Wednesday, September 9, 2009

International Co-Prosecutor Orders to Investigate Five More Persons – Wednesday, 9.9.2009

Posted on 9 September 2009
The Mirror, Vol. 13, No. 629
http://cambodiamirror.wordpress.com/

“Phnom Penh: The International Co-Prosecutor, Mr. William Smith, sent two documents for investigations (the second and third introductory submissions) to the Co-Investigating Judges [at the Khmer Rouge Tribunal] in order to open the way for the Co-Investigating Judges to investigate more suspects.

“In a statement released on Tuesday [8 September 2009], the Acting International Co-Prosecutor stated, ‘The last two Introductory Submissions for investigation cover different crimes which are a part of a “joint criminal enterprise,” and relate to five suspects.’

“According to the same statement, Mr. William Smith said that identifying five new suspects for the Co-Investigating Judges for further investigation will show a broader field of responsibilities for different crimes, committed during the Democratic Kampuchea Regime from 1975 to 1979.

“But, according to the procedures, the investigations will be conducted without arrests and detentions of the suspects. After the investigations end, arrests and detentions can be made only if there are warrants signed and approved by both National and International Co-Investigating Judges. In case that the Co-Investigating Judges disagree, the side that wants to have arrests and detentions must find support of at least 4 votes among the 5 judges of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, otherwise arrests and detentions cannot be made.

“Actually, according to the law, documents sent for investigations have to be kept confidential, but considering the importance of the trial chamber’s affairs and the necessity to provide information to the public about the progress of the procedures, the internal rules allow that the Co-Prosecutors provide summary information to the public, considering certain limits related to the identities of the victims, witnesses, and the investigation.

“According to the published statement, the second Introductory Submission identifies eight instances of alleged murder, torture, unlawful detention, forced labor, and persecution. If testimonies are found related to the above instances, they will be considered to constitute crimes against humanity, which seriously violate the Geneva Conventions and Cambodia’s penal code of 1956 [which was in effect when the Khmer Rouge took power in 1975]. The third Introductory Submission describes 32 instances of alleged murder, torture, unlawful detention, forced labor, and persecution. If testimonies are found, they will constitute crimes against humanity and violations of the penal code of Cambodia of 1956.

“It should be considered that the documents to investigate more suspects were sent on Monday [7 September 2009], the day when Prime Minister Samdech Hun Sen expressed his concern that national instability might break out if more persons are indicted. However, Prime Minister Samdech Hun Sen stated that whether to indict more persons or not is the Khmer Rouge Tribunal’s affair, but he said that he has the obligation to maintain peace in Cambodia.

“Do new tensions between Cambodia and the United Nations start again?”

Rasmei Kampuchea, Vol.17, #4994, 9.9.2009
Newspapers Appearing on the Newsstand:
Wednesday, 9 September 2009

Director Sam B. Lorn takes viewers on a gritty journey through 'The LBC'

http://www.examiner.com


LA Asian American Movie Examiner
Ed Moy

"The LBC" might best be described as "an epic for it's size and budget."

Produced by Forlorn Films and directed by Cambodian-American filmmaker Sam B. Lorn, the movie offers viewers a look inside the gritty dark side of Long Beach, California (aka "The LBC").

Born and raised in Cambodia, Lorn survived the "Killing Fields" and emigrated to America where he settled in Long Beach, California with his surviving relatives.

In 1991, Lorn moved to New York City to pursue a filmmaking career. He studied acting at HB Studios and graduated from the world-renowned New York Film Academy.

He learned about all aspects of the film and distribution industry by working at Assembly Films, Screen Gems, The American Museum of Natural History, Shelter Films and several other independent production companies.

Over the years, he has worked with the best in the film industry, including such directors as Robert Deniro, Woody Allen, Steven Spielberg, Alan Rudolph, Rick Famuyiwa, Alfred Cheung, Bruce Law, and Derek Wan. He has also worked with actors such as Christopher Walken, Leonardo DiCaprio, Nicholas Cage, Matt Damon and Tom Hanks.

As a director, writer, producer and actor, Lorn's feature film credits include: "Little Patriot," "Moving Target," "Young Survivor," "Manhattan Midnight" and "Lovesick."

"Lovesick," was realized with backing from Angelina Jolie. The compelling film tells "a modern-day Romeo and Juliet-type-story with a Khmer-American twist. A young Khmer-American woman is forced into an arranged marriage when she falls in love with another man. She is faced with the dilemma of honoring her family and respecting tradition or following her heart."

Completed in 2004, "Lovesick" was self-released on DVD domestically.

Recently, Lorn took time to answer a few questions about his new film "The LBC" for Examiner.com.

What inspired you to make LBC?

After living in long Beach for two years and seeing Cambodian people going through hardships, it reminded me of Cambodia.

As an independent filmmaker what challenges did you face getting this movie made?


Three things:
1. This subject matter, no one would help me with finance, so I have to do it with a small business man, Randy Hor.

2. Other filmmaker did not understand my vision, so I have to work extra hard to tell a story that people can relate to.

3. Working with shoestring budget, I had to cut pre-productions and rehearsal and had to limit production to only 12 days of shooting. I was very fortunate that my cast and crew, they were able to pull it together.

Tell us about the themes of the movie... what is it about?

THEME: Carpe Diem, Karma. LOG LINE: One man endeavors to avenge his mother’s death while being thwarted by a local drug kingpin. SYNOPSIS: Long Beach, California can change from a beautiful place to a deadly one on the turn of a dime. A gangster wannabe (Ivan Djurovic) slips deeper into the criminal underbelly seeking to avenge his mother’s death. He finds common ground with a man (Sam Lorn) searching for his brother’s murderer. When they are confronted by a ruthless drug kingpin (Larry Parrish), anarchy and betrayal reign supreme leading to a climatic bloody showdown on the streets known as “The LBC”.

How long did it take from start to finish on production?

Two years.

When can moviegoers see the film on dvd?

October 2009

What's your next project?

Lovesick 2 with Jim Leung as Vinny, hoping to shoot this Christmas.

For more info:
http://www.lbcthemovie.com

No Duty for Rice to EU; Challenges Remain

By Ros Sothea, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
09 September 2009

The European Union began a deal this month to allow Cambodian rice to be imported duty-free, but many challenges remain before Cambodia can be a powerhouse rice producer.

The deal would open a market of 500 million people from 27 countries and “provide a price incentive for European importers to import the product from Cambodia,” said Rafael Dochao Moreno, Charge d’Affaires of the European Commission in Cambodia.

“So by providing this zero-duty entry for Cambodian rice, we are promoting Cambodia’s development, especially in the sector of rice production.”

The duty-free status for Cambodian rice is part of the EU’s “Everything But Arms” initiative, which was established in 2001 and gives preferences on all goods, except weapons, entering the EU from 50 least-developed countries.

Moreno said the very last product to become duty free will be sugar, which will be covered from Oct. 1. From that date onward, all products exported from Cambodia to the EU will be duty free, unlike Thailand and Vietnam, which are ineligible for the initiative.

Cambodia’s rice export pales in comparison to its neighbors and other countries. According to US figures, Cambodian rice export was around 500,000 tons in 2008, compared to 10 million tons from Thailand and 4 million tons from Vietnam.

Of 2008 rice exports for Cambodia, only 2,700 tons reached the EU, for a value of $2 million.

Nevertheless, Agriculture Minister Chan Sarun welcomed the duty-free status. “It will benefit our farmers, who are producing rice for export to the EU,” he said, adding that he hoped exports would increase with the new status.

However, challenges remain. Cambodian farmers need to improve the value chain, upgrade milling equipment, create standards for the rice market and enhance market prospects, Moreno said.

Without these improvements,Cambodia will likely benefit little from duty-free status, said Chan Sophal an agricultural economist.

“I expect that rice exports will increase to the EU, but not much, because we still face shortages of better mills,” he said. High costs for export and small ships at Cambodia’s ports are further challenges, he said.

Exporters were optimistic, however.

“Before, there were some brokers who wanted to export rice from our country, but the negotiation always failed, due to high costs of exporting,” said Kim Savuth, president of the Khmer Food company. “But now that is not a problem, because we are duty free. So compared to neighboring countries, rice exported from Cambodia is cheaper.”

He acknowledged that some exporters were not confident with the quality of Cambodian rice.

Phou Puy, president of the Rice Milling Federation of Cambodia, said quality would not be a concern, as a new mill of international quality would start operation at the end of the year. More and more mills will follow, he said, but a main challenge would continue to be a shortage of money to buy un-milled rice from farmers.

Sun Kunthor, president of the State Development Bank, said the government will provide an $18 million package for loan disbursement to rice mills between 2009 and 2010, enough to buy 90,000 tons of un-milled rice.

Cambodia has a total 3 million hectares of agricultural land, and 80 percent of the population depends on agriculture. Vast tracts of land are still underdeveloped.

Indictments Hint at Tribunal Independence: Scholar

By Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
09 September 2009

An American professor who has been following and writing crucial articles about the UN-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal on Monday offered a cautious congratulations to the court’s latest development which could lead to more prosecutions of the regime’s senior leaders.

John Hall, a law professor at Chapman University School of Law, said in a letter to VOA Khmer that “by deciding to open the door to additional prosecutions, the tribunal has proclaimed its determination to remain above political manipulation.”

Hall was referring to a decision by the Pre-Trial Chamber last week to move five more indictments to the investigating judges, following the recommendation of the international prosecutor’s office and against the judgment of the Cambodian prosecutor.

Prime Minister Hun Sen has warned that further indictments could lead to instability or war, fears echoed by Cambodian officials and judges. (Three Cambodian Pre-Trial judges decided against moving the indictments forward, but with two international judges in favor of the move, the chamber did not reach the super-majority necessary to kill the prosecution’s submissions to investigating judges.)

“The apparent willingness of the tribunal to move forward with additional prosecutions suggests that the international judges at least are unwilling to allow Hun Sen to influence the legal proceedings with alarmist threats of impending civil war,” Hall wrote.

The concern of instability has little basis in the reality of contemporary Cambodia, Hall said, calling the split decision “particularly worrying, because the argument against additional prosecutions—a vague and less unconvincing threat of civil war from the prime minister—is clearly not a legal argument adequate for the court to reject additional indictments, such as an insufficiency of evidence.”

Now, Hall said, a worry lingers over whether Cambodian officials will cooperate with the court if the indictments move even further through the process.

“How will the Cambodian government respond if indictments are brought against former senior Khmer Rouge who are currently active supporters of Hun Sen and the CPP?” he asked, referring to the ruling party. “Will the prime minister then use the excuse of national stability to pull the plug on the hybrid tribunal, perhaps proceeding with a purely domestic trial only of the current five defendants?”

The tribunal is currently trying Kaing Kek Iev, the former prison chief known as Duch, and is holding Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary and Ieng Thirith, four of the senior-most leaders.

At least one former Khmer Rouge commander, Meas Muth, a probable suspect for indictment who serves an advisory role to the Ministry of Defense, has said he does not fear prosecution for his role in what he says was defense of the country from foreign invasion.

Flash floods slam Istanbul, kill at least 20

Rescuers evacuate people trapped in a bus in Ikitelli, Istanbul, Turkey, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2009. Flash floods gushed across an Istanbul arterial road on Wednesday, killing 14 people and stranding dozens in their vehicles, the state-run Anatolia news agency reported. As waters rose more than a meter (3 feet) high in the city's Ikitelli district, motorists climbed on roofs of their vehicles waiting to be rescued.(AP Photo/Ibrahim Usta)

Rescue workers evacuate passengers who were trapped in a bus in Ikitelli, Istanbul, Turkey, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2009. Flash floods gushed across an Istanbul arterial road on Wednesday, killing 14 people and stranding dozens in their vehicles, the state-run Anatolia news agency reported. As waters rose more than a meter (3 feet) high in the city's Ikitelli district, motorists climbed on roofs of their vehicles waiting to be rescued.(AP Photo/Ibrahim Usta)

Rescue workers evacuate passengers who were trapped in a bus in Ikitelli, Istanbul, Turkey, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2009. Flash floods gushed across an Istanbul arterial road on Wednesday, killing 14 people and stranding dozens in their vehicles, the state-run Anatolia news agency reported. As waters rose more than a meter (3 feet) high in the city's Ikitelli district, motorists climbed on roofs of their vehicles waiting to be rescued.(AP Photo/Ibrahim Usta)

By IBRAHIM USTA, Associated Press Writer

ISTANBUL – The heaviest rainfall in at least eight decades sent flash floods barreling across a major highway and into busy business districts in Turkey's largest city on Wednesday, trapping factory workers and truck drivers in their vehicles and drowning at least 20 people.

Waters six feet (2 meters) high in some places flooded hundreds of homes and offices and cut off the TEM highway, which connects central Istanbul to the sprawling city's main airport and goes on to Greece and Bulgaria.

Rescue crews in helicopters pulled people off rooftops in Ikitelli, a district of media offices and corporate headquarters about 13 miles (20 kilometers) from the Bosporus strait, which divides the European and Asian parts of Turkey.

The surging water flipped trucks, cars and buses, crushing many into piles of debris.

Some people took refuge atop stranded vehicles. Others were pulled from the floodwaters by passers-by who threw ropes or pulled them from the raging waters.

Inflatable boats fought the swirling waters to go from vehicle to vehicle, picking up survivors. Several others managed to swim to a tractor driving at the edge of the floods.

"The waters came suddenly and flowed over my car," survivor Suleyman Kucukkaya told Associated Press Television News. "We were dragged away up to some barriers."

One man struggled in the swirling brown water but kept disappearing beneath the surface and appeared to drown.

Turkey's meteorology institute said about 5.2 inches (13.2 centimeters) of rain fell in the area.

Rapid population growth fueled by decades of emigration from Turkey's impoverished rural regions has meant that the metropolis of 15 million has developed without adequate infrastructure to handle even moderate rainfall.

"The rains are not able to reach the sea through natural channels due to skewed and unplanned development," said Filiz Demirayak, the World Wildlife Fund's Turkey director.

Gov. Muammer Guler of Istanbul said seven women drowned inside a van that had just brought them to work at a textile factory in the nearby district of Halkali.

"There was no escape other than the back door, and it was stuck by the pressure of the flooding water," Guler said.

Flood waters caught other victims in their sleep, including 10 truck drivers who were killed at a parking lot that was littered with upended trucks.

Guler said at least 20 people were killed in downtown Istanbul, 20 injured and an unknown number missing. Eleven people have died in other areas of northwestern Turkey since heavy rains and flooding began there late Monday, including six in suburbs of Istanbul and five in Tekirdag province, west of the city, authorities said.

The emergency authorities said as many as 1,700 homes and offices were flooded in the Istanbul suburb of Silivri.

Flights continued at Istanbul's Ataturk Airport, an official said, but many passengers could not reach the airport or leave it.

By evening, receding flood waters exposed thick deposits of mud in parts of Ikitelli.

More rain was forecast for northwestern Turkey throughout the week, with authorities warning against flooding in several other cities.

In July, flash floods killed at least six people in the northeastern province of Artvin and inundated more than 100 homes and workplaces in the Black Sea province of Giresun.

In 2006, flooding from torrential rains killed 22 people across Turkey, including 14 who died when a minibus carrying wedding guests was swept away.

______

Associated Press Writer Suzan Fraser contributed to this report from Ankara, Turkey.

Japanese in Cambodia Facing New Government

By Ros Sothea, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
09 September 2009

Japanese diplomats, businessmen and employees congratulated the win of Japan’s opposition in recent elections, which broke half a century of ruling party rule, but some were wary the new party would make many changes.

The Democratic Party of Japan defeated the Liberal Democratic Party in Aug. 30 polls with a landslide win that made it the largest party in the lower house of parliament, with 308 of 480 seats.

Yano Tusi, owner of Ko Ko Ro restaurant in Phnom Penh, laughed happily when he was asked about his new government.

“Before, [the ruling party] worked for the rich people,” he said. “Rich people became richer, poor people became poorer. But now maybe [the opposition] will work for the poor.”

Japan’s next prime minister will be the DPJ’s president, Yuko Hatoyama, who is expected to be formally voted in on Sept. 16 and to name his cabinet in the days that follow.

Hatoyama had a chance to overthrown his strong competitor, the former premier Taro Aso, and the ruling party, because the opposition vowed to recover nearly $98 billion in “wasteful spending” through reductions in civil-servant and personnel costs and the upkeep of government offices over the next four years.

The DPJ also promised free high school education, free highways, a four-year freeze on the consumption tax, which is currently at 5 percent, and the creation of jobs in the private and agricultural sectors.

“I hope it is good,” said Sathol Miura, president of the Japanese Travel Agency APEX, in Phnom Penh. “It will make changes in the economy to create jobs and tourism.”

Japan’s economy has fallen sharply in the last decade, bringing worries that it could lose its place as the second-largest in the world. Many Japanese lost faith in the ruling party after its officials faced internal scandals and failed to expand the job market and national economy.

However, not everyone is convinced the DPJ can turn things around.

“It’s a hard experience to change for the new party,” said Hiroobu Kurata, president of Kurata Pepper. “I can’t say the policy is good. I can only hope that it will be changed, but if they change all the policies, some projects might be broken.”

Yamasaki Yuki, a Japanese-Khmer translator, said she didn’t hold too much hope for the new party, as it contains parts of the old.

“I suspect that it is not so good because the new party and the old one is the same,” she said. “I’m not really satisfied with these two big parties.”

Hatoyoma, 62, finished his PhD in engineering at Stanford University. He was born into a wealthy political family. His grandfather, Ichiro Hatoyama, was the ruling LDP’s first former Japanese prime minister. He began his political career in 1983 with the ruling party and later lead his own party, the DPJ.

Japan is Cambodia’s biggest donor. According to a report provided by the Japanese Embassy, some 830 Japanese nationals now live in the country. They work in tourism, hotels, restaurants, embassies and NGOs. Some are students.

Prime Minister Hun Sen recently congratulated the success of the DPJ and said he expected bilateral relations between the two countries would strengthen.

Tuberculosis prevention therapy Is cost-effective option

http://www.huliq.com

University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) researchers have found that the cost of preventive antibiotic tuberculosis (TB) therapy for patients infected by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is generally less expensive than the reported cost of treating newly confirmed TB cases.

The study, published in The International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease this summer, relied on treatment-cost estimates from previous research studies and data collected by members of the study's research team at a TB treatment site in Cambodia.

"We completed this study to provide health-program managers cost and cost-effectiveness data on components of a comprehensive package of HIV care. This data is essential to help establish feasible and effective ways to manage patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection and tuberculosis in a developing country," said Bryce Sutton, Ph.D., an economist in the UAB School of Business and one of the study's co-investigators.

The research found that the cost of preventing a single case of TB with intensive screening and preventive treatment with antibiotics in HIV-infected patients prior to their exposure to the disease was approximately $950. Compare that to a cost range of $900-$1500, which is the previously reported range for treating a new smear-positive TB case in a developing country setting after adjusting for inflation.

"Our analysis showed that the costs associated with screening and preventive treatment for tuberculosis among HIV-infected patients was comparable to the cost related to treating a patient with a newly confirmed case of TB," Sutton said. "When you factor in observed high adherence rate to treatment and other cost savings such as averted productivity losses that come with stopping tuberculosis's spread through the preventive care, we believe that this type of integrated care offers a potential savings to governments and health-care agencies."

Sutton said preventing the spread of tuberculosis goes beyond cost-savings and can positively affect local, regional and national developing economies.

"Diseases like tuberculosis in a developing country setting can be catastrophic both in terms of health and the financial burden it places on families," he said. "Often other family members stop working to become caretakers; children and young adults may be forced to enter the workforce to pay for expenses and forgo receiving an education, which can start a cycle of poverty.

"These are importatuberculosisnt economic factors that support the adoption of preventive-care policies."

Former UAB Professor of Infectious Diseases Michael Kimerling, M.D., is the study's co-investigator. Former UAB graduate researchers Phalkun Chheng and Mayra Arias and M.T. Eang from the National Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control (CENAT) Phnom Penh, Cambodia, also are on the research team.

By University of Alabama at Birmingham

Cambodia PM ratchets up tirade against tribunal

By SOPHENG CHEANG
Associated Press Writer - Thursday, September 10

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia – Cambodia's prime minister accused foreign judges and prosecutors at the U.N.-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal of seeking to arrest new suspects as part of a plot by foreign governments to incite unrest.

Hun Sen's accusation was the latest in a series he has launched against the tribunal and its ruling last week to allow foreign prosecutors to pursue more suspects.

On Monday, Hun Sen said such action could lead to civil war. He has repeatedly spoken out against expanding the list of defendants beyond the one currently on trial _ Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, _ and four others in custody.

He elaborated Wednesday, saying foreign governments want war in Cambodia, a former French colony that was later wracked by decades of civil war.

"I know that some foreign judges and prosecutors have received orders from their governments to create problems here," Hun Sen said while inaugurating a Buddhist pagoda south of the capital. "There is no doubt that they have received advice from their government to do so."

Hun Sen did not name specific countries. The tribunal includes 12 foreign judges and two foreign prosecutors from countries including Australia, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Zambia.

"What Cambodia needs is peace," Hun Sen added. "If Cambodia has peace, they (foreign governments) are not quite happy with us _ but if Cambodia has war, they are happy because then we'll be easy to occupy."

A tribunal spokesman, Lars Olsen, said Hun Sen's comments were being verified before a comment could be issued.

Critics accuse Hun Sen of trying to limit the tribunal's scope to prevent his political allies from being indicted. Hun Sen once served as a Khmer Rouge officer and many of his main allies are also former members of the group.

On Tuesday, the tribunal's acting international co-prosecutor, William Smith of Australia, formally recommended that five more suspects be investigated for possible crimes against humanity and other offenses.

The tribunal's Cambodian co-prosecutor opposed further indictments, but the tribunal ruled last week that his international counterpart could seek them. The tribunal, created last year under an agreement reached in 2003 between Cambodia and the United Nations, employs joint teams of Cambodian and international court personnel.

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 ultra-communist group's radical policies while in power in 1975-79.

The Khmer Rouge took control after a bitter 1970-75 civil war, and after being ousted from power in 1979, fought an insurgency from the jungles until 1999.

U.S. Citizen Arraigned on Charges of International Sex Tourism

WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Richard David Mitchell was arraigned yesterday on sex tourism charges in the U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaii, after being deported from Cambodia, announced Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division Lanny A. Breuer and U.S. Attorney for the District of Hawaii Edward H. Kubo, Jr.

Mitchell, 61, a U.S. citizen and resident of Hawaii, was charged in a criminal complaint filed on Aug. 26, 2009, in U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaii with engaging in illicit sexual conduct in a foreign place. According to the affidavit filed in support of the complaint, witnesses reported seeing Mitchell engaging in sex acts with a female child on the curbside of a street in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, in August 2008. Mitchell was initially arrested in August 2008 by the Cambodian National Police on local charges related to the same incident.

Mitchell returned to Hawaii on Sept. 5, 2009, following his removal from Cambodia. Upon his arrival at Honolulu International Airport, he was taken into custody by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. At yesterday's hearing, U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Kurren ordered Mitchell held without bond pending a detention hearing.

Mitchell is the fourth American arrested by ICE in the past two weeks for sexually exploiting minors in Cambodia. On Aug. 31, 2009, three Americans were taken into custody by ICE at Los Angeles International Airport following their removal from Cambodia on sex tourism charges. The four cases are the result of unprecedented cooperation among U.S. authorities, the Cambodian government and non-governmental organizations to target American sex tourists
in Cambodia.

Mitchell faces up to 30 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000 if convicted of the charges.

Charges in a criminal complaint are merely accusations, and a defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Amy Olson of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Hawaii and Trial Attorney Anitha Ibrahim of the Criminal Division's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section. The case was investigated by ICE.

SOURCE U.S. Department of Justice

U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Public Affairs, +1-202-514-2007, TDD
+1-202-514-1888

Marriott plans 21 new Asian hotels amid global downturn

The JW Marriott in central Jakarta

HONG KONG — Hotel group Marriott International announced Wednesday it was planning 21 new hotels in Asia, despite the impact of the global economic slowdown on travel and demand.

The company already has 37 hotels under construction across the region, meaning that it will have built 58 new hotels by 2013, creating an estimated 24,000 jobs.

"We are excited by these spectacular, architecturally interesting additions to our already dynamic Asia-Pacific pipeline especially since this growth is occurring in the context of the difficult global economy and tight credit markets," said Ed Fuller, president of international lodging.

"We see Asia as an exciting, dynamic market that we have continued to focus on since the start back in 1989."

The 58 hotels now under development will add more than 16,000 rooms to Marriott?s Asia-Pacific portfolio, bringing the company?s presence in the region to 154 hotels offering 51,500 rooms in 18 countries by the end of 2013.

The 21 newly announced hotels include two luxury JW Marriott hotels in China, 10 Marriott hotels in China, the Philippines and Thailand, two Renaissance Hotels in China and seven Courtyard hotels in Cambodia, China and India.

Marriott International entered the Asian market with the opening of Hong Kong's JW Marriott 20 years ago.

Ree Hotel Releases Promotional Packages for Travelers to Cambodia

http://www.pr-inside.com/
2009-09-09 - Ree Hotel, a first-class hotel in Cambodia, is offering a new set of promotional packages ideal for couples as well as business and leisure travelers.

Siem Reap, Cambodia – Ree Hotel, an upscale hotel catering to business and leisure travelers, is pleased to announce its latest special offerings this month and for the remaining months of 2009. Three honeymoon packages await couples who will book at the hotel from now until December. Corporate and leisure travelers on the other hand can avail of the Stay.

3 Nights, Pay 2 Nights Only Package or the Stay 4 Nights, Pay Only for 3 Nights Package.

The Honeymoon Package 1 entitles couples to a two-night stay at the hotel’s Le REE Suite with additional privileges such as a Khmer wedding photo session for souvenir, candle-lit dinner for two on a swing bed at the pool area, one bottle of champagne in the room upon arrival, half-day city tour, among others.

For the second Honeymoon Package, couples will be treated to a three-night stay at the Le REE Suite with benefits like a free one-hour massage in the room, room breakfast, rose decoration on the bed and in the bathtub, a bottle of champagne in the room upon arrival, turndown services with cake or chocolate, and many more.

The Honeymoon Package 3 lets couples stay at the Le REE Suite for four nights with the same additional perks as that of Honeymoon Package 1 and 2. These three honeymoon packages are valid from now until December.

Special discounted rates are offered to guests who will avail of the Stay 3 Nights, Pay 2 Nights Only Package or the Stay 4 Nights, Pay Only for 3 Nights Package. Included in both of these packages are daily breakfast, welcome drinks and a cold towel in the room, coffee/tea-making facilities, a fruit basket for the first night of stay, free Wi-Fi access, and late check-out until 3:00 PM. Both packages are available from now until the end of September.

Ree Hotel in Siem Reap provides luxurious accommodations and first-class facilities to visitors in Cambodia. It is situated close to the famed Angkor Archeological Park. To know more about this Siem Reap hotel and its promotional packages, visit: www.reehotel.com.


###

About Ree Hotel
Ree Hotel is located in the tourist destination of Siem Reap in Cambodia. It caters to both leisure travelers and business guests. The hotel offers spacious as well as elegant accommodations with a wide range of amenities for the guests’ comfort.

Cambodia PM accuses other countries of stirring unrest

By Sopheng Cheang, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
9th September 2009

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia’s prime minister accused foreign judges and prosecutors at the U.N.-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal of seeking to arrest new suspects as part of a plot by foreign governments to incite unrest.

Hun Sen’s accusation was the latest in a series he has launched against the tribunal and its ruling last week to allow foreign prosecutors to pursue more suspects.

On Monday, Hun Sen said such action could lead to civil war. He has repeatedly spoken out against expanding the list of defendants beyond the one currently on trial — Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, — and four others in custody.

He elaborated Wednesday, saying foreign governments want war in Cambodia, a former French colony that was later wracked by decades of civil war.

“I know that some foreign judges and prosecutors have received orders from their governments to create problems here,” Hun Sen said while inaugurating a Buddhist pagoda south of the capital. “There is no doubt that they have received advice from their government to do so.”

Hun Sen did not name specific countries. The tribunal includes 12 foreign judges and two foreign prosecutors from countries including Australia, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Zambia.

“What Cambodia needs is peace,” Hun Sen added. “If Cambodia has peace, they (foreign governments) are not quite happy with us — but if Cambodia has war, they are happy because then we’ll be easy to occupy.”

A tribunal spokesman, Lars Olsen, said Hun Sen’s comments were being verified before a comment could be issued.

Critics accuse Hun Sen of trying to limit the tribunal’s scope to prevent his political allies from being indicted. Hun Sen once served as a Khmer Rouge officer and many of his main allies are also former members of the group.

On Tuesday, the tribunal’s acting international co-prosecutor, William Smith of Australia, formally recommended that five more suspects be investigated for possible crimes against humanity and other offences.

The tribunal’s Cambodian co-prosecutor opposed further indictments, but the tribunal ruled last week that his international counterpart could seek them. The tribunal, created last year under an agreement reached in 2003 between Cambodia and the United Nations, employs joint teams of Cambodian and international court personnel.

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 ultra-communist group’s radical policies while in power in 1975-79.

The Khmer Rouge took control after a bitter 1970-75 civil war, and after being ousted from power in 1979, fought an insurgency from the jungles until 1999.

Egypt, Vietnam and Cambodia accept Republic of Kosovo Passport


http://www.newkosovareport.com
Source:Kosovothanksyou.com
Wednesday, 09 September 2009

KosovoThanksYou reports that Kosovar citizens visiting Egypt, Vietnam and Cambodia using the passports of the Republic of Kosovo.

In the recent months a number of Kosovo citizens have successfully applied and received tourist visas for Egypt, Vietnam and Cambodia.

The passports of Republic of Kosovo were accepted by the countries and stamps are provided further below as a reference.

Cambodia's Phnom Penh Post goes daily in Khmer

A Cambodian woman reads a copy of the English-language newspaper The Phnom Penh Post

PHNOM PENH — The Phnom Penh Post, one of Cambodia's leading newspapers, launched its first-ever Khmer language edition Wednesday, stepping up competition in the country's burgeoning media market.

Australian publisher Ross Dunkley said the paper, which will have a daily print run of 15,000 copies, would focus its reporting on Cambodia's changing economy and business climate as it leaves behind decades of conflict.

"Ultimately a newspaper is a reflection of the society we live in so you can expect the paper to be much more in tune with the new realities of this country," Dunkley said.

The majority of publications in the country's large and lively Cambodian-language press are accused of being aligned with political parties, however Dunkley promised independent reporting.

Cambodian Information Minister Khieu Kanharith welcomed the paper, the first full-colour Khmer tabloid in the kingdom's media market, as a "good thing" that would help "widen our free press".

The English version of the Post launched its first daily edition in August last year, after Australian businessmen with stakes in Yangon's The Myanmar Times weekly took a controlling interest in the paper.

The Post, founded by American journalist Michael Hayes 18 years ago, had published every two weeks but Post Media Ltd, the company now behind the paper, has invested heavily in expanded editions.

Hun Sen pessimistic about UN trial's future

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen has warned foreign judges and prosecutors at the United Nations-backed Khmer Rouge court they will fail in their attempt to prosecute more suspects.

An international prosecutor at the Khmer Rouge tribunal earlier this week formally requested five more suspects from the late 1970s regime be investigated for crimes against humanity, war crimes and other offences.

But Hun Sen says the court will not get more indictments because Cambodian judges outnumber their international colleagues.

He says the three Cambodian judges and two foreign judges at the tribunal's pre-trial chamber will be unable to get the four votes to indict additional suspects and the final results will be zero.

A ticket to somewhere

Deborah Groves with local Cambodian villagers, outside the temple district of Angkor Wat where Ms Groves has established an aid organisation. Picture supplied.
http://www.businessday.com.au

LARISSA HAM
September 9, 2009

Four years ago, Australian photographer Deborah Groves walked into a small village in the Cambodian countryside and met a man who would change her life.

Just 25 minutes away was the town of Siem Reap, the stopping-off point to the world famous Angkor Wat temple, a formerly modest town now flourishing with Western-style pubs, designer shops and luxury hotels driven by the influx of tourist money.

But lying in a primitive hut in the outlying village was 52-year-old man Mr Som - skeleton-thin, his ribcage clearly visible and emaciated legs resembling long strands of licorice.

Despite being gravely ill with tuberculosis for more than 18 months, he had not received any medical care mainly due to his family’s poverty Ms Groves was horrified.

"Morally I thought, ‘I have an obligation, this man is going to die, I need to stand up and offer some help’," she said.

Enlisting the help of family and friends, Ms Groves raised the money needed for Mr Som to be carried out on a stretcher to medical care.

But it was too late; Mr Som died 10 days later.

For Ms Groves, a wedding photographer from Queensland, Mr Som’s death was an enormous “wake-up call” that not everything could be fixed easily.

Shaken by the village’s desperate poverty, she vowed to stay on and help.

The result has been Helping Hands Cambodia, an aid organisation formed by Ms Groves to support Mr Som’s village and three others near Angkor Wat.

The idea behind Helping Hands is to give the local villagers a 'hand up,' rather than straight charity. For instance, recently when it gave away 1000 bicycles, each recipient agreed to work at least three days to fix local roads.

The organisation, which now has 10 Cambodian staff and up to two volunteers at a time, has also helped build bridges, a school, provided agricultural training and hundreds of free breakfasts.

The latest project will see drop toilets installed in the four villages. Fifty neighbours a day queued up to use the first one when it was installed in March, and another 15 have since been built.

To help fund Helping Hands, Groves sells photographs, magnets and bookmarks at hotels, airports and the night market in Siem Reap.

It is a long way from snapping excited brides on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.

In 2004 Ms Groves fell love with the country following an Intrepid Travel tour, and feeling unfulfilled and burnt out, decided to quit her business and move to Cambodia.

But making the leap to live in one of the world’s least developed countries wasn’t easy, with many friends advising caution about leaving her business and safe life behind. "(But) I thought ‘surely I’m more than just a business’," Ms Groves said.

In the ensuing years, Ms Groves says she has developed a thick skin after four years of dealing with sometimes terrible situations.

One of her worst experiences was a man who received terrible eye injuries after a landmine exploded in his face near the Thai border.

"He was sent back to the village he was originally from without seeing a single eye doctor... I thought it was so unfair that no one cares," she said.

Helping Hands paid for his treatment, although the man’s eyes couldn’t be saved. They were later removed to stop his pain. To Western ears this may sound horrific, but Ms Groves said the man was "unbelievably grateful".

As well as the lows, there have also been incredible highs, such as a man in his 60s, blind since he was 15, regaining his sight in one eye following surgery sponsored by Ms Groves' organisation.

Another woman with cataracts regained her vision after 20 years. Ms Groves says the woman told her the thing she was most excited about was now being able to find the best food at communal dinners.

"I get a big kick out of stories like that, when you’ve had a radical impact," Ms Groves said.

However, the economic crisis has made life harder for everyone this year. Figures from Cambodia’s Ministry of Tourism show although Vietnamese tourists increased by 40 per cent in the six months to June because of new visa exemptions, Australian, Japanese, Chinese, Thai and South Korean visitors fell sharply.

Cambodia’s two main industries, garment manufacturing and construction, have been crippled as US clothes orders fell and tourists stayed at home.

According to the United Nations Development Program, the garment sector lost 60,000 jobs by April and the construction sector 25,000.

UN resident co-ordinator Douglas Broderick warned: "it’s not just people’s livelihoods at risk – it’s people’s lives".

The effect on Ms Groves’ photography business has also been dramatic.

"Last year was a boom year, then the Australian dollar crashed. It made a big impact because a lot of our customers are Australian,” she said.

In June this year, her photo sales had fallen 50 per cent from the same period in 2008.

Donations to Helping Hands have also dropped, although fundraising efforts such as a US$23,000 (about $27,500) donation raised by a young Irishwoman who rowed 250 kilometres down the Shannon River- Ireland's longest river - have helped.

Ms Groves radical life-change has meant many personal sacrifices, including sleepless nights, long work hours, lack of a social life and being unable to regularly see her family and friends.

She is working towards spending more time in Australia, but continues to manage Helping Hands and run her photo business full-time from wherever she is at any given moment.

Back home, Ms Groves says her standards of living will probably be different to last time she lived there. She believes that might be a good thing.

“Most of my staff have never had a hot shower, most of the people in the village don’t even have a shower, they use a bucket. Hot water now I consider a luxury,” she says.

“Even the poorest in Australia are still better off than the people here.”

To help, go to www.grovesphotography.com

Source: theage.com.au

Cambodian genocide trial clash

The Independent
http://www.independent.co.uk

By Andrew Buncombe, Asia Correspondent
Wednesday, 9 September 2009

A prosecutor at the genocide tribunal in Cambodia has formally recommended that a further five suspects be investigated for crimes against humanity – setting the UN-backed trial on a collision course with the country's Prime Minister.

The tribunal, held on the outskirts of the capital, Phnom Penh, is trying five members of the Khmer Rouge for their alleged role in the mass murder that led to the deaths of up to 1.7 million people. Among them is Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, the head of a notorious prison where thousands were sent to be tortured before being dispatched for execution at the "killing fields".

A statement issued yesterday by the acting international prosecutor, William Smith, said he had recommended to the trial judges that a further five, so-far unidentified, suspects be investigated. He said the cases involved at least 32 instances of murder, torture, unlawful detention, forced labour and persecution.

The announcement came after Prime Minister Hun Sen said on Monday that such a move would lead to widespread violence. "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 be responsible?" he said.

The UN, which is overseeing the prosecutions, reiterated that the tribunal is independent of the government. The tribunal has both an international and a Cambodian prosecutor and the two have always disagreed on whether more suspects should be tried. Hun Sen, himself a former Khmer Rouge officer, has been accused of interfering with the trial and trying to protect many former rebels, some of whom are now members of his government.

Local woman's Cambodia photos up for grant award

http://www.edhat.com
Submitted to Edhat

A local woman’s photo project to highlight the plight of orphaned and disadvantaged children living in Cambodia has been named a finalist for a major grant.

Marisa Kaitlyn Heller’s Cambodian Photography Project is among 10 finalists — selected from nearly 300 entries — vying for a single $10,000 grant offered by Nau, an eco-clothing designer based in Portland, Ore., and owned by Santa Barbara apparel company Horny Toad.

Heller’s project is aimed at helping hundreds of children living at an orphanage in Siem Reap and run by Sunrise Children’s Village, with whom she has partnered.

“The children at Sunrise and I appreciate all the people who went online and voted for this important project,” she said, referring to the eight-week online voting window which closed Aug. 31 that helped determine the finalists. “We’re honored to be in the Top 10 from among all the worthy projects.”

Heller, 24, launched the photography project after having visited the orphanage while traveling in Southeast Asia. While she was at the orphanage, she gave her camera to one of the youngsters, who began taking pictures which she said simply stunned her.

“The images had a unique quality with a viewpoint that could only be captured from a child's perspective,” she said. “There was a beauty to the images that came from the heart of the children.”

Her photo project is designed to foster a sense of self-worth, awareness and creativity among the children, giving them the opportunity to tell their stories to the world through their own digital photography. It is also designed to provide them with valuable skills for the future, she said.

Children make up more than half the population of Cambodia, she noted. One-third of the country’s population lives in extreme poverty, subsisting on less than $1 a day.

When her project is completed, Heller plans an exhibition of the children’s photography. She is also hoping to develop an educational component, allowing the children in Siem Reap to share their images and stories with other youngsters via e-mail or through blogs and Internet postings.

Heller, 24, is a graduate of San Marcos High School and the University of San Francisco. She is currently living and working in New Zealand.

Her project and the other finalists can be viewed on the Nau Web site at
http://www.nau.com/collective/grant-for-change. The winner is expected to be named before the end of the month.

Cambodia has room to improve business climate: WB

http://www.istockanalyst.com
PHNOM PENH, Sep. 9, 2009 (Xinhua News Agency) -- Cambodia's ranking has remained low on the global ease of doing business in 2008/2009 while most economies in East Asia and the Pacific strengthened business regulations to help increase opportunities for local firms, the press release from the World Bank (WB) office here said on Wednesday.

"Cambodia was ranked No. 145 out of 183 countries on the ease of doing business as the global economic crisis prompted many countries to accelerate reforms, improving their ranking relative to Cambodia," the World Bank said.

"The World Bank and IFC, the member of the World Bank Group focused on private sector development, are working with the government on improving the business climate."

Between June 2008 and May 2009 a record 131 of 183 economies around the globe reformed business regulations, according to Doing Business 2010: Reforming through Difficult Times, the seventh in a series of annual reports published by IFC and the World Bank.

"The second Investment Climate Assessment, published in 2009 by the World Bank and IFC, identifies priorities to significantly improve the business environment by helping retain existing investors and attracting new ones," said Qimiao Fan, Country Manager for the World Bank in Cambodia.

"This would position Cambodia well to benefit from a recovery in the global economy, and also help its small firms to develop and create jobs."

IFC's Resident Representative in Cambodia, Julia Brickell, noted that Cambodia is making efforts to improve some aspects of the business environment."

According to Julia Brickell, IFC, with support from the European Commission and other donors, is assisting the government to improve commercial dispute resolution mechanisms through the establishment of the National Arbitration Center, which will be a quicker and cheaper alternative to the courts.

"Effective commercial arbitration is crucial in helping businesses enforce contracts in ways that are less costly and time consuming than is currently the case," Brickell said.

(Source: iStockAnalyst )

OM sends out 250 full-time missionaries

Some of the new OM missionaries at the gathering in De Kroeze in the Netherlands from 20th to 31st August 2009.(OM)
http://www.christiantoday.com

Operation Mobilisation has dispatched some 250 Christians to be full-time missionaries around the world.

by Anne Thomas
Posted: Wednesday, September 9, 2009

They include 35 Christians from the UK and one lady from Trinidad who even sold her own business so that she could work alongside OM in Cambodia.

"Each had heard and answered God’s call to join the Great Commission," said a spokesman for OM.

At the end of August, the missionaries came together in De Kroeze in the Netherlands to learn about cross-cultural communication and God's heart for mission.

They also prepared themselves for some of the challenges they would face while proclaiming Christ overseas by taking part in daily Bible studies, discussion seminars and setting an entire day aside for prayer.

Destinations include France and countries in East Europe, Central Asia and the Near East. Several of the new missionaries from the UK were inspired to join OM after the ministry's new ship Logos Hope stopped at UK ports earlier in the year. They flew out after the conference to join the ship in the Caribbean.

One Christian joining the OM team in the UK said of her visit to Logos Hope: "It was amazing to be with the people of God from so many nations! I loved the focus on knowing God and loving people."

There are presently 5,400 Christians serving with OM in 110 countries and onboard two ministry ships.

CU student hopes to bring a teacher to Cambodia


BOULDER - A freshman from the University of Colorado at Boulder is making a difference in some young people's lives that are half a world away.

Heather Starbuck says her life changed a year and a half ago, when she visited the Cambodian town of Pailin.

"I want to go back someday," Starbuck said.

The tiny community is situated along the country's Western border, near Thailand; almost everyone who lives there is poor.

"It just makes me think, 'Wow, we have it really well here in the United States,'" Starbuck said.

The town's needy reputation is what sparked Heather's interest in the first place.

"One of [its] main problems is education, without education you can't have substantial income coming in," Starbuck said.

She figured, if she could inspire kids to learn more, then they could get better jobs and ultimately help boost their community's economy.

"They really understand how important education is," she said.

Heather started a campaign called "Operation Lyhou." It's named after a boy she met in Pailin.

"It's taking off a lot faster than I thought it would," Starbuck added.

She's hoping to raise $13,000 by selling T-shirts she designed. So far, Heather has collected more than $750 in three weeks.

"It's a big task, but I'm willing to take it on," Starbuck said.

The money will help create a building, some solar panels, wire the rooms with Internet access and provide the students with an English teacher.

"Anything you give these kids, they'll take full advantage of," she said.

To learn more about Heather's effort, visit her Web site at http://operationlyhou.blogspot.com.

Cambodian Literacy Project calls on international tourism industry for support

http://www.traveldailynews.com/
Vicky Karantzavelou - Wednesday, September 09, 2009

The newly established Cambodian Literacy Project has chosen World Literacy Day to call on the international travel industry to get behind its efforts to help eradicate illiteracy in Cambodia.

Announcing the commencement of an initial Cambodian Literacy Project program involving up to 250 grade one children in three remote primary schools in rural Cambodia, principal Brett Morgan said the ultimate aim of the organisation was to expand this opportunity to over 100,000 children in multiple grades in schools across Cambodia by 2015.

Tourism industry backing to date includes Korean Airlines, Ho Chi Minh City-based Trails of Indochina and Heritage Lines (MV Jayavarman) and Brisbane-based The Adventure Traveller, all of which Mr Morgan said had pledged assistance with fund raising for the project.

“Two thirds of the world’s 1.6 billion illiterate population resides in the Asia-Pacific and Cambodia is one of the worst in the region for literacy standards,” Mr Morgan said. “More than eight per cent of all rural and remote teachers have had no formal schooling, 75 per cent of all teachers have gone without teaching handbooks for four years and it’s frightening to think that only 47 per cent of all Cambodian children actually complete primary school.

“While there have been great efforts by many organisations to build schools and encourage participation rates, up until now little has been done to fix the literacy situation in Cambodian schools. HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Dengue fever kill thousands of Cambodians every year and it is acknowledged that the best prevention for these and the eradication of many other health problems is via implementing education and literacy programs at grassroots level. Cambodian tourism has long been a huge money spinner for the international travel industry and its time to give something back. And giving something back is easy, anyone can help and it’s as simple going online at www.cambodialiteracyproject.com and buying a sheet of coloured cardboard for $0.50 cents or a pair of schoolchild’s shoes for $4.00. We are more than happy to hear from anyone wishing to get involved with this program.”

Mr Morgan said the CLE (Concentrated Language Encounter) system has been developed in Australia at Queensland University in Brisbane and is currently taught in over 10 countries.

These include Thailand where the education department, having trialed the system on a pilot basis with marked success, has now adopted the system for all grade 1-6 students on a national basis.

Boo! Hiss! He's a bum!

Photo by: Tracey Shelton

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 15:02 Tracey Shelton

Two teukai geckos hiss in the grass in Takeo province on Saturday. According to Khmer belief, these geckos will jump on anyone who touches them, attaching themselves around the neck, and can only be removed by seven virgins. The tone and number of bizarre cries they make in the night are also believed to hold the power to predict exam results and quality of a future marriage partner.

Sedona man charged in Cambodia sex tourism

By Jon Hutchinson, Staff Reporter

Tuesday, September 08, 2009
http://campverdebugleonline.com

SAN FRANCISCO -- A Sedona man described as a sex-tourist was to appear in U.S. District Court with two other men deported from Cambodia last week for having sex with children in that country.

The 75-year old Sedona man, a man from Connecticut and one from California could be sentenced to prison for 30 years each for their flights to Cambodia to have child sex.

Jack Louis Sporich of Sedona is reported by the Cambodia Daily to have driven a motorbike through the streets of Siem Riep, dropping Cambodian currency to attract children.

Formerly of Santa Monica, Sporich spent nine years in prison after his conviction in Ventura County on seven counts of lewd acts upon children under 14. Then he was committed to Atascadero State Hospital as a "sexually violent predator" deemed too dangerous to be released upon completion of his sentence. He was released in May 2004, according to the Sacramento Bee.

Ronald Gerard Boyajian, 49, of Menlo Park, Calif., who was arrested by the Cambodian National Police in February. He allegedly engaged in sexual activity with a 10-year-old Vietnamese girl in an area outside Phnom Penh frequented by child sex tourists.

Erik Leonardus Peeters, 41, of Norwalk, Calif., was taken into custody by the CNP in late February accused of engaging in sexual activity with at least three Cambodian boys. Peeters, who arrived in Cambodia in May 2008, paid the minors $5 to $10 for sex according to the affidavit.

The three previously convicted sex offenders were the first to be charged under "Operation Twisted Traveler" program. ICE has stationed an agent in Cambodia full-time to focus in large part on such cases.

All three men were charged under the Protect Act, which became law six years ago to make it easier for U.S. authorities to prosecute people for overseas sex crimes.

According to the criminal complaint, Sporich formerly abused at least one underage Cambodian boy after he arrived there in November 2008. But he is reported to have been building a Cambodian home with a swimming pool, outfitted with a water slide and containing video games, toys and clothing. Several boys are said to have stayed there as well.

Boyajian, Peeters and Sporich each are charged with international travel and engaging in illicit sexual conduct with minors, a charge that carries a statutory maximum penalty of 30 years in federal prison in the United States. They would have faced misdemeanor sentences in Cambodia.

The Twisted Traveler cases are the result of information provided to ICE by investigators for Action Pour Les Enfants (APLE), a non-governmental organization (NGO) to combat child sexual exploitation, and International Justice Mission (IJM), a human rights agency that secures justice for victims of slavery, sexual exploitation and other forms of violent oppression.

The child sex tourism cases are the direct result of the unprecedented cooperation among the FBI and Department of State, the Cambodian government and NGOs to target Americans traveling to Cambodia to sexually exploit minors.

Killer weather still threatens

Photo by: Photo Supplied
Hun Sen meets with families affected by floods in Kampot province Tuesday, offering gifts to grieving families after three people drowned this weekend.

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 15:03 Tep Nimol and Thet Sambath

THE bodies of three people who drowned in separate incidents this weekend were recovered Tuesday as rough weather continued to pummel the country.

Even as Prime Minister Hun Sen offered gifts to grieving relatives, meteorologists predicted that the storms, which have caused heavy rainfall and flooding in some areas, would persist.

Officials found the body of Phan Roy, 17, Tuesday morning floating roughly 4 kilometres from the Preah Sihanouk province beach where he and four others were swept into the sea on Sunday. One person was rescued while the bodies of two others were found later in the day.

"We found the body of a boy floating in the sea," Yin Bunnath, Preah Sihanouk province's deputy police chief, told the Post Tuesday.

A 14-year-old girl, Doeurk Srey Touch, was still missing Tuesday. "We believe she is dead, and we are looking for a body floating in the sea," Yin Bunnath said.

The storms that have lashed the country continued to hamper search efforts Tuesday.

"The coast guard ... is looking for her, but now it is heavily raining," said Sam Sam Ath, chief of cabinet for the province.

The relatives of the two people found dead Sunday were grieving for their loved ones on Wednesday. Kong Huon said he blamed himself for the death of his daughter, Kon Khann, 17. "I am so regretful for my daughter's death," he said. "It is my mistake because I allowed her to have a walk with other friends at the sea."

Ngeth Sina, 15, drowned in the same accident. "I am very sorry for my sister," said her brother, Ngeth Chhoun. "She never visited the sea, and it was her first time to the sea."


Photo by: Tracey Shelton
A storm cloud creeps over Phnom Penh last week before letting out a downpour that left many streets flooded in the capital.

Meanwhile Tuesday, officials in neighbouring Kampot province found the bodies of two drowned men. Keat Yat, 41, and Soy Leap, 52, both from Prey Kom village, Teuk Chhou district, in Kampot province, drowned after they slipped into fast-flowing water while crossing a flooded road, the province's deputy governor, So Chea, said Tuesday.

The regular monsoon season is combining with a low-pressure system to spark the recent storms, according to the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology.

Winds with gusts of up to 30 km/h, as well as heavy rain and storms, have lashed much of the country.

Coastal regions like Preah Sihanouk, Kampot, Koh Kong and Kep have been particularly hard-hit. Ministry officials are expecting more rough weather today and tomorrow, with heavy rain and storms in Banteay Meanchey, Pailin, Battambang, Siem Reap, Pursat, Kampong Chhnang and Kampong Thom provinces.

Kampot's deputy governor, So Chea, said his province was prepared to evacuate people by boat if the rain and flooding continue. Further flooding is expected in provinces along the Mekong, such as Kratie, Kampong Cham and Stung Treng, but some officials downplayed its severity. "I think the floods will not be serious because it is at the end of the rainy season," said Ly Thuch, deputy president of the National Committee for Disaster Management.

He said the government would not be looking to the international community for help. "We do not yet look for assistance from overseas to assist the flooded people because it is now in the hands of the provincial authority to solve," Ly Thuch said.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Hun Sen offered food to villagers besieged by floods during a visit Tuesday. He urged people to watch their children and to ensure that conditions remain sanitary to prevent disease, according to Ros Se, director of Kampot province's information department.

Families of the two Kampot drowning victims will be offered 5 million riels (US$1,203) by the government, and 500,000 riels by the provincial authority, said Deputy Governor So Chea.

Dams threaten Sesan

Photo by: Tracey Shelton
Children play in a stream on the road to Ratanakkiri. Water from the Sesan River dam in Vietnam has reportedly polluted water downstream throughout the Ratanakkiri river system.

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 15:03 May Titthara and Robbie Corey-Boulet

Report links high levels of algae, toxins to Vietnamese dams.

STAGNANT reservoirs formed by hydropower dams on the Sesan River have led to high levels of toxic algae and bacteria that could poison tens of thousands of people living downstream in Ratanakkiri province, according to a new report distributed Tuesday by the 3S Rivers Protection Network.

Research conducted by Anna Madeleine Tiodolf from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences confirmed the presence of cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae, and cyanotoxins in the Sesan. According to a press release distributed with a technical brief on Tiodolf's fndings, cyanotoxins "are cancerous to the liver after longer periods of exposure".

The release also cited other reported health problems that could be explained by the findings, including gastric disorders and skin problems.

Cyanobacteria was not detected in three Sesan tributaries, indicating that it was caused by large reservoirs of stagnant water created by dams upstream in Vietnam, according to the press release.

One of the largest tributaries of the Mekong River, the Sesan has a drainage area of 17,000 square kilometres, 6,000 of which are in Cambodia.

Most of the people living in the river basin are members of ethnic minority groups. The press release cited a 2000 Fisheries Administration estimate that roughly 28,000 people "rely on the Sesan River for their drinking water, fishing, bathing and feeding livestock".

Tiodolf's research was conducted over a two-week period in March 2008. Samples were taken from one site along the river located 30 kilometres from the Vietnamese border and another located 130 kilometres from the Vietnamese border.

Meach Mean, coordinator for the 3S Rivers Protection Network, said Tuesday that villagers were particularly at risk during the dry season.

"People face a lot of problems during the dry season because most of them get their water directly from the river, and there is no rainwater to dilute the river water," he said.

Ka Lanthy, who serves as a representative for villagers who claim to have been affected by dam projects, said villagers were "afraid to cross the river because it gives us skin problems".

He added that officials "should be thinking about this case because a lot of people just can't use the water".

Pich Dun, secretary general of the Cambodian National Mekong Committee, could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

No Thai territory lost to Cambodia: FM

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 15:03 Cheang Sokha

MINISTER of Foreign Affairs Hor Namhong said Tuesday that Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was right to say that Thailand has not lost any territory to Cambodia during border talks between the two countries.

"It is true that in the border negotiations Thailand did not lose land to Cambodia," Hor Namhong told reporters at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. "I think this is a positive point for Thai people because in the past, Thai opposition members have claimed that [as a result of] the negotiations, Thailand has lost land to Cambodia."

On Monday, Abhisit was quoted by Thai media as saying that Thailand has not lost any territory to date around the disputed Thai-Cambodian border area near Preah Vihear temple.

Abhisit also ordered his foreign minister, Kasit Piromya, to speak Monday night on national television to explain the details of border negotiations that were approved by the Thai parliament last week.

Hor Namhong also addressed the construction of a road to Ta Moan temple in Oddar Meanchey province by soldiers of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces, an issue that was cause for concern for some Thai politicians during parliamentary discussions.

"The construction Cambodia is doing is completely on Cambodian soil," he said, adding that Cambodia will continue work on the road regardless of these objections.

Chhum Socheat, spokesman for the Ministry of Defence, said Tuesday that Minister of Defense Tea Banh will meet with his Thai counterpart in late September or early October in the Thai resort town of Pattaya to continue border talks under the auspices of the General Border Commission.

"The General Border Commission meeting will focus on various issues related to the border, including security, terrorism, trafficking and reduction of military forces," Chhum Socheat said.

He added that relations between Thai and Cambodian troops stationed along the border have been friendly since Cambodia withdrew 50 percent of its forces there last month.

Cambodia and Thailand have never fully demarcated their 805-kilometre shared border. Since July 2008, skirmishes between soldiers from the two countries stationed at the border have killed at least seven soldiers.

KRT filings seek more suspects

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 15:03 Robbie Corey-Boulet and Cheang Sokha

THE acting international co-prosecutor at the Khmer Rouge tribunal on Monday requested the investigation of five more suspects in two separate filings, one of which covered crimes he said constituted genocide.

The filings from William Smith were submitted on the same day Prime Minister Hun Sen warned that the pursuit of additional prosecutions risked sparking civil unrest that could claim up to 300,000 lives.

They were the second and third introductory submissions from prosecutors. The first, submitted in July 2007, led to the indictments of the five Khmer Rouge leaders currently in custody.

In a statement Tuesday, Smith said the submissions covered 40 "distinct factual situations" of murder, torture, unlawful detention, forced labour and persecution.

The allegations described in both submissions would amount to crimes against humanity and violations of Cambodian law, whereas those in the third - which covers 32 of the 40 factual situations - would also amount to genocide, he said.

The co-prosecutors also argued in July 2007 that crimes detailed in the first submission constituted genocide, though none of the five regime leaders mentioned were ultimately charged with it after investigations concluded.

The tribunal opened the door to new investigations last week by announcing that the five-person Pre-Trial Chamber had failed to resolve a nine-month disagreement between the international co-prosecutor, who pushed for the investigations, and the national co-prosecutor, who argued against them, citing concerns about national stability. The chamber voted three-to-two against them. The tribunal's internal rules held that the proposed investigations would go forward in the absence of a supermajority, or four-to-one vote.

Smith told the Post Tuesday that the Pre-Trial Chamber decision "obligated me to immediately forward the two submissions to the co-investigating judges". National co-prosecutor Chea Leang said Tuesday that Smith "had every right" to go forward with the submissions and declined to comment further. Smith said in the statement that he had "no plans to conduct any further preliminary investigations into additional suspects" at the tribunal.

The submissions - and consequently the names of the five suspects - are confidential.

One former cadre who has been repeatedly mentioned as a likely suspect said he agreed with Hun Sen's repeated claims that more prosecutions could spark unrest.

Meas Muth, former secretary of Central Committee Division 164, which included the Khmer Rouge navy, said by phone from Samlaut that "further prosecutions would lead to conflict".

The former military commander is one of two men included in the 2001 report on prosecution candidates - written by Stephen Heder and Brian D Tittemore - who is still alive and has not been indicted.

Sou Met, former secretary of Central Committee Division 502, which included the air force, is the other.

Clinics lack maternal HIV services

Photo by: Sovan Philong
Pregnant women attend a conference on HIV transfer between mother and child at Tonle Bassac restaurant on Tuesday.


US donates millions for health services

The US signed an agreement on Tuesday worth US$34.8 million to help Cambodia improve its health and educational services - including HIV/AIDS prevention. During the signing ceremony, Foreign Affairs Minister Hor Namhong stated that US$31.6 million has been allocated for improving Cambodia's health services and combating the spread of infectious diseases. The remaining US$3.2 million will be spent on increasing quality and access in education, he said.

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 15:02 Mom Kunthear and Chhay Channyda

Fewer than two in 10 public health centres in Cambodia are equipped to help prevent the transmission of HIV/AIDS from mothers to babies, according to a new study.

Only 154 of 957 public health centres in the country - 16 percent - provide Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT) services, according to a report published by the Treatment Monitoring and Advocacy Project of the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition.

The report was part of a global study that examined PMTCT preparedness in six countries, including Cambodia.

Dr Kem Ley, a consultant with the Monitoring and Evaluation Association who conducted research on the Cambodian section of the report, said the lack of PMTCT services contributes to the majority of pregnant women - 70 percent - not using public health centres.

"They don't learn how to prevent HIV transmission from mother to child," he said.

Many women in rural locations also have to travel long distances to reach health centres, Kem Ley said, adding that others who make the lengthy trip find it difficult to meet with health officers because the medical professionals often work few hours because of low pay.

Local nongovernmental organisations specialising in health and HIV/AIDS prevention hope to use the evidence to lobby the Ministry of Health to promote better PMTCT practices.

Kem Ley is urging the Ministry of Health to list PMTCT services with private clinics because, he said, more pregnant Cambodian women use private clinics than public health centres.

Officials have urged the government to intervene. "The maternal mortality rate is still high in the region, with 472 per 100,000 live births," said Tia Phalla, deputy director of the National AIDS Authority. "So the government must strengthen health centres and human resources."

Health officials have encountered problems reaching HIV-positive pregnant women because many prefer to give birth at home or use untrained, traditional village midwives, Tia Phalla said. It has also proved difficult to reach women in rural areas. "If we find a pregnant woman is HIV positive, we have to give medicine to prevent her foetus from contracting the virus," Tia Phalla said. "She must be monitored every time, which makes it hard for her to come to the health centre because [it costs her] time and money."

The government is trying to encourage trained midwives by paying them 60,000 riels per birth, and the NAA is looking for US$10 million in funds to reduce maternal mortality and increase staff.

Reporter called to court

The Phnom Penh Post
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 15:03 Chrann Chamroeun

RADIO Free Asia reporter Ratha Visal has been summoned to Ratanakkiri provincial court relating to a 2007 land dispute in which Pen Bonnar, the former Ratanakkiri provincial coordinator for the rights group Adhoc, has also been summoned.

Pen Bonnar, who was removed to Phnom Penh by Adhoc after initially facing the threat of incitement charges last month, was summonsed for a second time.

Pen Bonnar said that he had yet to see the summons himself, but that his lawyer had informed him that he was to appear in Ratanakkiri provincial court on September 15.

Ratha Visal also confirmed on Tuesday that he was to appear for an investigation of charges of "accomplice of incitement".