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Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Cambodia Struggles to Save Mothers, Even as It Succeeds in Reducing Child Deaths

Mother and child in Cambodia

By Robert Carmichael, VOA
Phnom Penh
10 November 2009


Cambodia is one of the poorest countries in Southeast Asia. Given its turbulent past, decades of civil war and the devastating policies of the Khmer Rouge to name just two, it faces extra hurdles on its way to improving health care for its citizens.

Cambodia is working to reduce the number of women who die in childbirth and to lower the number of infants and children under age five who die.

The figures in the two efforts reveal an anomaly: While Cambodia has succeeded in dramatically cutting the ratio of children who die each year, the maternal mortality figure has not dropped in a decade.

Around 460 Cambodian women die in childbirth for every 100,000 births. The country had hoped to bring that figure down to 140 deaths per 100,000 births by 2015 as part of its commitment to its Millennium Development Goals, or MDGs.

Dr. Lo Veasnakiry, who heads the Ministry of Health's planning unit, blames the lack of success, in part, on a shortage of funds and expertise, but he also says the target was excessively optimistic. "The global MDG said that [each] country had to reduce two-thirds of the baseline information when they started the MDG. From a global viewpoint [it's] not only Cambodia - a lot of countries have not made significant progress in terms of maternal deaths," he said.

A study in 2005 found that around half of the Cambodian women who die in childbirth succumb to massive blood loss. A quarter die from eclampsia, which is a problem related to high blood pressure.

Malalay Ahmadzai, the mother and child healthcare specialist for UNICEF in Cambodia, says both conditions require rapid treatment - in the case of blood loss a woman can die within a few hours.

She says the onset of maternal complications is unpredictable, and the response is often slowed by what health experts call "the three delays". "The first delay is decision-making in the family whether to seek care or not. The second is the roads - roads counts as one of them - but costs, costs, roads and access. And third is the quality of care," she said,

The solution is a mix of better resources, more trained medical staff, and better roads - the logic being that the quicker patients get to a clinic, the better their chances of survival.

Cambodia's inability to save mothers contrasts with its success in lowering infant and child deaths.

The country aims to reduce the ratio of infants dying before their first birthday to 50 per 1,000 live births - or five percent.

Ten years ago the rate was almost twice that. Today's rate is six percent, putting Cambodia well on its way to hitting its target.

It is a similar story with deaths among children under five; the rate has dropped to 83 per 1,000, down sharply from 124 a decade ago.

Lo says the government's financial commitment to the health sector has proved vital to saving children. He also credits the cash and technical help from health partners such as UNICEF.

Ahmadzai says other factors play a part, too. "One has been the strong performance of the national immunization program. That has been one key promising intervention identified. Second has been the improvement in breastfeeding practices, and that goes back to a lot of community work plus support to the health centers and so on," she said.

Tackling maternal mortality, on the other hand, requires that good quality care be quickly available at health clinics. And in much of Cambodia, the quality of care is insufficient.

One problem health care providers have here is getting good data on the maternal mortality rate. Some officials say it actually could be anywhere between 300 deaths and 700 deaths per 100,000 births.

A more accurate figure will emerge next year when the five-yearly nationwide health survey is taken.

The Ministry of Health's Lo is optimistic that the new data will show an improvement in the rate.

That is because every one of Cambodia's almost 1,000 healthcare clinics now has a midwife. A year ago around 90 percent did.

Also, more women receive care before giving birth than ever before, and more midwives are present at births.

But even Lo does not expect the improvement will bring the goal of 140 deaths per 100,000 births within reach. He recently proposed that the government raise the target to 250.

While that rate is far from ideal, Lo points out that the lower rate will still be a significant improvement for Cambodian families.

Thai tensions rise over Thaksin Shinawatra’s Cambodian role

(AFP/PM Office/File/Prime Minister Office)
November 11, 2009
Richard Lloyd Parry, Asia Editor
Times Online (UK)


Tensions between Cambodia and Thailand were inflamed yesterday after Thaksin Shinawatra, the ousted Thai Prime Minister, was welcomed in Phnom Penh.

Relations between the neighbours — engaged in a border dispute — deteriorated further after Thaksin accepted a new role as economic adviser to the Cambodian Prime Minister, Hun Sen.

The move was seen in Bangkok as a provocation and Thai opponents of Thaksin threatened to demonstrate against his return to the region.

On Cambodian television, Mr Hun Sen was seen embracing his guest and was said to have described him as an “eternal friend” and “the best adviser with economic leadership”. Thaksin is due to give a lecture to ministers and government officials tomorrow.

“Thaksin is here for the economy and not activities related to politics,” Phay Siphan, a spokesman for the Cambodian Cabinet, said. “It is an honour for Cambodia’s economic sector and we hope that Cambodians nationwide welcome him warmly.”

Mr Hun Sen’s hospitality had less to do with Thaksin’s economic expertise than with the relationship between Phnom Penh and Bangkok.

Their differences date back to the Khmer Empire, a Cambodian civilisation which ruled large parts of Thailand between AD800 to AD1370. Today Cambodia is poorer than its former vassal but a sense of resentment and rivalry lingers on both sides, which periodically flares into violence.

Soldiers on both sides died in skirmishes last year over a few hundred square metres of disputed territory close to the ancient Preah Vihear temple. The Thai Foreign Minister, Kasit Piromya, is a Yellow Shirt leader who, before his appointment as his Government’s chief diplomat, described Mr Hun Sen as a “a gentleman with the mind of a gangster”. Now the Cambodian leader is taking his revenge by flaunting his friendship with Thaksin.

Thailand responded by recalling its ambassador to Phnom Penh, and made moves to cancel a joint agreement to explore energy reserves in the Gulf of Thailand. It has begun extradition proceedings against Thaksin, who last year was sentenced to two years in prison for corruption when he was Prime Minister.

It has no hope of success because Cambodia regards the case as a political matter and therefore excluded from an extradition treaty between the countries.

Thaksin told The Times in an interview on Monday that he had no intention of settling in Cambodia, but would visit it from his exile in Dubai.

His proximity to Thailand and especially to the country’s northeast where he has his most loyal support, is unsettling to the Government, which is supported by army generals who removed Thaksin from power.

Anti-Thaksin activists, known as the “Yellow Shirts”, announced a rally in Bangkok this Sunday after remarks that he made in an interview with The Times about the Thai royal family.

The visit comes days before a summit in Singapore between President Obama and leaders of the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean), also scheduled for Sunday.

George Yeo, Singapore’s Foreign Minister, said that the dispute had caused alarm, adding: “We are very concerned about this bilateral problem between two fraternal members of Asean and we hope they will find a way to reconcile and to act with restraint.” Previous Yellow Shirt rallies have led to fights with Thaksin’s supporters and brought chaos to Bangkok.

Last year the group took over Government House and seized the city’s two airports, stranding tens of thousands of passengers and damaging the tourism industry.

Tensions are at a peak again as Thaksin returns to South-East Asia, the closest he has been to Thailand since he was forced out in a military coup in 2006.

In April, Thaksin promised his supporters: “If there is the sound of gunfire, of soldiers shooting the people, I’ll return immediately to lead you to march on Bangkok.”

He told The Times: “If I were to start the march I would start from the north-eastern part of Thailand, on the soil of Thailand, but I will have to enter Thailand from the border. I can enter Thailand from Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar [Burma].”

In a message to his supporters on Twitter yesterday, he wrote: “Tonight I will meet and have dinner with Hun Sen and his family. I miss home so much.”

For my Thai "eternal friend"

... A Luxurious Villa
Official residence of Cambodia's PM Hun Sen in Phnom Penh where fugitive ex-Thai PM Thaksin Shinawatra, who arrived in Phnom Penh Tuesday, will stay. Thaksin will give a lecture on economic issue Thursday. (Photo: Korbphuk Phromrekha, The Nation)

and for my Khmer people

... Forced Eviction
(Photo: The Phnom Penh Post)

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Viet gov’t condemns Sam Rainsy about border posts


Opposition leader Sam Rainsy (Photo: Ayuthyea, RFA)

01 November 2009

By Mao Sotheany
Radio Free Asia
Translated from Khmer by Socheata
Click here to read the article in Khmer


The Vietnamese government condemned opposition leader Sam Rainsy for pulling out wooden posts along the border on Sunday of last week.

The AFP reported on 31 October that, in the evening of 30 October 2009, the Viet ministry of Foreign Affairs posted on its website a condemnation of the action taken by Sam Rainsy as being “a perverse action, damaging common property, violating both countries’ laws, and bilateral treaties and agreements.”

The Viet statement criticized Sam Rainsy of slandering Vietnam by accusing the latter of planting posts and violating Cambodian territories.

On Sunday 25 October 2009, the SRP led a Kathen procession to a pagoda located in Samrong commune, Chantrea district, Svay Rieng province. Mr. Sam Rainsy and about 10 SRP MPs, as well as about 100 local villagers were present during the ceremony.

RFA could not obtain Mr. Sam Rainsy’s reaction regarding the Viet government accusation leveled against him above as Mr. Sam Rainsy is currently participating in a conference in Egypt.

RFA was able to contact SRP MP Yont Tharo and asked him to clarify this situation as he was also present in the Kathen ceremony.

Yony Tharo said: “The villagers complained to the MPs, including myself, about the planting of border posts. Vietnam planted them on their lands, in the past, the border was located away from their lands, but now it includes their lands. Some villagers lost 1.5 hectares, some more than 2 hectares, that’s what they complained. At that time, after Mr. Sam Rainsy led the Kathen procession to the pagoda and he turned over the Kathen to the monks, about 100 villagers traveled with Mr. Sam Rainsy, among these people there were also border police officers who protected the pagoda. I am not sure if these police officers at the Kathen ceremony were protecting the border or they were protecting local order, I did not know, [but] there were 7-8 of them. When we went there, we saw the villagers’ rice fields measuring about 200-meter wide … one side of the field is on the other side of the Vietnamese border just like what they told us earlier, so now they took 2-hectare of their lands, that I witnessed it. On the scene, the border post was planted right in the middle of the rice field, it’s about 1-meter-square, the center is poured in concrete, but the concrete is poured into the soil… around the concrete border footing, there were 6 wooden posts. Mr. Sam Rainsy said that he will pull out these border posts, it was his idea, and he will take responsibility for them. He was just saying it but he did not pull them out yet when the villagers started to pull them out, all 6 of them.”

Mao Sotheany: What I wanted to ask your Excellency is regarding the declaration issued by the Vietnamese ministry of Foreign Affairs that was published last Friday evening. They condemned Mr. Sam Rainsy of disrupting the relationship between the Vietnamese and Cambodian governments and such, in this case, what do you think?

Yont Tharo: To me, what the Vietnamese government raised depends on the reality, so we want to see the fact, let’s all go visit together: the border committee and the villagers. If I did not see the place, I wouldn’t know, but the villagers are witnesses, they pointed to us the rice fields they are planting crops on … it’s 200 meter, but now they took 2-3 meters wide and 100 meter long, it’s equivalent to 2 hectares of their lands. This is what I saw, there was indeed encroachment of Khmer lands, that I saw.”

Mao Sotheany: When you and Mr. Sam Rainys went to the border, along with about 100 villagers, did you confirm with the local authorities, such as the commune and district authorities, that they recognize the fact that Vietnam planted border posts inside Cambodian territories or not?

Yont Tharo: I did not ask the local authority, because we are not involved in the border demarcation, during that time we went there for the Kathen ceremony. The villagers complained, they yelled and cried about the loss of their rice fields, that was why Mr. Sam Rainsy went to see the actual situation, just like what I told you earlier. The villagers were victimized. Older villages are located far from the border, so we have difficulties asking the authority, furthermore, these are only wooden stakes, but the real post, it is still there. We saw that Cambodians are not happy about the border post being planted by encroaching on Khmer territories. The actual border post with a [concrete] footing is still in the ground, it did not disappear.

Cambodia and Vietnam started to officially plant border posts along their 1,270-km common border in September 2006. The demarcation was done to end the several decade-long border dispute between the two countries.

Hun Sen praises Japan's role in Cambodia ahead of regional summit

PHNOM PENH — Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen on Tuesday praised Japan’s contributions to peace in Cambodia over the years and said Tokyo is playing a key role as a development partner in the Mekong River region. In a written interview with a group of senior editors from Kyodo News’ member newspapers visiting Cambodia, Hun Sen expressed a request for Japan to upgrade infrastructure to strengthen ties in the region.

In particular, Hun Sen sought support as ‘‘a highest priority’’ for the Mekong River Bridge that will serve as the final gateway of the Southern Economic Corridor, and requested cooperation in world heritage protection. Hun Sen said Japan has played a key role in seeking justice for the victims of the genocidal Pol Pot regime by contributing both spiritual and financial support for the work of the Khmer Rouge tribunal. He said Japan has provided $56.9 million to the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, nearly half of the total budget spent by both Cambodia and United Nations since it began operation from 2006

HOLOCAUST and CULTURE OF MEMORY: Photo Diary of Cambodian Diaspora and the German Experience


HOLOCAUST and CULTURE OF MEMORY:
Photo Diary of Cambodian Diaspora and the German Experience
May, July–September 2009.
By Theary C. SENG
------------------------------------
We, Cambodians, are given a “spectacular event” in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia to transition from a 30-year “period of communicative silence” to building a “culture of memory”.

The ECCC is both a “court of law” and a “court of public opinion” (see 19 Sept. 2009 KI-Media, Theary Seng’s Press Statement with Germany’s Federal Minister for Economic Development, Berlin) which will produce countless materials and resources toward the establishing of a more POSITIVE LEGACY and a more HONORABLE CULTURE OF MEMORY.

The desired legacy includes more than just a better legal/judicial system, but encompasses a culture of dialogue and creative expression, of personal/collective responsibility, of de-stigmatizing/sensitivity to mental health etc. A more honorable culture of memory declines the powers-that-be (in politics, civil society, donor community, in the ECCC or otherwise) from pursuing a revisionist history to whitewash one’s own complicity or to be a megalomaniac in claiming a “Super-Victim” status or to grandstand and build up the professional resumes.

I. ECCC Civil Party Theary C. SENG conducting Civil Party Seminars for Cambodian survivors in Brussels, Belgium (on way to The Hague, sponsored by IDRC) and Paris / Toulouse, France (on way to Lisbon, sponsored by Taiwan Foundation for Democracy)

In the ECCC, it is the first time in international law and mixed/international tribunals whereby victims of mass atrocities are given the status of a direct party in the criminal proceeding. As survivors of the Khmer Rouge, we should make every opportunity of getting involved and shaping this process, wherever we may be – in country or in the diaspora spread across the world.

Theary Seng with author of J’ai Cru aux Khmers Rouges, ONG Thong Hoeung, and Cambodian survivors in Brussels, Civil Party Seminar, Belgium, 21 May 2009.


Theary Seng at MacArthur Foundation’s International Justice Award to Richard Goldstone. ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo addressing panel of international justice / human rights luminaries, The Hague, 25 May 2009.

Theary Seng with author PIN Yathay holding his memoir Stay Alive, My Son. Civil Party Seminar, Paris. 6 July 2009.

Theary Seng with Mr. PHIN Malay and Dr. SENG Chen An after 2-hour live radio broadcast on Canal Sud, FM 92.2 in Toulouse addressing issues of KR legacy and culture of memory and later at a Civil Party Seminar, Toulouse, 7 July 2009.

II. “Collective Sharing and Healing”: Khmer Rouge Tribunal Forum II, Portland, OR organized by CACO, 15 August 2009.

The Cambodian-American Community of Oregon (CACO) organized with heart and soul this second forum in their city as evidenced by the audience and their engagement.

Cambodian survivors in Portland each holding a candle of commemoration; Theary Seng with Fmr. US Ambassador to UN, Hon. Sichan SIV; the indefatigable Ronnie YIMSUT treating Dr. Wendy Freed and Dr. Craig Etcheson (the unrelenting hunter of KR leaders and co- founder of Documentation Center of Cambodia, DC-Cam with Ben Kiernan and Helen Jarvis in 1995) and Theary Seng to a visit of Mt. Hood.

III. Theary Seng’s 3-weeks in Berlin learning about Germany’s Culture of Memory (sponsored by the German Development Service and the Friedrich Naumann Stiftung)

One cannot help but be extremely impressed with the courage and creativity of Germany in confronting its Nazi and Stasi past. Anyone who wants to learn how to genuinely transition out of the Period of Communicative Silence (as memorably put by Dr. Wolfgang Thierse, vice-president of the Bundestag who inaugurated the Holocaust Museum in Berlin) must visit Germany, in particular Berlin.

Theary Seng speaking with Germany’s Federal Minister for Economic Development Heide-Marie who initiated the Civil Peace Service 10 years ago, part of the ongoing legacy of Germany’s culture of memory, Berlin, 19 Aug. 2009.

Theary Seng being treated to lunch by Anja Justen of FriEnt (Working Group on Development and Peace), with DED Michael Eberlein and Jost Pachaly of Heinrich Boll Stiftung after a roundtable discussion on “Psycho-Social Accompaniment in Transitional Justice Processes – The Cambodian Experience”, preceded by another roundtable discussion at the Treatment Center of Victims of Torture, Berlin organized by Britta Jenkins and her colleagues (Dr. Christine Knaevelsrud, psychologist Katrin Schock, Nadine Stammel and Estelle both of whom had conducted 6-months research in Cambodia, and followed by an amazing conversation with Natascha Zupan who coordinates all of FriEnt, Berlin, 20 Aug. 2009.

Theary Seng accompanied by DED Monika Falkenberg took the train outside Berlin to visit Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, a well federally-funded “authentic site”, with amazing audio guide. In front of the large compound.

Theary Seng in front of large space provided for different associations, institutions (i.e., churches) to commemorate in their own creative way the lives of those who perished at Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp, again with informative audio guide available in several languages. Sachsenhausen has both preserved the “authentic site” and space for creative memorial. Everything is thoughtfully planned to facilitate the education and reflection of the visitor, outside Berlin, 21 Aug. 2009.

Every year, each of the German Ministries set aside one day for citizens and visitors to come to that particular Ministry and meet with directly with Ministry officials and view exhibitions of its work. Theary Seng standing in front of exhibition featuring CSD’s staff Om Chariya comforting a woman at Tuol Sleng, “direct democracy” or “Open Door Day” at the Federal Ministry of Economic Development, 23 Aug. 2009.

The German Parliament (Bundestag) generously sets aside hundreds of millions of Euros to fund these “authentic sites” and creative memorials to give real meaning to the “Culture of Memory”. We, Cambodians, can learn from this German experience – the building of this culture of memory must involve broad and diverse stakeholders of civil society (artists, authors in addition to traditional civil society of human rights/democracy builders) and government. 23 Aug. 2009.

The Holocaust Memorial, initiated by a civil society leader and inaugurated by then President of the German Bundestag, Dr. Wolfgang Thierse, sits in the heart of the financial, diplomatic and very touristic neighborhoods of Berlin – very central and prominent. 25 Aug. 2009.

The excellent, thoughtful Information Center sits underground. A map of all Holocaust Memorials spread across Europe. 25 Aug. 2009.

2 1/2 hrs meeting with Dr. Hubertus Knabe, director of Hohenschoenhausen Memorial, a former Stasi Prison, a preserved “ authentic site” of Stasi secrecy and paranoia. Berlin, 27 Aug. 2009.

1 ½ hours of conversation on the culture of memory and human rights in Cambodia with Dr. Wolfgang Thierse, Vice-President of German Parliament/Bundestag (transparent dome in background), who initiated the Holocaust Memorial. Theary Seng, Moritz Kleine-Brockoff, filmmaker Marc Eberle and artist Feit after the meeting in the corner conference room of Bundestag’s office building, with stunning overlooking view of Bundestag which was burned down in 1933 giving rise to Hitler and with the Berlin Wall running along its edges until 1989. (See also 19 Sept. 20 KI Media posting.) 28 Aug. 2009.

Spending 5 hours of conversations with Dr. Thomas Lutz who is the director of all the 100+ museums and memorials in Germany (!), after a very detailed tour of the Topography of Terror, at the nearby garden café. 28 Aug. 2009.

Theary Seng with filmmaker Marc Eberle in front of the Berlin Wall remnant forming an “authentic site”, the entrance of the Topography of Terror. 28 Aug. 2009.

On the way to dinner (with Marc’s friends—Judith, speech writer for Federal Minister of Health, and Udo, a famous film set designer, most recently of Same Same But Different, a love story set in Cambodia), we ran into a Stumbling Stone, a creative way of honoring the memory of those who perished in the Holocaust, one of hundreds in Berlin, 30 Aug. 2009.

Theary Seng on her way to meeting with Bert Rosenthal, Secretariat of International Relations at the Federal Commissioner for the Records of the State Security service of the former German Democratic Republic. Berlin, 31 Aug. 2009.

Theary Seng in front of the Jewish Museum, comprised of two beautiful structures – one old and the other modern, recognized worldwide as an architectural feat. Berlin, 31 Aug. 2009.

3 hours with Dr. Aubrey Pomerance, head of Archive of Jewish Museum in Berlin. Hall of faces, silently screaming to be heard, “Never Again!”. 31 Aug. 2009.

Later a conversation with Sarah Hiron, head of Education Department (on the very left in photo) and her colleague Marie Naumann, head of Publications, at the Garden Café of Jewish Museum in Berlin. She generously gave me a set of the curriculum. Group photo with Dr. Aubrey Pomerance (2nd from left), Marc Eberle (back), Theary Seng, Charles du Vinage (far right) at entrance hall of Jewish Museum, Berlin. 31 Aug. 2009.

Conversations with Bernd Schaefer (KR and Stasi scholar and senior research scholar of Cold War International History Project of Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars), Marc Eberle, Markus at the French Quarter of Berlin, 1 Sept. 2009.

Generous meeting with FDP (now junior coalition partner) Member of Parliament Hon. Hellmut Konigshaus at his Bundestag office, with Dr. Christian Taaks and Mr. Moritz Kleine-Brockoff of Friedrich Naumann Stiftung, one day before the International Conference on KR Tribunal: Scandal or Success, which he also attended amidst the election campaign season. (See 29 Sept. 2009 KI Media posting re this KRT conference in Berlin.) 2 Sept. 2009.

Theary Seng with panelists Hon. Jurgen Koppelin (German parliamentarian who opposed the KRT) and German prosecutor Jurgen Assmann, organized by and moderated by Friedrich Naumann Stiftung’s Moritz Kleine-Brockoff, Berlin, 3 Sept. 2009.

Meeting with the lovely Dr. Anna Kaminsky, executive director of Stiftung Aufarbeitung, another well federally-funded foundation (hundreds of millions of Euros!) in Berlin to archive crimes and history of Communism all over the world. Berlin, 3 Sept. 2009.

Meeting with Dr. Karen Jungblut, director of Research and Documentation of the Shoah Foundation, founded by Steven Spielberg as a result of filming Schindler’s List. USC Los Angeles, 11 Sept. 2009.

Theary Seng with cousin Visal Hok (born 2 months before end of KR regime in late 1978) on way to meeting with Karen Jungblut, with Cambodian flag in the background, at central campus of University of Southern California, permanent house of Shoah Foundation, 11 Sept. 2009.

We, Cambodians, are given the opportunity in the Khmer Rouge Tribunal to proclaim resoundingly NEVER, NEVER AGAIN!

Hun Xen's regime in collusion with the Viet encroachers sue Sam Rainsy and victimized Cambodian farmers



Opposition Accused of Border Post Destruction

By Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
03 November 2009


The opposition Sam Rainsy Party will face yet another lawsuit, for the destruction of boundary demarcations on the Vietnam border.
Authorities of Chan Trea district, Svay Rieng province, say party leader Sam Rainsy colluded with local villagers to rip border markings out of the ground last week, officials said Monday.

The suit would bring to three the number of cases against the opposition in recent months, including Prime Minister Hun Sen’s defamation suit against lawmaker Mu Sochua, and a similar suit brought by 22 military officials against lawmaker Ho Vann.

The lawsuit stems from an Oct. 25 Katina ceremony, led by Sam Rainsy, in Samrong commune, Chantrea district. At the end of the ceremony, villagers showed gathered officials six boundary posts reportedly planted in their own rice fields, indicating incursion, officials said.

Sam Rainsy then said the markers should be removed, after which villagers pulled them up.

“The complaint has been filed for destruction of public property,” said the party’s Svay Rieng provincial deputy chief, Meas Kheng.

District Governor Chea Yieng confirmed a complaint had been filed but declined to give details, saying only it had to do with boundary markers and not the Kathina ceremony.

Cambodia and Vietnam agreed in 2005 to finalized border demarcation, in a bid to end decades of disputes on a nationally sensitive topic. However, border activists have continued to protest the alleged incursion by Vietnamese into Cambodian territory.

“If there is a complaint, it would be another concern, after Mu Sochua and Ho Vann,” said Am Sam Ath, an investigator for the rights group Licadho.

Judge Korm Chhean, president of Svay Rieng’s court, said he had not yet seen a complaint.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Vietnam, Cambodia plan new air routes


Vietnam and Cambodia are planning to open two routes linking the coastal city of Sihanoukville in Cambodia with Phu Quoc Island and Can Tho city in the south of Vietnam.

Experts said that the new air routes will help create an attractive tourism triangle, facilitating the promising service sector of the two countries.

According to Undersecretary of the State at the Secretariat of Civil Aviation of Cambodia (SSCA), Soy Sokhan, SSCA and Vietnam Airlines are conducting a feasibility study for the two new routes.

Chairman of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents Ho Vandy said both Phu Quoc island in Kien Giang province and Can Tho city are attractive tourism centres in Vietnam.

Once launched, the weekly flights will help transport a large number of foreign tourists to Cambodia, he added.

Vietnam condemns acts hindering border demarcation with Cambodia


The Vietnamese Government strongly condemned acts and statements made by Sam Rainsy, President of the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) of Cambodia, who recently uprooted land markers on the Vietnam-Cambodia border, said a Foreign Ministry spokesperson on October 30.

Sam Rainsy on October 25 visited the border demarcation area between Vietnam’s southern province of Long An and Svay Rieng province of Cambodia and uprooted six temporary poles that mark the position of Marker 185 and then brought them to Phnom Penh. Sam Rainsy also made statements slandering Vietnam as encroaching on the land of Cambodia through the border demarcation and marker planting.

In response to questions from the media about Vietnam’s reaction to Sam Rainsy’s acts and statements, spokesperson Nguyen Phuong Nga said that “ Vietnam and Cambodia are promptly conducting borderline demarcation and planting border markers. Protection of land markers and poles is the shared obligation of the two countries’ governments and people, in accordance with bilateral agreements and international law.”
What Sam Rainsy did was a perverse action, damaging common property, violating both countries’ laws, and bilateral treaties and agreements, hindering the borderline demarcating and marker planting process, she emphasised.

Sam Rainsy’s speeches slandering Vietnam were ill-informed, irresponsible and designed to incite a feud, undermining the relationship between Vietnam and Cambodia, she added.

The Vietnamese government urged the Cambodian government to take due measures to deal with sabotage acts, ensuring favourable conditions for conducting borderline demarcation and marker planting between Vietnam and Cambodia, and for the common benefit of both peoples, Nga concluded. (VNA)

Typhoon Mirinae likely to worsen Cambodia's flood problems: Oxfam

PHNOM PENH, Oct. 31 (Xinhua) -- International aid agency Oxfam has cautioned that a new wave of rain from Typhoon Mirinae is expected to reach Cambodia on Nov. 2.

In a statement received Saturday, Oxfam said situations in communities already affected by Typhoon Ketsana and prolonged annual floods in central and northern Cambodia are likely to worsen with the effects of the new typhoon, putting already affected people further at risk.

"Typhoon Mirinae is currently on track to hit the northern Philippines island of Luzon . Although Cambodia may not be hit with the full strength of the typhoon, the country remains vulnerable due to its limited resources for preparation and response, and while the country is just beginning to recover from recent flooding," the statement said.

"Typhoon Mirinae could set back on-going emergency work and planned recovery and rehabilitation efforts in Cambodia ," said Francis Perez, Country Lead of Oxfam in Cambodia .

"The effects of the new typhoon could increase hazards in still flooded areas and cause further damage to crops and livelihoods. It may also displace communities or prolong the return of those already displaced by Typhoon Ketsana," he added.

Fearing a new threat of another typhoon, Oxfam is alerting humanitarian agencies and government authorities to help communities living in areas susceptible to flooding to be prepared by stocking on clean water and food and securing important documents.

The damage from Typhoon Ketsana runs to around 40 million U.S. dollars in Cambodia, according to the Ministry of Economy and Finance. The storm, which killed at least 30 people, affected about 6,000 families and destroyed thousands of hectares of rice fields, and local infrastructure such as irrigation systems, roads, schools and houses.

Construction of Cambodian bourse to begin in Dec

pic

By Ek Madra

PHNOM PENH, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Cambodia expects to begin construction in December on its first stock exchange, a government official said, giving momentum to a long-delayed joint venture with South Korean investors.

'We expect to have the ground-breaking ceremony in December,' Mey Vann, director of the financial industry department at Cambodia's Ministry of Economy and Finance, told Reuters.

The idea of a Cambodian stockmarket has been floated since the 1990s but has struggled for traction in a country known for chronic poverty and a history of upheaval, including the Khmer Rouge 'Killing Fields'.

Cambodian authorities have partnered with private South Korean developer World City Co Ltd to build a $6 million, four-storey stock exchange on the waterfront of a new financial district, Cambodian and World City officials have said.

The area where the stock exchange will be built is flooded swampland on the edge of Boeung Kak Lake in the heart of the Phnom Penh. The end of the rainy season this month will clear the way for workers to begin building the exchange on the corner of what developers are calling Phnom Penh Boulevard.

Cambodia gives big boost to military budget

By Ek Madra

PHNOM PENH, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Cambodia, one of Southeast Asia's poorest countries, plans to boost defense and security spending by 23 percent next year, its budget showed on Saturday, raising the prospect of a clash with the IMF.

Cambodia plans to spend $274 million on defense and security next year, up from $223 million this year, the budget showed. The total budget for calendar 2010 was $1.97 billion, which meant the military was allocated about 14 percent of total spending.

That compares with 1.7 percent spent on agriculture, the backbone of Cambodia's economy, and 0.7 percent on water resources. About 1.7 percent was set aside for rural development.

Military spending is a sensitive topic in Cambodia because of the millions of dollars of donor money flowing into the country, largely to social programmes.

"This big budget for defense is meant for preventative measures in response to international conflicts," said government spokesman Phay Siphan.

Siphan said the spending was unrelated to tensions with neighbouring Thailand over land surrounding a 900-year-old, cliff-top Hindu temple known as Preah Vihear. Skirmishes in the border area have killed seven troops in the past year.

Thailand is challenging a U.N. decision to make the temple a world heritage site under Cambodian jurisdiction. Cambodia was awarded the temple in a 1962 international court ruling that did not determine who owns 1.8 square miles (4.6 sq km) next to it.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) criticised Cambodia last year for its military spending, leading the Cambodian government to cut back its defense budget during a debate in parliament after questioning by the IMF.

"Donors will not be happy," Ou Vireak, head of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, said of the latest military budget.

He said Prime Minister Hun Sen was likely trying to whip up nationalist support by projecting an image of a strong military at a time of heightened tension with Thailand.

"By doing so, he is turning the country effectively into a military state," he said.

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