Monday, January 12, 2009

Hun Sen: Celebrating the 1991 Paris Peace Accords is meaningless


12 Jan 2009
KI-Media

On Saturday 10 January 2008, at a bridge inauguration in Pursat, Hun Sen announced that celebrating the anniversary of the 23 October 1991 Paris Peace Accords on Cambodia
cannot be done as Cambodia has too many holidays already. While several opposition parties have requested the celebration of this event rather than the celebration of 07 January, Hun Sen was quoted by The Cambodia Daily as saying: “People want to celebrate 23 October, but I said that it is meaningless.” Claiming that Cambodia has too many holidays already (currently there are 25 national holydays in Cambodia), Hun Sen claimed that investors will not come to Cambodia if there are too many holidays. Hun Sen also indicated that when the opposition parties lead the government then they can do away with the 07 January celebration. Opposition leader Sam Rainsy said that Hun Sen refuses to mark the Paris Peace Accords anniversary because the CPP lost the 1993 national election which resulted from the Paris Peace Accords.

Witness List Passed to Tribunal Judges



By Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
12 January 2009

Prosecutors have sent a list of witnesses to the Trial Chamber of the Khmer Rouge tribunal, officials said Monday, a key step in moving closer to a trial for jailed prison Duch.

By having the list of witnesses, judges can now chose who will appear in an upcoming trial. This will also help set a definite time-table for the trial of Duch, 66. wjp os charged with war crimes, crimes against humanity, torture and homicide for his role as the head of Tuol Sleng prison, known to the Khmer Rouge as S-21.

The trial for Duch, whose real name is Kaing Kek Iev, is expected to begin in earnest in March. The Trial Chamber is expected to hold a two-day meeting later this week to fix a date for the trial. Duch’s trial will mark the first for the tribunal, which has been beleaguered since its inception, with organization, management, funding, and allegations of corruption.

A source close to the tribunal said a list of more than 30 witnesses was sent to the Trial Chamber earlier this month. Among those listed are survivors of Tuol Sleng, family members of prisoners killed in there, and previous staff of the prison, where at least 12,000 people were tortured and later executed.

“It is clear that the first trial will allow witnesses to come and tell their stories, their experiences, which will permit them to shed light on what happened,” said Robert Petit, an international prosecutor for the tribunal.

The process will help some people understand better the regime, but the topic of the hearing would be focused only on the prison, he said.

The list includes an array of witnesses who will paint several pictures of the prison.

“There are, on one hand, survivors, and there are people who have worked in Tuol Sleng,” said Silke Studzinsky, a lawyer for civil party participants in the tribunal. “So there are of course witnesses that are very important and who are able to talk about the conditions in court.”

Tribunal judges could not be reached for comment Monday.

Hong Kong Residents Lend Helping Hand


Hong Kong residents and Cambodian orphanages tour Angkor Wat.

By Taing Sarada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
12 January 2009

A group of citizens recently joined together to raise funds, clothes, stationary and toys in Hong Kong to be sent to an organization in Siem Reap before taking a holiday to see Angkor Wat.
Together the Hong Kong residents gathered nearly 150 kilograms of clothes, toys, pens, and books, along with $1,600, which they hoped to send to 34 orphanages through the Working for Children organization.

“So many donations,” said Lingli Minji, who found the organization through an Internet search ahead of a trip and helped gather the donations. “We had to use the post office to send them in boxes. It is 150 kilograms, which we could not bring with our carry-on suitcases.”

Once in Cambodia, the group rented a bus to drive children to visit Angkor Wat and other temples, something the orphans had not had a chance to do before.

Minji said she and the others felt pity for the orphans, who lack opportunities and enough food to eat, compared to children in Hong Kong. She also admonished the Cambodian government for failing to provide for the children and their education, “because they are the future for their country.”

“This should be organized systematically, because they are very peaceful kids and we are getting worried about their education in the future,” she said. “They are so talented, but we don’t know what is going to happen in their future.”

Minji and her group were not the first from Hong Kong to lend aid to Cambodia. In mid-2007 and early 2008, a group of students from Hong Kong University helped students in Battambang province by digging wells for villagers.

Lingli Zhan, a Hong Kong-French citizen who also raised funds for the Working for Children orphanages, said she planned to raise money and stationary supplies for Cambodian children every year.

“When we were there, we gave them envelopes with addresses in France so that we could keep in touch with those kids,” she said.

Siem Reap Governor Sou Phearin told VOA Khmer he strongly supported the spirit and goodwill of the Hong Kong donors.

Education for all Cambodian children, including orphans, was a priority for the provincial authority and the national government, he said.

Changes In Drug Treatment, Commercial Sex Work Could Contribute To Spread Of HIV In Cambodia



A report showing a change in the use of drug abuse treatment and rehabilitation services throughout Cambodia has raised concerns about drug-related HIV transmission in the country's rural communities,
the Phnom Penh Post reports. The report, released Monday by the National Authority for Combating Drugs, shows a decrease in the number of drug users accessing treatment and rehabilitation services at 10 state health centers, from 1,719 people in 2007 to 1,005 people in 2008. Additionally, Lour Ramin, NACD general secretary, said that there has been an increase in injection drug use in Cambodia despite a decrease in overall drug use in 2008. Officials "worry" about the impact that the trends will have on the country's HIV/AIDS prevalence, particularly in rural areas, he said, adding that in 2007, 35.1% of injection drug users in Phnom Penh were HIV-positive. Teruo Jinnai, the Cambodian representative for UNESCO, said the report highlights a need to engage high-risk populations, like IDUs, in HIV/AIDS education efforts. He said that IDUs have a "very high risk" of contracting the virus "because their level of understanding and consideration are still low" (Leakhana, Phnom Penh Post, 1/8).

In related news, Cambodian officials say brothel-based sex work has shifted to relationship-based sex work, which is contributing to the spread of HIV in the country, the Post reports. The Post reports that "sporadic but often violent crackdowns" on brothels have led many customers to begin meeting with regular partners at beer gardens and karaoke bars. Tia Phalla, deputy director of the National AIDS Authority of Cambodia, said government data show that condom use also has dropped in correlation with the closing of brothels. He said the findings "also show that 53.7% of entertainment workers have never suggested condom use with their sweetheart, ... although around 70% of them do not know their sweethearts' HIV/AIDS status." Teng Kunthy, secretary-general of the National Authority on HIV/AIDS, said that about half of the men who regularly visit the same commercial sex worker or "sweetheart" do not use condoms, "so it is much more dangerous" than visiting a brothel (Titthara/ Leakhana, Phnom Penh Post, 1/8).

Four Cambodian men charged in failed bomb plots

Monday, January 12, 2009


Mon, 12 Jan 2009
DPA

Phnom Penh-Cambodian police charged four men with attempted murder and terrorism Monday in failed bomb plots against the Ministry of Defence and state-owned television in the capital early this month. The four men were arrested last week for allegedly planning the foiled January 2 attack, in which two small TNT bombs were laid outside the ministry and the TV3 headquarters in central Phnom Penh.

All four men appeared in court and were also charged with crimes relating to the illegal recruitment of armed people.

Prosecutors argued the men were members of small rebel group, which they said had links to other militant organizations and planned the attacks to destabilize the government and attract international attention.

Police said last week that the apparent leader of the group, Som Ek, had also confessed to ordering a thwarted bomb attempt at the Cambodian-Vietnamese friendship monument on one of Phnom Penh's main boulevards in July 2007.

Police also alleged Som Ek, also known as Ti To, had told them his group received funding from international supporters.

Som Ek is a dual Thai-Cambodian citizen and was a military policeman during the early 1990s, police said.

Cambodian court charges suspected mastermind of bomb plots with terrorism

Monday, January 12, 2009


PHNOM PENH, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) -- The Phnom Penh Municipal Court here on Monday charged Sam Ek, the suspected mastermind of two foiled bomb plots in the city, with conducting terrorism acts and illegal recruitment of armed people.

The court will make further investigation and Ek will receive his sentence in around two weeks.

Cambodian police arrested the 48-year-old man and his three subordinates on Jan. 7 in Banteay Meanchey province.

Ek had confessed to police that he produced and laid explosive devices near the Ministry of National Defense and the state-run TV3 Station on Jan. 2, 2009, and also did the same thing near the Cambodian-Vietnamese Friendship Monument in 2007.

On both occasions, specialists detonated the bombs, without causing any damage and casualty.

In addition, Ek had created his anarchic and illegal army with tiger head as its logo and carried out some anti-government activities in Modulkiri and Koh Kong provinces in the past years, according to the police.

The suspect was a former soldier and also expert of using chemical substances to make explosive devices.

7NG ups compensation offer


Two of Dey Krahorm's remaining 120 residents sit in their slum house last week. (Photo by: Tracey Shelton)

Monday, 12 January 2009
Written by Chhay Channyda
The Phnom Penh Post

Eager to relocate the remaining 120 families at Dey Krahorm, developer 7NG has offered more compensation but not as much as residents want

DEY Krahorm developer 7NG raised its offer of compensation for those agreeing to leave their houses, but declared they would not match the amount requested by the slum's defiant residents.
"This morning, they offered us an additional US$5,000 [taking the total cash compensation to $15,000] and another water tank," resident representative Chan Vichet said, adding that people have asked for between $30,000 and $60,000.

"The $15,000 is not a definite price for us to leave Dey Krahorm. We can still negotiate," he said. "But we do not expect to get what we are asking for."

After the last eviction deadline passed on December 30, residents met on multiple occasions with representatives of developer 7NG and resident officials to renegotiate compensation, seeking an increase from the previous offer of $10,000 plus a sum of 770,000 riels ($188.22).

Srey Sothea, 7NG company chairman, told the Post Thursday that $15,000 is just a base offer but the company could give more.

"We cannot make an equal offer to each family. We can give them more than $15,000, but not up to $30,000," he said, calling the current offer "generous" considering most residents' standard of living.

Srey Sothea said that peaceful negotiation could not go on indefinitely because he knew that some people at the site would not leave regardless.

"Negotiation is limited because we have negotiated for four years. No later than this month or next month, the authorities will take legal action. We respect the law," he said.

Residents have complained about various acts of violence by 7NG employees during the last couple of months, claiming that residents have been beaten and property destroyed. Company officials have denied such claims.

By the end of December, Chan Vichet estimated that about 120 families out of the original 1,465 were still living at Dey Krahorm, many in fear of arrest for defying eviction orders.

Bunn Rachana, monitor at the Housing Rights Task Force, called on authorities and the company to continue peaceful negotiations with the residents.

"Fair and just compensation is [only achieved] when both sides can happily enjoy the benefit of development," Bunn Rachana added.

Bomb plot mastermind faces court today: police


Police display a photograph of the alleged mastermind of the bomb plot that targeted the Ministry of Defence. (Photo by: KEM SOVANNARA)

Monday, 12 January 2009
Written by Sam Rith
The Phnom Penh Post

Authorities say the man who allegedly planned a bombing attempt this month was also behind a 2007 bomb attack on the Vietnamese Friendship Monument
FOUR suspects being held in connection with bombs discovered January 2 that appeared to target the Defence Ministry and state television station TV3 will appear before the Phnom Penh Municipal Court today, two days after police announced that the alleged mastermind had confessed to his involvement in the foiled attack.

Speaking at a press conference Saturday, Sok Phal, deputy director general of the National Police, said suspect Som Ek had confessed to masterminding the January 2 plot as well as a foiled attempt to bomb the Cambodian-Vietnamese Friendship Monument on July 29, 2007.

Som Ek, 44, who has dual Thai-Cambodian citizenship, was born in Kampong Cham's Koh Sotin district and was formerly involved in the Khmer People's National Liberation Front, Sok Phal said. He worked for the Defence Ministry in 1993 and later went to study in the United States for 18 months, where he learned to make explosives. He was jailed for three months in 2003 for forging Defence Ministry documents, he added.

Som Ek was arrested in connection with the January 2 plot on Wednesday in Banteay Meanchey's O'Chrov district.

Sok Phal said Som Ek ordered the bombings in an attempt to get foreign support and funding for the Khmer National Unity Front (KNUF), also known as the Tiger Liberation Movement, which uses the tiger head as its symbol. Som Ek allegedly took pictures of members of the group planning and carrying out the attacks to send to potential donors based outside the country.

Sok Phal compared the KNUF to the Cambodian Freedom Fighters organisation in that both groups receive support from outside donors, but he declined to elaborate on that comparison. He said police were looking to arrest people both inside and outside Cambodia who are allegedly involved with the KNUF.

Police arrested five people in 2007 in connection with the foiled attack on the Cambodian-Vietnamese Friendship Monument, Sok Phal said, noting that those suspects have been detained in Prey Sar prison. He said police discovered bomb-making materials and a remote-controlled helicopter that could transport a bomb. He said Som Ek claimed in his confession to ordering five people to place bombs in front of the monument.

Monday, January 12, 2009 KRT judges threaten lawsuit [to silence their critics]


Sean Visoth, head of administration at Cambodia's Extraordinary Chambers, is the subject of a new complaint by defence lawyers acting for Nuon Chea. He is show here in a file photo. (Photo: AFP)

Monday, 12 January 2009
Written by Cat Barton
The Phnom Penh Post

"....the Cambodian judiciary has used the threat of defamation in the past."

Claiming a recent complaint by foreign lawyers acting for Nuon Chea unfairly smears them, Cambodian ECCC judges say they reserve the right to sue

FOREIGN lawyers for Nuon Chea accused Cambodian judges at the Khmer Rouge tribunal Sunday of using intimidation tactics, including the threat to sue, to try to block a criminal investigation into corruption allegations at the UN-backed court.

Angered over a complaint filed last week in the Municipal Court by Nuon Chea's defence team urging a probe into two of Cambodia's top tribunal administrators, the judges said that they were being unfairly smeared by the lawyers and would "reserve the right to legal recourse against any individuals who have provoked such a problem".

The lawyers' decision to go public with their complaint "caused confusion and seriously affected the honour and dignity of all individual judges and [the ECCC] as a whole", the judges said in a statement Friday.

But lawyers for the regime's former Brother No 2 have dismissed the judges' objections, saying they would be happy to defend themselves against any defamation claims.

"It is no secret that the Cambodian judiciary has used the threat of defamation in the past to silence its critics," said Andrew Ianuzzi, a co-lawyer for Nuon Chea, adding that "any ECCC official with clean hands would welcome, rather than regret, the effort to uncover the corruption".

"We'll be happy to defend ourselves against any political charges they [the judges] may concoct," he told the Post.

Municipal Court Chief Judge Chev Keng on Friday accepted the lawyers' complaint, opening the way for an investigation into Sean Visoth, Cambodia's top tribunal administrator, and former chief of personnel Keo Thyvuth over accusations that Cambodian court employees have been forced to kick back portions of their salaries to their bosses.

The graft complaints have already gone before the UN, but the results of a review by the world body into the allegations have never been made public.

The move into Municipal Court could provide one of the most serious legal challenges to date for the tribunal, whose credibility has been battered by repeated allegations of misconduct stemming from mismanagement of the graft claims at the heart of this most recent complaint.

"We're just trying to get to the bottom of this," Ianuzzi said.

"If the ECCC wants to do this, fantastic, but it seems to us that the ECCC has little, if any, interest in getting to the bottom of it - so we'll see how far the national courts are prepared to go."

But his Cambodian counterpart, Son Arun, has so far declined to sign off on the complaint, saying there was no need to take the team's complaint outside of the tribunal's jurisdiction.

"This is strictly only the foreign legal team," Son Arun told the Post Sunday.

"Before, I signed the letter requesting [corruption information] from [Sean] Visoth, but I wanted to keep the complaint within the ECCC, which is why I am not involved now."

Protests planned by Khmer Krom


Unfair trial of Monk Tim Sakhorn in Vietnam

Monday, 12 January 2009
Written by Neth Pheaktra
The Phnom Penh Post

KHMER Krom ethnic minority members are planning demonstrations in Cambodia and Vietnam to protest against the detention of former monk Tim Sakhorn by Vietnamese authorities, activists said Sunday.
Khmer Kampuchea Krom Human Rights Association's chief executive, Ang Chanrith, said the demonstration would be held in the near future but declined to give a date.

Yoeung Sin of the Khmer Krom Monks Association said he will join the protest, claiming the detention was a violation of human rights. Both activists said they weren't afraid to demonstrate, but will seek permission from the Interior Ministry for the rally.

Cambodia-Vietnam: [Highly] Imbalanced trade


Monday, January 12, 2009
Cambodia-Vietnam: [Highly] Imbalanced trade

12 Jan 2009
Cambodge Soir Hebdo
Translated from French by Tola Ek


On Saturday 10 December, Vietnam trade office in Cambodia published information about 2008 commercial trade between the two countries. The number indicates a net trade imbalance.
$1.7 billion was the total amount of trade between the two countries in 2008, the Vietnam trade office communiqué indicated. This represents an increase of $400 million as compared to 2007. The amount of export from Vietnam to Cambodia is $1.45 billion, i.e. 85.3% of the total trade.

Since 2004, export from Vietnam to Cambodia has increased by 40% annually. Cambodia essentially imports agricultural products, sea products, iron and steel. Cambodia sells to Vietnam: wood, rubber, rice and rice paddy, as well as some agricultural products (cassava, cashew …).

Vietnam ranks no. 10 among investors in Cambodia. At the end 2008, 19 commercial projects amounting to $228 million were signed between the two countries.

Ranariddh: Thank you brother Hun Sen, I listened carefully to your speech saying that I am a nobody

Monday, January 12, 2009


The brotherly twins?

Ranariddh replies to Hun Sen

11 Jan 2009

By Leang Delux Cambodge Soir Hebdo Translated from French by Tola Ek Click here to read the article in French

Hun Sen indicated that some people are looking to recruit advisors to assist Prince Ranariddh for his duty at the royal palace.
Prince Ranariddh will not benefit from his position at the royal palace by recruiting a parallel cabinet, the prince assured in a letter sent to Hun Sen on Friday 09 Jan.

“I thank Samdach Hun Sen, who always act as a brother to me,” Norodom Ranariddh wrote on his return from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. “I listened carefully to the speech that you gave on 06 January, in which you discussed about me.”

On 06 Jan, Hun Sen reminded that the “Prime Minister” title granted to Norodom Ranariddh was purely symbolic, and that it does not authorize him to recruit a cabinet, nor can he have a spokesperson within the royal palace. The prince was nominated as “Supreme Advisor to the king” by his own half-brother, Norodom Sihamoni.

“I only have a few assistants around me, and they are not involved in politics,” the prince assured. “Earlier, the “Moneaksekar Khmer” (Khmer Conscience) newspaper wrongly announced that I recruited 200 people to work around me at the palace. The newspaper had recognized that it was wrong and it apologized to me.”

Norodom Ranariddh asked Hun Sen to provide him with the name of the people seeking to recruit advisors in his name. He reserved the right to sue these people in order to “protect his honor” and “to avoid possible treacheries.”

China appropriates foreign and domestic land to build its rubber empire

Monday, January 12, 2009


01/12/2009
Denis D. Gray
AG Week (North Dakota, USA)

CHALEUNSOUK, Laos — The rice fields that blanketed this remote mountain village for generations are gone. In their place rise neat rows of young rubber trees — their sap destined for China.

All 60 families in this dirt-poor, mud-caked village of gaunt men and hunched women now are growing rubber, like thousands of others across the rugged mountains of northern Laos. They hope in coming years to reap huge profits from the tremendous demand for rubber just across the frontier in China.

As Beijing scrambles to feed its galloping economy, it already has scoured the world for mining and logging concessions. Now it is turning to crops to feed its people and industries. Chinese enterprises are snapping up vast tracts of land abroad and forging contract farming deals.

Miracle or anarchy?

This quest raises both hope and criticism.

Laos’ Communist regime touts rubber as a miracle crop that will help lift the country from the ranks of the world’s poorest nations. China is expected to consume a third of the world’s rubber by 2020, become its largest car market and put 200 million vehicles on the road.

But some Laotian farmers are losing their ancestral lands or being forced to become wage workers on what were once their fields. Chinese companies are accused of getting rubber concessions from officials and not compensating farmers. They also are accused of violating laws, human rights and the environment, under conditions described by experts as “anarchic.”

“The Chinese companies in the north are a bunch of thugs,” says Charles Alton, a consultant in agronomy for international agencies in Laos. However, Alton says, the “unpoliced, unregulated situation” in northern Laos is ripe for exploitation.

The Chinese deny or don’t comment on such allegations.

“I haven’t heard of the bad behavior of Chinese companies abroad, but Chinese companies which intend to expand abroad must know it is important to have a good relationship with the local people,” says Ju Hongzhen, president of the China Rubber Industry Association.

Worldwide agriculture

China’s State Forestry Administration last year issued guidelines for Chinese firms running overseas planta-

tions. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization also is scrambling to put out guidelines for a fast-moving global scenario.

From Southeast Asia to Africa, the Chinese are farming oil palm, eucalyptus, teak, corn, cassava, sugar cane, rubber and other crops. As in Laos, the industrial-size farms are variously viewed as an ecological nightmare or a big step toward slashing poverty.

In Congo, a Chinese telecommunications giant, ZTE International, has bought more than 7 million acres of forest to plant oil palms. In Zimbabwe, state-owned China International Water and Electric Corp. reportedly received rights from the government to farm 250,000 acres of corn in the south.

Indonesia is moving to develop biofuel plantations with The China National Overseas Oil Corp. The London-based Environmental Investigation Agency, an advocacy group, believes other deals are in the works, often through proxy companies because of long-running anti-Chinese sentiment in the country. The group says the project would destroy natural forest.

In Myanmar, rubber concessions have gone to at least two Chinese companies, Ho Nan Ching and Yunnan Hongyu. Refugees fleeing Myanmar’s military regime say troops are forcibly evicting farmers to make way for rubber plantations, including some run by Chinese enterprises.

A Chinese-Cambodian joint venture, Pheapimex-Wuzhishan, converted land of the Phnong tribal people into a tree plantation 20 times larger than allowed by law in Cambodia, according to the environmental group Global Witness. The group says the concession in Mondulkiri province encroached on grazing grounds, destroyed sacred sites and used toxic herbicides.

Another Chinese enterprise in Kratie province circumvented the size restriction by registering as three separate companies, Global Witness says.

In Beijing, the Commerce Ministry declined to answer written questions about China’s global reach in agriculture or operations of Chinese enterprises abroad except in Laos, where it says companies have a “very strong awareness for environmental protection.” Local residents welcome the new developments because incomes have increased by as much as five times, a ministry statement says.

Wowed by a waterworld

Monday, January 12, 2009


Village people ... houses on the Tonle Sap. (Photo: AFP)

Should you need a Cambodian guide for your visit to this area, please contact:
Yun Wanna at sowanna012@yahoo.com
Additional information click here

January 11, 2009
The Age (Australia)

Sarah Price leaves the beaten track to peek at life in the floating villages of the Tonle Sap.

It was an odd sight - pairs followed by a camera and soundperson, racing from boats docked on the river we had just arrived at to big trucks driven by helmet-clad men and then racing back along the road we had just come along. It seems that, along with more than 2 million tourists each year, US commercial television has discovered this travelling hotspot.

It was on our way to see a floating village on the huge Tonle Sap lake that we came across the groups of people speeding away to their next destination; they looked suspiciously like competitors on the latest series of The Amazing Race.

As if that was not enough, things got a little more odd when we were snapped by a local wielding a digital camera as we were making our way down the riverbanks to our boat.

I briefly wondered if it was for safety reasons in case the boat sank but I didn't really want to think too much about that and put it promptly out of my mind before climbing into our vessel and setting off down the river.

About 16 kilometres out of Siem Reap, in the northern half of Cambodia, Tonle Sap is the largest freshwater lake in South-East Asia, filling with water from the Mekong River each year.

Designated as a UNESCO biosphere reserve in 1997 - which lists the area as vital for the Cambodian economy because of the many varieties of fish found there - the flow of the lake changes direction twice a year with the change of the dry to the wet season.

It is also home to entire communities of people who live in several floating villages, some of which are open for tourists to take a ride around.

It is a fascinating look into a waterworld existence where the main form of transportation is by boat or bucket.

The village we visited - Chong Kneas - features everything from floating houses to small shops to pig pens, a hospital, a school, a church and a basketball court encased by floor-to-ceiling wire to stop the ball - or players, for that matter - from falling into the lake.

About 300 people inhabit the village, with fishing their main income.

There is the obligatory tourist trap - a floating open-air structure where souvenirs and local crafts are sold, along with food - and there is, bizarrely, a pen full of crocodiles with a slightly rickety walkway above for tourists to take a look. It is a fascinating contrast to the other big tourist drawcard at Siem Reap, the temples at Angkor - a World Heritage site made up of 260 temples.

While the temples are a must-see, the lake is also highly recommended. It is not yet the tourist mecca that Angkor has become and is therefore worth a visit before it starts to attract the masses.

Back to the riverbank and up we clambered to be met by some enterprising locals wanting to sell us a plate as a souvenir of our visit. All very nice but no thank you, until we took a closer look and found that the plate featured a photo of, you guessed it, yours truly.

Suddenly it dawned on us.

The person snapping our portraits before our trip was not doing it for safety's sake.

For the bargain price of $US5 ($7), you can get your piece of Cambodian tourism history: a souvenir plate complete with your photo in the middle of it.

With the help of car batteries, the crew had a pretty decent set-up. A lap-top, a couple of printers and piles of blank plates just waiting for not-so-flattering portraits of tourists caught off-guard. And it was all housed in a wooden structure with a tin roof on the water's edge.

Sadly for them, the racing couples appeared to go by too quickly to get their own collector's item. A lost opportunity to own one of the best tacky souvenirs around.

The writer was a guest of Vietnam Airlines.

TRIP NOTES

Getting there
Vietnam Airlines flies daily from Australia to Vietnam, departing from Sydney four times a week and Melbourne three times a week. Vietnam Airlines flies from Ho Chi Minh City to Siem Reap six times a day. See vietnamairlines.com

Staying there
The Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa is a tranquil five-star resort built in the colonial architecture of the 1930s in Siem Reap. Rates start from $US115 ($160) a night. See victoriahotels.asia

Further information
See tourismcambodia.com

Bombs discovered in Phnom Penh: the police present the alleged “brains” behind the operation

Monday, January 12, 2009


Phnom Penh (Cambodia), 10/01/2009. Press conference held at the National Police headquarters concerning the January 2nd bombs. The police revealed the face of Som Ek, presumably responsible for the operations (Photo: Vandy Rattana)

10-01-2009
By Duong Sokha
Ka-set in English
Click here to read the article in French
Click here to read the article in Khmer

No suspects to present to the public but instead, so-called evidence of the guilt of at least one person out of four arrested after three expl osive devices were discovered on Friday January 2nd near the Ministry of Defence and the premises of television channel TV3 in Phnom Penh. At a press conference held on Saturday January 10th, Cambodia's national police deputy general commissioner Sok Phal revealed the name of the man said to be the brains behind the operations, a 48 year-old former soldier, arrested in Poipet on January 7th.

Leading a group of “bandits in the woods”
All four suspects will not be questioned before Monday January 12th but one of them, thought to be the group leader, confessed to having formed illegal forces with a view to destabilise the government. The national police deputy general commissioner reported that this might not be his first deed. He is also said to have plotted the explosion of a small bomb on July 29th 2007 near the Khmer-Viernamese Friendship monument in Phnom Penh. Five suspects were arrested days following the explosion and sent to jail. The man, from Kampong Cham, was also condemned to a three-year prison sentence in 2003 after being charged with using false documents when he was employed by the Ministry of Defence.

The plot instigator was reported to be called Som Ek but used a variety of names to disguise his identity – no less than 11 other names according to the police – and is allegedly the leader of a small group of “bandits in the woods” committing all sorts of crimes, from kidnappings to organised armed robberies on the national roads of Cambodia, and hiding in the forests of the Mondolkiri and Koh Kong provinces. Photos of Som Ek posing in the forests among his henchmen, all clad in military uniforms, were presented to the press.

The January 2nd operation
“By planting these devices, their aim was to bring attention to the group in order to become known abroad. By giving their movement publicity in the media, Som Ek's idea was to get funds from foreign countries to finance their operations. The pictures they took of themselves in the forests were equally to be used with the same logic and meant to widely circulate”, Sok Phal explains, adding that Som Ek started fomenting his plan back in October 2008 with three other accomplices in Thailand. He is said to hold Thai citizenship, also his wife's nationality.

According to the police, Som Ek chose three henchmen to plant on the roadside explosive devices not equipped with a detonator. The deputy commissioner, however, observed that the three suspects arrested as part of the investigation might not be directly involved, and therefore refused to reveal their identities. “We still have doubts as to their actual guilt...”

A movement aimed at following in the footsteps of the CFF?
Som Ek and his followers are said to have founded the “National Khmer Liberation Front”, the logo of which is a tiger, according to the police official. The former soldier, a member of a fighting group in the 1980s, finally entered the Ministry of Defence in 1993 not long after the signing of the Paris Peace Accords.

According to biographical elements revealed by Sok Phal, Som Ek spent a year in the United States and made several trips to Malaysia, Thailand and Myanmar, always keeping in mind the same preoccupation: “learning how to make explosive devices”. And according to research led by the police, the man might have been a former active member of the supposed movement of sedition entitled the “Cambodian Freedom Fighters” (CFF) dismantled in January 2005 when its leader was arrested in the United States. “Som Ek's confession indicates that their movement might have some connections abroad... Like the CFF, in a way!”, the deputy commissioner pointed out.

Among other things, the police presented as evidence a scale model, that of a radio-controlled helicopter.

The police official stressed that the authorities did not consider this group as a dangerously threatening. He argued that its members would not be able to overthrow the government and estimated that they only acted in their own interest since their activities did not go beyond the line of highway crime. Still according to him, the group is not known to have ties with any political party. The deputy commissioner promised that the police would do their best to dismantle the network, said to spread as far as to the provinces of Kratie and Battambang.

Asian, US police meet on tackling wildlife crime


Monday, January 12, 2009
AFP

Police investigators from Southeast Asia, China and the United States met in Bangkok Wednesday to share strategies for tackling the illegal international trade in tigers, leopards and pangolins. Big cats prized for their skin and body parts and pangolins, or scaly anteaters, which are used in cooking, are under particular threat from organised trafficking gangs in Asia. Investigators from Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia and Vietnam joined representatives from China and the United States for a three-day workshop on curbing the crime. “Concerted and coordinated joint actions are required to address the illegal exploitation and trade,” said Chumphon Suckasaem, a senior officer with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Wildlife Enforcement Network. Chumphon said the trade had already taken its toll, “threatening to irrevocably damage Southeast Asia’s ecosystems.”