs clearance formalities, payment and tax deduction, which have hindered border trade activities between Vietnam and Cambodia.

Vietnam latest news - Thanh Nien Daily