Thursday, September 3, 2009

Cambodian Soldiers Use Tattoos To Protect Them From Bullets [... and so are the Thai soldiers and citizens]


A Cambodian man whose body is covered with yantra (Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/39274585@N00)
A Thai man whose back is covered with yantra. Interestingly enough, yantra used in Thailand bears exclusively Khmer script. (Photo: Wikipedia)

09- 3-09
John Maloy
GlobalPost


Cambodian soldiers believe certain tattoos can protect them from bullets and landmines, and even make them invisible.

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- Magic tattoos begin with a magic man. Typically a Buddhist monk or adjar (essentially a deacon) and known for great piety, this Khmer magic man can draw scripts and images into another's skin, granting with the person supernatural armor against all kinds of harm. Understandably, such body art became popular with soldiers.

Reut Hath is one such magic man. He first learned the art of inking magic from his father, a farmer and martial arts trainer in northwestern Cambodia who was himself a "powerful magic man," according to the 52-year-old former soldier.

"Many people came to [my father], so he gave some of the work to me," Reut Hath said. "So, I had to learn magic."

Wherever Cambodian soldiers cluster, charms and amulets abound, from cloths scrawled with protection spells to bags of Buddha figurines to boar tusks -- anything to gain a magically endowed edge over the enemy. And there is perhaps no more explicit display of belief in mystical powers than magic tattoos, geometric patterns of written spells and images that crisscross the bodies of many older soldiers.

The list of powers that supposedly come with the tattoos is long and includes: imperviousness to bullets, anti-landmine protection, invisibility, an amplified voice to address troops and "great gravity" magic to make one's fists into heavier, deadlier weapons.

Story continues below The intricate arrangements of some tattoos and the folk-like quality of others are often beautiful artworks in their own right. However, it's also a fading art, a system of belief that is disappearing from a military looking to recruit younger soldiers in place of aging veterans of the country's recent decades of civil war.

Reut Hath started tattooing soldiers in 1977 after himself fleeing executioners from the murderous Khmer Rouge to join the resistance against the Pol Pot regime. (In its effort to create a Maoist agrarian utopia, that regime was ultimately responsible for the deaths of more than 1.7 million people. In early 1979, the Vietnamese military toppled the Khmer Rouge government, sparking a 20-year civil war in Cambodia.)

Reut Hath joined the Khmer People's National Liberation Front (KPNLF), one of the main resistance groups that battled it out with the Vietnamese-backed Phnom Penh government throughout the 1980s. It is mostly former fighters from resistance groups like the KPNLF that have the magic tattoos.

The method

Magic men punch tattoos into the skin by hand, using a thin handle about 30 centimeters long with two syringe needles at one end. According to Reut Hath, any old ink will suffice, but during the civil war, when ink was often in short supply, he would create his own by mixing the material inside alkaline batteries with rice wine.

It only takes a few seconds to punch a single letter into the skin, though some soldiers have veritable essays written on their bodies, which require days of painful prodding.

Casting the spell

The spells are written in two ancient Indian languages -- Sanskrit or, more commonly, Pali, which is the liturgical language of Cambodia's dominant religion, Theravada Buddhism. Reut Hath admits he can't actually understand any of the spells because they aren't written in his native tongue of Khmer.

"I cannot read the Pali, but I know what letter is what letter, so I know what to write according to the formula," he said. "I learned it, but even I don't understand why the magic is so powerful."

The soldiers' stories

Sgt. Maj. Boung Thoeun is covered from head to toe in protective tattoos, his arms almost black from the dense web of Pali spells running up and down them.

The 50-year-old soldier, a former KPNLF captain, said that his tattoos twice saved him from landmines, which merely fizzled when he stepped on them. He also recalled getting caught in a nighttime ambush that should have meant certain death, but he came away unscathed.

"The enemy sprayed a lot of bullets at us," he said. "It was a dark place but there were so many [tracer bullets] flying about that it looked like the daytime."

Cambodian army Maj. Gen. Lay Virak, formerly a KPNLF senior commander, said he knows of magic that prevents a person from getting lost in the forest. He also met a monk who knew magic that allowed one to walk through fire.

"During the war, we believed in the magic. We knew a lot, including magic that prevents you from being tied up or hurt by torture," Lay Virak added.

With so much power supposedly at their fingertips, it would seem like a half-dozen tattooed soldiers could take on an army. But when it comes to magical tattoos there's still a catch -- several, actually.

"It is a question of your belief, your nationalism and your devotion to the rules," said Reut Hath of how one keeps their magic potent.

The basis of belief

These rules are typically based on morality and religiosity: Do not murder, do not steal, do not commit adultery, regularly burn incense and pray, recite magical mantras, etc. The rules establish a Buddhist grounding for the magic, taking what could be thought of as a selfish act to empower oneself and changing it into a promotion of moral behavior and faith. Of course, to the more cynical-minded, the rules also provide reasons why a man covered in protection spells might be killed on the battlefield: "If only he hadn't been so forward with his neighbor's wife," for example.

However, some of the rules might appear more arbitrary. Reut Hath forbids the men he tattooed from eating dog meat. In addition to dog, Lay Virak must also shun snake, turtle and pork, and in perhaps the most unusual limitation, he will sacrifice his protection if he urinates and defecates at the same time.

In addition, former resistance fighters say, the end of warfare in Cambodia has done much to reduce both the strict morality and magical potency associated with the tattoos -- with easy living comes temptation.

"During the fighting, most of the fighters were powerful -- the magic worked," Reut Hath said. "But with peace, many came to the cities and starting drinking, sleeping with girls and the magic has faded away."

This perceived decline in morality has driven Reut Hath to vow to never tattoo anyone ever again. "I decided to stop giving the tattoos because I cannot trust the young people these days. If they had tattoos they'd probably fight. Before, we thought about the liberation of our country. We had a good spirit."

He said he does know of some magic men who continue to tattoo people, but their numbers are dwindling. "Many soldiers have [tattoos] but they don't know how to pass them on," he added.

Though not in any way prohibited, tattoos are now an increasingly rare sight in the Cambodian military. Even among those who fought in the 1970s and '80s, it was only in the resistance groups based along the Thai border that it remained a prominent tradition. Resistance fighters who joined the military after the war have also typically found themselves relegated to positions with little authority or influence.

"Usually it's the fighters from the border that have tattoos," said Maj. Gen. Chap Pheakdei, commander of Brigade 911, the army's elite paratrooper unit, adding that few of his soldiers have sought the protection of magical body art.

"On the Phnom Penh side during the [civil] war maybe two out of 100 would have [tattoos]," said one Brigade 911 officer who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak to the press. "Some guys go out with tattoos all over them and get killed, and a guy with nothing comes back fine -- I believe in luck, not magic."

"But maybe," he added, "that's because our side has tanks."

While the PM begs at home, the Poor beg overseas


Asking for sympathy: A mother and child seen begging at the SS13 night market in Subang Jaya.
In plain sight: A badly scarred individual seen begging at the Section 17 night market in Petaling Jaya.
High traffic: The beggars choose places where there are a lot of passers-by to maximise their gains.

Beggars choose to take the easy way out

Friday September 4, 2009
The Star Online (Malaysia)

"Lam, who has been trading at the SS13 night market for three years, suspects that the beggars are mostly foreigners from countries like Cambodia and China and are attached to a syndicate that brings them around Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia to beg."

TAKE a walk around the city or any of its suburbs and you are almost guaranteed to run into a beggar. These beggars are usually disabled, old or very young and they sit along the pathways waiting for a handout.

Those who beg tend to frequent places with high traffic like night markets or outside banks or gambling outlets in commercial areas.

A trader at the SS13 night market in Subang Jaya said he had seen various individuals, including handicapped children and adults, old folks and mother-and-child pairs begging at the night market almost every week.

The trader, who identified himself as Lam, believed that the beggars are part of a syndicate as his friend, who is a trader at the Kepong night market, has also seen the same faces.

“Someone will drop them off at the designated night market and they will find their way in before sitting down in the middle of the path to beg.

“I have actually seen the beggars wear old and torn clothing while begging, only to change into something cleaner before boarding a special taxi that comes to take them home,” he said.

Lam, who has been trading at the SS13 night market for three years, suspects that the beggars are mostly foreigners from countries like Cambodia and China and are attached to a syndicate that brings them around Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia to beg.

Subang Jaya Municipal Council (MPSJ) Licensing Department director Ismail Salim said the council could conduct joint operations with the Social Welfare Department (JKM) in an effort to tackle the beggars.

Noting that there were also beggars in other public places like mosques and food courts, Ismail said that it was public sympathy that encouraged the beggars to continue looking for a handout.

“They will continue coming back as long as people give them money. If they genuinely need aid, they can always contact the JKM,” he said.

Deputy Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datin Paduka Chew Mei Fun echoed similar sentiments by saying the public should stop sympathising with beggars and donating money as it offered them an easy way to earn money.

“What the public needs to do if they spot any beggar is to call the Talian Nur or report to the nearest JKM office. There are more than 100 JKM offices located in each district office in Malaysia,” she said.

Chew said the Talian Nur operators would note the callers’ information and refer them to the relevant authorities and let them know what they should do.

To address the begging syndicate issues, Chew said the JKM conducts scheduled operations once or twice a week at areas with lots of street beggars, as well as joint operations with various agencies like the local councils, Immigration Department, National Registration Department, National Anti-Drugs Agency and hospitals.

“If a child (aged under 18) is found during the operation, then the Child Act 2001 will be used,” she said.

(Section 32 of the act states: Any person who causes or procures any child… allows that child to be on any… place for the purposes of begging, receiving alms, whether or not there is any pretence of… performing or offering anything for sale; or carrying out… illegal activities detrimental to the health and welfare of the child, commits an offence and shall on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding RM5,000 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years or both.)

“The JKM protection officer will rescue the child and place him or her in a welfare home within 24 hours,” Chew said.

“A court order will be obtained from the magistrate’s court to place the child in a welfare home for the next 30 days while the officer prepares a report.


“If the child is found to have a family member or relative who can care for them, we will send them back.

“Putting them in a welfare home is the last option as we believe it is best for the children to grow up in a loving family environment.”

If they are to be put in a home, Chew said, the children would be placed in an orphanage or Rumah Tunas Harapan, a home that is run by couples with their own children.

The Ministry provides allowances for the relatives or Rumah Tunas Harapan families to care for the children.

Meanwhile, if adults are found during the operation, they would be rescued under the Destitute Person’s Act 1977.

“They will be placed in a welfare institution within 24 hours and a 30-day court order will obtained while the officers investigate their case,” said Chew.

“If a family member or caregiver cannot be found, they will be placed in a welfare home for three years. Those aged above 60 will go to the Rumah Seri Kenangan old folks’ home, while those under 60 will be placed in Desa Bina Diri workshops to learn soft skills.”

She stressed that welfare organisations and charities cannot use children to solicit donations.

“If an association wants to solicit donations in commercial or residential areas, they will need to get permission from the JKM and a police permit,” she said.

Talian Nur’s number is 15999. For a list of JKM locations and contacts, visit www.jkm.gov.my (search under directory).

Mu Sochua refuses to pay court ordered fine


(Photo: SRP)

Friday, September 04, 2009
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

SRP MP Mu Sochua refused to pay the 16.5 million riels fine imposed on her in the defamation lawsuit case brought up by Hun Xen. According to today’s edition of The Phnom Penh Post, on Thursday, Mrs. Mu Sochua said that she will not pay the fine imposed on her by the Phnom Penh municipal court because she is the victim, not Hun Xen. According to Yim Sovann, SRP spokesman, the SRP supports Mrs. Mu Sochua’s decision to oppose the court verdict. Yim Sovann said that the SRP will stay behind Mrs. Mu Sochua, regardless of whether she decides to pay the fine or not, and that this decision is her right. Yim Sovann indicated that Mrs. Mu Sochua appealed her case already, and that she will not show up to the Appeal court. Yim Sovann also added that Mrs. Mu Sochua said that the Appeal court can sentence her behind closed door because she believes that, whether she shows up to the court for clarification or not, the Appeal court decision will not be different from the one handed down by the Phnom Penh municipal court.

Teaching subservient CPP MPs about their parliamentary oversight role is merely a futile exercise


(Photo: Ly Meng Huor, RFI)

Australian Parliament teaches parliamentary role to Cambodian MPs

Thursday, September 03, 2009
By Ly Meng Huor
Radio France Internationale

Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy


Australian Parliament experts shared their experience on the efficient oversight role to Cambodian MPs. During the 2-day presentation which ended on Thursday, Australian Parliament experts showed the important role of the parliament in the oversight of the government action. Nevertheless, an independent observer indicated that the Cambodian parliament does not have the ability to fulfill such a role.


Dr. Brendan Nelson, an Australian MP, and Ian Harris, Secretary of the Australian Parliament, indicated the Parliament plays an important in role: it forces the government to be responsible to the people. [In this manner,] the government policy and action would also be efficient. The parliament must also ensure that the government fulfills the needs of the people, i.e. the voters.

During the 2-day presentation, Ian Nelson, an Australian MP with a record of 13-year office mandate, provided in-depth knowledge on the techniques used to efficiently oversee the government’s work. These techniques include the discussions on draft laws and the review of state budgets, as well as the questioning of the government on the National Assembly floor, etc…

Nevertheless, Mar Sophal, an independent observer, indicated that the role of the Cambodian National Assembly has significantly degraded during this 4th mandate, when compared to the previous mandates. He indicated that non-ruling parties saw their freedom of expression tightened and MPs have difficulties sending their written questions to the government, and when they could, only a small number of these questions are answered by the government.

Nevertheless, Ian Nelson noted that Cambodia is a young democracy, and that it is a good start and that it could bring in good development in the future.

Children's camp focuses on life of Saint Paul


Children sing a song about Saint Paul during the camp
Youngsters praying together during the stay-in program

September 2, 2009

PHNOM PENH (UCAN) -- The Church in Phnom Penh recently held a faith formation camp for children focusing on the life of Saint Paul the Apostle, during which participants also learned about communal living.

"Childhood is the time when one easily absorbs (lessons from) one's social environment," said Father Bruno Cosme, rector of the major seminary in Phnom Penh.

"If we do not pay enough attention to children, we miss a great opportunity to educate them on their faith and the right way to conduct their lives," said the Paris Foreign Missions priest, who was one of the organizers of the August 24-29 camp.

About 150 children, aged mostly between nine and 12, attended the stay-in program at the Don Bosco Vocational Training Center for girls. A committee which included 33 Catholic youths and four seminarians helped run the camp, which included lessons and reflections on the life of Saint Paul, talks on Catholic morality and hygiene, as well as group tasks and games.

"The main purpose of the camp was to teach them to be like Saint Paul who preached the Word of God, and to be good Catholics," said Father Cosme. "In addition, the children learned how to live together and how to cooperate with each other while performing tasks."

The camp, which had the theme, "Let's Go Together With Saint Paul to Meet Jesus," is the second of its kind. The first was in 2008 and had the theme, "The Word of God." About 130 children took part in that camp, said Father Bruno.

Saint Paul the Apostle was the major New Testament figure who preached the Gospel outside the Jewish community. He encountered many hardships and much persecution in his work.

Camp participants said that learning about Saint Paul's life helped them realize that sharing their faith with others is often a challenging task.

Ravy Sophearong, 12, said the camp taught him about "the mission of Saint Paul" and his preaching of the Word of God, "and discovered that it is not easy."

He said he could identify with the saint's experience, as he has also experienced criticism and rebukes when sharing his faith with people who do not understand it. He added that he liked the communal spirit of the camp, and learning and playing games together with other children.

Doung Reaksmey, 14, said he would be happy to be able bring the Good News to people around the world like Saint Paul, but like Sophearong, he realized that this would not be easy.

Organizers said the camp benefited them as well. Hom Chansophany, 22, said she acquired some leadership skills through volunteering to help out at the camp. She admitted that living with the children and making the program engaging for them was a challenging task.

Mung Ros, a seminarian, said the program included daily reflections on biblical passages, games related to the Gospel and lessons on morality.

Drought ended by one week of rain


Friday, September 04, 2009
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

Pursat, Prey Veng and Takeo provinces that are facing drought because of the mini dry season in August, is now out of danger following the intense rainfalls brought in by a low pressure system. Keo Vey, director of the Pursat province department of water resources and meteorology, said that Bakan and Krovanh districts, which faced the most intense drought, are now out of danger from the one-week-long rainfalls. At the beginning of this year, Pursat province received a good amount of rainfall, but starting in May, the situation changed. Chum Sophy, director of the Prey Veng province department of water resources and meteorology, indicated on 03 September that Preah Sdech district, which faced the most intense drought, now has sufficient amount of water. Up to now, the amount of rainy season rice farming in Prey Veng province is 83% completed from plan. Chan Yutha, director of the office of water resources and meteorology, said on 03 September that the provinces that faced intense drought in August were: Pursat, Prey Veng and Takeo, but now, they all have sufficient amount of water following the rainfalls brought in by the one-week long low pressure system which covered the entire country.

24 garment workers passed out


(Photo: DAP news)

Friday, September 04, 2009

Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

24 out of the 1,4000 workers at the Golden Mile factory passed out one after another at 2PM on 03 September, and they had to be taken to the hospital emergency. The Golden Mile factory is located along National Road No. 5, in Spean Khpous village, Kilometre 6 commune, Russei Keo district. According to the local authority, these workers passed out during work while others threw up. Immediately after the incident, the factory administration sent the passed out workers to the hospital. The official indicated that the cause of the passing out of the Golden Mile factory workers is not different from the poisoning case at the Morea Garment Corp. factory: the workers that passed out have weak health and they breathed in the chemical smell from the fabric in an area of the factory where is there is no sufficient ventilation.

When will the PAD sore-losers stop politicizing the Preah Vihear issue?


PAD Southern Networks Urge Govt to Investigate into Land Dispute at Preah Vihear Temple

4 September 2009

Thai-ASEAN News Network

The People's Alliance for Democracy networks from 16 southern provinces held a public announcement urging the government to investigate Thailand's rights to 4.6 square kilometers in the vicinity of the Preah Vihear Temple, in order to prevent the country from losing the disputed land.

People's Alliance for Democracy or PAD coordinator for southern networks , Soonthorn Rakrong, made an address on behalf of the PAD networks from the South, acknowledging their support of a group led by Weera Somkwamkid in investigating a disputed 4.6 square-kilometer area along Thai and Cambodia border.

The area mentioned is also the location of the Preah Vihear Temple.

The group claims that evidence indicates that Thailand has obviously lost its ownership over the disputed area to Cambodia and that the Thai government remains inactive and appears to be supporting Cambodia's actions.

In this regard, they have called for the government to preserve the country's sovereignty and revoke any contracts or agreements made between the two countries.

The PAD networks said that if the government still remained inactive about the issue, they would join forces with the public sector to reclaim the nation's sovereignty. They will hold a gathering on September 9th in Nakhon Srithammarat province to put a concrete plan into action.

In Soklyda Recounted Events about the Acid Attack Related to Chea Ratha – Thursday, 3.9.2009


Posted on 4 September 2009
The Mirror, Vol. 13, No. 628
http://cambodiamirror.wordpress.com/

“Phnom Penh: In Soklyda, known to have had a relation with former Military Police brigadier general, Ms. Chea Ratha, participated in a press conference organized by the Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (LICADHO).

“In the evening of 2 September 2009, LICADHO held a press conference at its headquarters with Ms. In Soklyda, Ms. Ya Soknim [her aunt], and her mother, where the three of them recounted in detail events related to the previous acid attack against Ms. In Soklyda’s aunt, Ms. Ya Soknim, and they accused Ms. Chea Ratha to be the person responsible for the attack.

“Ms. In Soklyda said, in between sobs, that Ms. Chea Ratha is a person involved in many previous cases of acid attacks including against [CTN commentator] Mr. Tith Polen and against her aunt, Ms. Ya Soknim.

“She added that there is much evidence to prove that Ms. Chea Ratha was involved in those cases, including voice recordings of phone calls; however, the court had decided to drop the charges against her, due to a lack of evidence. In the meantime, Ms. In Soklyda expressed concers about her own safety when Ms. Chea Ratha is now freed from charges and can return home.

“Ms. In Soklyda’s aunt, Ms Ya Soknim, who is the victim of an acid attack, said in the conference that she is worried about her safety, after the court had decided to drop the charges against Ms. Chea Ratha.

“Also, both Ms. In Soklyda and Ms. Ya Soknim, asked for intervention by the Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia, Samdech Akkak Moha Senapadei Dekchor Hun Sen, over this case, and called for support to offer her asylum.

“Kampuchea Thmey could not reach Ms. Chea Ratha for comment in the evening of 2 September 2009, but her lawyer, Mr. Keo Ya, had claimed that his client was not involved in that acid attack, and that she can return back [to Cambodia] soon. Also, Mr. Keo Ya hopes that the Royal Government will offer the position of Military Police brigadier general back to his client.

“The president of the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, Mr. Chiv Keng, could not be reached for comment by phone in the evening of 2 September 2009.

“Regarding the announcement of the verdict by the Municipal Court, Ms. In Soklyda, LICADHO, and the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, released a joint statement in the evening of 2 September 2009, calling the decision to drop the charges against Ms. Chea Ratha and her accomplices a display of impunity in the Kingdom of Cambodia.

“It should be remembered that on 21 August 2009, the Phnom Penh Municipal Court announced to lift the accusations against seven suspects involved in the acid attack against Ms. In Soklyda’s aunt, claiming that there was insufficient evidence to put the burden on them.

“After Ms. In Soklyda’s aunt had been attacked with acid, the authorities had arrested two people for involvement in the attack and they said that Ms. Chea Ratha was the most important person of this case. After that, Interpol had issued a red warrant in 180 countries to arrest Ms. Chea Ratha.

“Since then, Ms. Chea Ratha has hidden herself, and recently, after the court decided to drop charges against her, a news source said that she will return home soon.”

Kampuchea Thmey, Vol.8,#20,.9.2009
Newspapers Appearing on the Newsstand:
Thursday, 3 September 2009

Court Lambasted for Dropping Acid Attack Case





In Soklyda breaks into tears during a press conference on Wednesday as she begs forgiveness from her aunt Ya Soknim for having a relationship with Chea Ratha that she believes led to the disfiguring acid attack on her aunt.

The child sex trade in Cambodia



Wednesday, September 2, 2009
By Cassandra Clifford
ForeignPolicyBlogs.com


Children around the world are forced into the sex trade, very often by their own families, mislead by promises of economic opportunity or pushed by desperation. The commercial sex industry is fueled by poverty, but driven by demand and while the issue of poverty must be addressed, so must the those who prey on women and children such as through the sex tourism industry.

One of the many countries ravished by sex trafficking is Cambodia. Organizations such , as UNICEF, ECPAT and Save the Children, estimate that there are anywhere from from 50,000 to 100,000 women and girls in the sex trade in Cambodia. Of those in the commercial sex industry in the country many are children, some as young as only a few years old. According to the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) “the majority (52.2%) of female sex trafficking survivors identified were under the age of 17 at the time of trafficking”.

As the global recession continues, children are increasingly vulnerable to sex trafficking. In Phnom Penh, which has about a quarter of the countries sex industry, children who are begging and peddling are increasingly at risk. Many children roam around the city’s Riverside were pedophiles and human traffickers are also known to prey on their innocence.

Little girls who should be giggling and playing with dolls are offering sex in child like terms with happy smiles, “yum-yum, boom-boom”. The normality of it all what is more shocking as children, some as young as four or six, who know nothing other than a life of sex and exploitation. A child who knows more about sex than toys, who think that grown men everywhere desire little girls as their play things…this is the sad reality that is life for many children in Cambodia and across the globe.

In February 2008 the Cambodian government enacted a “Law on Suppression of Human Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation”, which was done mostly after years of pressure from the United States. One such form of pressure coming from the US was the country’s low ratings on the State Departments notorious TIP Report, the 2009 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report, placed Cambodia on the Tier 2 Watch List. Following the country’s first step to use legal means to impact and deter trafficking, they imposed ban on foreign marriages, in March 2008. The ban was enacted largely in response to a sharp increase in marriages between South Korean men and poor Cambodian women, many who were not destined to newly wedded bliss, but a life forced into sexual slavery. Since the law was enacted Cambodian authorities have conducted numerous raids and cracked down on street prostitution, however the crack down according to many non-profits, has done little to help the actual situation, let alone the victims.

For more eye opening incite into the Cambodian sex trade and those whom it takes as its victims in its unrelenting path, see the video above.

Women and girls are not the only victims of trafficking and slavery in Cambodia, nor is the sex industry the only exploitative industry the country has to a great deal of work to do in order to combat. One such area is labor, such as seen in the recent SIREN case analysis: Cambodian men and boys exploited on long-haul fishing boats, English PDF

Thai Parliament Opens Way for Border Talks


By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
03 September 2009

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Thursday welcomed the approval of border discussions in Thailand’s parliament, providing the border committees of the neighbors a foundation for resolving a longstanding border dispute.

The two sides are expected to discuss border demarcation near the temple of Preah Vihear, which has been at the center of a military standoff for more than a year. The approval follows the withdrawal of some troops by both sides in recent weeks.

In a closed-door session between the Thai upper and lower Houses, lawmakers voted 306-6 to engender talks, the Nation newspaper reported. Earlier attempts to negotiate a border settlement have been scuttled by a Thai government in chaos, as partisan sides protested, and, in one case, ousted, the government.

“Thai parliament approved the negotiation framework to allow the Thai government to discuss all problems with its neighbors, particularly the border issue with Cambodia,” said Koy Kong, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry. “In the past, Cambodia has waited for approval from Thai parliament allowing the Thai border commission the right to continue discussions with the Cambodian side.”

The new vote would allow discussions “as soon as possible,” he said. “The Cambodian side needs to resolve the border dispute sooner and sooner.”

Var Kimhong, head of Cambodia’s border committee, said the two countries have so far approved more than 30 of 73 sites where markers need to be placed along 805 kilometers of frontier.

The General Border Committee, led by defense ministers of both nations, and the Joint Border Commission, led by the foreign ministers, met in late July, while the top commanders of respective militaries met in August—all in talks aimed at diffusing tension along the border, which saw at one time a build-up of thousands of troops and led to to several skirmishes and at least seven dead soldiers.

Over the past year, those skirmishes threatened to spill over into larger battle, as soldiers fired machine guns, rockets and mortars at each other, while heavy infantry and artillery were stationed nearby. A Cambodian market was destroyed, Preah Vihear temple damaged and hundreds of residents near the 11th-Century temple forced to evacuate their homes.

The standoff was sparked by the July 2008 listing of Preah Vihear temple as a Unesco World Heritage site, subsequent protests in Thailand and on the border and the occupation of disputed land near the temple by troops from both sides.