Saturday, August 22, 2009

1 killed, 3 injured in car blast in NW Pakistan

ISLAMABAD, Aug. 22 (Xinhua) -- A powerful explosion occurred in northwest Pakistan on Saturday, killing one man and injuring three others, local TV channel reported.

According to the private TV Geo News, the blast was a car bomb blast in Hayatabad area of Peshawar, the capital city of North West Frontier Province.

According to eyewitnesses, there was only one person in the vehicle, who was killed in the blast.

Ruling out the likelihood of sabotage, police said the blast occurred owing to explosion of cylinder of the car.

The sources said all the injured are passers-by, who have been shifted to hospital.

The blast created havoc around the area spurring the shopkeepers to close down the markets.

S. Korea's rocket moved to launch pad

SEOUL, Aug. 23 (Xinhua) -- S. Korea's first space rocket was moved to its launch pad for its blastoff arranged for Aug. 26, the state-run aerospace institute said Sunday.

According to Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI), responsible for the launch, the rocket made it to the launch pad, located at the Naro Space Center in the southern part of the nation.

The rocket will be set up by 3:50 p.m. (0650 GMT) and later be connected with all mechanical and electrical cables by 09:00 p.m. (1200 GMT) for thorough check-ups, the KARI said.

The Korea Space Launch Vehicle-1 (KSLV-1), South Korea's first satellite-carrying rocket, will be fired on Tuesday around 05:00 p.m. (0800 GMT), if there are no last minute problems with the weather or the systems.

KARI said that if there are no last minute problems with the weather or launch systems, the country's first satellite-carrying rocket will blast off on Tuesday around 5:00 p.m.

South Korea has earlier notified of the blastoff to both the International Civil Aviation Organization and the International Maritime Organization, with reserving a "launch window" until Wednesday in case of contingencies.

The launch of the KSLV-1, which was originally scheduled for July 30, had to be postponed twice to Aug. 19 due to technical problems.

However, the countdown for the Aug. 19 launch was suspended 7 minutes and 56 seconds before ignition due to a problem in the high pressure tank that can affect valves in the first-stage rocket.

The South Korean government said it has finished repairing the detected trouble in the tank, saying it is now ready for the launch.

South Korea, working with Russia, began the space rocket project in August 2002 and initially planned to launch the rocket in October 2007.

Angkor 333-2010: Cambodian home-made car


Cambodian mechanic Nhean Phaloek sits in his self-designed homemade Angkor 333-2010 car at his house in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Phaloek hopes to mass-produce the petrol-powered vehicle to which he has incorporated various peculiar features, including one which he claims allows users to open its doors telepathically. (Tang Chhin Sothy-AFP/Getty Images)

Cambodian mechanic Nhean Phaloek sits in his self-designed home-made Angkor 333-2010 car at his house in Phnom Penh on August 21, 2009. Phaloek hopes to mass-produce the petrol-powered vehicle to which he has incorporated various peculiar features, including one which he claims allows users to open its doors telepathically. (AFP PHOTO/TANG CHHIN SOTHY)

Two French men held on underage sex charges in Cambodia (Roundup)


Police arresting the Frenchman, inset: the 16 year-old girl, right: the owner of the guesthouse.


Monsters and Critics
Asia-Pacific News
Aug 22, 2009

Phnom Penh - Two French nationals were questioned at a Phnom Penh court on Saturday on charges of soliciting sex from a minor and producing child pornography. Both crimes carry the possibility of lengthy jail sentences.

The head of the municipal police's anti-trafficking department, Keo Thea, said both men would be charged by the court on Sunday.

'They were questioned today on the first charge of having sex with a 16-year-old girl and on the second charge of making child pornography,' Keo Thea said.

The men, named by the Cambodia Daily newspaper as 62-year-old Michel Jean Raymond Charlot and 60-year-old Claude Jean-Pierre Demeret, were arrested after Charlot solicited a 16-year-old at a well-known red-light district in Phnom Penh and brought her back to his guesthouse.

The girl then told the police about Demeret.

Police searched the room at the guesthouse where Demeret was staying and found a collection of sexually explicit videos and photographs of him, most of which the police said were taken in Thailand.

A search of Charlot's room uncovered a collection of similar photographs and videos.

Keo Thea earlier told national media that their arrests were a significant success for the police.

'[Demeret] confessed that he had actually taken a lot more pictures in Thailand than in Cambodia,' Keo Thea told the Cambodia Daily, adding that police believed the images were made for commercial purposes rather than, as the men had claimed, their own entertainment.

Police said evidence against the men included children's underwear and toys, as well as dozens of videos of the suspects and numerous sexually explicit photographs of the men with what police believe are children in Thailand.

Cambodia has long been seen as an easy place for foreigners to procure sex with minors, which under Cambodian law that combats sexual exploitation is anyone under the age of 18. In recent years the authorities have cracked down on the problem.

Much more to beauty than 'perfect' T&A



Jacqui Bunting
August 23, 2009

It's time for the Miss Universe pageant to reinvent itself or bugger off.

SHINY locks hair-sprayed into perfect bouffants bounce in slow motion. Oiled, sun-kissed limbs emerge confidently from the slits of Swarovski-encrusted gowns. Botoxed, freckle-free cheeks frame lipsticked pouts that part to reveal pearls of prosthodontic perfection. There's not a lazy eye, hooked nose or knocked-knee in sight. Greetings from the sunny Bahamas, where tonight one lucky girl will be crowned Miss Universe 2009 in a glittering celebration of narrowly defined beauty ideals, as antiquated as marshmallow sofas and gherkin canapes.

Cambodia couldn't be further away from the gaggle of plastic dolls and horny billionaires moulding their coiffures on Paradise Island. But until earlier this month it was at the forefront of challenging the concept of pageant perfection. Miss Landmine, a beauty pageant for women maimed by landmine explosions, was set to take place in Phnom Penh in December. That is, until the Cambodian Government called it off in an effort to ''protect the honour and dignity of people with disabilities''.

It seems girls on crutches revealing their stumps is most undignified, a veritable catwalk cancer. It has been dubbed a ''freak show'' by critics. I mean, who does pageant organiser Morten Traavik think he is portraying these impoverished amputees as role models? A beauty pageant is certainly not the platform to boost the self-esteem of ''imperfect'' women while alerting the world to their plight.

And why consult the contestants before cancelling the much-anticipated event? They might say they found the process empowering, that it made them feel pretty and accepted, and that sure would throw a steel tiara in the works. Besides, they're disabled, so they're obviously being exploited. It takes two legs to make a self-empowering decision, doesn't it?

While these ignorant misconceptions infuriated me, I'll admit initially I didn't know what to make of the Miss Landmine competition. I found the title slightly crass, and a photo of a contestant holding a plastic gun on the pageant website misguided. One associates pageant prizes with diamonds, facials and haute couture, not custom-made prosthetic limbs.

But then I read about activist and pageant finalist Song Kosal, who lives in pain due to an ill-fitting prosthetic leg. Kosal said of the event cancellation: ''It meant that I, a disabled person, lost my right of expression.''

Inspired by such ''brave, beautiful friends and most respected collaborators'', Traavik wants to continue the competition online. I say, good on that kooky Norwegian - it's about time we got a generous dollop of purpose and side of compassion with our pageant pie.

Another welcome venture challenging aesthetic homogenisation comes from our own backyard. In an industry recently tarnished by tasteless stunts and broken promises, a Melbourne radio show is running a competition that will see three Australians with impairments or disabilities take part in a fashion event to promote the idea that beauty is more than tits, teeth, hair and hunger. Entrants include Carly, who suffers from erythroderma, which leaves her body covered in scaly red skin; Dhea who lost all her hair at the age of seven due to alopecia; and wheelchair bound Fatma who suffers from spinal muscular atrophy. All strong, inspirational, beautiful women.

Initiatives such as these force us to reassess our shallow concept of beauty. At the opposite end of the emery board, traditional beauty pageants promote the idea that beauty only comes in a perfectly proportioned package wrapped in a sequinned flag. It's no wonder they've become irrelevant and antiquated. Just look at the bigoted and insensitive views expressed by recent pageant princesses, most notably Miss USA contestant Carrie Prejean, who announced that she only supports ''opposite marriage'' because that's what her parents believe in, and the reigning Miss Universe 2008, Dayana Mendoza (left), who blogged about Guantanamo Bay being ''a loooot of fun!'' She no doubt thinks the water boarding that occurred there involved speedboats, polka-dot two-pieces and strawberry daiquiris.

As for Miss Universe Australia, Rachael Finch, I do hope she finds herself adorned in a satin sash and 30 carats of bling tonight. It would be a fitting tribute to the ranga ostrich who sacrificed his life for her national costume headdress.

But my obligatory patriotism aside, I think it's time for Miss Universe to reinvent itself or bugger off. Please, Donald Trump, no more flogging a formulaic vestige of a bygone era. Stick to buying real estate and marrying gold-diggers. I'll take inspiration on crutches over rouge and rhinestones any day.

Jacqui Bunting is a Melbourne writer.

Planned dams in Cambodia ‘could cause poverty to soar’



Plans to build hydropower dams in north-east Cambodia could bring about a rise in poverty and the displacement of around 5,000 people, it has been asserted.

Following an announcement from Vietnam that it is interested in investing US$600 million (£362.4 million) in the two dams – which would be situated along the Sesan River in Cambodia – conservationists and academics have spoken out about the possible social consequences, reports Reuters.

Chhith Sam Ath, executive director of the NGO Forum on Cambodia, told the news provider that construction of the second dam will cause flooding in 25 per cent of the surrounding land, which is currently used for agriculture – something that could also bring health problems for locals.

If completed, the dams will provide areas in both Cambodia and Vietnam with 500 MW of electricity.

In related news, it was revealed earlier this month that six more border crossings are to be opened between Vietnam and Cambodia.

Thai Military Leaders Scheduled for Visit


By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
21 August 2009

High-ranking Thai military commanders are slated to meet their Cambodian counterparts later this month, in an effort to address the longstanding border dispute near Preah Vihear temple and an emerging maritime dispute, officials said Friday.

Already high military tensions escalated this week, when Thailand protested Cambodia’s push for further oil exploration in the Gulf of Thailand, especially near Kuth island. Thailand said this was an encroachment of its maritime borders, a claim Cambodia denies. Both sides have had soldiers entrenched near the Preah Vihear border for more than a year.

Gen. Songkitti Jaggabatra, supreme commander of the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters, and his deputies, Adm. Apichart Pengsritong and Air Chief Marshal Bureerat Ratanavanich, will be accompanied by some 87 Thai military officials to visit Cambodia Aug. 24.

The delegation will meet with Gen. Pol Saroeun, commander of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces, and other senior officials.

The visit “is intended to strengthen the relationship and cooperation between the two countries,” Defense Minister Gen. Tea Banh told VOA Khmer. “This visit will reduce military tension in border disputes.”

The Number of Boeng Kak Lake Residents Protesting against Their Eviction Declines Steadily – Saturday, 22.8.2009


Posted on 23 August 2009
The Mirror, Vol. 13, No. 626
http://cambodiamirror.wordpress.com/

“The Daun Penh authorities had agreed to wait seven more days before evicting people from Village 2 and Village 4 of the Boeng Kak community. The delay was made following the decision during a meeting with the Daun Penh authorities on 20 August 2009, when also the Phnom Penh Municipal deputy governor Koet Chhe joined the event. In the meantime, the number of people protesting against their eviction has declined steadily.

“On 20 August 2009, forces deployed by the the Phnom Penh authorities, dispersed citizens of 70 families, to stop them protesting in front of the Municipality, and yesterday [21 August 2009], there was a report that only 40 families [instead of 50] keep on protesting, and the number might still be smaller on 28 August 2009.

“Different news said on 21 August that some citizens stated they better die by the hands of the Khmer authorities, than agree that their houses are demolished by force by the machinery of the authorities.

“Boeng Kak residents said that the protest by citizens from Village 4 in the Boeng Kak region in Phnom Penh aimed to demand the Shukaku company of Oknha Lao Meng Khin, a Senator from the Cambodian People’s Party, to offer an in place development [as this was originally also discussed as a possibility]. This demand was raised again during the protest in front of the Phnom Penh Municipality on Thursday 20 August 2009, but the protesters were then chased away by the authorities.

“A representative of the 70 families in Village 4, Mr. Pov Toury, said that his villagers have not given up protesting, but they stay quietly at their house. If there is an action to remove their houses, they will struggle to death. He said, ‘If they come to remove my house, I will struggle to death… I cannot go anywhere else, because, you know, our houses are our lives.’

“But after that protest there was information that 30 families had agreed to remove their houses.

“An official of the Cambodian Human Rights and Development Association (ADHOC), Mr. Chan Soveth, said in an interview with Radio Free Asia yesterday morning that the authorities do not respond to the demands of the residents, disappointing many observers.

“A Daun Penh district councilor from the Sam Rainsy Party, Mr. Heng Samnang, said that the authorities do not care to solve their demands. He said, ‘I also raised the case, but I do not have much power.’

“On 20 August 2009, a special working team of the Housing Rights group held a press conference to announce that citizens of Village 4 had agreed to accept the option of development-in-place offered by the government in 2007. But they do not agree to leave the Boeng Kak region for four years before they can return, because they fear that they authorities would forget the promise.

“Since the development plan of the Shukaku company started to move on, after the permission for the investment plan was granted in 2007, citizens of two villages of the Boeng Kak region have been affected. Some had finally agreed to remove their houses in order to avoid to be tormented by the authorities through violent ations as had previously happened to other villagers in Phnom Penh.

“Human rights officials from non-government organizations said that the inhabitants of at least four more villages will face eviction from that region.

“It should be noted that Amnesty International released a statement late last week, asking the Khmer authorities to immediately stop evicting citizens from Village 2 and from Village 4 in the Boeng Kak region.

“The statement of Amnesty International asked the authorities to reconsider the plan to evict citizens and move them to live in the Damnak Trayueng region, a suburb of Phnom Penh, because in that region, there are no proper shelters, there is no utility system, no toilets, no water pipe system, no health center, and no possibility to find jobs.

“Amnesty International asked also for clarification about the development on that total region of 133 hectares, and asked the Khmer authorities to specify clearly the date when the inhabitants are required to remove their houses, and to guarantee the citizens their right to return to the Boeng Kak region after the time of their temporary relocation is over.

“Furthermore, Amnesty International appealed on the Cambodian government to adhere to its obligations under international human rights treaties, which do not allow forced evictions, because they will lead to human rights violations.

“According to information from the authorities, so far 30 more families have removed their houses from the Boeng Kak region, and there are only about 40 families remaining. Thus, the delay until 28 August 2009 might make more families to agree to remove their houses. The authorities expect that it will be like the case of the inhabitants of 78 Group, where there was a delay until all citizens agreed to remove their houses.”

Khmer Machas Srok, Vol.3, #474, 22.8.2009
Newspapers Appearing on the Newsstand:
Saturday, 22 August 2009

Family of Slain Union Leader Welcomes Court Move


By Khemara Sok
Original report from Washington
21 August 2009

Relatives of Chea Vichea, who was gunned down in 2004, joined UN agencies in praising a recent court order for a reinvestigation into the case, saying two men widely believed innocent should be absolved of the charges against them and the true murderers punished.

The statements follow the order of the Appeals Court Monday reopening the investigation, potentially freeing Born Samnang and Sok Samoeun, two men arrested shortly after the killing and facing 20-year prison sentences.

The Supreme Court ordered their release on bail in December 2008, leading to hopes the Appeals Court, which had been ordered to review the case, would free the men.

“I just want to suggest to the government and the Appeals Court to revise the case and find the real killer and fully free the two convicted,” said Chea Kim Ny, wife of the slain union leader, speaking from Finland, where she has political asylum.

The UN human rights office in Phnom Penh issued a joint statement with the International Labor Organization this week welcoming the Appeals Court decision and adding that the evidence against Born Samnang and Sok Samoeung was even more clearly insufficient for their detention.

The case “raised wider questions about the ability of the Cambodian justice system to administer justice in accordance with international standards and the willingness of the authorities to combat extra-judicial killings and impunity,” the groups said. “The miscarriage of justice perpetrated against Born Samnang and Sok Samouen has allowed the real murderers to escape justice for more than five years now.”

Chea Mony, Chea Vichea’s brother, who now heads the Free Trade Union, said the court should issue an official letter freeing the two men.

Chea Vichea was only the one in a line of murdered labor leaders. His shooting was followed by the killing of Ros Sovannareth, killed in May 2004, and Hy Vuthy, killed in February 2007.

None of the cases has been solved.

Doctor Discusses Risk of Strokes


By Nuch Sarita, VOA Khmer
Washington
21 August 2009

Lowering blood pressure, improving diet and quitting smoking can help reduce the causes of stroke, a malady with risks increasing with age, poor diet and other factors, a doctor said Thursday.

Taing Tek Hong described two kinds of strokes to “Hello VOA” listeners, one in which a blood clot or other blockage reaches the brain and one where a blood vessel bursts.

High blood pressure is the top cause of strokes, which are also contributed to by age, family history, smoking, diabetes, high cholesterol and heart disease.

Symptoms following a stroke depend on which part of the brain was damaged. A victim may not be aware he suffered a stroke.

Other signs of a stroke can be “a sudden change in vision or sudden double vision, numbness of the face, weak arms or legs, weakness on one side of the body, disorientation, problems with speech, or trouble understanding others, trouble walking, dizziness or loss of balance or coordination, painful headache that comes on suddenly and has no known cause,” Taing Tek Hong said.

The risk of a stroke increases with age, especially after age 55, and increase for people who’ve already had a stroke or have close family members who have had a stroke. Other risks are those who have had a heart attack, as well as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, heart disease, atrial fibrillation, sicle cell anemia, cigarette smoking, high-fat or high-sodium diets, obesity and lack of exercise.

Govt puts torch to seized drugs


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Khoun Leakhana

PHNOM Penh Municipal authorities on Tuesday burned all drugs collected by police in seizures during 2008 at a ceremony held at My Chance Centre, a drug rehabilitation facility in the capital's Sen Sok district.

Following a speech from Phnom Penh Governor Kep Chuktema, drugs including heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana, yama and Ecstasy were set ablaze at an event attended by representatives from the police, the government and civil society groups.

According to figures from a report issued by the Phnom Penh First Court, authorities burned 761,061 grams of heroin, 479,319 grams of methamphetamine and 126 Ecstasy pills, among other drugs.

"Even though we have had a lot of success, we are still paying attention to the problem, and we will keep trying to eliminate it bit by bit," said Ean Sokhim, a board member of My Chance Centre.

Between 30,000 and 40,000 Cambodians are involved in illegal drug use, most of them between ages 15 and 35, said Ke Kim Yan, president of the National Anti-Drug Authority.

Mok Dara, secretary general of the authority, said the burning was planned both as a statement against drug use and "to answer those who have been suspicious" about what happens to drugs after they are seized.

"Today's event proves that officials have made a great effort in eliminating drug trafficking, drug dealing and drug use," Kep Chuktema said Thursday. "It also shows that illegal drugs are still a big concern for Cambodia."

Minnesota Pagoda Prepares for Buddha Relics


By Neou Sarem, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
21 August 2009

Minnesota Pagoda Prepares for Buddha Relics A Cambodian community in Minnesota celebrated a three-day Buddhist ceremony this month, with a groundbreaking ceremony for a new stupa to hold Buddha relics at Wat Munisotaram.

The ceremony, held from 14 to 16 August, marked the 21st anniversary of the pagoda, in Hampton, Minnesota. The Buddha relics to be housed there came from Sri Lanka, which shares Cambodia’s Theravada Buddhism traditions.

Forty-five monks from Khmer, Bangladeshi, Laotian, Thai and Vietnamese temples in the US, Cambodia and Canada attended the ceremony.

Cambodian-Thai talks address malaria cases


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Mom Kunthear and Thet Sambath

PUBLIC health officials from Cambodia and Thailand are holding a conference this week in Siem Reap province to discuss containment of the increasing number of malaria cases along the border between the two countries.

Duong Socheat, director of National Centre for Parasitology, Entomology and Malaria Control (NCPEMC), told the Post on Thursday that health officials from 10 provinces in Cambodia and seven provinces in Thailand are meeting in the hope of formulating a coordinated strategy to fight the disease.

"We are meeting ... in order to share our experiences and compare our methods for educating people about malaria, spreading awareness about fake medicines and encouraging more people to visit health centres," Duong Socheat said.

Growing concerns
Malaria-related deaths in the Kingdom nearly doubled during the first six months of 2009 compared with the first six months of 2008, according to an NCPEMC report.

From January to June this year, there were 103 deaths from 27,105 reported cases of malaria. From January to June last year, there were only 65 deaths from 25,033 reported cases, the NCPEMC said.

The report attributed the increased fatality rate to an early rainy season and a delay in distributing mosquito nets, though fears have been stoked recently by findings that malaria strains in western Cambodia are developing resistance to artemisinin, the drug typically used as the first line of defense in malaria cases.

Rare wildlife product seizures spike


Photo by: Tracey Shelton
Officers from the government’s Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team inspect restaurants in Koh Kong province for illegal wildlife products, later releasing a live civet cat (inset) rescued from market vendors.

The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Sam Rith

SOUTHEAST Asian wildlife law enforcement authorities seized more than 10,000 endangered animals and animal products in the second quarter of 2009, according to a recent update report from ASEAN's Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN).

The report documents the seizure of 5,296 live animals and 4,827 dead animals, animal parts and animal derivatives with a minimum estimated value of US$3.6 million across Southeast Asia.

The figures represent a sharp increase on the first three months of the year, which saw a total of 5,410 animal seizures.

It also said a total of 30 people were arrested for illegal wildlife trafficking in five countries, including Cambodia, between April 1 and June 30 this year.

ASEAN-WEN, which claims to be the largest wildlife law enforcement network in the world, documented just one major enforcement operation in Cambodia over the period, a May 21 raid on a Phnom Penh restaurant.

During the raid, the government's Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team seized eight dead pangolins, four live cobras and parts of others, five live and three dead turtles, and several dead giant geckos, as well as wild pig and deer parts.

Positive local trends
Despite the increase in seizures across the region, such confiscations have decreased in Cambodia in recent years, government figures show.

According to a Forestry Administration document obtained by the Post in June, the number of illegal wildlife seizures in Cambodia has been steadily dropping since 2005, when there were 6,294 seizures, compared with 2,933 in 2008.

At the time, experts put the drop in seizures down to the rapid rescue team's work and increased penalties for wildlife trafficking offenses.

Meng Sinoeurn, a military police officer who participated in the May 21 raid, confirmed that the owner of the restaurant was arrested and tried at Phnom Penh Municipal Court under Article 96 of the Forestry Law, which carries hefty fines for "those who process, stock or import rare wildlife species or specimens".

Meng Sinoeurn said smugglers could face more serious punishment for pursuing endangered wildlife.

Article 97 of the law carries prison terms of up to 10 years for anyone who has "hunted, killed, traded or exported endangered wildlife species".

Ty Sokhun, director of the Forestry Administration, said wildlife crime in Cambodia had always operated on a small scale, and added that the Kingdom has been sharing information with other regional countries for five years.

'I betrayed friends,' says S-21 chief


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Cheang Sokha

Former Tuol Sleng prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch, told Cambodia's war crimes court Thursday that he made a conscious effort to ignore friends and colleagues who were sent to the torture facility, an act he said was tantamount to betrayal.

"I would like to reiterate that my friends who were arrested and detained at S-21 were numerous, and I had to get away from them. I betrayed friends and colleagues," he said.

"I had to pretend not to see them because I did not want to face them."

He went on to say that all detainees at the prison were considered enemies and were doomed to be executed.

Duch's comments came in response to the testimony of Chum Sirath, 68, a civil party who said his brother, Chum Narith, had studied with the prison chief in 1968. Chum Narith was arrested and sent to Tuol Sleng in 1976.

"I have struggled constantly, every day and night, trying to forget the suffering and misery of my siblings," said Chum Sirath, who was living in Switzerland during the regime but who lost two brothers and a sister-in-law to it.

Chum Sirath also said he did not believe Duch's oft-repeated confessions and apologies were genuine, prompting Trial Chamber President Nil Nonn to assure him that the chamber would issue a "fair and just" verdict.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have struggled constantly, every day and night, trying to forget...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"The proceedings before this chamber have been ongoing for several months, and at the end the chamber will consider all the information and evidence and then issue a judgement, which will be fair and just," Nil Nonn said.

Court spokesman Reach Sambath said Thursday that proceedings in the Duch case would conclude in late September or early October, and that a verdict would be reached in early 2010.

60kg of heroin seized in Jakarta on local tip


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Chrann Chamroeun

CUSTOMS officials at Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatta International Airport seized 60 kilograms of heroin on Wednesday after receiving a tip from the Cambodian National Anti-Drug Authority, officials from the Ministry of Interior said Thursday.

Mok Dara, director of the ministry's Anti-drug Trafficking Department, said local officials tipped off the Indonesian Customs and Excise Office last week about the drug shipment, sent via international courier company DHL. "This is a new success for Cambodia to tip off Indonesia about the arrest of a suspected receiver," he said. "We have had many successes, receiving appreciation from Thailand, Vietnam, India and China, all of whom we have tipped off about drug smuggling through Cambodia."

The Jakarta Post quoted Indonesian customs office chief Bahaduri Wijayanta as saying the shipment was sent via DHL on August 13 to an address in Cikini, in central Jakarta.

"With the help of the airport task force, we managed to track down the receiver. Both the suspect and evidence will be handed over to the National Police for further investigation," he said.

Those involved will likely be sentenced to death if found guilty under Indonesia's harsh drug laws.

Ministry of Health officials leave for intl conference on swine flu


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Mom Kunthear

A DELEGATION from the Ministry of Health left Cambodia on Thursday morning to attend a public health conference in Beijing, where experts from around the world are to discuss measures to contain outbreaks of A(H1N1), or swine flu, the ministry said.

The conference, to be held today and Saturday, is to include health officials from several countries affected by outbreaks of the deadly flu, the ministry said.

Minister of Health Mam Bunheng said Thursday that the Cambodian government had been working on H1N1 prevention even before the first reported cases within the Kingdom, having seen news of its spread in Western countries.

The Ministry of Health and the World Health Organisation reported Cambodia's first case of swine flu on June 25. Twenty-six cases have been reported so far, with no deaths.

"The biggest prioritiy for our country as winter approaches is to make sure people are aware of precautionary measures including washing their hands frequently, not spitting in public, using tissues or handkerchiefs, and avoiding crowds," he said.

This message is especially important to communicate to people leaving near the Thai border, Mam Bunheng added.

Thailand has reported more than 4,000 confirmed cases of swine flu, and 111 deaths, as of earlier this week.

More than 182,000 cases of swine flu have been confirmed worldwide, according to data released last week by the WHO, which warned the actual number of cases was likely much higher.

Nearly 1,800 people have died from swine flu since the outbreak was reported in April.

Vendors take rent grievance to PM


Photo by: Sovan Philong
A woman walks by the Toul Kork market in Phnom Penh on Thursday.


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
May Titthara

Tuol Kork stall holders stage protest in Takhmao, decrying operator's hikes of 95pc, 257pc.

ABOUT 100 vendors from Tuol Kork market staged a protest Thursday at Prime Minister Hun Sen's house in Takhmao to seek his intervention in a rent dispute with market owners.

Heng Chan Sry, a vendor representative, said management had announced large rent hikes from the start of next month.

"The market owners announced in a letter that they will increase stall rental fees ... from US$70 to $250, and from $180 to $350," she said.

Seng Khoun, another vendor representative, said sellers would accept hikes of about 20 percent but that the proposed rise was unjustified.

Market operator King Fortune Industry Co Ltd signed an 80-year lease with the government prior to opening in 2002, Seng Khoun said.

Tuol Kork district Governor Seng Rattanak said city authorities were in talks with the company and vendors to broker a solution to the problem. He said the company had so far signed vendors to one-year leases and that a possible solution was to give them rent cuts for signing five-year leases.

"The reason they [are protesting] ... is they are afraid the market will close," he said, but added that authorities will ensure the market stays open while negotiations proceed.

A King Fortune representative, who gave his name as Chhou, said rents had been raised because of taxes and staff salaries.

Some flee riverbank erosion


Photo by: Sovan Philong
The new construction site of a house in Koh Nirouth falls Thursday into the lower Mekong River.

The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Khouth Sophakchakrya

AUTHORITIES in Nirouth commune have called on families in Koh Nirouth village to vacate their homes on the Tonle Bassac and lower Mekong riverbanks in response to rapid erosion due to flooding.

But the families of several high-ranking officials who live in the village have vowed to stay in their homes and have asked the government to help them stave off further erosion.

"Almost every day, strips of land 2 metres wide and 200 metres long are falling into the water," said commune chief Sam Phon, forcing poor families away from the riverbank.

Nhek Chhon, the Koh Nirouth village chief, said the poor families had moved to new homes in the centre of the village, adding that some had already sold their riverfront land to wealthier families.

He said some of the wealthy families' homes were also in danger of falling into the river.

Nhek Chhon suggested that the rich families were being tightfisted by asking for state assistance.
"I think that they are worried about their second homes collapsing into the water, but they don't want to pay their own money," he said.

But Sam Phon said local authorities did not have the funds to construct a barrier.

"We can stop the riverbank collapsing if we build the brick barrier to protect the homes from the current, but now we have no money to construct it," he said.

Govt denies patrols in disputed waters


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Vong Sokheng

DEFENCE officials have denied Thai media reports that Cambodian patrols have entered disputed maritime areas near Thailand's Koh Kut island.

The reports came less than one week after marines and warships from the Thai navy's 1st Fleet were deployed close to disputed areas.

Neang Phat, a secretary of state at the Defence Ministry, said he had not received any reports from his subordinates about a Cambodian move into the areas.

"We had a meeting today and nobody reported anything about the issue, [so] I will wait and see," he said Thursday.

In Sokhemara, chief of the Preah Sihanouk provincial coast guard station, said his men conducted regular patrols in Cambodian waters but had never entered the 27,000-square-kilometre so-called overlapping claims area.

"We have never conducted a patrol entering a disputed maritime area," he said. "We patrol within our zone, and the Thais patrol in their zone, and both sides respect one another," Sokhemara said.

"I am a monitor of naval patrols, and if something was going on I would know about it.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have never conducted a patrol entering a disputed maritime area.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Bangkok Post reported Thursday that the Thai Ministry of Defence was planning to register a complaint through its Ministry of Foreign Affairs about a Cambodian patrol that had entered disputed waters near Koh Kut in Trat province.

According to the report, the patrol would have constituted a breach of an agreement on the disputed area that requires the two countries to inform each other about upcoming patrols and for patrols to be jointly conducted.

Koy Kuong, spokesman for Cambodia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said he had not received a diplomatic note from Thailand about the matter.

"If they do make an allegation, we will examine and investigate their claims," he said.

Following Prime Minister Hun Sen's visit to France in July, officials announced an agreement offering the French petrochemical giant Total the exploration rights to a 2,430-square-kilometre block in the disputed waters.

Minister of Foreign Affairs Hor Namhong told reporters that the agreement with Total would not affect Thailand.

But the deal prompted complaints from the People's Assembly of Thailand, a nationalist advocacy group that argued that the Total agreement was in violation of Thai sovereignty
.

4 loggers return after crackdown


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Thet Sambath

FIVE Cambodian men remain missing while four have returned home and 11 have been detained in a Thai prison after Thai authorities staged a crackdown on illegal logging in border areas this week.

On Thursday, Thai military officials sent their Cambodian counterparts the names of 11 men imprisoned in Sisaket province, Kan Thalak district.

The men, from Oddar Meanchey province's Trapaing Prasat district, are awaiting trial in a Thai court, said Touch Ra, deputy chief of the Thailand-Cambodia relations office at the Chom border gate.

The men were arrested Monday in a crackdown that officials said turned violent, as Thai soldiers opened fire on the loggers.

Vann Kosal, governor of Trapaing Prasat district, said Thursday that four of the original nine missing men had returned to Cambodia. He added that soldiers from the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces were working with the Thai military to locate the five missing men.

"We don't know where [the men] are because everyone ran in different directions when the Thais started shooting," he said.

Oddar Meanchey Deputy Governor Loun An said Thailand must pay compensation to the families of any men wounded or killed in the incident."We have asked them before not to use guns to shoot unarmed people who enter their country illegally," he said.

A spokesman for the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the ministry was "checking the facts of this case" and did not wish to comment.

Cambodia expects to join international rubber group


Cambodia will soon join Thailand, where this worker is shown tapping into a rubber tree, and nine other nations in the Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries. BLOOMBERG

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When we become a member, we will know more about the global rubber situation...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
May Kunmakara

Kingdom to be officially welcomed into the key intergovernmental trade body at annual meeting in November, giving it access to more expertise and data

Government officials hope Cambodia's impending membership in an intergovernmental rubber producers association will help the country integrate further into global markets and boost exports.

Ly Phalla, the director general of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries' rubber department, said Cambodia would have access to better information about global demand and pricing as a member of the Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries (ANRPC).

"When we become a member, we will know more about the global rubber situation, and they will know more about our production," he said.
Cambodia's acceptance is expected to be formally announced at the body's annual meeting in Vietnam on November 4, said Ly Phalla, who will serve as Cambodia's official representative at the association.

Support for producers
The Philippines is also due to join the group this year. The ANRPC was formed in October 1970 to promote the overall interest of the natural rubber community and currently includes China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam.

It does not set prices, preferring to leave that to member countries, but Ly Phalla said it aims to keep prices stable. Membership would also give Cambodia improved access to technical expertise, he said.

Cambodia currently sells almost all its rubber to China, but it tends to sell at 10 percent or more below international prices due to a "lack of knowledge about, and certification of, Cambodian rubber", the UN Development Programme said in a report earlier this year.

Recognition
Ly Phalla said Cambodia applied to join the association only on July 21. "They have seen our request, and they are happy to accept Cambodia as a member," he said, adding the acceptance was recognition of the quality of Cambodian natural rubber.

"Investments taking place in the natural rubber production sector since the last few years in Cambodia and Philippines indicate the potential of the two countries to be significant players in the commodity's global supply in future," ANRPC Secretary General Dr Djoko Said Damardjati wrote in the association's August bulletin.

"Membership of the two countries would be helpful in further widening the coverage of the data published through the monthly bulletin."
Global production of natural rubber has fallen by 4.6 percent up to July 2009, according to ANRPC estimates.

Ly Phalla said low-grade rubber was currently selling on the Malaysia rubber exchange for $1800 per ton, but Cambodia was receiving just $1,600 to $1,700 per tonne for its grade 3 and 4 rubber. Prices have dropped by half since last year, he said.

However, Mak Kimhong, director-general of the Rubber Plantation Association told the Post last week prices had reached as high as $1,930 per tonne but had dropped to $1,840.

He has exported 4,000 tonnes to Vietnam, Malaysia and Singapore this year, he said.

The government plans to expand the area under rubber cultivation to 150,000 hectares by 2015. Mak Kimhong said membership of the association would do more than any government plan to boost the area under plantation.

Club owner, 2 managers are charged on sex law


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Chrann Chamroeun

THE owner and two managers of a karaoke bar in Siem Reap province that was raided by police last week have been charged in provincial court with aggravated procurement of prostitution, court prosecutor Nuon San told the Post Thursday.

Police arrested the three suspects, who were charged Tuesday, during a raid Saturday at the C-Star Karaoke Club in which they also rounded up 27 Vietnamese and 15 Cambodian female staffers.

Nuon San said the 42 women had not been receiving salaries, meaning their only earnings came when they flirted or slept with customers.

Nevertheless, he said, the staffers had supported their bosses, which made the case difficult to investigate.

"It took several months of investigation before we could launch a raid on the club," he said. "But we knew from customers and from other people that the staffers were having sex with customers, which has severely impacted our country's culture and reputation."

The women were briefly held at provincial police headquarters before being sent to the Department of Social Affairs, which sent them to NGOs or vocational training centres.

Nuon San identified the Korean club owner as Jeong Jong-jin, 52, but he declined to identify the two Vietnamese managers.

He said they face up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

Exports of garments to Japan rise 98.1pc


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Chun Sophal

Garment exports to Japan almost doubled in the first half of this year compared with the first six months of 2008, providing a bright spot in an otherwise gloomy year for the key sector, Ministry of Commerce figures show.

In the six months to the end of June, the country bought $9.62 million worth of garments, up 98.13 percent from the $4.73 million it sourced from Cambodia in the first half of 2008, according to the official numbers.

Exports of textiles climbed 39 percent to almost $450,000, while shoe exports edged down 10 percent from $8.76 million to $7.87 million.
Officials said the uptick came as Japan reduc
ed its dependence on garments sourced from China.

"We hope that as it reduces its purchases from China further, Japan will eye up more purchases of garment products from Cambodia," Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia External Relations Manager Kaing Monika said.

Japan bought $20 billion worth of garments from China in 2008, or about 84 percent of its total global purchases, dwarfing the value of its purchases from Cambodia, he said.

While the combined exports to Japan represented just $18 million of the $1.27 billion worth of the garments, shoes and textiles exported over the period to all countries, it bucked a downward trend across the sector that saw exports fall 18 percent in the first half of the year.

Exports to the United States, Cambodia's key market, were down 30 percent. Canada took 13 percent less by value, while European purchases were down 5 percent over the period.

Ath Thorn, president of the Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers, said that Japan was still a small destination for Cambodian garment exports, but that it was an "attractive" market for the future

"I think that in the next two years, Japan can become the second-biggest market for Cambodia after the US because the Japanese government has good relations with Cambodia," he said.

Last year, Cambodia's exports of garment, footwear and textiles to the key US market were worth US$1.98 billion, or around 63 percent of the $3.15 billion total.

However, Kaing Monicka said Cambodia would be unlikely to overtake Bangladesh and Vietnam, the second- and third- biggest exporters of garments to Japan behind China.

A commerce ministry spokesperson who asked not to be named said a major Japanese buyer looked at investing between $45 million and $50 million in garment factories in Cambodia last year but instead decided to invest in Bangladesh.

The deal would have been worth more than $100 million annually in export orders, the official said.

Singapore group eyes investments


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Ith Sothoeuth

A delegation representing 21 companies from Singapore met government officials this week to discuss investments potentially worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

Delegation head Lawrence Leow, who is the deputy honorary secretary of the Singapore Business Federation, told the Post Thursday the group was looking at four key areas: tourism, agriculture, education and logistics.

"We see the progress, very steady progress in the country," he said. "The people are very warm, and the government is very helpful; I think it is good for foreign investments."

He said he could not speak for other investors, but that his company, the Crescendas Group, would invest between $30 million and $50 million in the tourism sector.

"It depends on the project but I will invest in Cambodia. I'm coming back very soon ... to continue my discussion," he said.

An official from the Center for the Development of Cambodia, the country's key investment body, said the centre briefed the delegation Wednesday about the local investment environment.

"They wanted to know about investment in Cambodia," he said. "We gave them a briefing about our investment law and our macroeconomic situation," was all the official would say. He declined to give his name.

CEO Talk: Troubles loom, but AMK is golden


Photo by: Vinh Dao
AMK Chairman Paul Luchtenburg.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is part of our social mission; we want to help, we don't want to become the problem.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Kay Kimsong

AMK Chairman Paul Luchtenburg talks about the microfinance lender's recent gold medal for transparency in reporting and what can be done to reduce interest rates in the sector

CEO Talk

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Kay Kimsong

You won a gold award earlier this month from industry analyst the Microfinance Information Exchange. What was that for?
It was for transparency in reporting of social performance indicators. AMK has just been elected to head a steering committee looking at the issue of transparent reporting of a range of social performance indicators, which was quite an honour. So we are very active in social performance reporting, but we were surprised to get this award. We [were] one of only four institutions around the world, out of around 1,200 registered with the Microfinance Information Exchange, and the only one in Cambodia, so it is quite nice to have it. It shows that AMK is a world leader in social performance reporting.

Let's get back to more local issues such as the rising incidence of non-performing loans. How is AMK faring?
AMK's [non-performing loans] have gone up the same as everybody's. It's primarily a function of clients receiving too many loans from more than one institution and the industry growing too fast. Most organisations are now slowing down, like AMK, so that we can get our processes perfected to avoid problems in the future.

Has AMK confiscated collateral from any defaulters?
For us, our largest loan is only around $500, and individuals make up just 15 percent of our portfolio. Because our loan size is small, our organisation has never had any problems like that. But I think some organisations may be facing that challenge.

There are lots of stories about borrowers losing land, though the situation is complex and the stories can be hard to verify. What can be done about the problem?
Well, the problem started in Kampong Thom, where we had a few meetings to try and see how we could work together and resolve the issue. Our strategy is, we want to work with the clients as much as possible. If people don't have money, we won't take their land. It is part of our social mission; we want to help, we don't want to become the problem.

The other interesting and dynamic thing happening is that we are talking about financial transparency for things like interest rates, so that the industry is accountable for how much we charge. It costs money for us to go to Kampong Thom, to Ratanakkiri, to Stung Treng, to Preah Vihear, to all of these places, so we can justify the fact that rates are high. But we need to come together with each other and our clients to give them a better idea of how we set the rates.

Does anyone offer lower rates?
Not that I'm aware of. Last year, when inflation was very high, we should have put interest rates up to cover it, but no rates went up. With $25 million in loans out there, we lost a lot of money, but we didn't raise interest rates then. Now even with non-performing loans, I don't think there will be a raise. I think rates will come down slowly, but everything is now about 2009, about the world-wide financial crisis. It is not a good time for organisations to take risks with rates.

Has the financial crisis had an impact on rates?
Rates have gone up globally, which makes it harder for us. Our margins are already quite tight, so there is no way that we can reduce our rates now the cost of funds has increased. If the cost of funds come down, then we could lower rates more easily, but now we can't.

Also, we go to remote areas to meet clients, we go to the villages, and we don't expect them to come to us, which means our costs are high. The third problem is it's hard for us to get local currency, which we primarily lend in. No bank in Cambodia will lend to us in riel so we depend on external lenders.

Do any domestic commercial banks give loans to microfinance lenders?
The only one I am aware of is ANZ Royal, though ACLEDA may lend a small amount. Even in dollars we find it hard to borrow from commercial banks. It is no problem to borrow from international lenders in dollars, but we need to exchange those dollars to riel through the National Bank of Cambodia [NBC] or the Foreign Trade Bank, [and] that is quite expensive for us.

What measures can the NBC take to help the sector?
There are two things. First, when we borrow money from outside, we need to pay the NBC 15 percent tax on the interest. The other thing is that we don't have a savings licence yet. If we had that, it would help our communities, as people need places to save money, and it would give us a cheaper source of funds to lend to people. We applied to them quite a while ago, but we are still waiting for their approval.

Pumped-up Polo takes fourth in bodybuilding competition


Photo by: SOVAN PHILONG
Sok "Polo" Sopheak shows off the physique that won him fourth in the 2009 Asia Bodybuilding and Fitness Championship.


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
EM MEAK

28-year-old Cambodian Sok Sopheak, aka Polo, claimed his best-ever placing of fourth in the 2009 Asia Bodybuilding and Fitness Championships in Thailand

CAMBODIAN body builder Sok Sopheak, also known as Polo, has finally seen all his hard work payoff, claiming fourth in the 2009 Asia Bodybuilding and Fitness Championship held August 11-17 in Pattaya, Thailand.

Despite failing to make the podium, he was delighted with his best-ever placing in an international event.

Training out of Phnom Penh's Rama Fitness Club, Sok Sopheak entered the competition at the 1.65-metre division of the Men's Classic Body category. Iran's Seyed Roohollah Mirnoorollahi took the gold medal, with Daljit Singh of India coming second and Thailand's Kittipong Jansuwan taking third.

Polo, who has adjusted his weight between 60 and 75 kilograms to suit his competitions, has never gained such a good placing in overseas competition. In the same tournament last year, he ranked ninth in Men's Body Building category, while at the 2007 South East Asia Championships, he took eighth in the same classification.

Polo explained that experience from previous events has helped him significantly to improve his placings.

"I didn't know clearly what food was necessary for bodybuilding," he said. "But experiences from several competitions, and through acquaintance with foreign bodybuilders, I got to know how to eat properly."

Polo remembered meeting a Thai athlete in Hong Kong last year, who set him straight on the correct way to balance his diet. "He told me what food to eat and what not to eat."

The 28-year-old Cambodian expressed his pleasure at achieving at something that came out of his own effort, thanking the encouragement of Cambodian youngsters around him.

Rama Fitness club owner Ky Sao, who recommended Polo to travel to Pattaya to join the competition, applauded the bodybuilder's success, saying: "This is the pride of Cambodian sportsmen."

Polo said he had gone through various difficulties in building up his body and attending international competitions, initially without the support of sponsors. However, support from Paul Chua, secretary general of Asia Body Building and Fitness Federation, and Pakpong Kriangsa, director of the Thailand Fitness Federation, eventually allowed him to participate.

Moreover, Polo noted that his food requirement was extremely expensive, with six daily meals including eggs, fish, vegetables, fruit and chicken breast, costing between US$15 and $20 per day. "My mother always scolded me because she was not sure what my money was spent on when she gave it to me," Polo revealed.

Unfortunately, the Cambodian received no cash prize for his fourth rank, with just the prestige and a medal to reward his efforts.

Kong Phalla, secretary of the Cambodian Fitness Federation, acknowledged that the institution was lacking in funds to support the daily fees incurred by its registered athletes, stating there was not even enough to subsidise travel and accommodation costs. However, he praised Polo's achievement, saying: "The result of Sopheak makes me pleased."

Polo is now hoping to attend the World Body Building Championship in Dubai in November, although he has yet to confirm whether he will receive sufficient funding to go.

National teams slug it out at Baribo ballpark


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
CBAF

KAMPONG CHHNANG - Players of the Cambodian National Baseball team have been gaining invaluable match experience through a tight schedule of games against each other, after splitting Sunday into two sides: the Royals representing Phnom Penh and the eastern Cambodian provinces Kandal, Kampong Thom, Kampong Speu, Preah Sihanouk and Preah Vihear; and the Braves, representing the western provinces of Kampong Chhnang, Siem Reap, Anlong Veng and others.

Top first-round picks for the Royals included Moun Chan Ton, Chea Theara and Som Vichet, while the Braves chose Teng Sakhan, Hoey Sipho and Nget Vanna.

The Braves triumphed in the first two games Tuesday and Wednesday, delayed by a day due to rain, winning 5-3 and 4-3, respectively. The Royals seemed to come up short at the end, with the Braves able to capitalise with a strong finish.

Braves slugger Som Vijet has had all the breaks so far, stunning the Royals with a 6-6 record including two doubles, two RBIs and three runs in the two games.

Meanwhile, 15-year-old Poen Pea Rum - now playing in his fourth season - has been lighting up the Royals mound, pitching four innings without giving up a single run, with nine strikeouts, no walks and no hits.

Games continue nearly every day at the wet and muddy Baribo field in Kampong Chhnang province, starting at 1:15pm.

Changing their acronym
At a meeting Tuesday in Baribo, the Cambodia Baseball Federation announced a change of their acronym, from CBF to CBAF, as well as updating their constitutional laws with cooperation from the National Olympic Committee.

Decorated athletes return


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Khouth Sophakchakrya

Cambodia won 15 medals in total at the 2009 ASEAN Para Games

ELEVEN Cambodian athletes made a triumphant return to the Kingdom on Thursday, fresh from winning 15 medals in the fifth ASEAN Para Games in Malaysia.

The event - held in Kuala Lumpur from Saturday to Wednesday - brought together disabled athletes from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, as well as East Timor, to compete over 11 events.

Speaking to reporters Thursday during a press conference at the National Paralympic Committee of Cambodia, the committee's secretary general, Yi Veasna, praised the athletes for their accomplishments during the games, which included winning one gold, 10 silver and four bronze medals.

"These medals show that our disabled athletes are just as strong as those from other countries in ASEAN," Yi Veasna said.

He added that the results stacked up well against regional powerhouses such as Thailand and Vietnam when considering the total number of athletes Cambodia sent to the games, and how many medals they brought home.

Thailand led all participating nations with 289 medals, 157 of which were gold. Host nation Malaysia placed second with 246 medals, 94 of them gold. Vietnam had the third-highest medal count with 130, including 73 gold.

Unbelievable performance
To Rithya, director of the Centre for Education and Sport, who trained and led the Cambodian team to Malaysia, said he had little hope that his athletes would do so well after seeing the strength of competitors from other nations upon arriving in Kuala Lumpur.

"I almost can't believe that we have done as well as we did, receiving 15 medals from the competition," To Rithya said.

He added that Cambodia's medal haul might have been better had two of the athletes - in swimming and athletics - not been pulled from competition.

"They had health problems, so we had to take them out of the games," he said.

Cambodia's top athlete in the games, Chim Phan, took home five medals including gold in the 400 metres.

"I was very excited about my competition because I won a gold medal," he said.

The athletes who earned medals will also be given a little extra treasure. According to a governmental decree from 2008, issued to provide incentives to Cambodian athletes, medal winners are to receive cash prizes for each time they make the podium. This year's Para Games medal winners will pocket more than 200 million riels (over US$48,000) in total.

Brief: All eyes on the top five


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
DAN RILEY

With relegation already decided in the Cambodian Premier League, the attention now shifts to the top order. Realistically, only Build Bright United (BBU) and Spark FC have a chance of making the Super 4 postseason playoffs, although Kirivong Sok Sen Chey and National Defence Ministry could yet place fifth and grab some much-needed prize money. Kirivong will attempt to take crucial points off Phouchung Neak, who have failed to survive for yet another season, having been granted CPL status this year only through the withdrawal of promoted side Kampot. BBU have a sterner test Saturday, facing Phnom Penh Crown, although Crown have already booked their place in the Super 4, and may field a weaker squad ahead of their trip to Singapore to face Bangkok Glass in the Singapore Cup. The weekend's standout fixture is a titanic clash between Preah Khan Reach (PKR) and Naga Corp. PKR have impressed all season and will hope to go into the Super 4 competition finishing top of the league. Naga Corp need a win to effectively guarantee their ticket to next month's playoffs. Sunday's remaining tie sees Khemara Keila play Spark, with Khemara hoping to consolidate their Super 4 place and Spark poised to snatch the lucrative fifth position from BBU.

Police Blotter: 21 Aug 2009


The Phnom Penh Post
Friday, 21 August 2009
Lim Phalla

RECKLESS GUNPLAY KO'S LOCAL BOXER
A 24-year-old boxer, Chey Vannak, was pierced in the knee by a bullet that was accidentally discharged from a shotgun with which the victim and his friend had been playing. The boxer's friend, who owns the gun, is known as Rambo. The event happened on Tuesday night at Khlang Moeung boxing club, located in Phnom Penh's Chroy Changvar commune, Russey Keo district. The victim was subsequently taken to Calmette Hospital.
RASMEY KAMPUCHEA

HUSBAND GOES THROUGH THE ROOF
Keng Phat, a 32-year-old Thai national, was arrested for chopping down the roof of his Cambodian wife's house in Banteay Meanchey province's Serei Sophorn district. The incident occurred on Monday afternoon, when the perpetrator was heavily drunk. The victim, 36-year-old Reoung Tel, said her husband treats her very cruelly and always destroys her household possessions.
KOH SANTEPHEAP

GUEST ACCUSED OF RAPING 15-YEAR-OLD
A 39-year-old recycled-item collector, was arrested by Snuol district police in Kratie province for allegedly raping a 15-year-old disabled girl on Saturday night. The incident took place after the suspect was allowed to take shelter at the victim's house by her parents, who then left the victim at home alone and went out to their farm because they believed the suspect was trustworthy. The arrest was made after the victim's parents returned home and called the police.
KOH SANTEPHEAP

RESORT SERIOUS ON KEEPING OFF GRASS
Yun Chanthea, 14, of Battambang province was attacked and severely wounded in the head by three security guards for walking on the lawn at Wat Phnom resort in Wat Phnom commune, in the capital's Daun Penh district, on Tuesday night. The victim fainted and was taken to a local hospital by his family, who had been touring the area with him.
RASMEY KAMPUCHEA

UNSAVOURY SIBLINGS TOSSED IN CLINK
Two brothers were arrested last Thursday by police in Phnom Penh's Chroy Changvar commune, Russey Keo district, for stealing spare car parts. The arrested were Loh Sakirin, 22, and Loh Hanafi, 26, both of Chhroy Changvar commune. They were also charged with stealing a machine from 55-year-old Ry Borin's boat, and with breaking into the home of 52-year-old Hy Channy to steal two cell phones and US$410. Victims said that the brothers had been a menace to villagers for quite some time.
KOH SANTEPHEAP

'Balibo' cover-up: a film’s travesty of omissions



by John Pilger
Friday, 21 August 2009

On August 30 it will be a decade since the people of East Timor defied the genocidal occupiers of their country to take part in a United Nations referendum, voting for their freedom and independence. A “scorched earth” campaign by the Indonesian dictatorship followed, adding to a toll of carnage that had begun 24 years earlier when Indonesia invaded tiny East Timor with the secret support of Australia, Britain and the United States. According to a committee of the Australian parliament, “at least 200,000” died under the occupation, a third of the population.

Filming undercover in 1993, I found crosses almost everywhere: great black crosses etched against the sky, crosses on peaks, crosses in tiers on the hillsides, crosses beside the road. They littered the earth and crowded the eye. A holocaust happened in East Timor, telling us more about rapacious Western power, its propaganda and true aims, than even current colonial adventures.

The historical record is unambiguous that the US, Britain and Australia conspired to accept such a scale of bloodshed as the price of securing South-East Asia’s “greatest prize” with its “hoard of natural resources”. Philip Liechty, the senior CIA operations officer in Jakarta at the time of the invasion, told me, “I saw the intelligence. There were people being herded into school buildings by Indonesian soldiers and the buildings set on fire. The place was a free fire zone ... We sent them everything that you need to fight a major war against somebody who doesn’t have any guns. None of that got out … [The Indonesian dictator] Suharto was given the green light to do what he did.”

Britain supplied Suharto with machine guns and Hawk fighter-bombers which, regardless of fake “assurances”, were used against defenceless East Timorese villages. The critical role was played by Australia. This was Australia’s region. During World War II, the people of East Timor had fought heroically to stop a Japanese invasion of Australia. Their betrayal was spelt out in a series of leaked cables sent by the Australian ambassador in Jakarta, Richard Woolcott, prior to and during the Indonesian invasion in 1975. Echoing Henry Kissinger, he urged “a pragmatic rather than a principled stand”, reminding his government that it would “more readily” exploit the oil and gas wealth beneath the Timor Sea with Indonesia than with its rightful owners, the East Timorese. “What Indonesia now looks to from Australia …,” he wrote as Suharto’s special forces slaughtered their way across East Timor, “is some understanding of their attitude and possible action to assist public understanding in Australia”.

Two months earlier, Indonesian troops had murdered five newsmen from Australian TV near the East Timorese town of Balibo. On the day the capital, Dili, was seized, they shot dead a sixth journalist, Roger East, throwing his body into the sea. Australian intelligence had known 12 hours in advance that the journalists in Balibo faced imminent death, and the government did nothing. Intercepted at the spy base, Defence Signals Directorate (DSD) near Darwin, which supplies US and British intelligence, the warning was suppressed so that it would not expose western governments’ part in the conspiracy to invade and the official lie that the journalists had been killed in “crossfire”.

The secretary of the Australian Defence Department, Arthur Tange, a notorious cold warrior, demanded that the government not even inform the journalists’ families of their murders. No minister protested to the Indonesians. This criminal connivance is documented in Death in Balibo, Lies in Canberra, by Desmond Ball, a renowned intelligence specialist, and Hamish McDonald.

The Australian government’s complicity in the journalists’ murder and, above all, in a bloodbath greater proportionally than that perpetrated by Pol Pot in Cambodia has been cut almost entirely from a major new film, Balibo, which has begun its international release in Australia.

Claiming to be a “true story”, it is a travesty of omissions. In eight of 16 drafts of his screenplay, David Williamson, the distinguished Australian playwright, graphically depicted the chain of true events that began with the original radio intercepts by Australian intelligence and went all the way to prime minister Gough Whitlam, who believed East Timor should be “integrated” into Indonesia. This is reduced in the film to a fleeting image of Whitlam and Suharto in a newspaper wrapped around fish and chips.

Williamson’s original script described the effect of the cover up on the families of the murdered journalists and their anger and frustration at being denied information and despair at Canberra’s scandalous decision to have the journalists’ ashes buried in Jakarta with ambassador Woolcott, the arch apologist, reading the oration. What the government feared if the ashes came home was public outrage directed at the West’s client in Jakarta. All this was cut.

The “true story” is largely fictitious. Finely dramatised, acted and located, the film is reminiscent of the genre of Vietnam movies, such as The Deer Hunter, which artistically airbrushed the truth of that atrocious war from popular history. Not surprisingly, it has been lauded in the Australian media, which took minimal interest in East Timor’s suffering during the long years of Indonesian occupation. So enamoured of General Suharto was the country’s only national daily, The Australian, owned by Rupert Murdoch, that its editor-in-chief, Paul Kelly, led Australia’s principal newspaper editors to Jakarta to shake the tyrant’s hand. There is a photograph of one of them bowing.

I asked Balibo’s director, Robert Connolly, why he had cut the original Williamson script and omitted all government complicity. He replied that the film had “generated huge discussion in the media and the Australian government” and in that way “Australia would be best held accountable”. Milan Kundera’s truism comes to mind: “The struggle of people against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting.”

Volleyball league set for more action


Phnom Penh Crown striker Tunji Ayoyinka has returned from Turkey.

The Phnom Penh Post

Friday, 21 August 2009
Ken Gadaffi

The 2009 Cellcard National Volleyball League (Disabled) enters its second round of fixtures this weekend with teams hoping to spring above one another in the table and smash past their opponents at Olympic Stadium

CNVLD second round entertainment
The indoor sports hall of the Olympic stadium will once again resonate to the sounds of the Cellcard 2009 National Volleyball League (Disabled) this weekend, with the ten teams playing in a selection of 12 games starting from 2pm Saturday and Sunday.

After the first rounds of games were played July 24-25, Phnom Penh Anz Dragons and Siem Reap Globe Eagles are joint leaders, having won all three of their matches.

With a congested set of fixtures, some teams are bound to come off worse from a lack of rest time. Battambang MOSVY Tigers face the Prey Veng Kingmaker Cobras and the Kampong Speu Global Scorpions Saturday in quick succession.

Potentially one of the most one-sided games Saturday sees Kratie Nike Changemakers Dolphins pitted against Pailin Stadt Frechen Lions. Kratie looked fragile in their first round ties, losing all three matches despite playing the more attractive volleyball. Kratie have yet to win a set, and are likely to be spanked by the Pailin side who benefit from endorsement by Cambodian national team coach Christian Zepp, whose hometown in Germany lends the team half its name.

First-round pacesetters Phnom Penh ANZ Dragons will hope to put distance between themselves and second place Siem Reap Globe Eagles on Sunday. The Dragons should have enough in their armoury, and one would expect them to be fired up against a strong opposition like the Eagles.

The Siem Reap Eagles (right, orange) and Prey Veng Cobras play each other July 26 during the first round of the Cellcard National Volleyball League (Disabled).

A first-time visitor of the CNVLD may doubt the disability factor of the competitors, with players exerting physical prowess seemingly beyond their handicaps, but taking a closer look will reveal prosthetic and missing limbs. The weekend's games promise to be fiercely contested and a joy to watch.

Crown look through Bangkok Glass
Phnom Penh Crown manager Makara Be and coach Apisit Im Amphai returned Thursday from their spy mission in Thailand, having witnessed the capabilities of next week's Singapore Cup opponents Bangkok Glass. "We have seen them play in a match and training, and they are very good," stated Makara Be. "They play with power, and have very strong players, which we hope our players will be able to overcome."

The manager declared he would be working on adapting techniques to counter the Thai team's crossing and long-ball tactics, which he says they use a lot.

Crown are also aware of the threat posed by their former striker, Nigerian-born Ajayi Gbenga, who now plays for Bangkok Glass. "He is very dangerous; we have to watch out for him," warned Makara Be, adding that Crown's Cameroonian hotshot Jean Roger Lappe Lappe has been lent back to Thai team Samuth Songkram, and won't feature in the weekend's game against Build Bright United or, most likely, the cup match.

However, the Cambodian champions have been boosted by the return of frontman Tunji Ayoyinka, who failed to sign for a Turkish team during his visit there, with the Crown manager asserting that the Nigerian would be available for both upcoming fixtures.

Photos by Nick Sells (www.nicksellsphotography.com)

An elephant's tale


Chhouk the baby elephant

http://www.oxfordtimes.co.uk

Thursday 20th August 2009
By Nigel Wild

T he story behind how Chhouk the baby elephant gained his artificial foot is one of hope and salvation following the desperate years of his troubled homeland.

It is also a story of how Cambodian medical students found themselves using techniques developed to create prosthetic limbs for mine victims to help a wild animal.

Cambodia is now politically stable and tourism a major growth industry, but the legacy of war, genocide and political upheaval has left the country as one of the poorest of the developing nations.

Between 1975 and 1979, Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge fanatics strove to return Cambodia to Year Zero, an agrarian subsistence farming society. Anyone considered intellectual – and that could be no more than wearing glasses — was either put into forced labour or executed. More than a million people fell victim to this genocide, nearly half-a-million fled the country.

Following the 1979 invasion by Vietnam, the Khmer Rouge was forced over the border into Thailand, and countless landmines laid along the 600-mile border to keep them from returning.

Landmines were also sown liberally through many areas of Cambodia. With few records, the numbers are an estimate, but somewhere between three million and ten million mines were laid.

The outcome is one of the world’s largest disabled populations, with 43,000 landmine survivors who have lost arms and legs.

In 1989, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen asked for help with these victims and the Cambodia Trust was founded in Oxford by Dr Peter Carey, Stan Windass and John Pedler.

The trust established the Cambodian School of Prosthetics and Orthotics (CSPO), with the help of Roehampton and a major UK manufacturer of artificial limbs.

Adrienne Liron from the trust outlined living conditions in the country and the day-to-day problems that still have to be faced.

“The Khmer Rouge regime tried to return Cambodia to the dark ages and has condemned it to a long, slow climb out of poverty,” she explained.

“In the major cities like the capital, Phnom Penh, tourism and property development are growing industries, but outside, it is still just grinding poverty, subsistence farming and an income level of about 50p a day.

“Community healthcare is virtually non-existent. Organisations like CSPO provide it. Cambodia does receive a great deal of outside financial aid, but as so often happens, not all of it reaches its intended target.

“Our goal is to train Cambodian staff to prescribe and fit prosthetic limbs and braces.”

As well as landmine victims, a host of other disabled people need help too. Changes in diet have brought on diabetes, resulting in amputations, polio is a serious problem (with some 50,000 sufferers) and increasing road traffic brings more accidents.

In Cambodia, disability is a social stigma. The disabled are ostracised, even by their own families, finding it almost impossible to have any schooling or find a job. Breaking the cycle of poverty is pretty tough.

Since its beginnings in 1989, the CSPO has grown to three centres, one in Phnom Penh and two more in remote areas. Its success in recruiting and training local staff is such that now, all the 2,000 limb and brace fittings carried out annually are by Cambodian staff. The CSPO qualification is at bachelor degree level.

The trust’s responsibility for a patient is lifelong. An adult will need a new limb every one to two years depending on the use and environment of the prosthetic, a child every six months to cope with growth. Although the latest high-tech materials are used, wear-and-tear on the limbs is a fact of life.

“We have to be there for all our patients” Adrienne said. “If we stopped, the devices would fail and condemn the patients to return to where they started.”

And Chhouk? The baby elephant was found two years ago in the jungle. He had lost 12cm of his left foot in a snare. Unable to walk properly and with the right leg bowing under the strain, the little animal was thin, emaciated and unhappy.

The CSPO students face many difficult challenges in their work and are encouraged to think laterally.

Led by the school’s Cathy McConnell, a team spent lunch-hours and weekends designing Chhouk a new foot. The original used the same materials as human prosthetics, with the base made from a car tyre. It was an instant hit.

Surprisingly, Chhouk’s X-ray and casting demanded no greater anaesthetic than a plentiful supply of bananas and turnips.

Try Sitheng, elephant keeper at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre, said that Chhouk and Lucky, an older elephant, were now like brother and sister.

“Chhouk loves to run through the forest with Lucky, on the hunt for jungle fruits. He plays with Lucky and puts sand on his own head. With the shoe, he runs very well, but without it, he walks slowly.”

The prototype needed several repairs in a short space of time. A more rigid version was devised, but was too tight. Chhouk threw a tantrum until it was removed and it is back to the drawing board for the CSPO team.

Their real problem is yet to come, how to design a prosthesis to withstand the weight of a fully-grown elephant as Chhouk matures.

The Cambodia Trust is funded to a small degree by the country’s government, bolstered by aid from Britain, Australia, New Zealand, the Nippon Trust in Japan and public donations.

Adrienne is fulsome in her praise for the Nippon Trust, which has been at the heart of the activities right from day one.

“The Nippon Trust’s aim is that everyone in Cambodia will pay taxes. That means full inclusion in society and the economy.”

The Cambodia Trust has now extended its activities to Sri Lanka, Indonesia and East Timor, the latter one of the few places where leprosy still exists. Unlike Cambodia, these projects are of fixed-length, with dates already set for government takeover.

Adrienne said: “And we are looking for more places where our skills and experience can really make a difference.”

For more information about the Cambodia Trust call 01844 214844