Monday, January 19, 2009

Southeast Asia's Wounded Tigers [-Remittances from Cambodian migrant workers have become an important revenue source and driver of domestic demand]


January 20, 2009
By Abe De Ramos
Far Eastern Economic Review (Hong Kong)


As the extent of the U.S.-led financial crisis unfolds globally, developing Southeast Asian countries are finding themselves in the position of suffering the collateral damage. While not directly hit by the liquidity crunch like their larger and wealthier neighbors, they’re also not immune to the slowdown, being part of the chain that supplies goods to consumers in the West who are now crimping on their spending. Indeed, the crisis highlights how developing economies in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) are being reduced to a fringe role in the global economic landscape, and how they’re facing the hard truth that they won’t be able to regain the “tiger economy” status they once held without building a stronger domestic base.
On the surface, it seems as though the region will ride out the crisis relatively well. After all, the first economies to go into recession are those whose financial and industrial sectors are directly linked to the fortunes of the West. The liquidity crunch in Wall Street has weakened the financial hubs of Hong Kong and Singapore, while falling consumer confidence is hurting many Japanese companies reliant on exports to the United States and Europe. Projected declines in GDP growth rates for developing Asean nations this year also seem to be less severe than in China, the factory of the world, as well as Taiwan, Korea and India, which generate substantial revenues from exports of goods, services and technological expertise.

But the region is far from well and good. Being in the middle of the supply chain East Asia has created in the last 20 years—in which a computer is designed in Japan or Taiwan, its components made in Malaysia, Thailand or Indonesia, then assembled in China—developing Asean nations are seeing a mild slowdown now only because of the lag effect. The question is how quickly and how well it can recover when the full impact of the global slump finally hits home.

In the near term, countries like the Philippines and Vietnam have little leeway to boost domestic economic activity in order to offset falling external demand. With the crisis proving deeper than expected, Asian governments may need to provide stimulus packages and pursue easier monetary policies. However, most are already overstretched, with negative fiscal balances unsupported by a narrow tax base, and made worse by fiscal leakage through corruption. Those with the borrowing capacity such as Thailand and Malaysia can raise funds, but for much higher costs given the lack of liquidity and greater perception of risk.

What differentiates developing Asean nations from the rest of the region is a weak domestic economy. Private consumption expenditure as a component of GDP has barely budged since at least 1990. This would not necessarily be a negative factor if it were overshadowed by growth in state expenditure and capital formation through investments, as has happened in China and India. However, these indicators have also lagged across Southeast Asia, with the exception of Vietnam, a newcomer to liberalization.

It’s true that in the larger economies of Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines, exports have grown and made significant contributions to their GDP growth over the period. It’s also true that in the Philippines, Cambodia, Indonesia and Vietnam, remittances from migrant workers have become an important revenue source and driver of domestic demand. But these trends only emphasize the troubling reality that developing Asean nations are struggling to create their own wealth within their respective boundaries.

In the long term, no country in the region is yet competitive enough to generate robust, sustainable growth without the spoils from their industrial neighbors and the West. This is a factor of their failure to innovate and create globally competitive domestic industries. While China has foreign investments and exports to thank for its growth, it used its newfound wealth to invest in knowledge and manufacturing technology, creating not just a virtuous cycle of job creation and more investments, but also national champions—companies that are taking on global giants. In India, it’s not the state but an enterprising private sector—encouraged by favorable demographics and an economy that’s opening up—that’s giving birth to the same virtuous cycle and homegrown multinationals. How many innovators and global companies from Southeast Asia can you name?

The problem is it may already be too late for developing Asean countries to attract the kind of foreign investments that will help them benefit from technology transfer. Multinationals that have the technology are putting it to use in China, investing only in the region to diversify geographic risk. Private investments, meanwhile, are constrained by capital limitations and a general lack of entrepreneurial spirit: companies are not borrowing, and banks are not lending. As a percentage of GDP, domestic credit from the banking sector in developing Asean nations, apart from Vietnam and Cambodia, is lower than 1995 levels. Domestic capital markets, an alternative funding source, are shallow: stock markets are small, bond markets even more so.

This situation isn’t likely to change soon. The Asian crisis of 1997 has forced both banks and investors to be conservative in lending and borrowing, and governments’ inclination to build up their foreign reserves has no doubt misallocated capital away from job-creating and industry-building initiatives. In other words, as developing Asean nations rebuilt themselves from their own crisis, they lost sight of the long term, in the process losing competitiveness to aggressive neighbors. This current crisis, as it washes on their shores, should challenge the region to reassess its vision for the future, perhaps towards a domestic economy able to dictate its own fate.

Abe de Ramos, an Associate Fellow of the Asia Society, is a Hong Kong-based financial editor and a former policy analyst at the CFA Institute’s Center for Financial Market Integrity.

We should help the Former Soldier


I would wish to help them who disable that they are hopeless to live in the world and should give them edcuation of any skill that they could do.
I believe that they can do and love their country.

Preah Vihea Province:
Kohsantepheap stuffs gave money to one fomer soldier in the hospital.
the former soldier, his disable leg by mines in year 1986 at Preah vihear Provice and burned by fire was given an amount of money.
It is so good if we take care all of them who injured or diable from the war.
Translated by Mis: Sreymou from Kohsan tepheap.


Cambodian girl was cheated by her boyfriend


She is silly or smart ? why?
when we love we trust, yes any time we love some body we alway trust and will give any thing that our honey need. like one action happened in cambodia.
the most worst she told her parents a lie taht the robber had stoled her moto.

Yes, we can blame that because she is easy to trust and make her dangerous. my idea it is her experience the best think is she is still alive and correct her lesson , and create her idear and good experience. I wish her not to believe her boy friend any more....Translated from Khonsantepheap,..Translated by Miss. Vaen Srey mou
sorry for my english, itis my time to learn .please correct me by comment, thanks


who we should blame, should we blame the leader?


Hello Every one who visit my blog!
I am happy to create this site to show the cambodia and what really happen in cambodia and who we should blame and we observe what the goverment doing right now. the budget and hundred of milion dollars spent in cambodia. do they spend the much of ammount of money on what ? we really doubt, most of cambodia don't really know why this ammount of money spend for what, why cambodia like this, we see the street, we see the situation and see all the action happen. ok we will talk more I wanna cry before I write.

PM promises to protect boat people's basic rights


Rights groups demand disciplinary action

By: Anucha Charoenpo
Published: 19/01/2009 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: News

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has assured human rights activists his government has no policy to violate the rights of Rohingya boat people.


Illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and Burma eat a meal in this undated picture taken on a Similan island. AFP/ROYAL THAI NAVY

The prime minister yesterday met activists and gave assurances that Thai officials had not abused Muslim migrants from Burma and other countries.

After meeting Mr Abhisit at Government House, Somchai Hom-laor, chairman of the NGO Coalition for the Protection of Human Rights, said the prime minister assured him state agencies did not use force to coerce the migrants, but had treated them in a humane manner.

Mr Somchai quoted the prime minister as saying there was no policy to mistreat boat people and his government operated on humanitarian principles.

Mr Somchai said human rights defenders had called on Mr Abhisit and his government to crack down on human trafficking gangs believed to be behind the migration of the Rohingya Muslims from the Arakan region of Burma to Thailand.
At the same time, Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban ordered the defence minister to investigate accusations of maltreatment of Burma's Rohingya minority.

Human rights groups have accused the Thai navy of forcing the Rohingya back into the Andaman Sea on a boat with no engine and limited food and water.

Gothom Arya, director of the Mahidol University Research Centre for Peace Building, said both the prime minister and Fourth Army commander Lt-Gen Pichet Visaichorn had confirmed that an investigation must be carried out to find out whether human rights violations had been committed by units under their command.

Mr Gothom quoted Mr Abhisit as saying Thailand had signed the United Nations convention against torture.

He also urged the prime minister to speed up talks on the planned establishment of a regional human rights mechanism at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit set down for Hua Hin in Prachuap Khiri Khan late next month.

"As chairman of Asean, Thailand and Mr Abhisit must play a key role in convincing nine other Asean leaders to establish the human rights mechanism for Asean no matter what form it will be, as quickly as possible," Mr Gothom said.

He said the regional human rights mechanism must be independent of the politicians and state authorities of each country and it could be authorised to look into many kinds of human rights violations.

He said establishing such a mechanism would ensure that all Asean member states adhere to international human rights standards.

Angkhana Neelaphaijit, chairwoman of the Working Group for Peace and Justice, said the prime minister pledged to re-investigate the suspicious murders of about 20 human rights activists across the country over the past five years.

"We will closely monitor the government's work [on human rights protection]," Mrs Angkhana said.



Earlier report: By BangkokPost.com

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on Monday assured Thai human rights groups of the government’s intention to clear all cases concerning alleged human rights violations including maltreatment of Rohingya boat people.

Mr Abhisit gave the assurance during his meeting with members of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) including Somchai Homla-or, chairman of the Campaign for Human Rights, Angkhana Neelapaichit, a human rights advocate, and Gothom Arya, director of Mahidol University’s peace study centre who called on him at Government House this morning.

Mr Somchai said after the meeting that the NHRC urged the government to be patient and refrain from use of violence in solving problems because social conflict in the past always led to human rights violation, and the prime minister was open to all suggestions.

Concerning the situation in the South, Mr Abhisit is interested in an Amnesty International’s report on systematic torture and beating up of suspects. Moreover, the government wants to limit use of special laws, including the law for administration in emergency situation and martial law, in the three troubled southern border provinces, Mr Somchai said.

According to Mr Somchai, the prime minister vowed to use these laws only as necessary.

Mr Abhisit also promised to push for agencies concerned to look into all human rights violation cases on which little progress has been made during the past four to five years. They include the cases on drug-related killings and assassination of human rights lawyer Somchai Neelapaichit.

Concerning allegations that the navy had ill-treated Rohingya boat people, Mr Abhit said he has ordered all agencies concerned to investigate, said Mr Somchai. The NHRC urged the government to clarify this case to set a precedence regarding democratic development and human rights promotion to other countries in the region, he added.

Mr Gothom, meanwhile, said he urged the government to clear this matter. On an observation raised by the military that the illegal entry of the Rohingya boat people might be for some clandestine activities that might affect national security, Mr Gothom said no matter what the real motive might be Thai authorities are duty-bound to adhere to the human rights principle and guarantee safety for them.

Since photos of the Rohingyas having their hands and feet tied up are evidence of human rights violation, the government should investigate to see if Thai authorities had overacted, Mr Gothom said. from...http://www.bangkokpost.com

More Groups Ready for Inauguration


By Taing Sarada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
19 January 2009


Cambodian embassy officials in Washington say they won’t hold a special event for the inauguration of president-elect Barack Obama, but they have been invited to Tuesday’s event.
“The Cambodian Embassy, like the representatives all of the countries’ embassies based in the US, has been invited by the US State Department to join president Obama’s inauguration,” said Nay Meng Eang, deputy chief of mission at the Cambodian Embassy.

Cambodia is currently without an ambassador in Washington, following the exit of Ek Sereywath in late 2008. Hem Heng, the incoming ambassador, has yet to be recognized.

“We haven’t seen any confirmation yet,” Nay Meng Eang said.

Cambodian Embassy officials have also requested the establishment of a military attaché with the US, as well as a consulate office in Lowell, Mass., where many Cambodians live, but they have not received responses, he said.

Meanwhile, the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation, an advocacy group based in New Jersey, said it had sent a letter of congratulations to the incoming president.

Attached to the letter was an eight-page report on restrictions by the Vietnamese government against members of the Khmer Krom minority there, including the persecution of liberty, human rights and religion, said Thach Ngoc Thach, president of the group, who met with State Department officials last week.

“I think the new government will be able to continue the cooperation from [George W. Bush] administration’s work,” he said. “We strongly hope that the relationship between the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation and Obama’s administration will comprehensively continue.”

Villagers Say Military Police Halt Protest [-More land dispute protests to be held also in Siem Reap, Battambang, Kampot]


By VOA Khmer Stringers
Original reports from Phnom Penh
19 January 2009


Cambodian military police prevented a protest of villagers near the Kandal provincial home of Prime Minister Hun Sen early Monday, following a shooting incident Friday.
Nearly 40 representatives of villagers from Kandal Stung district, Kandal province, who are embroiled in a land dispute with the Heng Akphiwath Company, amassed near Hun Sen’s home, but military police dispersed them and ordered them to return home, human rights officials said.

“In the morning, a lot of villagers representing 292 families tried to hold a protest against Heng Akphiwath, but military policed armed [with weapons] and electric batons tried to block them and push them away,” said one protester, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The military police ordered villagers to stay in their homes or register with police if they planned to leave, the protester said.

Kandal Governor Chhun Sirun denied Monday that military police had blocked a protest.

“I went there this morning, but I did not see any protesters,” he said.

The attempted protest follows a shooting Friday in Kandal Stung, where villagers say military police are aiding Heng Akphiwath in a land grab.

Two men were injured by shots fired by the military police and remain in Meanchey hospital, in Takmao district, while another eight people were injured in ensuing violence.

One man was knocked unconscious, but was recovering at home Monday. Another man was arrested Friday, but was released on Sunday, after he gave $30 to military police, said Am Samath, an investigator for the rights group Licadho.

Officials from Heng Akphiwath Company declined to comment Monday.

Chhun Sirun said the military had fired in self defense, as villagers threatened them with knives and axes. The military police had not fired directly at villagers, but had fired at the ground, the wounded hurt by shrapnel, he said.

He said the incident was “small,” and military police had received reprimands from their commanders, he said.

Monday’s protest was only one among several this week: villagers in the provinces of Siem Reap, Battambang, Kampot also protesting land disputes.

Initial Hearing Set for Start of Duch Trial


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


An initial hearing for jailed Khmer Rouge prison chief Duch will be scheduled for Feb. 17, leading to the first-ever trial of the ongoing tribunal, officials announced Monday.
On that date, the tribunal will hold a hearing on witnesses and other participants of the trial, as well as evidence, but the full trial is not likely to begin until March, tribunal spokesman Reach Sambath said.

“The initial hearing is the beginning of the official trial, and it will respond to the awaiting families and victims of Democratic Kampuchea,” Reach Sambath said, referring to the Khmer Rouge by its political moniker.

The Trial Chamber of the courts will decide the schedule for the full trial of Duch, whose real name is Kaing Kek Iev, following the February hearing, Reach Sambath said.

“We think it’s a welcome development, and people in general in Cambodia have been waiting a long time for justice to be served,” US Embassy spokesman John Johnson said. “We hope that from this point on the process will move fairly quickly.”

For Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, the announcement did not yet signal the justice sought by victims of regime.

“This news does not demonstrate that justice has arrived,” Youk Chhang said. “It is a small step in the enormous investment of time and budget, but at least it has started and it demonstrates that the court works.”

China reports second bird flu death this year


Monday, January 19, 2009
By AUDRA ANG

BEIJING (AP) — China is stepping up bird flu precautions on fears that the virus could spread more quickly in cold weather and as families gather for Lunar New Year feasts that often include poultry. Four new cases of the illness — two fatal — have been reported this month.

A flu expert at China's National Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Shu Yuelong, said new infections were likely because the H5N1 virus is more active in lower temperatures.

"The situation urges us to further strengthen prevention and supervision," Shu was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency late Monday.

The Agriculture Ministry said it is requiring tighter monitoring of disease outbreaks at all levels and proper vaccination of all poultry. It would also increase checks across the country and at borders.

"With the Lunar New Year approaching, the volume of trade of live poultry is growing, and the risk of the emergence and spread of an epidemic is increasing," the ministry said in a statement posted late Sunday on its Web site.

An estimated 188 million people travel between cities and rural hometowns for Lunar New Year, the country's biggest holiday, which begins next week.

Dishes prepared from freshly slaughtered chicken and duck feature prominently in celebration feasts. This means a potentially greater risk of exposure to sick birds as people shop in markets for poultry or when the birds are transported to be sold, said the World Health Organization's Beijing office.

The most recent death from the H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus occurred in Jinan, the capital of Shandong province in China's east.

The 27-year-old woman surnamed Zhang died Saturday, the Health Ministry said, but did not give any details on how Zhang, who fell sick on Jan. 5, contracted the virus.

The fatality comes less than two weeks after a 19-year-old woman died from an H5N1 infection in a Beijing hospital after buying and cleaning ducks in a market in a neighboring province.

On Monday, the Health Ministry announced the latest H5N1 infection — a 16-year-old student surnamed Wu in the central province of Hunan. The teen fell ill Jan. 8 in his hometown in Guizhou province in the country's southwest and was in critical condition, the ministry said.

It said the boy had been in contact with domestic poultry that had died from illness but did not elaborate. Those in close contact with Wu have not shown signs of infection, the ministry said.

Meanwhile, a 2-year-old girl sickened by H5N1 was in critical condition in the northern province of Shanxi after falling ill on Jan. 7. Ta Kung Pao, a Hong Kong newspaper backed by the mainland's communist authorities, reported that the girl's mother died recently and that doctors "highly suspected" bird flu.

The paper did not give any other details and Shanxi health officials refused to comment on the mother's death. But Xinhua, citing a health official, said that none of the 67 people who had close contact with the girl have become ill.

The WHO said it was prepared to provide assistance to China if asked and urged people to take precautions against bird flu infections by washing their hands after handling raw meat and ensuring that all poultry is well cooked.

According to the WHO, bird flu has killed 248 people worldwide since 2003.

While the disease remains hard for humans to catch — with most cases linked to contact with infected birds — scientists have warned that if outbreaks among poultry are not controlled, the virus may mutate into a form more easily passed between people.

Human-to-human transmission of bird flu has happened about a dozen times in the past, in countries including China, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Turkey. In nearly every case, transmission has occurred among blood relatives who have been in close contact, and the virus has not spread into the wider community.

Mercurial hospital chief hangs expense to heal sick

Written by Peter Olszewski
Thursday, 15 January 2009

090115_07_2.jpg
Photo by: PETER OLSZEWSKI
Dr Beat Richner (left) and hospital director Professor Yay Chantana check a patient’s progress.
THE controversial, much-loved, yet much-maligned, cello-playing hospital boss, Dr Beat Richner - Swiss Man of the Year in 2002 - slides his glasses down his nose so he can get a better look at the figures on the piece of paper he's unfolding, the paper that gives him the final tally of the tab he's run up in 2008 to operate the Jayavarman VII Hospital for children in Siem Reap.

He mutters something about US$35.4 million but then, holding the sheet at arms-length, he mumbles: "We are not too expensive to run, but we are expensive. We spent in 2008, including the cost of the new wing we just opened, we spent, ah, yes, $35.5 million."

He quickly adds: "But the cost in relation to the healing rate is still the best because there are so many children. Our treatment figures keep increasing, and in November 2008, we had 25 percent more patients than we did in November 2007."

Richner's sidekick, Dr Denis Laurent, biologist and deputy director of the hospital, rattled off more figures about daily activities at the hospital: 1,000-1,500 outpatients treated daily; 800-1,000 vaccinations daily; 50 babies delivered on average daily, with 400 women presenting for maternity checks.

Dr Richner adds: "We have worldwide the lowest dilation cost-healing rate in pediatric institutions evaluated in 44 countries, twice, but international health experts still say we are too expensive."

For years, Richner has been at odds with a bewildering variety of UN groups, government authorities and NGOs, including Britain's Princess Anne, whom he savaged over her comments that perhaps he spends too much.

He's continually accused of providing "Rolls-Royce medicine" in a Toyota Camry country, and a common complaint is that he soaks up money and staff that could be better used elsewhere in Cambodia's medical system.

This is water off the doc's back because he claims his hospital has saved thousands of lives, and who is to put a price on that?

Plus, most of the money he spends is money he raises.

"It's a daily fight for every dollar. We get $2 million from the Cambodian government, $3 million from the Swiss government, and all the other monies are private donations. My concerts bring about $7 million a year. Finance is my nightmare and has been for the last 17 years."

On the day he spoke to the Post, he was also starting to shift the first of about 140 women and children from overcrowded wards where they had to sit on mats into the hospital's new wing, which was opened on December 30.

King Norordom Sihamoni and Minister of Health Mam Bunheng presided at the inauguration of this wing, which cost a cool $12 million for land and building, and increases the hospital's floor space by about a third.

It comprises 200 beds, a new imaging department, a laboratory and large pharmacy, and houses Richner's new pride and joy, a $3 million MRI scanner that he acquired in October.

Richner said that once again he is being criticised for installing such hi-tech equipment, just as he was hectored in 1996 when he installed Cambodia's first CT scanner.

The Post was given a demonstration of the radiation-free MRI - a boy's brain was scanned and the monitor showed an abscess lurking in the depths of his brain. The abscess was scanned and a graph showed it was tubercular.
Richter explained that the MRI doubles as a diagnostic tool and a research boon, and is worth every cent it costs.

But talking about costs brings Richner back to his recurring nightmare - getting the bucks. He said he has now moved a new potential donor to the top of his list - US President-elect Barack Obama.

"What I can't understand is why the governments who brought the war here and the governments that sustained the civil war, do not give us comfortable funding money?

"What I want from Barack Obama is to come to Cambodia so that I can show him this hospital and for him to understand why more and more people are saying this hospital is now a model worldwide."

Former Untac governor tours old haunts of Siem Reap's dark past

Written by Peter Olszewski
Thursday, 15 January 2009

090115_08.jpg
Photo by: Peter Olszewlsi
Benny Widyono at his former Siem Reap residence.
WELCOME to the governor's residence, says Professor Benny Widyono, pointing to a humble wooden house on the airport side of National Road 6, one of the few such houses that haven't been chewed up in the thirst for land in what is now mostly a row of high-priced hotels.

Widyono was the former Untac Siem Reap shadow governor in the early 1990s, and when he took up his station here in 1992, he eschewed gubernatorial grandeur, choosing not to live in a mansion like many of his peers, but instead opting for humble digs so that he could not be compromised.

The quaint little house is now an office for a security company, but his former landlady, Lom Ang Sim, still lives in an adjoining little house.

And when she saw him inspecting his former home, an emotional welcome mat was put out, and bemused security company officials allowed the entourage to inspect the building's dim interior.

Checking out the house was part of a guided tour of old haunts that Widyono conducted for the Post during his brief stay in Siem Reap for the Centre for Khmer Studies annual board meeting.

But there wasn't all that much for Widyono to show because hardly anything is left that was standing in Siem Reap when he was the main man.

The only other still-standing building he could find was Martini's girlie bar near the Old Market and, apart from a few garish nightclub refurbishments, he said the building is the same as when he was governor and visited frequently because two Khmer Rouge generals operated out of the premises.

There's an irony that the KR generals' former lair is now a girlie bar because Widyono points out two sites in town that were attacked by the Khmer Rouge on morality grounds alone, in anger over the practice of Untac soldiers to corrupt local women.

At one site near the Grand Hotel, the Khmer Rouge killed two nurses while they were sleeping in their tents because they slept with Untac staff.

Widyono shakes his head and winds up his brief tour saying that dealing with the Khmer Rouge back then was like dealing with "mental patients on early release".

African dancer teaches new moves

Written by Nora Lindstrom
Monday, 19 January 2009

Senegalese dancer and artist Germaine Acogny shakes up Phnom Penh.
090119_17a.jpg 090119_17b.jpg
Photo by: Photo Supplied
One of Germaine Acogny's African dance classes.

Germaine Acogny, described by some as the "mother of African dance", is this week taking a residency at Phnom Penh's Reyum Institute as part of the networking activities of the Amsterdam-based Prince Claus Fund.

The renowned Senegalese performer is in Phnom Penh to share her technique of modern African dance with local dancers in daily workshops and will also host a public lecture, a drumming workshop and finally a public performance featuring workshop participants.

Around 30 Cambodians, selected from various local art associations, are expected to take part in the program.

"We have tried to provide the opportunity to a variety of local institutions and involve people from different horizons," said Ly Daravuth, who organised the event at the Reyum Institute. "About half of the participants are classical dancers," he continued, adding that other dancers taking part have varied backgrounds in hip- hop, theatre and even the circus.

"It's a short visit, so it is difficult to develop anything [in depth], but maybe in the future we can do something more," Ly Daravuth said.

Starting a dialogue
It is only the beginning of a dialogue, Germaine Acogny agreed. "While teaching, I will encourage participants to use their own background, too, and well, we'll see what happens," she said.

"Sometimes, classical dancers seem almost handicapped; they are not used to moving their body so much. But after a while they usually come around, as they already possess the fundamental techniques [of dancing]," she added.

The residency is not only about teaching. It is also an opportunity for Germaine Acogny to explore something new.

"When I go somewhere, I try to learn the traditional dance and transform it into my own technique," she said. "I am curious about classical Khmer dance. Like in classical European dance, the bust does not move and it seems rigid, but I don't know at the moment, I have to try it first."

From Africa to the world
Germaine Acogny, who runs the Senegal-based International Centre of Traditional and Contemporary Dances, describes African dance as emanating a special energy through its rootedness in the ground and its connection with nature.

In fact, she believes all forms of dance share the same African heritage; only, they have been transformed over the centuries in different parts of the world.

if I was a president of a country, I woud make everyone dance.


Regardless of technique, however, she considers dancing in general to have a positive effect on society.

"I think dance is communication, education - it awakens something in people and relieves frustrations .... It's my dream that everyone would dance. Dancing has a sociological, psychological and educational effect on people and society. If I was a president of a country, I would make everyone dance. That's how the country would develop," she said.

A royal dance
While in Cambodia, Germaine Acogny also has a small request: She would like to meet King Norodom Sihamoni.

"I've read he is a former ballet dancer, and so I would like to dance for him, or perhaps we could dance together," she said.

Germaine Acogny's lecture on African dance will be held at 6pm on Wednesday at the Reyum Institute. The final performance involving all workshop participants will take place at 7pm on Friday at Gasolina.


Tuning music and the body

Written by Anne-Laure Poree
Friday, 16 January 2009

Combining jazz with traditional Khmer music and dance, French musician Louis Sclavis, Phare Ponleu Selpak and Belle improvise an unusual treat.

090116_17.jpg
Photo by: SOVANN PHILONG
Louis Sclavis, Belle and Phare Ponleu Selpak during rehearsal at the French Cultural Centre on Tuesday.
Dance and music are on the program when the French Cultural Centre opens its garden to an unusual trio this Saturday: Belle, a Khmer dancer who graduated from the Royal University of Fine Arts last year, 10 musicians from the traditional Khmer band Phare Ponleu Selpak and Louis Sclavis, a French jazz giant and a passionate fan of improvisation.

Sclavis, 55, is visiting Cambodia for the first time, and he has much more experience in improvisation than his young Cambodian partners.

At rehearsals prior to the big event, the trio learns to work and create together, and to discover that in the tradition of improvisation, things are not strictly fixed.

Getting in sync
When Sclavis starts playing, Belle starts dancing. He plunges into the music - he becomes the music - and Belle choreographs her emotions.

Her arms and hands twist like lotus petals swept up by the wind. Her body performs the slow and graceful movements of the Apsaras. Suddenly, she breaks the ancestral rules. She wiggles her shoulders, her chest vibrates discreetly, she moves fast, she introduces a contemporary repertoire.

Sclavis follows her with his eyes; sometimes he changes his rhythm in order to accompany her movements. Sometimes, he moves away from her. She feels it, then she stops dancing and marks her movements with a gesture, concentrating on what she wants to express.

She tries to find her way and to simultaneously respect the freedom of the musician.

The art of improv
The rehearsal tunes the dancer - the body - with the musician - the instrument.

"If you have your rhythm, which is not mine, it is not a problem. We do not have to be always the same. I use my own vocabulary, and so do you," Sclavis tells Belle at the end of the piece.

"Improvisation is the capacity to invent the music immediately and in the moment," Sclavis added after the rehearsal.

Improvisation is the capacity to invent the music immediately.


"I try to make Belle move out of her traditional universe. And I make the musicians hear another way to play. I perform, I let it go, I put some speed, I slow down. This is like writing. The aim is to get a good composition."
Belle understands the principles.

When she first met Sclavis, he made her listen to different styles of music. They agreed on a panel of styles, but Belle is unaware in what order the music will be played. She prepares herself and is ready for when the different styles of music come. And she seems to enjoy this challenge because she says she is eager to discover new ways of thinking, feeling and moving - to discover what she calls "the spirit inside the body".

Sclavis leads the Phare Ponleu Selpak band the same way and with the same success.

He gives the tempo and plays an entrancing and sensual melody that will be the first theme of the performance. He organizes the sounds of the xylophones, the drums, the flute, and gives marks to the musicians. He is the conductor and the score at the same time.

"There are two parts in this piece. In the first one, I play the melody. I improvise a little and when I make a sign to you, we start the second part of the piece," Sclavis advises the musicians before inviting them to improvise.

The result is that the music carries the public into another world, the world of its own imagination.
The cafe-concert improvisation will take place Saturday at the French Cultural Centre at 6:30pm. fromm...http://www.phnompenhpost.com


ACLEDA to up ATM service

Written by May Kunmakara
Monday, 19 January 2009

A plan to implement 42 new teller machines in rural areas will nearly double the number nationwide as the bank aims to boost service in the provinces.
090119_16.jpg
Photo by: Tracey Shelton
A new ACLEDA bank under construction in Krang Ampel commune. Rural expansion and improved services are a main priority, says CEO In Channy .

Amid growing concern over the local effects of the global credit crunch, ACLEDA Bank is pressing ahead with plans to open 42 new automated teller machines in rural areas, bank CEO In Channy told the Post Sunday.

The plan will nearly double the existing total of 60 ATMs nationwide and allow rural patrons faster access to cash, In Channy said.

"The additional ATMs will make our bank a leader in providing easier access to cash," In Channy said, adding that the number of new clients using ATM services is growing.

"We are issuing as many as 500 new ATM cards each day for new clients," he said.

In Channy said the bank expects to begin installing the new machines in May, at an estimated cost of US$700,000, though he could not provide any details about where they will be located.

Some prospective areas could be affected by a lack of reliable electricity supply, he added.

The expansion of automated services follows a growing trust among Cambodians in the country's banking sector, In Channy said.

More people are choosing to apply for an ATM card for use as an optional form of identification, In Channy said-a process, he added, that requires only an initial deposit of $10.

"ACLEDA has 180,000 ATM cardholders at present," he said. "And they are not charged anything for using our 24-hour automated services."

The bank's expansion of automated services is part of a national strategy to modernise the banking sector, including credit card and mobile banking services, said Tal Nay Im, director general of the National Bank of Cambodia.

WE ARE ISSUING AS MANY AS 500 NEW ATM CARDS EACH DAY FOR NEW CLIENTS.


"Clients are being offered a growing number of new products and services at Cambodia's commercial banks to bring the sector in line with what is happening internationally. Though we might be behind our regional neighbours, we have to aim for an international standard," Tal Nay Im said.

"Many Cambodians don't have experience with some of the new services that are regularly available abroad, but commercial banks can play an important role in promoting these new services to new customers," she added.

Economist Chap Sotharith, head of the Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, said the expansion of ATM services, specifically in rural areas, could help ACLEDA appeal to larger numbers of potential customers that have yet to feel confident about using banks on a regular basis.

"If the bank can increase its presence in the rural provinces, they will likely attract greater deposits and help spur on economic growth nationally," Chap Sotharith said.

He added Cambodia's banks have begun to feel the strain of the global credit crunch, though largely indirectly.

"Cambodia's banking sector has suffered a bit, but mainly because of the impact the crisis has had on developed countries," he said.

Cambodia currently has 231 teller machines nationwide, according to a report by NBC in the first quarter of last year.

Graveyard moves upscale

Written by NGUON SOVAN AND HOR HAB
Friday, 16 January 2009

A former Funcinpec legislator says he hopes to be the country's first high-end cemetary operator with room for about 30,000 corpses

090116_14.jpg
Photo by: TRACEY SHELTON
Children praying in one of the country’s decaying cemeteries. A new project aims to tap into the high-end market.
ALOCAL entrepreneur is planning to build Cambodia's first boutique graveyard in Kampong Speu province.

Lu Laysreng, 73, a former Funcipec lawmaker, says his project will be the country's first modern graveyard and burial business.
"Vimean Sour Graveyard is Cambodia's largest graveyard investment," said the former rural development minister.

"It will be like a park with a crematorium, a morgue, a ceremony hall, space for gardens and walking areas," he said.
"The graveyard will be capable of housing around 30,000 corpses."

He said he invested in the site because he is very old and wants to distance himself from politics.
He said that the lack of modern grounds in the country has created a market for high-end burial spaces.

"Phnom Penh is very crowded. There is no place left for a graveyard," Lu Laysreng told the Post on Thursday.
Lu Laysreng said the business will target the Cambodian middle class in Phnom Penh.

"Pagodas are places where Buddhists pray and celebrate religious ceremonies, but now pagodas are also crowded with stupas, so the pagoda campuses are narrower - there is no space for people to celebrate rituals, so my graveyard will help to ease that."

He said that the 60-hectare graveyard is located at the foot of Srang Mountain in Srang commune, Kong Pisey district of Kampong Speu province - 54 kilometres from Phnom Penh.

He said the infrastructure at the ground has been built, and the site is ready for its first corpses.

Prices range from $300 for a small space to $6,000 for a four-meter-by-four-meter plot.

He said part of the revenues from sales of burial plots will be contributed to social development, especially to improve health care for the poor.

Pennies from heaven
"If they have no money to pay instantly, they can pay in instalments," he said.
"I want to contribute to society. I am too old to be rich, the money will go mainly towards improving health care for the poor," said Lu Lay Sreng.

He said that the development of the graveyard will benefit the approximately 4,000 locals through jobs and micro-businesses such as selling flowers and amulets.

But Chum Vong, governor of Kong Pisey district, said he was not interested in the project and that Srang Mountain is believed to be a holy place.

"I think the place should be developed as an ecotourism attraction, rather than a graveyard.
"We are not really interested in this development and we don't expect local people will benefit from it," Chum Vong told the Post on Thursday.


Cambodia and Kuwait: the start of a great cooperation?


Phnom Penh (Cambodia). 16/01/2009. Hun Sen returning from Kuwait, his first visit in the Middle East. (Photo: Vandy Rattana)

16-01-2009
By Ros Dina
Ka-set in English
Click here to read the article in French
Click here to read the article in Khmer


On Friday January 16th , Cambodian prime Minister Hun Sen and his delegation returned to Phnom Penh in the same way as they left, with a direct flight especially chartered by Kuwait. The prime Minister's first ever and “very friendly” visit in Kuwait lasted four days in all, during which the head of government and some of his Ministers signed several agreements with the Arab emirate, their new partner. Hun Sen expressed his wish for the opening “soon” of an embassy of Kuwait in Cambodia. The new cooperation seems to be going all smoothly.
Upon their arrival at Pochentong airport, Cambodian Minister of Foreign Affairs Hor Namhong indicated to the press that the two countries had reached an agreement on direct flights between Cambodia and Kuwait and intended to promote tourism between both countries. They also signed two Memoranda of Understanding, one concerning the sending of Cambodian labour to Kuwait and the other about the setting-up of irrigation infrastructures in the province of Kampong Thom, a project worth $USD350 million which would apply to 130,000ha of ricefields. Among other things, Kuwait promised to finance the renovation of two road sections in the Northeast of Cambodia, namely the Thmor Kol-Sampov Loun section and the Kôn Domrei-Pailin section. These projects, according to Hor Namhong, will not be launched without the final assent of Kuwait's direction committee.

In August 2008, a delegation from Kuwait visited Cambodia and since then, Hun Sen has invited the country to send more delegations. He also sought the help of the Kuwaiti Fund for Development, this time for support to small irrigation networks in the country “to help farmers and reduce poverty”. The prime Minister suggested that the money might either be transferred to private micro-finance structures or to the Rural Development Bank, which belongs to the state.

The Minister of Foreign Affairs reported that Hun Sen encouraged Kuwaiti investors to take an interest in Cambodia, a land admittedly agricultural, but full of resources, he claimed. He offered them, as they have started doing, to buy rice to feed their country, but also to establish stocks with a view to sell them in turn to other countries in the Near East, forced to import, like Kuwait, the majority of their agricultural and farming products. A Working group should soon be set up to tackle investment questions raised by both countries.

As for tourism, Cambodia expects a lot from Kuwait. The Cambodian Minister of Tourism Thong Khon, who was also accompanying the prime Minister, is in charge of creating a programme of cultural events including exhibitions and fairs promoting key-products in Cambodia, which would then be organised in Kuwait. Together with the Kuwaiti Minister of Commerce, Industry and Parliamentary relations, he signed a 5-year convention which will require, as a condition, the launching of projects within the first six months of its implementation.

The Minister of Tourism insisted on the interest there was in attracting to Cambodia tourists from a small country but where the GDP per capita amounts to USD50,000... (GDP per capita in Cambodia: USD1,800). “In 2008, we only welcomed some 700 Kuwaiti tourists in Cambodia. But if we could welcome 50,000, that would be good!”

First Khmer Rouge trial date set


Monday, 19 January 2009
BBC News

A UN-backed tribunal in Cambodia has set 17 February as the start date for the long-awaited first trial of former Khmer Rouge leaders.

Kaing Guek Eav - better known as Comrade Duch - will be the first in the dock, facing charges of crimes against humanity and war crimes.
He ran Tuol Sleng prison, where detainees were tortured and executed.

As many as two million people are thought to have died during the Khmer Rouge government in the late 1970s.

The process of bringing the regime's leaders to court has suffered years of procedural delays, and no major figures have yet stood trial.

Brutal Khmer Rouge regime

Duch was in charge of the notorious facility known as S-21 or Tuol Sleng, where about 15,000 prisoners were systematically tortured.

Those who survived the ordeal were sent for execution in the so-called "killing fields".

Officials have indicated that Duch cooperated with the investigating judges and is willing to testify in court, so correspondents say the trial should be a chance for survivors of the Khmer Rouge era to hear directly at last from one of the organisation's key figures.

Cambodia's Funcinpec, NRP agree to alliance for may election [A case of "1+1=0"?]


PHNOM PENH, Jan. 19 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia's two main royalist political parties, the Funcinpec and the Norodom Ranariddh Party (NRP), have decided to combine forces for May's district and provincial council elections, national media reported Monday.


Officials from the two parties met on Thursday to hold talks and agreed to assist each other in the upcoming election, in which commune councilors will vote to choose the first-ever district, provincial and municipal councils, Funcinpec Secretary-General Nhiek Bun Chhay was quoted by the Cambodia Daily newspaper as saying.

"We have agreed to unite with each other during the council election on May 17," he told the newspaper.

He added that the two parties uniting to form a single party would make sense because the NRP was originally born out of Funcinpec.

NRP spokesman Suth Dina confirmed that the discussions between the two parties were held and the two parties would cooperate for the May election.

In late 2006, Prince Norodom Ranariddh formed the NRP shortly after being ousted from the presidency of Funcinpec, effectively splitting the royalist vote.

Israeli investors are eyeing Cambodia


16 Jan 2009
By Leang Delux
Cambodge Soir Hebdo
Translated from French by Tola Ek
Click here to read the article in French


Tzahi Selzer, first secretary and economic attaché of Israel embassy in Cambodia (residing in Bangkok, Thailand), paid an official visit to Cambodia on 15 January. His undertaking coincides with Israel’s wish to invest in Cambodia.
The Israeli representative gave an interview to the Deum Ampil (Tamarind tree) newspaper in which he indicated that his country is interested to invest in Cambodia in the agricultural sector and in communication.

“In May, we will organize an international exposition on agriculture in Tel Aviv. We invited the Cambodian minister of Agriculture to participate in it, as well as all his counterparts from all over the world,” Tzahi Selzer indicated. He also added that between 15 and 16 March, a meeting between Israeli and Cambodian businessmen and technicians would be organized in Phnom Penh. In fact, he indicated that Israel wishes to establish a commercial cooperation between the two countries.

“Some Israel investors are already in Cambodia. Most of them are in Sihanoukville. They work on bio-diesel and in the real estate sector. Other investors from Israel who have established in neighboring countries, would like to establish themselves here,” he said while recalling that the amount of Israeli investments in Cambodia is still very low.

KRT defence supports probe


Monday, 19 January 2009
Written by Georgia Wilkins
The Phnom Penh Post


The head of defence at the Khmer Rouge tribunal has warned that if nothing is done to resolve the issue of corruption, it will hang over the court's head forever.

THE head of the defence section of the Khmer Rouge tribunal has thrown his support behind a criminal investigation into corruption at the court, warning that a litigious attempt by Cambodian judges to block the probe smacks of intimidation and threatens to tarnish the process.
"This could look like an attempt to intimidate defence lawyers into not providing rigorous defence or ensuring a fair trial for their client," Richard Rogers, interim chief of the defence support section, told the Post Friday.

"The only way to resolve the issue of corruption is through a full, proper and transparent investigation," he said, adding that he supports an investigation by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court into such allegations, which began after a defence team at the court made a complaint against the Extraordinary Chamber's administrators.

"It's clear the Cambodian government doesn't want to investigate [allegations], so there are few other choices left," he said.

Speaking in response to a statement on January 9 in which Cambodian judges at the internationally backed tribunal threatened the lawyers who made the civil complaint with "legal recourse", Rogers said he was concerned that such dialogue created an environment of intimidation that could impact the willingness of witnesses to come forward.

"If [witnesses] see judges publicly threatening lawyers, they might be less likely to come forward. It is important for judges to create an environment in which witnesses feel comfortable to come forward and help find the truth," he added Sunday.

Trial date still looms

On Friday, the tribunal concluded a two-day preparatory meeting for its first trial, that of Kaing Guek Eav, known as Duch, charged for his role as head of Tuol Sleng prison.

The meeting likely set a date for the trial, expected in March, but details are not expected until later this week.

Rogers said it was to everyone's benefit, including victims of the regime, for the issue of corruption to finally be put to bed.

"Unless [the issue of corruption] is resolved, the court will forever have it hanging over its head, [and] it will remain a major criticism of the court."

Victims to have a say on whether KRT should try more suspects


Monday, 19 January 2009
Written by Robbie Corey-Boulet
The Phnom Penh Post


A DC-Cam survey will ask the victims of the KR regime to voice their opinions on the question: Should more people be put in the dock?

A SURVEY commissioned by the Documentation Centre of Cambodia (DC-Cam) will ask ordinary Cambodians to weigh in on the question that has divided the national and international prosecutors at the Khmer Rouge tribunal: Should additional suspects be brought to trial?
DC-Cam Director Youk Chhang said the survey, to be administered over the next few weeks, will give Cambodians not affiliated with the war crimes court an opportunity to voice their views as to how it should be run.

"The role of the ECCC is to provide a final judgment to the victims, and a fair judgment cannot be made unless they listen to the victims," he said. "Victims are not only the witness of history; they are also judges."

Robert Petit, the international prosecutor at the tribunal, filed a "statement of disagreement" last month after he failed to reach an agreement with Chea Leang, his Cambodian counterpart, on his proposal to submit more suspects for investigation.

Chea Leang has reiterated her opposition to expand the list of suspects beyond the five currently detained, saying such a move could stymie efforts at national reconciliation and overstretch the court's budget.

In addition to asking respondents whether they think the ECCC should try more than the five current detainees, the survey asks whether they think "the cost of the trials should be an important factor" in determining how many KR leaders to prosecute; if they expect additional prosecutions would lead to "public disorder or violence"; and whether they think the ECCC should wait for the trials of the current detainees to be completed before making fresh indictments.

Youk Chhang said he was forming a "professional team" to arrange for the survey to be conducted, adding that he expects to receive results by early February.