Monday, September 7, 2009

Cambodian FM, U.S. Secretary of State to meet at NY for deepening bilateral ties

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Hor Namhong said on Tuesday that he plans to meet with his American counterpart Hillary Clinton in New York during his stay there.

"So far, both sides have plan to meet to strengthen the bilateral cooperation and relationship between the two countries during I stay there to join the UN General Assembly late this month," Hor told reporters at his ministry after signing agreements with the U.S. to receive over 34 million U.S. dollars assistance for health and education improvement.

"I and my American counterpart are busy at the U.N. General Assembly but both sides plan to seek appropriate time for talking to deepen the bilateral relationship," he said, adding that "I have just talked with U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia (Carol A. Rodley) briefing about the time of the bilateral talks."

Hor Namhong said he plans to leave Cambodia on September 22 for New York to join the U.N. General Assembly.

Since 1999, the U.S. has provided over 250 million U.S. dollars for health and education system improvement in Cambodia. "We highly appreciated with the assistance from the U.S.," he added.

"The bilateral relationship between the two countries are getting better and better and moving forwards," Hor Namhong said, citing that "the U.S. sent their Peace Corps to help local Cambodians, lifted Cambodia from trade blacklist and provided military assistance to Cambodian armed forces." Last week, the U.S. offered over 6.5 million U.S. dollars worth of military equipment and technical assistance to Cambodian Royal Armed Forces.

Thai PM says Thaksin must return to serve jail term

BANGKOK, Sep. 8 (Xinhua) -- Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said in a Twitter interview that the convicted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra must return to Thailand to servehis jail term before they could a talk, The Nation online reported Tuesday.

In his probably first interview through Twitter, a comparatively new form of social networking and mini-online-chatting service, by The Nation's editor-in-chief on 9:30 p.m. Monday, the prime minister insisted Thaksin would have to respect the laws like all Thais.

Thaksin was, under the charge of power abuse, sentenced in absentia to two years in jail by Thai Criminal Court in 2008, after he and his wife found a chance to leave Thailand and never came back. Thaksin had been ousted by a military coup in September19, 2006.

When asked to confirm whether he would not hold any talk with Thaksin unless the self-exiled former premier returns to serve his jail term first, Abhisit replied, "I want everybody to respect the laws".

"You wouldn't answer my question," Suthichai, the editor, would not give up.

"Read my answer well and you will find the answer," Abhisit replied.

Asked again by Suthichai whether this means a "No", Abhist said his interpretation is probably right.

In terms of the possibility to talk with Thaksin over Twitter, on which the former premier also owns a personal page, Abhisit said the mini-blog tool's capacity of 140 characters per post would be too limited to hold such a talk.

On the other hand, Thaksin said in an interview on Sunday he is ready to talk to everyone, including the prime minister or a deputy prime minister.

"If you or any taxi driver and low-ranking policeman can have my phone number, then the powers-that-be should know how to get in touch with me," Thaksin said in the interview aired for the first time by Thailand's state-run MCOT station.

Abhisit's Twitter interview began with a question about the speculation that the prime minister would dissolve the House on New Year day, but he ducked the question.

"No one can tell in advance about House dissolution, but I'll devote myself t

U.S. provides $34.8 mln for Cambodian health, education

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- The United States on Tuesday signed amendments to two agreements with Cambodia to provide 34.8 million U.S. dollars in 2009 to support Cambodian priorities in health and education.

Hor Namhong, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, and Flynn Fuller, USAID (U.S. Agency fro International Development) Mission Director, signed on behalf of their respective governments with U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia Carol A. Rodley as a witness.

The new funding brings to over 250 million U.S. dollars that the United States has provided in support of health and education in Cambodia since 1999, according to the press release from U.S. Embassy.

The amendment to the first agreement consists of 31.6 million U.S. dollars in grant funds to achieve health objectives. Funds will be used to promote a variety of activities to reduce the transmission and impact of HIV/AIDS; to prevent and control major infectious diseases such as tuberculosis; to fight avian influenza and other influenza-like illnesses; to improve maternal, reproductive, and children's health; and to strengthen Cambodian public-health systems.

The amendment to the second agreement will provide 3.2 million U.S. dollars in grant funds to support the Cambodian government's education objectives. These funds will support the launch of a new program that will build on USAID's ongoing education program, which is improving the quality and relevance of basic education and increasing access to schooling for all children, including minorities, people with disabilities, and the very poor.

Activities will also focus on reducing school dropout and repetition rates through improvements in teaching quality, school-management training, and measuring student academic achievement.

USAID expects to commit 61.8 million U.S. dollars in assistance to Cambodia in 2009.

Powerful quake rocks Java, Indonesia

JAKARTA, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) - An earthquake with magnitude of 6.8 jolted Yogyakarta of Java Island on Monday evening, but no report of damage or casualty, meteorology and geophysics agency, and disaster management agency said here.

The intensity of the quake was felt up to the next island of Bali tourist resort, and also next province of West Java, an official of the meteorology and geophysics agency named only Fauzy said.

At the hardest-hit area, Wonosari and Yogyakarta city, which the intensity was felt the highest at 3 to 4 MMI (Modified Mercally Intensity), there were no report of damage or casualty, spokesman of the disaster management agency Priyadi Kardono said.

"We have checked the hit area, particularly Wonosari and Yogyakarta, there was no damage or casualty," he told Xinhua.

The intensity of the quake was also felt at 2 to 3 MMI in GunungKidul and Pangandaran of West Java and Bali Island, said Fauzy.

The quake struck at 23:12 Jakarta time (1612 GMT) with epicenter at 263 kms southeast of Wonosari of Yogyakarta and at 35 kms undersea bed, Fauzy said.

Indonesia, with over 230 million population, sits on a vulnerable quake hit zone known as the Pacific Ring of Fire, where two continental plates, stretching from Western hemisphere to Japan, meet and cause frequent seismic and volcanic movements.

Trip to Cambodia opens eyes of Chicago native

Dey Krahorm forced eviction (Photo: Sarah Grime)

September 7, 2009
Sara Lugardo
Los Angeles Examiner (California, USA)

Christine Robinson grew up in the Chicago area and attended the University of Iowa with a Bachelors’ in International Studies. Her recent visit to Cambodia opened her eyes to their economic situation.

While staying at a hotel in Phnom Penh Christine witnessed the forced evacuation of the slum, Dey Krahorm, by the Cambodian military. Trucks hauled out the few possessions people were allowed to take from their homes.

The evacuation of the slum was in collaboration with the Cambodian Peoples’ Party and a development company named 7NG. The 150 families living in the slum had been offered compensation by 7NG to relocate to Cham Chao before the evictions.

However, by relocating, the families would lose their income and so they refused. Once negotiations failed, the police and the Cambodian military forcefully evacuated the families.

Christine wrote on WIP that according to the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Cambodia, “The eviction was carried out in the middle of the night, with bulldozers, tear gas, rubber bullets, batons, and workers equipped with sticks and axes contracted to demolish the houses… The residents were thrown onto the street to watch their homes being destroyed.”

Cambodia has a long history of battling with property rights and this situation is very common to its’ people. Check out Christine’s full story on Property Rights for the Urban Poor in Cambodia.

JBC border talks to be discussed in the parliament this month

Mon, September 7, 2009
The Nation

The Parliament is expected to consider negotiation documents for the Thai-Cambodian Joint Commission on Demarcation for Land Boundary (JBC) within this month, Thai Foreign Ministry said Monday.

Last week, the parliament approved the framework for negotiation of Thailand-Cambodia General Border Commission (GBC) to provide security and order in the border area.

The JBC, a responsive mechanism for boundary demarcation is under the Foreign Ministry while the GBC, which takes care of general security along the border, is under the Defense Ministry.

It was widely misunderstood in many media which reported last week that the JBC had been approved by the parliament.

Democrat MP Kraisak Choonhavan told Cambodian media, Phnom Penh Post, last week that the national assembly approved solutions to technical and other issues surrounding the border demarcation.

"A majority of parliamentarians approved the reports of the Cambodian-Thai Joint Boundary Commission this morning (September 2)," Kraisak was quoted by the Post as referring to the bilateral body that has met three times since November.

Thai foreign ministry spokesman Thani Tongpakdi said the ministry is still waiting for the parliament's consideration on the issues.

A matter of civil rights

Monday, 07 September 2009
Olivia Jaimee
Letter to The Phnom Penh Post


Dear Editor,

The government has no business imposing its will on citizens' freedom of movement. This would definitely be an infringement of civil rights. My question to the governor is where, exactly, is Cambodia headed right now?

Firstly, not too long ago, a senior official voiced their concern about the scantily clad Cambodian women pictured in a certain magazine. Almost immediately, all copies were removed from the shops and the magazine office was shut down.

Secondly, the recent banning of the Miss Landmine pageant also has me scratching my head. Now, a curfew on underage girls? Whatever's next?

Democracy in Cambodia is slowly and surely buckling under pressure from the elite few and their "Yes, Sir!" cronies. This trend threatens to roll Cambodia back to its darkest day in recent history.

Olivia Jaimee
Phnom Penh

Meeting of 2 communist parties: China's CPC and Hun Xen's CPP

Senior CPC official meets Cambodian guest

Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- China would work with Cambodia to deepen bilateral cooperation of mutual benefit, a senior Communist Party of China (CPC) official said here on Monday.

Liu Qi, member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, made the remarks during a meeting with Sim Ka, member of the Standing Committee of the Central Committee of the Cambodian People's Party (CPP).

Liu, also secretary of the CPC Beijing Municipal Committee, said China regarded Cambodia a good neighbor, good friend, good brother and good partner.

The amities between the two peoples were of long standing, and the two countries enjoyed mutual political trust, economic cooperation of mutual benefits, and close coordination on international and regional issues, he said.

Sim Ka agreed to make efforts to strengthen inter-party ties with the CPC, and said the CPP would like to contribute to the Cambodia-China relations.

Sim Ka began his visit to China on Monday. He is scheduled to visit Xi'an, capital of northwestern China's Shaanxi Province.

Cambodian PM asks U.S. to cancel Cambodian debts

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen on Monday asked the United States to remit Cambodia's debts which the country has owed since 1970s by Lon Nol's regime.

"The U.S. should cancel the debts for Cambodia because the U.S. dropped large amount of bombs on Cambodia and many people suffered from it," he said at a ceremony of releasing final result of 2008 Population census at Chuktumok Theater Hall in Phnom Penh.

Hun Sen put forwards the requirement directly to Carol A. Rodley, U.S. ambassador to Cambodia who also attended the ceremony.

"The U.S. should pay compensation for Cambodians but the U.S. side has always asked us to pay debt back," he said.

Cheam Yeap, a lawmaker and chairman of the committee of finance, banking, economy and audition of Cambodian National Assembly, said that "we have been urging U.S. side to cancel debts for several times but they said they need decision from top level."

He added that Cambodia has owed the United State in a total of over 300 million U.S. dollars by Lon Nol regime.

Cambodia provides land for retired armed forces: PM

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Monday the government will provide land for families of retired armed forces including military police, police, and soldiers for planting agricultural corps.

"It will be a big system of social safety and welfare for retired armed forces and we want to transfer the non production forces to the production forces because they have land for planting agricultural crops to survive as pension," he said at the ceremony of releasing the final result of 2008 population census.

"With the land, those armed forces will not be fallen into poor after they retired from the positions," he said, adding that we need at least 30,000 or 40,000 hectares of land for those armed forces.

"Those plots of lands will come from the economic concession land which private side did not follow the contract and were taken back by government to be transferred into social concession land for armed forces," Hun Sen said, adding that Ministry of Economy and Finance will organize the project with the legal regulations.

Khieu Kanarith, government spokesman and information minister said that the retired armed forces will not be allowed to sell, transfer or rented those land but they have to plant agricultural crops for their living conditions.

The soldier families will get a plot of land about a hectare or two hectares.

Cambodia seeks to attract more foreign investments

Cham Prasidh, Cambodia's Senior Minister and Minister of Commerce

07 September 2009
By Channel NewsAsia's IndoChina Bureau Chief Anasuya Sanyal

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia is open for business, despite global economic uncertainty and a negative growth forecast. For foreign investors in the country, the downturn could be a moment of opportunity.

Cambodia has not been spared by the economic crisis - exports have dropped by 23 per cent and the construction industry has slowed almost to a standstill. But it will take another quarter to determine any negative long-term economic effects.

The country's Commerce Minister, Cham Prasidh, is confident that demand will pick up again, especially in the hard-hit garment sector. He explained why the country is a perfect springboard to foreign markets.

"Cambodia is a less developed country. We enjoy market preferences larger than our neighbouring countries which are developing countries. It means that products that you can produce in Cambodia go to Europe duty free and quota free," he said.

Fund manager Doug Clayton dispels some common misperceptions regarding investing in Cambodia.

He said: "Many investors think Cambodia's an unstable place, but personally I think it's one of the most stable countries in Southeast Asia because it has had the same government for over two decades and is unlikely to change over the next ten years."

A 15 per cent corporate tax rate and various government incentives have made CEOs like Johnny Ong of Singapore's HLH confident of its success. The company is expected to invest US$40 million into its corn agribusiness over the next few years.

HLH said it can import expensive farm equipment and seed stock from abroad tax free. Local labour is easily available and there is plenty of land to lease – 7 million hectares over the whole country.

Cambodian PM's warning over new KRouge trials [-Hun Xen undermining the KR Tribunal?]

Monday, September 07, 2009
AFP

PHNOM PENH — Cambodian premier Hun Sen on Monday renewed strong warnings his country could be plunged back into civil war if the UN-backed Khmer Rouge court tried more suspects from the late 1970s movement.

Hun Sen, himself a former low level commander in the communist regime, made his speech less than a week after the court said it could open investigations against more members of the government which killed up to two million people.

"If you tried (more suspects) without taking national unification and peace into consideration and if war re-occurred, killing between 200,000 and 300,000 people more, who would be responsible for it?" the premier told a ceremony.

"I have achieved this work (peace), I will not allow anybody to destroy it.... The value of peace here is very big," Hun Sen said, lamenting that Cambodia had already been drenched "by blood and tears".

"So anybody, please don't cause more trouble," he added.

The prime minister in a speech in March made similar assertions that further prosecutions at the Khmer Rouge court could destabilise Cambodia, saying that he would prefer the court failed than indict more suspects.

But critics have said there is no risk of renewed fighting since the country's civil war ended in 1998, and have accused the administration of trying to protect former regime members now in government.

The tribunal was created in 2006 to try leading members of the 1975-1979 regime and five former leaders are currently being held on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The court's long-awaited first trial of Kaing Guek Eav, better known by the alias Duch, is under way and he has accepted responsibility for overseeing the execution of more than 15,000 people at the regime's main prison.

After Duch's trial, the court plans to prosecute former Khmer Rouge ideologue Nuon Chea, head of state Khieu Samphan, foreign minister Ieng Sary and his wife, minister of social affairs Ieng Thirith.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge an agrarian utopia, resulting in the deaths of up to two million people from starvation, overwork and torture.

Cambodia terminates land titling program with World Bank [... more land-grabbing to take place?]

PHNOM PENH, Sep. 7, 2009 (Xinhua News Agency) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen announced Monday his country has terminated the land titling program with World Bank before the original schedule, which was planned to end at late this year.

"They has put more complicated conditions on us over land titling program," Hun Sen said at the ceremony of releasing the final result of 2008 population census at Chak Tuk Mok Theater Hall in Phnom Penh.

He ordered Keat Chhon, deputy prime minister and minister of economy and finance, to tell World Bank partner about that termination. He also blamed the World Bank for always wanting "to play the role as big brother on other development projects with partners in Cambodia."

"The World Bank plans to suspend the project, but now we tell them first that we have to terminate that project," He said.

The World Bank has supported Cambodian land titling program, namely Land Management and Administration program (LMAP), with the budget amount of 24.5 million U.S. dollars. It has cooperated with Ministry of Land Management and Urban Planning and Construction and handed over one million land titles for local people so far, according to the World Bank's review.

Hun Sen also said that the project plans to end at late this year, so now "we have to do it with our own budget as we have done it before."

"We have shared the findings of the review with the (Cambodian) government but could not reach an agreement on whether LMAP's social and environmental safeguards should apply in some of the disputed urban areas," Wordl Bank country director Annette Dixon was quoted as saying by local English language newspaper the Cambodia Daily.

Cambodia pulls plug on World Bank land dispute plan [... Hun Xen protecting the land-grabbers?]

PHNOM PENH, Sept 7 (Reuters) - Cambodia said on Monday it had pulled out of a World Bank project aimed at settling land disputes, raising further concern about forced evictions in the impoverished Southeast Asian country.

Prime Minister Hun Sen said the World Bank's administrative procedures were too complicated and Cambodia no longer wished to be part of the project.

"We decided to end the partnership with the World Bank," Hun Sen said during a meeting devoted to the annual census report.

"And the remaining money...they can take it back," he said, adding that terms of the arrangement were "very complicated".

Land ownership is a controversial issue in Cambodia, where legal documents were destroyed and state institutions collapsed under the Khmer Rouge regime of the 1970s and the civil war that followed.

A period of unprecedented growth since 2004 has boosted land prices, particularly in the capital Phnom Penh, leading to a spike in the number of evictions and triggering fierce criticism of the government by aid donors.

The World Bank joined other donors in July to ask the government to halt the evictions and the problem was raised again during a visit by its vice-president for East Asia and the Pacific Region, James Adams.

The scheme had provided $24.3 million for land management and administration projects over the last seven years, during which 1.1 million title deeds were issued.

The World Bank and rights groups said the termination of the deal, decided last week but not announced until Monday, would compound the problem of land-grabbing in Cambodia and hobble campaigns to eradicate poverty.

"The government wants to have the right to evict people and sell the land to companies, forcing people to sell for only small compensation," said Ou Vireak of the US-funded Cambodia Centre for Human Rights.

"It is a sad day for Cambodia, for the poor, and for the victims of the land grabbing."

(Reporting by Ek Madra; Editing by Martin Petty and Ron Popeski)

http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2009/09/hun-xen-former-khmer-rouge-opposes-more.html

Cambodian PM opposes more Khmer Rouge arrests

Monday, September 07, 2009
AP

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen renewed his criticism of the country's U.N.-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal Monday, warning that arresting more suspects could spark civil war.

Hun Sen spoke in response to last week's ruling by the tribunal allowing prosecutors to pursue further arrests. The matter had been in contention because the Cambodian co-prosecutor opposed the idea, while his international counterpart supported it.

The tribunal is seeking justice for the estimated 1.7 million people who died in Cambodia from execution, overwork, disease and malnutrition as a result of the communist regime's radical policies while in power between 1975-79.

Critics allege that Hun Sen has sought to limit the tribunal's scope because other potential defendants are now his political allies. Hun Sen served as a Khmer Rouge officer, before changing sides, and many of his major political allies are also former members of the group.

Brad Adams, Asia director at New York-based Human Rights Watch, said he believed Hun Sen was seeking to protect members of his own Cambodian People's Party, who could be targets for prosecution. But he said it was unlikely more arrests would be made.

"(Hun Sen) has been saying the same thing for 10 years, since before the court was set up," Adams said. "It's never happened, and it's not going to happen."

He pointed out that the Khmer Rouge have been defunct for a decade, and that its former leaders are more interested in business than war, and even if they sought to fight, they would be unable to recruit anyone to their side.

The tribunal's long-awaited first trial — of the Khmer Rouge's chief jailer, for war crimes and crimes against humanity — opened in March. A joint trial with four other senior officials — the only others currently in detention — is expected in the next year or two.

Hun Sen said that if foreign aid donors stopped funding the tribunal, Cambodia would carry on the proceedings on its own, without the international participation it now has. The tribunal employs joint teams of Cambodian and international court personnel.

"I would like to tell you that if you prosecute (more leaders) without thinking beforehand about national reconciliation and peace, and if war breaks out again and kills 20,000 or 30,000 people, who will responsible?" Hun Sen said. He said he was not trying to use his influence against the court, but only stating the situation.

There was no immediate reaction to Hun Sen's comment by representatives of the tribunal.

The Khmer Rouge came to power after a bitter 1970-75 civil war, and after being ousted from power in 1979, carried out an insurgency from the jungle until 1999.

Hun Sen said that he had devoted several years of his life to persuading Khmer Rouge leaders and their soldiers to end their fighting, so he could not allow anyone to drag the country back into a new civil war.

"I will not allow anyone to destroy what I have achieved,' Hun Sen said. "The value of peace here is huge."

Hun Sen has dominated Cambodian politics for more than two decades. He ousted his former co-prime minister in a 1997 coup and has since ruled virtually unchallenged.

Cambodian PM asks U.S. to cancel Cambodian debts

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen on Monday asked the United States to remit Cambodia's debts which the country has owed since 1970s by Lon Nol's regime.

"The U.S. should cancel the debts for Cambodia because the U.S. dropped large amount of bombs on Cambodia and many people suffered from it," he said at a ceremony of releasing final result of 2008 Population census at Chuktumok Theater Hall in Phnom Penh.

Hun Sen put forwards the requirement directly to Carol A. Rodley, U.S. ambassador to Cambodia who also attended the ceremony.

"The U.S. should pay compensation for Cambodians but the U.S. side has always asked us to pay debt back," he said.

Cheam Yeap, a lawmaker and chairman of the committee of finance, banking, economy and audition of Cambodian National Assembly, said that "we have been urging U.S. side to cancel debts for several times but they said they need decision from top level."

He added that Cambodia has owed the United State in a total of over 300 million U.S. dollars by Lon Nol regime.


Cambodia provides land for retired armed forces: PM

www.chinaview.cn
2009-09-07

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Monday the government will provide land for families of retired armed forces including military police, police, and solders for planting agricultural corps.

"It will be a big system of social safety and welfare for retired armed forces and we want to transfer the non production forces to the production forces because they have land for planting agricultural crops to survive as pension," he said at the ceremony of releasing the final result of 2008 population census.

"With the land, those armed forces will not be fallen into poor after they retried from the positions," he said, adding that we need at least 30,000 or 40,000 hectares of land for those armed forces.

"Those plots of lands will come from the economic concession land which private side did not follow the contract and were taken back by government to be transferred into social concession land for armed forces," Hun Sen said, adding that Ministry of Economy and Finance will organize the project with the legal regulations.

Khieu Kanarith, government spokesman and information minister said that the retired armed forces will not be allowed to sell, transfer or rented those land but they have to plant agricultural crops for their living conditions.

The soldier families will get a plot of land about a hectare or two hectares.

Editor: Bi Mingxin

Cambodia pulls plug on World Bank land dispute plan

http://www.iii.co.uk
PHNOM PENH, Sept 7 (Reuters) - Cambodia said on Monday it had pulled out of a World Bank project aimed at settling land disputes, raising further concern about forced evictions in the impoverished Southeast Asian country.

Prime Minister Hun Sen said the World Bank's administrative procedures were too complicated and Cambodia no longer wished to be part of the project.

"We decided to end the partnership with the World Bank," Hun Sen said during a meeting devoted to the annual census report.

"And the remaining money...they can take it back," he said, adding that terms of the arrangement were "very complicated".

Land ownership is a controversial issue in Cambodia, where legal documents were destroyed and state institutions collapsed under the Khmer Rouge regime of the 1970s and the civil war that followed.

A period of unprecedented growth since 2004 has boosted land prices, particularly in the capital Phnom Penh, leading to a spike in the number of evictions and triggering fierce criticism of the government by aid donors.

The World Bank joined other donors in July to ask the government to halt the evictions and the problem was raised again during a visit by its vice-president for East Asia and the Pacific Region, James Adams.

The scheme had provided $24.3 million for land management and administration projects over the last seven years, during which 1.1 million title deeds were issued.

The World Bank and rights groups said the termination of the deal, decided last week but not announced until Monday, would compound the problem of land-grabbing in Cambodia and hobble campaigns to eradicate poverty.

"The government wants to have the right to evict people and sell the land to companies, forcing people to sell for only small compensation," said Ou Vireak of the US-funded Cambodia Centre for Human Rights.

"It is a sad day for Cambodia, for the poor, and for the victims of the land grabbing."

(Reporting by Ek Madra; Editing by Martin Petty and Ron Popeski)

AlJazeeraEnglish: Witness - Deacon of Death

Witness - Deacon of Death - Trailer


Witness - Deacon of Death - Part 1


Witness - Deacon of Death - Part 3


Witness - Deacon of Death - Part 4



A Cambodian woman confronts the man whom she holds responsible for the death of her family and other villagers under Cambodia's Khmer Rouge regime when she was a child.

JBC border talks to be discussed in the parliament this month

http://www.nationmultimedia.com
By The Nation
Mon, September 7, 2009

The Parliament is expected to consider the negotiation frameworks for the Thai-Cambodian Joint Commission on Demarcation for Land Boundary (JBC) within this month, Thai Foreign Ministry said Monday.

Last week, the parliament approved the framework for negotiation of Thailand-Cambodia General Border Commission (GBC) to provide security and order in the border area.

The JBC, a responsive mechanism for boundary demarcation is under the Foreign Ministry while the GBC, which takes care of general security along the border, is under the Defense Ministry.

It was widely misunderstood in many media which reported last week that the JBC had been approved by the parliament.

Democrat MP Kraisak Choonhavan told Cambodian media, Phnom Penh Post, last week that the national assembly approved solutions to technical and other issues surrounding the border demarcation.

"A majority of parliamentarians approved the reports of the Cambodian-Thai Joint Boundary Commission this morning (September 2)," Kraisak was quoted by the Post as referring to the bilateral body that has met three times since November.

Thai foreign ministry spokesman Thani Tongpakdi said the ministry is still waiting for the parliament's consideration on the issues.

Is Every Khmer Citizen Equal Before the Law? – Sunday, 6.9.2009

Posted on 7 September 2009
The Mirror, Vol. 13, No. 628
http://cambodiamirror.wordpress.com/

Well, Article 31 of the Constitution of the Kingdom of Cambodia speaks very clearly:

- “The Kingdom of Cambodia shall recognize and respect human rights as stipulated in the United Nations Charter, the Universal Declaration of human Rights, the covenants and conventions related to human rights, women’s and children’s rights.

- Every Khmer citizen shall be equal before the law, enjoying the same rights, freedom and fulfilling the same obligations regardless of race, color, sex, language, religious belief, political tendency, birth origin, social status, wealth or other position.”

While talking to a number of people about the case of a person who spent four years –without having been presented to a judge for sentencing! – in prison, supposedly “by mistake” because the legal bureaucracy had forgotten about this person, accused of having stolen a second hand mobile phone worth US$15.-, I did not find anybody who thought that a rich person, or a person with higher level social and political connections, would have been in prison for four years in a similar situation. And this is the second, similar case within a month. The media report again and again – over the years – that many people in general do not believe that the courts bring justice equally to all.

It is a stark contrast to have, during the same week, the report that a former high ranking police officer, accused to have been behind an acid attack, is absolved from prosecution by a court, for insufficient evidence. She threatened the victim and her family members, who taped the threatening phone calls before the crime happened.

There is always the desperate hope that crude injustice will not happen again, or will happen less. The Minister of Justice admonished the courts not to give too harsh sentences. And this week, a prosecutor of the Supreme Court started to questioned the Kandal Court for illegally detaining a person for four years who is accused of a petty crime only. Will those responsible for the misconduct of justice be punished? Will the innocent victims of these events even get a financial compensation for the time they were jailed against the law?

This week, the president of the Cambodian People’s Party, who is also the president of the Senate, also called for moderation when applying the law against those who are economically week in society – pointing out that they have the power to vote!

On 18.1.2008, last year, The Mirror had carried a report saying that the President of the National Assembly signed a letter, asking for the suspension of pumping sand to fill the Boeng Kak Lake – and The Mirror carried an aerial picture showing the lake when it was still larger than now – a natural basin for floodwater, a place of recreation, a counterbalance to the urbanized areas. Many big cities in the world would be happy to have such a lake in their midst.

Now also the President of the Senate referred to the Boeng Kak Lake, reminded commune, district, and municipal governors and councillors to remember that the citizens are voters, while implementing the law. He said that “what is important is that proper solutions are offered to the residents, otherwise it will affect the members of our party, accusing them of disregarding the difficulties of the citizens.”

Such concerns were were hardly heard by other representatives of the state and of Phnom Penh city. And he added a reference to the implementation of new obligations required by the traffic law, saying, “Sometimes, the poor people have little money to afford to buy a motorbike to work as moto-taxi drivers, and sometimes, even our civil servants encounter difficulties and take their free time to work as moto-taxi drivers, to find additional income to support their family’s living. They face another difficulty when their motorbikes are confiscated to pay taxes… there has to be a practical understanding for our people and for our fellow civil servants who face difficulties in their livelihood.”

This was not a call to disregard and to not implement the traffic law – but law enforcement too has to be done in a balanced way, considering all participants in road traffic. Throughout the city, one can see police forces stopping motorcycle drivers who do not wear safety helmets, or who do not have rear-view mirrors on their vehicles. And while they are busily educating the poorer participants traveling on the roads, big cars without license plates – so they have also not paid taxes – pass by without getting attention, or being stopped, or getting confiscated as may happen to a motorcycle driver whose owner has not paid the license tax. There was not one day for months – when I travel around town on a moto-taxi – that I did not see several big cars without license plates.

This week, we mirrored that in May 2009, 132 people died in traffic accidents, and 442 people were seriously injured – the number of deaths countrywide had increased by 35% compared to the same period in 2008. And it was reported that in Phnom Penh, 67% of traffic accidents that happened during daytime were due to over-speed driving. Are those who cause many of these high speed accidents the same who are targeted by the campaign to fix rear-view mirrors to their motorcycles? The equality before the law needs also to be applied when enforcing the traffic laws equally – “regardless of sex, social status, wealth, or other position.”

A matter of civil rights

The Phnom Penh Post
Monday, 07 September 2009
Olivia Jaimee

Dear Editor,

The government has no business imposing its will on citizens' freedom of movement. This would definitely be an infringement of civil rights. My question to the governor is where, exactly, is Cambodia headed right now?

Firstly, not too long ago, a senior official voiced their concern about the scantily clad Cambodian women pictured in a certain magazine. Almost immediately, all copies were removed from the shops and the magazine office was shut down.

Secondly, the recent banning of the Miss Landmine pageant also has me scratching my head. Now, a curfew on underage girls? Whatever's next?

Democracy in Cambodia is slowly and surely buckling under pressure from the elite few and their "Yes, Sir!" cronies. This trend threatens to roll Cambodia back to its darkest day in recent history.

Olivia Jaimee
Phnom Penh


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Send letters to: newsroom@phnompenhpost.com or PO Box 146, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The Post reserves the right to edit letters to a shorter length.

The views expressed above are solely the author's and do not reflect any positions taken by The Phnom Penh Post.

Cambodia seeks to attract more foreign investments

Cham Prasidh, Cambodia's Senior Minister and Minister of Commerce

http://www.channelnewsasia.com
By Channel NewsAsia's IndoChina Bureau Chief Anasuya Sanyal

Posted: 07 September 2009

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia is open for business, despite global economic uncertainty and a negative growth forecast. For foreign investors in the country, the downturn could be a moment of opportunity.

Cambodia has not been spared by the economic crisis - exports have dropped by 23 per cent and the construction industry has slowed almost to a standstill. But it will take another quarter to determine any negative long-term economic effects.

The country's Commerce Minister Cham Prasidh is confident that demand will pick up again, especially in the hard-hit garment sector. He explained why the country is a perfect springboard to foreign markets.

"Cambodia is a less developed country. We enjoy market preferences larger than our neighbouring countries which are developing countries. It means that products that you can produce in Cambodia go to Europe duty free and quota free," he said.

Fund manager Doug Clayton dispels some common misperceptions regarding investing in Cambodia.

He said: "Many investors think Cambodia's an unstable place, but personally I think it's one of the most stable countries in Southeast Asia because it has had the same government for over two decades and is unlikely to change over the next ten years."

A 15 per cent corporate tax rate and various government incentives have made CEOs like Johnny Ong of Singapore's HLH confident of its success. The company is expected to put US$40 million into its corn agribusiness over the next few years.

HLH said it can import expensive farm equipment and seed stock from abroad tax free. Local labour is easily available and there is plenty of land to lease – 7 million hectares over the whole country.

- CNA/so

CU freshman raising money to help build school in Cambodia

http://www.coloradodaily.com
Heather Starbuck touched by trip she made in high school

By Melanie Asmar, asmar@coloradodaily.com
Posted: 09/06/2009


University of Colorado freshman Heather Starbuck poses for a portrait while wearing a shirt she designed for Operation Lyhou, a project she founded to raise funds to build a school in rural Cambodia. ( Will Morgan )

Several things about Heather Starbuck's trip to Cambodia last year made an impression on her. The heat. The cockroaches that crunched under her feet when she walked down the hallway of her hotel. The way the kids at the school she visited immediately caught on to "The Macarena."

The kids surprised the University of Colorado freshman in other ways, too.

As she was saying goodbye on her last day, a particularly outgoing 13-year-old boy named Lyhou approached her. He was one of the poorest in the school, she said; he wore the same shirt, green-and-white striped with a sassy saying -- "I Do What I Want" -- printed in English across the front, almost every day.

That day, he took off his sunglasses and gave them to her as a keepsake.

"They were probably his only personal possession," she said. "He had nothing but he was so generous."

Starbuck has started a campaign in Lyhou's name to raise money to build another school in Cambodia.

The 18-year-old launched Operation Lyhou (pronounced Lee-how) this past summer with the goal of raising $13,000. To reach her goal, Starbuck is selling trendy T-shirts emblazoned with a sketched peace sign for $19.99 each.

So far, she said, she's raised $526.

Starbuck is working with an organization called American Assistance for Cambodia, which has helped build more than 400 elementary and middle schools in rural Cambodia since 1999. Through the organization, World Bank will match Starbuck's $13,000. The money will pay for the construction of a modest school and other amenities, including teachers, computers and solar panels, she said.

"The kids there love school," she said, adding that they often came early or stayed late and showed up on weekends to use the computers.

"It's amazing to see how much they took advantage of it," she said -- especially coming from the United States, "where school is seen as such a drag."

Starbuck traveled to Cambodia as a high school junior. Her school, the private Overlake School in Redmond, Wash., had raised the money to build a primary school in the town of Pailin, Cambodia, several years earlier, a project profiled in a New York Times column about the problem of sex trafficking in Cambodia and the positive effects of education.

Every two years, students from Overlake return to Pailin to make improvements and volunteer there, teaching English, dental hygiene and other subjects for two-and-a-half weeks.

Starbuck ended up on the trip by chance. She was new to Overlake and halfway through her junior year, hadn't chosen an activity for the school's "project week." Someone dropped out of the coveted Cambodia trip at the last minute and she snagged a spot, not knowing what to expect. At the time, she said, she was bitter, "an angry high school kid who thought school was boring."

Visiting Pailin changed that.

"I was feeling really down," she said, "but it made me realize there are so many better things you could be doing than feeling bad for yourself. Somewhere in the world, someone has it worse."

The trip inspired Starbuck to intern with two nonprofit groups -- a microfinancing organization called Global Partnerships and the aid agency Mercy Corps -- and eventually apply to CU, where she's studying international affairs.

She said she chose CU partly because the school is ranked the No. 5 all-time producer of Peace Corps volunteers, a path she's considering pursuing after graduation.

Starbuck keeps in touch with Lyhou, who's now 14 and in high school. At first, she said, the e-mails they sent were simple: "How's the weather? Did you go to school today?"

But in the year and a half since she last saw him, Lyhou's English has improved. In one of his last messages, he asked what she sees as a very important question: "How's college?"

Lyhou told her he wants come to the United States to study.

"He seems to have really big goals," Starbuck said.

So does she.

Cambodia upholds pill sentence

Johanne Vinter Axelsen, 55, has had her sentence upheld in Cambodia.
http://politiken.dk
7. sep 2009

Cambodian court has upheld a verdict on a Danish woman for having sent headache pills to the United States.

A Cambodian court has upheld a 15-year sentence on a Danish woman for having sent headache pills to the United States, despite police having destroyed most of the evidence.

Johanne Vinter Axelsen, 55, was sentenced in January on charges of having sent the pills, which included codein, to her son who was starting a business in the U.S.

"Immediately after the appeal court's decision, she was pulled into a car and taken to continue her sentence at Correctional Centre 2 in Phnom Penh," says her lawyer Henrik Hasseris Olesen.

In handing down its decision, the Appeals Court did not take Nielsen's claim that she was unaware that it was illegal to send pills out of the country into account.

"In January she was sentenced for having sent 28 envelopes with pills to the United States. The charge is now that she sent 58 envelopes. And at least one of them was sent before she arrived in the country," Olesen says, adding that the police had told the court that all but one of the envelopes that were evidence in the case had been destroyed.

Supreme Court
Axelsen's Cambodian lawyer is now trying to appeal the case to the Cambodian Supreme Court and her Danish lawyer is seeking help from the Danish Foreign MInistry to improve her conditions.

According to her lawyer, Axelsen currently spends 23 hours of each day with 45 other prisoners in a cell measuring 60 square metres.

Edited by Julian Isherwood

PAD Network Urges Govt to Clarify Preah Vihear Land Dispute

TAN/Network
http://www.thailandoutlook.tv/tan

7 September 2009

Members of the People's Alliance for Democracy in Ubon Ratchathani Province have come out to urge the government to clarify the alleged loss of sovereignty over the disputed 4.6-square kilometer area in the vicinity of Preah Vihear Temple to Cambodia.

Supporters of the People's Alliance for Democracy, or PAD, in Ubon Ratchathani issued a statement, acknowledging their support for the group led by Weera Somkwamkid in travelling to the disputed 4.6-square kilometer area on the Thai and-Cambodian border on August 28.

Weera's group claimed the government's negligence has allowed Cambodian troops, monks and people to take control of the area.

The group claimed evidence indicated that Thailand has obviously lost its right 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 on the government to assign the Defence Ministry to take action over encroachment on the area in order to preserve the country's sovereignty. The government has also been asked to urgently clarify the issue to the public.

PAD coordinator for Ubon Ratchathani, Thatsanee Bunprasit, said the group has organized the Tonkla Prachatipatai', or Sprouts of Democracy, program to explain key political and democratic issues to high-school and university students nationwide. She added installation of ASTV satellite dishes in the province is also part of the program.

Cambodia: An Obligation To Protect Human Rights

SCOOP New Zealand
Monday, 7 September 2009

Press Release: Asian Human Rights Commission

Cambodia: The State Has An Obligation To Protect Human Rights Defenders

Unlike many other countries, Cambodia is bound to international human rights obligations, including one towards its citizens who wish to participate in the promotion of human rights. Thus, under the Paris Peace Agreements of 1991 that ended the conflict in that country, “Cambodia undertakes”, among other things, “to support the right of all (its) citizens to undertake activities that would promote and protect human rights and fundamental freedoms.”

Since the conclusion of those agreements many such citizens have formed various NGOs with the purpose of doing precisely that work. Nowadays, there are several thousand NGOs that have registered but only a fraction of them are actually operational.

In reality, the Cambodian government has not honoured this particular international obligation as the registration of NGOs is a lengthy and complicated business, and requires the approval of officials at many levels of administration from the commune, district and provincial levels to many units higher up in the Ministry of Interior.

As to human rights defenders themselves, who are invariably affiliated to such NGOs, they not only have little support and protection from the government but also have at times received threats and intimidation from its agents. More often than not these agents have restricted their activities. The general attitude of the government is simply not particularly favourable to their work when NGOs and human rights defenders are invariably critical of the human rights situation in the country, an assessment which the government does not like at all.

Human rights defenders and their NGOs working closely with the grassroots people, have come to know the real situation and have been able to make interventions to help victims of human rights abuses. They have also been able to bring their cases to the attention of the relevant public authorities. It has now become a routine in the country that whenever people have some troubles related to human rights violations, the first thing they do is to call for help from the NGOs and inform sympathetic media so that they can highlight their cases. NGOs and human rights defenders have become part of the country’s social landscape.

For their respective part, the government has set up its own human rights committee, and the National Assembly (Lower House) and the Senate (Upper House) have likewise their respective human rights committees. Alleged victims of human rights violations have resort to these public institutions, invariably with the help from human rights defenders. But the effectiveness of these committees is debatable when, at times, they are not so keen to receive complaints from victims and fail to keep them informed of the progress of their investigations.

Recently, the government has shown more hostility to NGOs and human rights defenders. When reconfirmed in office after the July 2008 elections, Prime Minister Hun Sen prioritised the law on NGOs as one of the first three laws his government set out to enact, the other laws being the penal code and anti-corruption law. On both pieces of legislation the government has made frequent promises to enact. The reason behind the enactment of the NGO law was said to prevent the funding of NGOs by terrorist organisations. In September, 2008 Hun Sen asserted: “We have a concern that sometimes under so and so NGO, financial assistance has been provided for terrorist activities, take for instance the Al Um Quran under which Ham Bali hid himself in Cambodia.” But what has been forgotten was that the anti-Terrorism Law of 2007 (Chapter 11 on funding and aid for terrorism) has already adequately addressed this issue.

In March 2009, in response to a critical assessment of the human rights situation in Cambodia by the US State Department, Hun Sen accused NGOs of giving “misleading information” to the report and lashed out at them saying that, “human rights NGOs are working only for salaries; if they didn’t criticize the government, they would be out of work; they would also have to close their doors if there were no assistance from abroad.” He further asserted that in order to get money, “they have therefore to endeavour to fabricate stories to prove that the government has a poor human rights record.” The US and its various foundations are a major source of funding for Cambodian NGOs.

This year the NGO bashing has reached the mass media sympathizing with the government when TV channels have aired comedies to paint bad pictures, not only of donors but also the NGOs themselves. Representatives of donors were shown as being more concerned with womanizing than with evaluating the work of NGOs while NGOs were shown as being busy producing reports critical of the government to submit to their donors. Recently, the government’s hostility has gone as far seeing local and international NGOs and even international agencies, when critical of the human rights situation in Cambodia, as working for the opposition.

Human rights defenders have therefore not been secure in their work. In 2008, ADHOC, a leading human rights NGO reported 63 cases of threats of various forms, including arrests, against hundreds of defenders. These defenders comprised in majority, community representatives advocating the protection of their lands, human rights activists and trade unionists.

According to ADHOC, such threats were “an unprecedented phenomenon” and they had happened in almost every province and municipality. ADHOC asserted that public authorities took no action against the perpetrators and the judiciary seems to have connived with these threats. It said that, “In particular, threats against human rights defenders on the part of some judges and prosecutors became close to (being) systematic, and the Supreme Council of Magistracy (in charge of nominating and disciplining judges and prosecutors) and the Ministry of Justice failed to take disciplinary measures against judges and prosecutors committing such abuses.”

Very recently, apparently under pressure from powerful persons interested in the exploitation of the resources that are supposed to belong to the indigenous people in the area, according to the country’s land law, a judge recommended to ADHOC to remove from a member of its staff from Rattanakiri province. Pen Bonnar, is a human rights defender well known for his defence of the rights of the indigenous people against the encroachment of their local land and forests by the rich and powerful. That judge intimated that if Pen Bonnar was no longer under his jurisdiction he was not have to conduct the investigation into the charges of defamation, disinformation and incitement against him. ADHOC obliged and assigned Pen Bonnar to work in Phnom Penh.

By making obstacles to the work of human rights defenders and their respective NGOs, the Cambodian government has not only defied its own undertaking under the Paris Peace Agreements but also the country’s Constitution. Article 31 of this Constitution says, inter alia, that “The Kingdom of Cambodia shall recognize and respect human rights as stipulated in the United Nations Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human rights, the covenants and conventions related to human rights, women’s and children’s rights.” The same Constitution, under its Article 35, guarantees its citizens’ “the right to participate actively in the political, economic, social and cultural life of the nation.”

The government’s NGO bashing and obstructions have affected the citizens’ constitutional right “to establish associations” (Art. 42). It has also violated their right mentioned above to participate in the political, economic, social and cultural rights of the country.

By working against NGOs and human rights defenders, the Cambodian government has also violated the Declaration on the Right and Responsibility of Individuals, Groups and Organs of Society to Promote and Protect Universally Recognized Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, which the UN General Assembly adopted with its Resolution 53/144 dated 9 December 1998. This Declaration should have been more widely known and complied with, especially among government officials dealing with human rights defenders, as the field Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Phnom Penh widely disseminated it in the local language (Khmer) since 2006.

The work and activities of NGOs and human rights defenders is in conformity with this Declaration to promote and protect universally recognized human rights and fundamental freedoms. However, the Cambodian government should do its part and fulfil more of its responsibilities. In particular, it should provide protection to all human rights defenders as stipulated under Art 12 (2) of the Declaration:

"2. The State shall take all necessary measures to ensure the protection by the competent authorities of everyone, individually and in association with others, against any violence, threats, retaliation, de facto or de jure adverse discrimination, pressure or any other arbitrary action as a consequence of his or her legitimate exercise of the rights referred to in the present Declaration.”
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) strongly urges the Cambodian government to honour all its international human rights obligations, and in particular, to support the right of all its citizens, human rights defenders and NGOs to undertake activities that promote and protect human rights and fundamental freedoms in Cambodia. The government and its agents must provide adequate protection to all human rights defenders.

About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.

KRouge trials may ignite war

Mr Hun Sen made his speech less than a week after the court said it could open investigations against more members of the government which killed up to two million people. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

The Straits Times
http://www.straitstimes.com/

Sep 7, 2009

PHNOM PENH - CAMBODIAN premier Hun Sen on Monday renewed strong warnings his country could be plunged back into civil war if the UN-backed Khmer Rouge court tried more suspects from the late 1970s movement.

Mr Hun Sen, himself a former low level commander in the communist regime, made his speech less than a week after the court said it could open investigations against more members of the government which killed up to two million people.

'If you tried (more suspects) without taking national unification and peace into consideration and if war re-occurred, killing between 200,000 and 300,000 people more, who would be responsible for it?' the premier told a ceremony.

'I have achieved this work (peace), I will not allow anybody to destroy it.... The value of peace here is very big,' Mr Hun Sen said, lamenting that Cambodia had already been drenched 'by blood and tears'.

'So anybody, please don't cause more trouble,' he added.

The prime minister in a speech in March made similar assertions that further prosecutions at the Khmer Rouge court could destabilise Cambodia, saying that he would prefer the court failed than indict more suspects.

But critics have said there is no risk of renewed fighting since the country's civil war ended in 1998, and have accused the administration of trying to protect former regime members now in government.

The tribunal was created in 2006 to try leading members of the 1975-1979 regime and five former leaders are currently being held on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The court's long-awaited first trial of Kaing Guek Eav, better known by the alias Duch, is under way and he has accepted responsibility for overseeing the execution of more than 15,000 people at the regime's main prison.

After Duch's trial, the court plans to prosecute former Khmer Rouge ideologue Nuon Chea, head of state Khieu Samphan, foreign minister Ieng Sary and his wife, minister of social affairs Ieng Thirith.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge an agrarian utopia, resulting in the deaths of up to two million people from starvation, overwork and torture. -- AFP

Cambodia terminates land titling program with World Bank

http://www.istockanalyst.com
Monday, September 07, 2009

PHNOM PENH, Sep. 7, 2009 (Xinhua News Agency) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen announced Monday his country has terminated the land titling program with World Bank before the original schedule, which was planned to end at late this year.

"They has put more complicated conditions on us over land titling program," Hun Sen said at the ceremony of releasing the final result of 2008 population census at Chak Tuk Mok Theater Hall in Phnom Penh.

He ordered Keat Chhon, deputy prime minister and minister of economy and finance, to tell World Bank partner about that termination. He also blamed the World Bank for always wanting "to play the role as big brother on other development projects with partners in Cambodia."

"The World Bank plans to suspend the project, but now we tell them first that we have to terminate that project," He said.

The World Bank has supported Cambodian land titling program, namely Land Management and Administration program (LMAP), with the budget amount of 24.5 million U.S. dollars. It has cooperated with Ministry of Land Management and Urban Planning and Construction and handed over one million land titles for local people so far, according to the World Bank's review.

Hun Sen also said that the project plans to end at late this year, so now "we have to do it with our own budget as we have done it before."

"We have shared the findings of the review with the (Cambodian) government but could not reach an agreement on whether LMAP's social and environmental safeguards should apply in some of the disputed urban areas," Wordl Bank country director Annette Dixon was quoted as saying by local English language newspaper the Cambodia Daily.

(Source: iStockAnalyst )

Civil parties boycotting the trial while judges are divided and tense up

Phnom Penh (Cambodia). 31/08/2009: Emotional prayer during a “pilgrimage” by civil parties to S-21
©John Vink/ Magnum


Ka-set
http://cambodia.ka-set.info

By Stéphanie Gée
07-09-2009

The judges’ decision on Thursday August 27th not to allow civil party lawyers to have a say in the last topic in the trial regarding the character of the accused was a pill hard to swallow for the victims and relatives of victims, who openly said so from Monday August 31st. Why question their participation as civil parties, only a few days from the end of Duch’s trial? The turnaround bitterly tasted of betrayal and it was twofold: in addition to being an insult to the victims, who have fought for years to have a full role in an international criminal law in construction, it brought into the courtroom an ideologically-tainted clash between common law and civil law and sowed division among the international judges. On the eve of the plenary session, the common law proponents, patently hostile to any opening, successfully won over their Cambodian colleagues, despite their civil law background.

Civil parties’ boycott of the hearings
On Monday August 31st, the hearing at Duch’s trial started with the sight of civil parties’ empty seats. They had come to the tribunal but stopped outside. On the parking lot. Twenty-eight men and women solemnly denounced the breach of their rights and the double standard in the treatment of the accused and the victims. At the forefront were Chum Mey, Chum Sirath and Phung-Guth Sunthary, who all testified before the Chamber. A press conference without ceremony, where the tribunal’s representatives, including the Victims’ Unit officers, were conspicuous by their absence.

From the outset, they reminded what they considered an initial aberration: that the defence counsel be remunerated by the tribunal, but not their lawyers. They were offended by a discrepancy between their rights – “the accused has the right to say anything about the victims, but when we want to respond to him, the president interrupts us.” Very quickly, they expressed their “consternation” and their incomprehension regarding the decision of August 27th, which “reduces [their defenders] to silence” and reflected, in their view, an inequality of arms between the victims and the accused they have observed since the trial started. They announced they would not go back to the seats they were allocated in the courtroom as long as the Trial Chamber did not backtrack and restore their full rights as parties to the trial.

“We are not asking for a favour, only equal treatment with the accused,” Chum Sirath hammered. “Our concern is about not having access to the truth. But to know the truth, we need to understand not only the actions of the accused, but also his intentions,” the civil party explained, before lamenting such a “discriminatory” decision that prevented civil parties from interrogating experts and character witnesses. The 28 notified the court in writing about the reasons for their action.

No courtroom, a pilgrimage instead
In one movement, the group moved and boarded the bus they chartered themselves to start a moving pilgrimage – first, to S-21, where they or their relatives lived through hell, then to the killing fields at Choeung Ek to honour the souls of those who were sacrificed by an insane Khmer Rouge regime.

At S-21, Bou Meng was waiting for the group. Chum Mey, another S-21 survivor, led the impromptu procession through the rooms of the genocide museum with determination, dignity and grief. They quickly found themselves faced with the dozens of photographs of prisoners covering the walls, a gloomy legacy of this killing machine. Spontaneously, each and everyone started looking for their relatives, crying out their names, in a harrowing call to the deceased. Under the predatory eye of photographers and cameramen, they broke down the one after the other. It was for each of those portraits they fought to see the trial happen at last.

“The civil parties are suffering. Where are human rights? The accused may have lost his authority, but not for a second did he lose his rights. He is a criminal in the history of mankind. We, the civil parties, are here for truth and justice. We have supported the civil parties’ participation to this trial and we have accepted the rules of democracy. But in my view, these rules of democracy are a double-edged sword, because civil parties suffer. Sometimes, we’d prefer to be accused because he is so much better-off,” mocked a grave Mrs Phung-Guth Sunthary.

“Must we eat the rice raw?”
As for him, Chum Mey shared his fear to see his hopes doused. “Every day, since the start, I have come to attend the trial and I want it to be an exemplary trial. The judges have placed wood under the pot to cook the rice. But now, they take the wood out of the fire and we are supposed to eat the rice raw? Why did they silence our lawyers, the plaintive? Why are we deprived of the right to speak and respond to the defence?” However, he did not want to “abandon” the tribunal yet and hoped it would reconsider its decision. “I aspire to justice, but I can see that the rice is not cooked.” Earlier, on the parking lot, he explained he wanted to “know history so he could tell it to [his] children.” He said: “If we were not meant to participate, they should have told us from the start!”

The climax of this distressing walk took place in the Tuol Sleng room where an altar had been set up. They collected themselves and lit a forest of incense sticks, which curls of smoke took their messages away to their disappeared relatives.

The lawyers’ lobbying in the courtroom
Meanwhile, at 9am, as the hearing started, Alain Werner, co-lawyer for civil party group 1, drew the judges’ attention to the situation and soberly informed them of the boycott decided by the civil parties. In the afternoon, once the office of the co-Prosecutors interrogated the experts mandated by the tribunal to establish a psychological report on Duch, the Swiss lawyer again intervened. He reminded that French psychologist Françoise Sironi-Guilbaud had begun her statement in the morning “by speaking directly to the victims [to pay them tribute] and she did it again this afternoon.” Yet, Alain Werner stressed, “as you know, the victims are not present here, for the first time since the trial’s start, to listen to this expert, contrary to other experts.” “At the very least, we ask that the two experts be explained why they are testifying in the civil parties’ absence and why their lawyers cannot ask them questions.” Put in an awkward situation, the judges consulted one another. Jean-Marc Lavergne, only dissenting judge in the decision of August 27th, did not join these discussions. Finally, president Nil Nonn, who now seemed to form a pair with his neighbour Sylvia Cartwright, announced that the Chamber “had no obligation” to take such a step. He added peremptorily: “The decision was made. It is clear and the rationale for the decision will be made public in due time.” On September 6th, it had still not been publicised. But for now, one thought, the case was closed.

Christine Martineau, recently arrived for civil party group 2, then launched into the battle herself. “In this trial, it is important that the experts know why the civil parties are not here. That the court has no obligation to explain it, we of course understand it. But if the civil parties are not here, it is because they consider that one of their rights was taken away from them. Yet, they are parties to the trial and they clearly want to express their discontent regarding their exclusion from this very important day for them, because it is also one of the civil parties’ roles to understand the character of the accused and ask him questions. I believe it was important that the experts be at least informed of what is going on. We are not in a rupture trial.” And indeed, the defence counsel themselves had not opposed the opportunity for civil parties to interrogate the expert psychologists. The president was slightly annoyed and repeated the court’s position, before hurriedly giving the floor to Duch’s lawyers, whose turn it was to interrogate the psychologists.

Offensive after offensive
The next day, Tuesday September 1st, the civil party lawyers continued to hold the line with their clients. Christine Martineau started, as the first character witness was testifying. “The Chamber knows that the civil parties who are boycotting the hearing have asked their lawyers to be present so the witnesses summoned – to whom their lawyers cannot ask questions – be informed of these civil parties’ absence. I would like to ask you the chance to say one word on the reason for their absence in the courtroom yet today.” The president seemed to little appreciate the request and explained he had already explained the situation the previous day. Responding immediately, the lawyer had the time to say “for the attention of those who did not know,” that to be aware of the civil parties’ statement in which they detail the reasons for their boycott, “one only had to read the morning press.”

At the next character witness, it was Alain Werner who spoke. “We, civil party lawyers, ask the Chamber to explain why the civil parties are not here, because they do not understand the decision preventing their lawyers from asking questions to this witness.” Nil Nonn started to become irritated. “It is a repetitious statement! Are you a repetitious person? We will not allow this issue to be raised again,” the president stated, unnerved.

The third character witness appeared and it was Cambodian lawyer Kim Mengkhy who bravely took the plunge: “In the name of the civil party counsels, we have asked the Trial Chamber to inform the character witnesses of the civil parties’ rights to ask them questions. But on the basis of the decision made by the Chamber…” His microphone was turned off. Nil Nonn could take no more. “The Chamber does not wish to add anything to the response you have already been given. We will no longer give you the floor to make observations or requests as long as character witnesses take the stand.” Indeed, they no longer had the floor. But the message was out.

Crystallisation of the clash between common law and civil law
Judge Lavergne dissented from the other judges in the decision of August 27th limiting the role of civil parties. This profound divergence among the red-robed magistrates was again marked by the French judge during the hearing on September 2nd, when Duch’s interrogation on his character resumed. Following the president, judge Cartwright – who comes from a common law system in which civil parties do not exist – spoke. As a preliminary to her questions to the accused, she declared with insistence: “Mr Kaing Guek Eav, these questions we ask you on your character aim to highlight relevant information to take into account in case you were deemed guilty of the crimes you are charged with, to determine the sentence. Are you fully aware of that?”

The French judge reacted swiftly and requested the floor. “If I may, I believe there is – you have realised it – a dissenting opinion on these issues of questioning on the character of the accused. It seems important to me to say that as far as I am concerned, the interrogation on the accused’s character is not limited to the issue of sentencing, but it aims to contribute to a debate in the search for truth and to know who the accused is. This question – who the accused is – may then allow an understanding of the motivations and an understanding of the facts he is charged with.”

Two different ways to approach law? In a dense, tight and substantially pertinent interrogation, Sylvia Cartwright, as if unbeknownst to her, seemed to prove her French colleague’s case: most of her questions did not address directly the character of the accused, but the facts themselves. For the trial, the questions’ interest was obvious. But to justify the civil parties’ exclusion from this questioning, nothing could probably have deepened further the victims’ bitterness.

Civil parties’ participation: solutions to be imagined, according to François Roux
Indeed, the handling of civil parties – whose status is difficult to prove and who are expected to join in high numbers in the next trials – often appears to be a puzzle. However, François Roux, Duch’s co-lawyer and long-time advocate of the presence of civil parties in international criminal jurisdictions, believed there were avenues of reflection to be explored. In an interview on Monday August 31st, the French lawyer thus suggested the creation of “a public victims’ defence office, following the same model and given the same resources as a defence office in some countries.” The idea, he continued, was to confer “an exclusive competency” to the chief of such an office in the representation of victims before this tribunal. “The chief of that office would be an experienced and qualified lawyer, who must come from the civil law system, know and practiced in the civil parties system for at least ten years, and who would be remunerated by the tribunal as a civil servant.”

For François Roux, all that has already been accomplished in this area cannot be simply erased. “I consider that the victims’ access to international criminal tribunals is an unstopping movement. It is in motion. It is normal we still need to find methods to make it work in satisfying conditions. But you must not stop this movement and rather prove creative in the search for concrete solutions that allow both victims’ access while preserving the fundamental balance in a criminal trial, that is: a prosecutor who accuses and an accused who defends himself.”

Waiting for the judges’ decisions
The plenary session opening on Monday September 7th is expected to yield decisions heavy in consequences for the participation of civil parties to the next trials before the Khmer Rouge tribunal. On the agenda for discussions, the ECCC website announces propositions relating to a modification of the current model of participation of victims to upcoming trials.

Will the ECCC international judges – the majority of whom at least come from common law – prefer giving up before the challenge or seek to innovate? The atmosphere of rigid confrontation that settled since the August 27th decision bodes ill for the opening debates. Yet, judges have a lot to lose: the support of the victims who have waited for thirty years to be heard and to see justice given, and who were made to believe they would be fully parties to these trials.

Cambodian PM's warning over new KRouge trials

Remains of the victims of the Khmer Rouge regime's "Killing Fields" in Choeung Ek near Phnom Penh

PHNOM PENH — Cambodian premier Hun Sen on Monday renewed strong warnings his country could be plunged back into civil war if the UN-backed Khmer Rouge court tried more suspects from the late 1970s movement.

Hun Sen, himself a former low level commander in the communist regime, made his speech less than a week after the court said it could open investigations against more members of the government which killed up to two million people.

"If you tried (more suspects) without taking national unification and peace into consideration and if war re-occurred, killing between 200,000 and 300,000 people more, who would be responsible for it?" the premier told a ceremony.

"I have achieved this work (peace), I will not allow anybody to destroy it.... The value of peace here is very big," Hun Sen said, lamenting that Cambodia had already been drenched "by blood and tears".

"So anybody, please don't cause more trouble," he added.

The prime minister in a speech in March made similar assertions that further prosecutions at the Khmer Rouge court could destabilise Cambodia, saying that he would prefer the court failed than indict more suspects.

But critics have said there is no risk of renewed fighting since the country's civil war ended in 1998, and have accused the administration of trying to protect former regime members now in government.

The tribunal was created in 2006 to try leading members of the 1975-1979 regime and five former leaders are currently being held on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The court's long-awaited first trial of Kaing Guek Eav, better known by the alias Duch, is under way and he has accepted responsibility for overseeing the execution of more than 15,000 people at the regime's main prison.

After Duch's trial, the court plans to prosecute former Khmer Rouge ideologue Nuon Chea, head of state Khieu Samphan, foreign minister Ieng Sary and his wife, minister of social affairs Ieng Thirith.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge an agrarian utopia, resulting in the deaths of up to two million people from starvation, overwork and torture.

Pensions shortfall delays retirement of 2,000 soldiers

Photo by: Tracey Shelton
Sok Pol, 46, waits for customers in Central Market on Sunday. After five years of service in the Cambodian army, Sok Pol says he received no compension when he lost his right leg from a land mine and must now sell books to support his family.

The Phnom Penh Post
Monday, 07 September 2009
Cheang Sokha and Tracey Shelton

System straining despite premier's urging: ministry.

A FUNDING shortage has kept more than 2,000 Cambodian soldiers in uniform beyond the retirement age of 60, a Defence Ministry spokesman said Sunday.

The delayed retirements are the latest symptom of a pension system that officials say has long been plagued by a lack of resources and administrative inefficiencies.

Defence Ministry spokesman Chhum Socheat said Sunday that there was nothing his ministry could do to address the problem beyond keeping a list of those who were set to retire.

"We have already prepared their names, but we cannot let them retire because we do not have the budget," he said.

His comments came four days after Prime Minister Hun Sen called on officials to expand the social safety net for veterans. Speaking at a Council of Ministers plenary session, the premier told Finance Minister Keat Chhon to direct more money to the pensions, though he specified neither an amount nor a timeline for the request, according to a statement released after the meeting.

Hong Sreysambath, deputy director of the Veterans Affairs Department at the Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation, said the department was making payments for 100,000 disabled and retired soldiers and families of deceased. Including relatives, the payments are currently supporting 600,000 people at a cost of US$12 million per year.

A 2004 article in the Cambodia Development Review, published by the Cambodia Development Resource Institute, found that 471,252 people were entitled to government transfers from Veterans Affairs. The total expenditure in 2003, according to the report, was $13.7 million, translating to an average of $29 per beneficiary per year.

According to the Veterans Affairs figures, more pensioners are now vying for less money. The results of a survey released last week by Handicap International suggest this has contributed to an even less efficient system.

The survey, which focused on land mine survivors, pointed to the pension system as "an area of least improvement", citing problems including "delayed payments, bribery and the selling of entitlements in times of need".

Ny Chakrya, head of monitoring for the rights group Adhoc, said Sunday that he approved of the government's plan to expand the safety net for soldiers but stressed the need to cut down on corruption and delays.

"This policy should serve as an incentive for military officers who have devoted their lives to the nation," Ny Chakrya said. "They need assistance when they retire."

______________________________

Ex-soldiers say system neglects wounded vets

THE shortcomings of the pension system have been felt acutely by Teng Teung, 50, a former soldier who lost his right leg in a land mine explosion in Koh Kong in 1985. The native of Kandal said he was slated to receive 80,000 riels (US$19) from the provincial social affairs office each month, but that the money often came every three months instead.

"I receive the money, but it is very late," he said Sunday in Phnom Penh, where he begs for food. He said the payments were not enough to support him and his nine children.

Sok Pol said he lost a leg and a large part of his left foot from a land mine. He sells books about the Khmer Rouge era in in Central Market to provide for his family and cover the medical expenses for the large hole that remains in his foot. He said the pension system does not compensate even for injuries sustained while in service.

Working alongside him, Pring Chut, 46, said he has received no money for his 11 years of service in the military. He said he lost his left leg to a mine in 1989, and has since turned to selling travel and history books and hand-painted gift cards. A sign he carried Sunday read: "Buy a book to help me [have] a better life. Help me feed my family and send my kids to school."