FOX News : Health

30 December, 2008

Documentation Centre of Cambodia Received KR Films

Cambodia receives Khmer Rouge films from Vietnam

Australia Network News

Cambodia has received 20 Khmer Rouge documentary films from Vietnam, which will be used as evidence against the regime at the trial of top Khmer leaders.

Chhang Youk, director of the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, says the films are in English and Khmer, and were mostly made by Vietnamese soldiers between 1973 and 1982.

He says they cover several aspects of the regime of interest to the trial, including conditions for children, the notorious Tuol Sleng prison in Phnom Penh, treatment of foreigners, and killings Vietnamese citizens in Vietnam's Tai Ninh Province.

Chhang Youk told reporters that Vietnam is the first ASEAN country to provide key documents ahead of the trials of jailed Khmer leaders, which Cambodia is preparing to open early next year.

Five Khmer Rouge leaders are being held in a pretrial detention center at the United Nations-backed Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.

''The films are parts of our history and they are considered as hard evidence besides the reading texts," Chhang Youk said.

"These films will help the younger generation to a better understanding of our history,'' he added.

He says while Vietnam has cooperated with his center since 1998, China and Thailand have failed to do so even though he says they may have similar films.

Controversial doc opens sch

Dec 30, 2008
By Ben Bland , FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
Dr Richner has set up five children's hospitals in Cambodia. -- PHOTO: WWW.BEAT-RICHNER.CH
SIEM REAP: - A controversial Swiss doctor who has frequently clashed with international health experts is continuing his fight to bring world-class healthcare to Cambodia's children by setting up an academy to train doctors and pouring additional millions into one of his hospitals.

Dr Beat Richner, who has set up five children's hospitals in Cambodia with funds from private donors, has built a new wing at his hospital in Siem Reap, close to the renowned temples at Angkor Wat, to solve a chronic shortage of beds. He refuses to turn patients away and many children are currently treated on mats on the floor.

The US$12 million (S$17 million) extension, which incorporates a state-of-the-art MRI scanner as well as 200 extra beds, is being launched today, alongside a new academy to train young doctors who are keen to pursue similar humanitarian projects.

The opening ceremony is being presided over by King Norodom Sihamoni, who has been a strong supporter of Dr Richner's work ever since he set up his first hospital in Phnom Penh in 1992.

The Kantha Bopha hospitals provide free treatment to 85 per cent of all sick children in Cambodia and Dr Richner claims that his foundation saves 90,000 lives a year.

An accomplished cellist, he plays twice-weekly fund-raising concerts at his Siem Reap hospital to tourists visiting the Angkor Wat temples.

His hospitals cost US$25 million a year to run and most of the funding is from private donors. Many of his backers are in Switzerland, where he is something of a celebrity. The Cambodian and Swiss governments also contribute 16 per cent of his annual budget.

However, his methods have brought him into conflict with international health groups such as the World Health Organisation. They argue that reliance on individual foreign donors and use of expensive equipment and drugs make his approach unsustainable.

They say efforts to improve Cambodian health standards should focus on state-run hospitals and the promotion of basic health care and hygiene.

The Kantha Bopha Academy of Pediatrics, which will hold its first six-month course in July next year, is being launched in part as a response to these criticisms.

'They say we are not sustainable but I want to help train the next generation of doctors so we can have more Kantha Bophas around the world,' said Dr Richner.

By avoiding corruption and using international-standard technology, he insists that his approach has provided economically efficient and medically correct health care.

The academy is aimed at 'promoting this positive experience and creative know-how to other parts of the world with similar conditions and needs', he added.

Although the academy will be open to all fully qualified physicians, the focus will be on training young doctors from developing nations in South-east Asia, Africa and other parts of the world.

The fees are likely to be subsidised for those who cannot to afford to pay. Courses will be run by doctors from the Kantha Bopha hospitals as well as visiting professors from Switzerland.

Dr Richner first worked in Cambodia in 1974 but was forced to flee when the murderous Khmer Rouge took control of the country in 1975. He returned in 1991 to rebuild the main children's hospital in Phnom Penh at the request of former king Norodom Sihanouk.

Sri Lankan Garment-Float SL Rupee

Float SL rupee, says exporters

Sri Lanka's National Newspaper since 1918

Thursday December 30, 2008

Sri Lanka Garment Buying Offices Association (SLGBOA) and the Sri Lanka Chamber of Garment Exporters (SLCGE) have appealed to the Monetary Authorities to allow the Sri Lankan rupee to a realistic level so that garment exports and imports in general could remain competitive.

Sri Lanka’s competitors India, Bangladesh and China have floated their currencies to realistic levels posing a threat to our garment exports, they point out.

A statement issued jointly by the two organisations said: “With the advent of the post quota regime the Industry faced fierce competition from Bangladesh, China and India. Due to the dialogue of the Government of the day the commitment of the garment industry in marketing the ethical practices and the high compliance the EU accordingly granted the importation of Sri Lanka ready made garments Duty Free access under certain stipulated conditions which is commonly known as GSP Plus scheme.

“This gave the Sri Lankan exporter much fillip which helped the Industry to increase the exports to the EU since the scheme came into operation. Under the GSP Plus scheme the apparel industry is the main beneficiary but it also gave great opportunities or both the traditional and non-traditional exports.

“Due to very fierce competition since the post quota period many factories could not survive the highly inflationary environment in Sri Lanka when ad hoc wage increases, increase in factor cost and a very strong Sri Lankan rupee added to the woes of the Industry especially the small and medium (SME) sector.

“In addition to these factors the Banks who up to this time made good profits from the trade started to look at the very Industry they supported and thrived on a negative outlook.

“The Banks follow a policy of giving the customer the umbrella when the “sun was shining has taken it away when its raining” The garment industry which had about 800 factories until 2005/06 has now shrunk to less than 290 factories. The SME sector being the main casualty.

“The large Groups have survived (only a few had shut down) and the surviving have spread their risk by moving their operations to India, Bangladesh who will benefit at the expense of Sri Lanka. Hence there will be foreign exchange gain to these countries which will be a loss to Sri Lanka and unlikely to regain.

“Sri Lanka’s inflation which reached a record of almost 30% and currently stands at year on year inflation of 20.20% which is still high by any standard. Strangely and for inexplicable reason the Sri Lankan rupee has emerged as the strongest currency in the world today. In comparison, the currencies in our competing countries devalued realistically thereby making their exports remain competitive and Sri Lanka Apparel Exports made to struggle further.

“We urge the Monetary Authorities to be proactive like our competitors and allow the Sri Lankan Rupee to float to a realistic level so that our apparel exports in particular and exports in general can remain competitive and survive this crucial and critical period.”

29 December, 2008

Infuence of Humen Garment

Infuence of Humen Garment

Humen town of Dongguan, on the east coast of Pearl River Estuary, is located in the southeast of Guangdong province. Humen covers an area of 178.5 square kilometers and has a local resident population of 120,000 and a foating population of 500,000. There are more than 1,250 large-scale garment enterprises in Humen town, among which 300 foreign-capital enterprises, 800 private enterprises, and about 100 support factories specializing in weaving, heat setting, zipper and dyeing, with productive capacity of 250 million suits per year. It was awarded the Most Infuential Capital of Textile Industry by Economic Daily Media. In the one square kilometer's garment market, there are 22 large-scale garment wholesale marts, such as Fumin Commercial Building which enjoys the reputation of No. 1 fashion wholesaler in China, Huanghe Fashion City of Humen town, Lungchuen Business Plaza, Lane Crawford, New Times, Baolaohui, Xinlangchao, JinBaili, Daying Eastern International Garment Mall, which accommodate more than 10,000 garment shops in total. The domestic and international sales amount to about RMB 13.5 billion yuan per year.

In addition, there are 11 garment support malls, such as Fumin Drapery Mart, Huacheng Drapery Mart, Humen International Cloth Center, Bomei Cloth Trade Center, Fumin Leather & Leatherware Mart and Taixing Accessories Mall, which covers an area of one square kilometer with more than 8,000 shops and sales volume RMB six bi l l ion yuan per year. Humen Association of Apparel & Ornaments Industries, the first town apparel & ornaments association in China, was established in March 1996. In accordance with the guideline of management, service, guidance and improvement, the Association serves for the garment enterprises in Humen with heart and soul, and builds a bridge between enterpr ises and government .

It has successfully held Humen International Fashion Fair for 12 times from 1996 with turnover of more than RMB one billion yuan every year. Thanks to so many years' meticulous cultivation, Humen garment has become the first famous garment manufacturing base and wholesale market in China and a pillar industry of Humen which boasts large scale, high qual i ty indust ry cluster. Human was awarded Professional Town and Technology Innovation Pilot Town of Guangdong province by Science and Technology Offce of Guangdong Province in 2002, China Famous Town of Women Wears by China Textile Industry Association in early 2003, and was listed in Torch plan- Humen Garment Design and Characteristic Manufacturing Industry Base by National Science and Technology Ministry in 2007.

Humen has successfully held China (Humen) International Fashion Fair for 12 times in a row which greatly promoted garment industry.

As the saying goes, one industry's prosperity will bring prosperity to many other industries. The development of garment indust ry act ivated 10 industries in Humen, such as business, tourism, transportation, electronics and communication, real estate, hotel, catering, etc. The regional economy featured by taking the garment industry as its pillar industry, has generated good industry cluster effect.

Its prosperous exhibition industry has also facilitated the fast development of logistics and hotel industry.

There are more than 50 professional companies specializing in logistics, warehousing, distribution and transportation in Humen, and still more than 6,000 runs of bus and minibus going to or back to Humen everyday. Humen's hotel industry booms with so many businessmen and tourists. Humen has 107 hotels, among which three are five-star hotels. In 2007, the GDP of Humen reached 18.289 billion yuan, the gross value of industrial output 45.834 billion yuan, total taxes 3.176 billion yuan and per capita net income of farmers 13,915 yuan.

The strategy of building brand through the platform of exhibition starts to yield positive effect. Humen already possesses one national well-known trademark, three national brand products, 11 national inspection- free products, 13 famous trademarks of Guangdong province and 11 famous-brand products. It was also awarded the Grand Prix for Brand Promotion of Chinese Clothes, 2005-2006.

Source form China Textile Magazine

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Angkor-A series of attacks by the Siamese led to the abandonment of the city

Mystery in the jungle
ELLEN CREAGER; Detroit Free Press

Published: December 28th, 2008 12:05 AM
SIEM REAP, Cambodia – For something so ancient, the rock face looked as content as a man who’s just eaten a big slice of peach pie.
“Who made you?” I whispered. “Were you lonely when nobody came to visit for 400 years?”
No answer. Just a smile.

Bayon, a temple near the better-known Angkor Wat, has 49 towers that feature nearly 200 huge carved images of a pleasantly smiling face.

ELLEN CREAGER/DETROIT FREE PRESS
Angkor Wat, built in the 12th century to honor the Hindu god Vishnu, is considered the masterpiece of the Angkor complex in Cambodia.

PHOTOS BY ELLEN CREAGER/DETROIT FREE PRESS
A dancer performs at Angkor, a complex of temples and ruins in central Cambodia that covers 1,000 square miles.

That is the fascination of Angkor, the mysterious temple complex of Cambodia. As at the pyramids of Egypt or the temples of the Maya, visitors here must infer the nature of a civilization from the astounding architecture left behind.
Angkor, located in central Cambodia, probably should have been a winner in last year’s New Seven Wonders of the World contest.
In scope and beauty, it easily beats Mexico’s Chichen Itza and possibly even Peru’s Machu Picchu. It likely lost because fewer people have seen it than the other attractions.
Although 2 million tourists a year visit Angkor now, the site was basically covered by the jungle from 1500 to 1900, then off-limits to visitors due to war and political instability in Cambodia from the 1960s to 1998.
Its masterpiece is Angkor Wat, a funky temple built in the 12th century in honor of the Hindu god Vishnu. Stunningly original, the temple’s five towers were built using porous clay foundations and sandstone exteriors. Put together with an unknown mortar, stones were stacked like a Jenga puzzle, each piece fitting atop the other into tall spires.
Yet Angkor Wat is only one of 72 major temples, and the Angkor ruins area covers more than 1,000 square miles.
There are ways to tour Angkor responsibly, says the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property. Don’t touch, and don’t take anything except photographs. Wear soft-soled shoes so sharp heels don’t leave marks. Don’t brush backpacks or bags against the monuments. Avoid climbing on them except where allowed. Don’t leave graffiti or litter, and talk softly.
Especially, I’d add, when talking to the carvings.
The rise-and- fall story of Angkor is dramatic enough to fill 10 history books.
Between the 12th and 15th centuries, the great Khmer empire spread over what are now parts of Laos and Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. Its center was Angkor, the home of the kings, temples, fountains and gold.
A series of attacks by the Siamese and exhaustion of the land by overfarming led to the abandonment of the city in the early 15th century, historians believe.
That’s when most of Angkor fell victim to the jungle for 400 years. There it sat, while nations rose and fell, while America was discovered, while Shakespeare wrote “Hamlet.”
When French archaeologists in the late 19th century rediscovered Angkor and started pulling the vines away and looking at what remained, they were astonished. We still are.
It takes all day for even a bare-bones tour. You can start before sunrise and watch the sun come up over the towers of Angkor Wat, stay all day, then watch the sun go down from a hill nearby.
Some of the ruins have been sufficiently restored so that you can wander the halls and climb the steps. Yet most are only partly put back together, giving the ruins a tumbledown feel, as if you’d just stopped by after an earthquake.
Angkor Wat, built in the early 12th century by King Suryavarman II, is the star of Angkor. But I preferred the Bayon, a nearby temple with 49 towers emblazoned with nearly 200 huge carved images of a pleasantly smiling face. Historians believe the images represent either King Jayavarman VII, who built the temple in the late 12th century, or the Buddhist “compassionate being” Lokesvara or both.
Yet, the Bayon is not just a happy-face ruin. It’s also an ancient art gallery, with wonderful bas-relief murals depicting the ordinary life of the Angkor people – gambling, in childbirth, dancing, cooking, playing, hunting and fishing. These murals not only are a kind of Facebook posting of daily life back then, they illuminate the high standard of living at Angkor in its heyday, when people had enough to eat, and safety, leisure and time to create such art.
You don’t need a guide to visit the Angkor complex, but I would recommend it. The complex is so huge that it helps to have someone show you high points you might miss on your own.
Many tourists get around by tuk-tuk, a cart with an awning pulled by a motorcycle driver. Other sightseers visit by car, van, tour bus, bicycle or even by elephant, depending on what kind of tour they book.
Inside the complex, it’s not just sightseers. Local people gather sheaves of rattan, the reed used to weave baskets. Cattle wander amid the chaos. An ice cream truck parks in a field. At most of the popular temples and sites, persistent children sell sticky rice, baskets, scarves, bracelets, guidebooks, bananas, pineapple chunks and Fanta Orange.
The average tourist needs at least two days to see Angkor, but archaeology buffs will want to stay longer.
One of the most photo-friendly sites is Ta Prohm, a temple monastery. Today, visitors can see the temple much as it was found in the early 1900s, with giant kapok tree roots winding through the doors and windows, so that the stone temple appears to be part of the natural landscape. Also lovely is Neak Pean, a pond with a fountain as elegant as anything you’d find at Versailles.
Today, the Angkor Wat complex is in no danger of fading away. Huge luxury hotels have opened pell-mell outside the park just in the last three years. About 3,000 new hotel rooms are about to be added to the 7,000 already here.
Naturally, environmentalists aren’t happy about the unregulated hustle and bustle right next to a UNESCO World Heritage site. They worry about the water table under Angkor being sucked dry by hotel wells. They worry that the site’s fragile ruins can’t handle the traffic.
Still, I keep thinking that the kings who built Angkor would probably love all the attention.
From the 1960s to 1998, Cambodia was either at war, crippled by the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime or unstable.
Now, the fledgling democratic nation is trying to make up for lost time in expanding tourism at a frenetic pace in Angkor and Siem Reap, its gateway city.
Ready or not, Tourism Cambodia expects up to 3 million tourists at Angkor by 2010.
IF YOU GO

GETTING THERE: Fly into Siem Reap’s two-year-old Angkor International Airport from nearby Bangkok, Thailand; Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; or Singapore. There are no direct flights from the U.S.

VISA: It’s needed but easy to obtain through Cambodia’s e-visa program. Get it before arrival for $25 at evisa.mfaic.gov.kh/e-visa/vindex.aspx.

LODGING: Most hotels in Siem Reap are new and less than a mile from the gates of the Angkor complex. Try Tara Angkor (about $90-up, www.taraangkorhotel.com).

MONEY: Cambodia uses the riel, but it also uses U.S. dollars; no need to exchange money.

TOURS: Most tourists to Angkor go as part of a larger tour of Southeast Asia. However, it’s possible to fly in on your own and hire an Angkor guide through your hotel.

TICKETS: A one-day ticket to Angkor is $20; a three-day pass is $40; buy at the Angkor entrance gate; if you’re on a tour, your guide will take care of this.

SHOPPING: Siem Reap has nice handicrafts at local markets and roadside shops. Look for textiles, baskets and marble statues of Buddha.
OTHER TIPS

• Take a break from the heat every two hours while touring the ruins. Weather can be humid and in the 90s. Wear a hat and sunscreen; carry water.
• Read up on Hinduism and Buddhism and the history of Cambodia to better appreciate what you are seeing.
• Try to shoot Angkor photos in late afternoon when the light is best. Also shoot in black-and-white for a timeless effect.
• Learn a little Khmer language, although most Cambodians who deal with tourists speak some English. For instance, “Angkor” means city. “Wat” means temple.

Garment exports may slow down

Garment exports may slow down

(27-12-2008)

Producing clothes for export at the Dong Nai Garment Joint Stock Company. At present, orders for textile and garment exports as well as prices have fallen by 20-30 per cent, and in some cases, by 30-50 per cent, compared to last August. — VNA/VNS Photo Van Khanh

HCM CITY — Export growth for the garment and textile industry is expected to slowdown next year because of the global financial crisis, according to the industry’s main trade association.

At a meeting on Thursday of the Garment, Textile, Embroidery and Knitting Association (AGTEK), officials said exports to the US, France, Spain and Japan would suffer the most.

Markets in Northern Europe and Switzerland would remain stable, they said.

In recent months, importers have cut back on orders and the domestic market has also slowed at year-end, even during the busy holiday season.

The slow pace of payments from importers has also caused difficulties for garment and textile exporters. Many companies have not received long-term orders for exports next year, AGTEK said.

Orders for textile and garment exports as well as prices have fallen by 20-30 per cent, and in some cases, by 30-50 per cent, compared to last August.

Representatives of several garment and textile companies said their top priority now was finding a way to survive, and as a result, would not set an export target for next year.

Nguyen Thi Phuong Quang, general director of Long An Garment and Textile Import Export Joint-Stock Company, said the Government’s recent economic stimulus package should contain measures to help the garment industry.

Japanese agreement

The industry has proposed that the Government lower the corporate income tax and extend tax payment deadlines.

They have also asked the Government to lower labour union fees to 1 per cent from 2 per cent.

The garment industry will have more export opportunities when a free trade agreement between Japan and ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) becomes effective on December 1.

Under that agreement, Japan will reduce its import tariff from 10 per cent to zero per cent on Vietnamese textiles and garments that use materials of Vietnamese or ASEAN origin.

Recently, garment and textile companies in HCM City have focused their efforts on the Middle East, Africa and Russia.

Despite financial difficulties faced by the sector, most company representatives said salaries and Tet bonuses for workers would be paid. — VNS

Pain of China export slump moves along supply chain

Pain of China export slump moves along supply chain

Reuters
Sun Dec 28, 2008 10:38pm EST

By Fang Yan - Analysis

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Nevermind the banks. Eastern China's Shaoxing county has launched a massive polyester bailout.

The locality of 710,000 in prosperous Zhejiang province arranged 1.5 billion yuan ($220 million) in aid to let Zhejiang Hualian Sunshine Petro-Chemical Co, a major producer of purified terephthalic acid (PTA), used to make polyester, restart output after financial difficulties had shut it down.

The virtually unprecedented offer of government money to a non-state firm highlights how far the global economic downturn has spread, from small exporters that bore most of the initial brunt to bigger companies in more basic industries.

"We had to bail out Hualian Sunshine even though it was privately held," a Shaoxing municipal government official, who declined to be named due to briefing rules, told Reuters.

"Hualian Sunshine is the biggest supplier to our textile industry, which gives us half of our fiscal revenue. The stakes were just too high for us to sit there and let it die."

Signs of problems with China's export-driven economy started in the coastal south, where hundreds of small-scale toy makers and garment firms were forced out of business as the global financial crisis battered their main markets in Europe and the United States.

Many had initially blamed currency appreciation. But anemic annual growth of 5.4 percent in China's industrial output in November, the worst reading in nearly 10 years, showed the problem has gone far beyond the yuan's rise, which anyway came to a virtual halt in mid-July.

TROUBLE UPSTREAM

A number of upstream suppliers in eastern China's industrial heartland, such as Sinopec Yizheng Chemical Fibre Co and Nanjing Chemical Fibre Co, slipped into losses in the third quarter as their order books dried up.

One hard-hit industry has been chemicals, including makers of polyester, a synthetic resin widely used in clothing and a variety of plastic goods.

"Due to the severe situation facing the downstream business and slowing demand, the domestic polyester industry is in an extremely difficult operating environment," Sinopec Yizheng said in its quarterly financial report.

That reflects a severe slowdown in exports of clothing and accessories, which grew just 3.1 percent year-on-year in the first 11 months of this year compared with a 22.2 percent rise in the same period of 2007, official data showed.

Industry analysts expect the situation to get worse next year along with the faltering global economy, forcing some smaller suppliers out of business.

"It's a domino effect. If the garment exporters continue to fall one after another, how can you expect their upstream suppliers to stay in the business?" said Gao Guo, an analyst with Huatai Securities.

"Industry-wide consolidation is inevitable next year as there is no sign of an end to the global financial crisis."

Hualian Sunshine's problems, in a fitting reflection of the global financial crisis, were due in part to losses in PTA futures trading, the Shaoxing government official said.

The firm made an overall net loss of 1.17 billion yuan on sales of 10.93 billion yuan in the first three quarters, according to China Union Holdings, which owns a 16.4 percent stake in the company after the bailout. Shaoxing county holds a 33.44 percent stake.

BAILING OUT

When the economy was booming early this year, losses of that scale were not necessarily life-threatening for PTA suppliers such as Hualian Sunshine, but with their downstream customers in trouble, any serious missteps can be fatal.

A China Union spokeswoman said Hualian Sunshine halted production in early October but was able to restart about a month later after the bailout, which included funds from the county and another local company.

"A lot of firms, especially privately run family businesses, have management problems and are sometimes involved in irregular dealings for quick profit. The weak economy has now exposed some of the skeletons, " said Qian Xiangjing, an analyst with CITIC-Kington Securities.

In recent months, Beijing has unveiled a series of measures, including export tax rebates for exporters of textiles and other goods, as well as a 4 trillion yuan fiscal stimulus package and repeated interest rate cuts.

The central government is determined to maintain at least 8 percent economic growth in 2009, a level it said it must achieve but which foreign economists have said could prove elusive.

The local authorities, for their part, are not willing or able to wait until nationwide policies have an impact.

After nursing Hualian Sunshine back to health, the Shaoxing government is now considering lending a hand to another troubled PTA maker, Zhongheng Group, whose businesses also include steelmaking and property.

One option is a roughly 150 million yuan government aid package for Zhongheng in exchange for some of its property assets, the Shaoxing government official told Reuters.

"We are still discussing ways to help out Zhongheng. I am afraid we might have to intervene when other big taxpayers here fall apart. What else can we do?" asked the official.

($1=6.84 yuan)

(Reporting by Fang Yan; Editing by Andrew Torchia)


Water of life springs from Pol Pot's canals

Water of life springs from Pol Pot's canals


Published Date:
28 December 2008
THE dry season has taken hold here, but water is everywhere. It pours out of sluice gates with the roar of an alpine torrent. Children do backflips into the ubiquitous canals and then pull their friends in with them. Fishermen cast their nets for minnows, and villagers wash their Chinese-made motorcycles.
"It's never dry here," said Chan Mo, a 36-year-old rice farmer standing on top of a dike.

The reason? The Khmer Rouge canals have come back to life. By the time the murderous government of Pol Pot was toppled three decades ago, 1.7 million Cambodians were dead from overwork, starvation and disease, and the country was in ruin.

But the forced labour of millions of Cambodians left behind something useful – or that is how the current government here sees it.

The leaders of the Khmer Rouge were obsessed with canals, embankments and dams. They presided over hundreds of irrigation projects to revive the country's glorious but perhaps mythical past as an agrarian wonderland.

"There has never been a modern regime that placed more emphasis and resources towards developing irrigation," wrote Jeffrey Himel, a water resource engineer, in a recent study of Cambodia's irrigation system.

"The Khmer Rouge emptied all cities and towns, and put practically the entire population to work planting rice and digging irrigation dikes and canals."

Some of the canals were poorly designed – "hydraulic nonsense", says Alain Goffeau, a French irrigation expert with the Asian Development Bank. But many were viable.

The Khmer Rouge built about 70% of Cambodia's 800-plus canal networks, according to a survey commissioned by the UN in the Nineties.

Now, across this impoverished nation of 14 million people, the canals are being rebuilt by a government hoping to take advantage of the world's increasing demand for rice.

The Asian Development Bank is helping to finance the rehabilitation of a dozen canals, adding to projects financed by the Japanese and Korean governments.

"There's a lot of possibility," Goffeau said.

For older Cambodians, the canals are a source of ambivalence. Men like Loh Thoeun, a 61-year-old rice farmer, think back to the basketfuls of dirt he carried away hour after hour.

He recalled the horrors of the Khmer Rouge: the labourers, hands tied behind their backs, who were "dragged away like cows" and never returned, the Muslim families who were thrown down a nearby well. The foremen of the irrigation project in Baray were killed after the canals and embankments were completed, without explanation. Loh said he once saw Pol Pot inspect the canals on what he described as a "speedboat".

Loh had a particularly wide view of the Khmer Rouge earthworks: when he was not digging he was assigned to collect the sweet sap from the top of towering palm trees.

All of the work was done by hand in Baray, a two-hour drive north of the capital, Phnom Penh. There was no talking allowed among labourers. The Khmer Rouge played revolutionary songs and banged hubcaps to encourage the workers. Photos show huge crowds toiling in the dust.

"The earth here is very hard, and when we dug deeper we got to the hardest part – the most compact ground," said Loh, sitting in a bamboo shelter beside his rice fields. "We had to hammer at it. It was like cutting down a tree."

For so many Cambodians, the Khmer Rouge years, from 1975 to 1979, were about digging. Villagers and residents of Phnom Penh, who were forced to move to the countryside, were organised in small work units.

"I was a slave," said Ang Mongkol, now the deputy director general of the Interior Ministry, who was a law student when the Khmer Rouge came to power and was assigned to haul dirt. Ang is leading an experimental project that uses water from the canal to irrigate fields of hybrid rice varieties that promise to yield four times as much as the variety traditionally grown here. Because only about 20% of Cambodia's fields are irrigated, its rice farmers harvest on average half of Vietnam's yields and one-third of China's.

The irrigation system in Baray, which is fed with water diverted from the nearby Chinit River, functioned for several years after the Khmer Rouge left power. But in the mid-Eighties it fell into disrepair and the canals often went dry. It was only in 2005 that the government began rebuilding it.

Today the local municipality hires a maintenance crew to repair the embankments and keep the water flowing.

Loh hopes the canals he built will help double or triple his rice output. "I always recall the past to my children," he said. "I say, 'We have water from this canal that was built by the people. And many of them died.'"

Among the current workers on Baray's canal system is Sim Vy, 48. As a teenager she was also enlisted by the Khmer Rouge to help build the canals here, carrying dirt away on baskets tied to bamboo poles.

She was told she was working for national glory but received only watery gruel as recompense. Now she is paid $55 a month. "I prefer working this way," she said.

Cambodia: Supreme Court Tested by Labor Leader’s Murder Case

Lack of Justice Leaves Unionists in Fear for Their Lives
December 28, 2008

The Cambodian Supreme Court should rely on the evidence and not give in to government pressure when it reviews the case. Born Samang and Sok Sam Oeun have already spent five years behind bars for a crime they did not commit, and it is time for justice to be done in this case.

Sara Colm, senior researcher for Human Rights Watch.

(New York, December 28, 2008) - Cambodian authorities should exonerate and free Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, who were unfairly sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2005 for the murder of labor leader Chea Vichea, said three international human rights organizations and the world's largest trade union confederation in a joint statement released today.

The Cambodia Supreme Court will hear the case on appeal on December 31, 2008.

The joint statement was issued by Human Rights Watch, the International Trade Union Confederation, and the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders (a joint program of the International Federation for Human Rights and the World Organization Against Torture), which have all closely followed the case since Vichea's murder.

"The Cambodian Supreme Court should rely on the evidence and not give in to government pressure when it reviews the case," said Sara Colm, senior researcher for Human Rights Watch. "Born Samang and Sok Sam Oeun have already spent five years behind bars for a crime they did not commit, and it is time for justice to be done in this case."

Chea Vichea, 36, was the founder and president of the Free Trade Union of Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia (FTUWKC) and a vocal supporter of the opposition Sam Rainsy Party. He was shot and killed in broad daylight in front of a newsstand in Phnom Penh on January 22, 2004. Vichea was well known for his outspoken efforts to organize garment workers and to fight for improved working conditions in Cambodia, work he continued in spite of death threats.

The investigation into the high profile murder was marred by alleged police brutality and forced confession by one of the suspects, intimidation of witnesses, and political interference in the judicial process. The prosecution and conviction of Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun have drawn extensive criticism from Cambodian and international human rights activists, union advocates, lawyers, and United Nations officials.

The International Labour Organization (ILO), which sent a fact-finding mission to Cambodia in April 2008 to investigate the murders of trade unionists, has repeatedly expressed strong concerns about the convictions of the two men and called for a fresh investigation into Chea Vichea's murder.

"The lack of justice in this case leaves trade unionists in fear for their lives," said Guy Ryder, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, whose 311 affiliates represent 168 million workers worldwide. "Even ILO leaders who were on an official ILO mission to Cambodia earlier this year were subject to intimidation."

In a report released in November 2008, the ILO sharply criticized the Cambodian government for not effectively stemming a series of violent and deadly attacks against trade unionists. At the core of the problem, the report said, is Cambodia's lack of an independent judiciary, which allows the real perpetrators of such attacks to evade justice. The atmosphere of impunity in Cambodia reinforces the climate of violence and insecurity, the report said, which in turn "is extremely damaging to the exercise of trade union rights."

The ILO report's findings, which could affect the future of Cambodia's important garment industry, noted that during the ILO mission in April, the government "demonstrated an unwillingness to engage in fully frank discussions" and "provided no concrete indications" that it would act upon any of the ILO's recommendations.

In addition to the murder of Chea Vichea, there has been an ongoing pattern of violence against trade union activists in Cambodia. This includes the murders of FTUWKC official Hy Vuthy in February 2007 and FTUWKC Steering Committee member Ros Sovannarith in 2004, and a series of threats and physical assaults against FTUWKC representatives and other trade unionists.

The four organizations urged the Cambodian government to launch a full and impartial investigation into Chea Vichea's murder, as well as an independent and public inquiry into the handling of the prosecution of Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun.

"If the Supreme Court fails to provide long-overdue justice by releasing these two innocent men, it will only further highlight the lack of progress toward rule of law in Cambodia," said Souhayr Belhassen, president of the International Federation for Human Rights.

The organizations also urged the Cambodian government to take prompt action to address the key issues highlighted by this case: Cambodia's endemic impunity and lack of rule of law, government interference in the judiciary, intimidation and violence faced by trade union members and leaders, and widespread torture by the police.

"It's time for the Cambodian authorities to finally deliver justice to Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, and stop the widespread practice of torture by Cambodian police to force confessions out of criminal suspects," said Eric Sottas, secretary-general of the World Organisation Against Torture.

Background

The police and court investigations into Vichea's killing were marred by a series of procedural flaws and violations of international legal standards. The police allegedly tortured Born Samnang to obtain a confession. A judge who initially dropped the charges against the two men for lack of evidence was swiftly removed from his position, and the charges were reinstated. The subsequent trial of the two men was conducted in a manner that flagrantly violated Cambodian law and international fair trial standards. In April 2007, the country's Appeal Court upheld their convictions despite the state prosecutor acknowledging that there was insufficient evidence.

Chea Vichea's family members say they believe Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun are not responsible for the crime, as has Var Sothy, the newsstand proprietor who was the key eyewitness to the killing. She subsequently fled Cambodia in fear for her life.

As an example of the politicization of the Cambodian judiciary, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Dith Munthy, is a member of the Standing Committee of the ruling Cambodian People's Party. The lack of judicial independence has been cited in successive UN human rights reports for the past 15 years and is a major concern in the ongoing attempts to bring Khmer Rouge leaders to justice. The Cambodian government has long acknowledged weaknesses in the judiciary and made commitments to address this, but has taken no meaningful steps to do so.

For background on Chea Vichea's murder and the prosecution of Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, please see:

Ex-[Thai] Foreign Minister Condemns Govt for Inappropriate Stance

Ex-[Thai] Foreign Minister Condemns Govt for Inappropriate Stance

26 December 2008
Thailand Outlook Channel
The former Foreign Minister has asked Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to express a clear opinion on whether his government will reclaim the rights over Preah Vihear Temple as suggested by the Democracts while still serving as the opposition party.

Former Foreign Minister Noppadon Pattama said he is unhappy with the stance of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva over Preah Vihear Temple as his recent actions regarding the matter contradict what was promised when he served in the role of opposition leader.

Noppadon has disclosed that he assigned a representative to submit an open letter asking the Prime Minister to ensure whether his government would act on its policy to reclaim the country's rights over Preah Vihear Temple and its surrounding areas.

The Foreign Minister also urged Abhisit to clarify his approval of the L-7017 map while serving as PM's Office Minister in 1998.

Noppadon said Abhisit's approval was regarded as an approval of the borderline shown on the map, but Democrat later stated that it could not be used to determine the boundaries.

The matter will be also debated by two Pheu Thai Party's MPs Jatuporn Promphan and Chalerm Yoobumrung .

He also expressed concern regarding the conduct of new Foreign Minister Kasit Pirom particularly pointing to his remarks relating to leaders of neighboring countries.

Noppadon cited Kasit's comments about the Cambodian Prime Minister made on the rally stage of the People's Alliance for Democracy, saying they were disrespectful, and suggested Kasit readjust his outlook and think carefully before taking any further action.

The former Foreign Minister believes he will be cleared of the alleged violation of the Constitution's s Article 190 and 157 currently under investigation by the National Anti Corruption Commission.

Thai to Get Back Preah Vihear Temple

Noppadon to Abhisit: Get temple back

PM pressured over Preah Vihear issue

27/12/2008
Bangkok Post
Former foreign minister Noppadon Pattama has urged Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to keep his promise to get the ancient Hindu ruins of Preah Vihear back from Cambodia.

Mr Noppadon said he was concerned about the prime minister's stance on the issue. He raised the Preah Vihear issue before the Democrat-led government is due to deliver its policy statement to parliament, where it is expected to face a tough grilling by opposition MPs led by the Puea Thai party on Monday and Tuesday.

Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya will be one of the targets of the grilling.

Mr Noppadon said he had supplied information about the issue to opposition MP Chalerm Yubamrung to debate in parliament.

He said when he was foreign minister he made it clear that the Preah Vihear case was closed.

But Mr Abhisit, who was then opposition leader, insisted he would reserve the right to press for the return of the border temple to Thailand.

Mr Noppadon said Mr Abhisit said in a House debate that Thailand only acceded to Cambodia's demands for the temple, but the land where the temple is located is still owned by Thailand, although the Foreign Ministry disagreed with Mr Abhisit on the issue.

If Mr Abhisit can prove his claim, his government must talk with Cambodia and demand the return of the land surrounding the temple or demand Cambodia pay rent for the land.

Preah Vihear belongs to Cambodia, but both countries claim ownership of a 4.6-square-kilometre overlapping area surrounding the temple.

If the government fails to proceed with the matter, this will show that what the Democrats said during the debate was meaningless.

"Mr Abhisit and his government should be given the chance to work. But be warned that the efforts to encourage reconciliation will never materialise if the prime minister is something of a hypocrite," Mr Noppadon said.

Mr Noppadon resigned as foreign minister under duress over debates surrounding the Preah Vihear temple joint communique which was found to be unconstitutional by the Constitution Court.

The court ruled that the Thai-Cambodian joint communique backing Cambodia's unilateral bid to list the temple as a World Heritage Site, signed by Mr Noppadon and Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sok An, was a treaty and required parliamentary scrutiny and endorsement.

Mr Noppadon said he was unhappy about Mr Kasit's remarks about Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.

He claimed Mr Kasit made offensive remarks against Mr Hun Sen that could affect relations between Thailand and Cambodia.

Cambodia and Thailand might meet for border talks in January 2009

Cambodia and Thailand might meet for border talks in January 2009

Agreements to withdraw Thai troops reached in the Siem Reap talks on 12th November, 2008 between Thai Foreign Minister Sompong Amornvivat (L) and Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong (R) are awaiting the approval of the Thai parliament.

Radio Free Asia
By Sav Yuth
25th December, 2008
Translated from Khmer by Khmerization

Cambodian officials said that the Khmer-Thai Joint Boundary Commission plans to meet for border talks in January next year.

Government officials said that the Khmer-Thai Joint Boundary Commission plans to meet in January after the border talks between the two countries have stalled due to the political crisis and the change of government in Thailand.

Chairman of the Cambodian Border Commission, Mr. Var Kim Hong, said on 25th December that he had received news from the Thai Foreign Ministry through the Thai embassy that all the documents agreed with Cambodia recently will be put to the Thai parliament for approval which will be convened at the end of January next year.

Mr. Var Kim Hong said that the next Khmer-Thai border talks will be held in Thailand but added that there is no timetable yet because they have to wait for the Thai parliament to approve the previous documents first.

Mr. Var Kim Hong said: “The meeting for talks on land boundary issues will be held in Thailand but there is no timetable for the actual planting of the border pillars have been decided yet.”

Mr. Var Kim Hong said he doesn’t know what the results of the talks will be because he doesn’t know about the stance of the new Thai government regarding the issues. But he added that currently, Thailand has a real government which he hopes this new government will continue to work with Cambodia on resolving the border issues.

Recently, the newly-elected prime minister of Thailand, Mr. Abhisit Vejjajiva, said that his government will work hard to resolve the border issues with Cambodia.

Mr. Hor Namhong, foreign minister of Cambodia, has said that during the third border talks in Siem Reap on 12th November, 2008, he had requested for the withdrawals of all Thai troops from Wat Keo Sekhakirisvarak pagoda and the areas surrounding the Preah Vihear temple.

Mr. Hor Namhong said: “Cambodia had requested Thailand to withdraw all their troops from Wat Keo Sekhakirisvarak, from the areas around the pagoda and from the vicinity of the pagoda. It means that they have to withdraw much further then their present positions. Regarding the troops withdrawal, we told them that after the Thai parliament approved the agreements we all will start the withdrawals."

There are reports that, in Tatum and Anlong Veng areas in Banteay Meanchey province, Cambodian troops are on high alert because Thai troops are staging military drills in the areas.

Cambodia is ready if Thailand invades

Cambodia is ready if Thailand invades

Cambodian soldiers guarding the Preah Vihear temple.

Radio Free Asia
By Chea Makara
27th December, 2008
Translated from Khmer by Khmerization


The Cambodian government has reiterated that Cambodia is ready if Thailand violates the sovereignty and the territorial integrity of Cambodia while the current border disputes have not yet been resolved.

Minister of Information and government spokesman, Mr. Khieu Kanharith, has told reporters on Saturday like this: “If Thailand decided to invade, we will not allow them to invade us easily. We have been prepared, even if Thailand has many jet fighters, that we are ready because in the war it is not important if they have jet fighters or not, because in the early stages of fighting they have to consider which side will suffer the most heaviest casualties. So, it is not so easy for Thailand (to invade Cambodia).”

Mr. Khieu Kanharith said that if the fighting along the borders erupted, Cambodian requires around 17,000 to 20,000 troops.

He added that after the clashes between Khmer-Thai troops on the 15th of October, 2008, the Cambodian government has conceptualised three possible scenarios. First, Cambodia and Thailand must resolve all border problems in a total package. Secondly, there will be military confrontations without actual fighting occurring. And thirdly, wars will break out along the borders between the two countries.

Mr. Khieu Kanharith added that the Cambodian government has chosen the second scenario and that is to avoid armed conflict and continue to engage in bilateral talks and the Cambodian government can complain to the United Nations only when Thailand invades Cambodian territories.

Please note that border disputes with Thailand had occurred after Unesco had decided to inscribe the Preah Vihear temple into a world heritage list in July, 2008.

Textiles and garments to buck slowdown

Textiles and garments to buck slowdown


The Office of Industrial Economics (OIE) forecasts that the textile and garment industry will grow at least 3 per cent next year despite the global economic slowdown.

After discussion with manufacturers, OIE director-general Arthit Wuthikaro noted that they had shifted focus to producing premium products to serve higher demand in Japan and other developed countries.

"We have become very competitive since we gained tax benefits under the Japan-Thailand Economic Partnership Agreement, and so we expect to boost our textile and garment exports to Japan by 20 per cent next year," he said.

He added that although the global recession would dampen overall market demand, the world's top brands would still use Thailand as their production base.

However, the industry's main obstacle is a shortage of labour. The Thai Garment Manufacturers Association says 11 companies in the Northeast are looking for approximately 13,000 workers.

The companies are in Nakorn Ratchasima, Khon Kaen, Roi Et, Buriram, Surin, Ubon Ratchathani and Chaiyaphum provinces.

"If we include Bangkok and the surrounding provinces, more than 10,000 workers are required, so we are trying to transfer laid-off workers to this industry in order to relieve the unemployment problem," Arthit said.

The textile and garment industry needs a similar level of skill to the electronics industry, he said, adding: "Therefore it would be the best solution for now to move those laid off from electronics work to the textile and garment industry by training them in sewing."

Industry Ministry permanent-secretary Damri Sukhotanang has ordered his provincial offices to concentrate on transferring the unemployed to industries that lack labour as quickly as possible.

26 December, 2008

Textile industry revises outlook

Textile industry revises outlook


Many textile and garment export enterprises had not had any long-term orders for next year.
- UPDATED: 23/12/2008 - Export targets for Viet Nam’s garment and textile industry for next year must be adjusted downward, given the economic impacts from difficulties in the global market.


In previous years, the country experienced a growth rate of 20 per cent in textile and garment export revenue. This year, the total export value for these industries is estimated to reach 96 percent of the yearly plan with about US$9.1 billion, an increase of only 17 per cent, according to the Viet Nam Textile and Garment Group (Vinatex).

However, next year the exports for the industry were expected to experience a dramatic decline and increase a mere 5 per cent over this year, said Le Quoc An, chairman of Viet Nam Textile and Garment Association (Vitas).

The country’s initial target was set at $11.5 billion, An said, but this goal must be reduced due to production and business challenges already forcing an overall downward trend for export value starting in the third quarter this year.

Vinatex statistics show that Viet Nam’s textile and garment exports started to drop off in August. The export value was $916 million in August, fell to $831 million in September and dropped further to $753 million in October.

That figure was $780 million in November and is expected to hit $800 million this month.

Le Tien Truong, Vinatex deputy general director, said economic downturns in Viet Nam’s key textile and garment export markets would affect national export values this year and next year.

Pham Xuan Hong, deputy chairman of the HCM City the Association of Garment, Textile, Embroidery and Knitting (Agtek), agreed that the textile and garment industry would have many difficulties in the future.

Foreign partners of some enterprises have reduced their orders, even after the products have already been produced, according to the Agtek. Orders for the domestic market have also slowed down at the end of the year, which in previous years was a busy shopping season.

Many textile and garment export enterprises had not had any long-term orders for next year, Hong said.

Agtek claimed that orders of for textile and garment exports might reduce as much as 30 per cent next year with no dramatic economic recovery in sight.

Dream weavers

With the current global economic downturn, Agtex said that textile and garment enterprises should be coming up with solutions to improve their competitiveness and quality of products for all export markets.

A good opportunity to stabilise production levels and business for the new year is the free trade agreement between Japan and ASEAN effective as of December 1, 2008.

Under the agreement, Japan will reduce its import tariff from 10 per cent to zero for Vietnamese textiles and garments using materials of Vietnamese or ASEAN origins.

Some industry experts suggested enterprises work together to improve production ability, share business experiences, and introduce customers to each other.

Law on Suppression of Human Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation to be prosecuted in Feb 09

Cambodia faces problems enforced new sex trafficking law

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — Chantha said there was nothing else she could do in Cambodia but become a prostitute.

"If you don't even have a dollar in your pocket to buy rice, how can you bear looking at your starving relatives?" she said.

"You do whatever to survive, until you start to realize the consequence of your deeds."

Chanta, in her early twenties, was working in a small red-light district west of the capital Phnom Penh several months ago when she was arrested under Cambodia's new sex-trafficking law.

Police nabbed her in a raid and charged her with publicly soliciting sex, fining her nearly two dollars. Then, Chanta claims, the arresting officers gang raped and beat her for six days in detention.

Bruises covered her body, but none of her assailants were brought to court, she said.

The Cambodian government began prosecuting a new "Law on Suppression of Human Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation" in February after years of pressure from the United States to clamp down on sex trafficking.

Since then, authorities have conducted brothel raids and street sweeps, but rights groups complain the new law has in many ways worsened the exploitation of women.

"The law allows police of all levels to arrest and punish sex workers," said Naly Pilorge, director of local human rights group Licadho.

"The sex workers are arrested to police stations and rehabilitation centres and then they are abused."

More than 500 women were arrested for soliciting sex in the first nine months of 2008, according to anti-trafficking organisation Afesip, with many of them forced into rehabilitation centres.

Rights groups say the new law makes women easier prey for traffickers, and could increase rates of sexually-transmitted infections as prostitutes stop carrying condoms out of fear they will be used as evidence against them.

They also allege that detainees are regularly abused at the two rehabilitation centres controlled by Cambodia's ministry of social affairs, Prey Speu and Koh Kor.

Koh Kor has the added grim reputation of being on an island which was the site of a prison and execution camp under Cambodia's murderous 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime.

Despite Chanta and others testifying to instances of rape, beatings and extortion at the hands of police in the rehabilitation centres, authorities have repeatedly denied the abuses.

Major General Bith Kimhong, director of the interior ministry's anti-trafficking department, said he does not believe anyone has been abused under the new law because he has received no complaints from victims.

More than 100 people were arrested this year, as human trafficking prosecutions increased by 50 percent, Bith Kimhong said.

The raids on brothels and streetwalkers proved a commitment by the government to end sex trafficking, he said, vowing they would continue.

"We'll continue to cooperate with local authorities to enforce the law," Bith Kimhong said.

The new law is one of several moves by the Cambodian government over the past year to show that it is cracking down on sexual exploitation.

In March it imposed ban on foreign marriages amid concerns of an explosion in the number of brokered unions involving South Korean men and poor Cambodian women, many of whom were allegedly being set up for sex slavery.

There have also been a string of arrests of alleged foreign paedophiles, as Cambodia seeks to demonstrate sex tourists are not welcome.

Pich Socheata, deputy governor of one Phnom Penh district, leads "clean-ups" of prostitution on the streets but said she empathizes with sex workers.

"They are female and I am too, so I do understand no girls want to do that job. But we are only practising law," she said.

But Keo Tha, a staff member at sex workers' rights group the Women's Network for Unity, says many more Cambodian women are still being forced into prostitution as jobs dry up amid the global financial crisis.

A more sensible law, she said, would legalise prostitution.

"We are sandwiched right now -- we are oppressed by the police, the law and rising living costs," she said.

Cambodia and Singapore insisted the Asean Charter be launched at the Asean Secretariat

Asean sets the date, but it wasn't easy
Bangkok Post
Wednesday December 17, 2008
THANIDA TANSUBHAPOL
-->
The launching of the Asean charter and the setting of a new date for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit, from Feb 24 to 26, were agreed on only after extensive negotiations.
There was no debate on where the summit should be held, however.
Whether it is in Bangkok or Chiang Mai is irrelevant, as both cities are in Thailand.
The problems concerned the way to organise the charter launch and the date for the summit.
Cambodia and Singapore insisted the Asean Charter, which was supposed to be launched at the 2008 summit in Thailand this week, should not be postponed. So it was proposed the landmark charter be launched at the Asean Secretariat, which is in Jakarta.
It made perfect sense and fitted the notion of the secretariat being an icon for all member countries. Similarly, the charter is meant to unify all members under a common brand.
The idea was well received by the member countries. But before it got to that point, there were many things that needed to be sorted out.
After close consultation with Asean secretary-general Surin Pitsuwan, Thailand agreed to contribute 1.5 million baht to spruce up the secretariat office and grounds to welcome the Asean foreign ministers.
This included buying a new meeting table to replace the existing one.
It was the first time the secretariat office had hosted this kind of meeting in its 41 years of operation.
While the Thai and Asean staff were busy preparing the venue for the launch, the Thai host encountered another problem. It had no foreign minister to lead the delegation at the event.
Sompong Amornvivat lost his job on Dec 2 as a result of the Constitution Court's verdict, which disqualified the People Power party and two other coalition parties for election fraud.
A few days before the meeting, Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Nam Hong sent a letter to his Indonesian counterpart Hassan Wirajuda proposing it be cancelled because, in his view, Thailand was not ready.
A source quoted Mr Wirajuda as saying "ignore it".
Back in Thailand, many ministers who were not affected by the court ruling were nominated to lead the delegation. But most of them declined. So the Foreign Ministry nominated its special adviser, Manaspas Xuto, for the job.
But Cambodia again opposed the idea, saying only a minister could attend the meeting.
Acting Prime Minister Chavarat Charnvirakul had to lobby hard on Saturday to get a minister to fly to Jakarta.
The final decision came at the last minute, not long before the delegation departed, with Information and Communications Technology Minister Mun Patanotai going on the trip.
Mr Mun said he was given a briefing only a few hours before arriving in Jakarta.
But as one problem was resolved, another emerged.
Indonesian officials wanted to replace the video presentation of Asean prepared by Thailand with choral performances by the University of Padjadjaran on the new Asean anthem, the "Asean Way", during the opening ceremony.
Only after a long negotiation was a compromise reached - Thailand would go ahead with its presentation, and the Indonesian performances would follow at the end.
When the meeting came to the important discussion about choosing a new date for the summit, one proposal was for January.
But many countries' schedules are blocked with the Chinese New Year holiday, budget debates, and bilateral visits. So the consensus came down to Feb 24 to 26.

New Thai Government Prompts Border Questions

New Thai Government Prompts Border Questions

By Taing Sarada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
25 December 2008
[Editor's note: A new Thai administration was sworn in Monday, including a prime minister, Abhisit Vejjajiva, but a monthslong border dispute centered around the Preah Vihear temple area remains unresolved. VOA Khmer spoke with Cambodian Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan about expectations for Thailand's new government.]

Q. Do you think the new Thai leadership will bring even more obstacles to Cambodia in the process of negotiating the border issue?

A. I would like to tell you that this is the third prime minister following the conflict over the Preah Vihear temple area. What is happening now is that the new Thai prime minister has just made his vows in front of the Thai king, as well as in the Thai parliament. We see a [chance] to practice two goals. One is what we call international relations between Cambodia and Thailand, with an agreement we had already reached in 2000 through a memorandum, saying that we need to resolve the border issue peacefully and legally.Altogether, we had respected this, depending on the treaty and pact in1904 and 1907 between the French republics and Siam at the time. If we look up to now, for Cambodia, the new Thai foreign minister said this is a [situation] between Cambodia and Thailand that continues to need solving. This is not just a Thai but an international obligation.

Q. Near Preah Vihear temple, there is a mountain with a guardhouse built by the late Khmer Rouge commander Ta Mok. Now that mountain is controlled by Thai soldiers armed with rifles. The Thais are even building a new road across the mountain. If border negotiations were based on a 1904 and 1907 map, would Cambodia be able to bring back that mountain and some other land that is currently occupied by Thailand?

A. Cambodian Foreign Affairs Minister Hor Namhong has already stated during discussions that the basis of the treaty and pacts during 1904and 1907 by the French border committee and Siam at the time can be a basic principle to consider. So the negotiation is based on three basic principles, and one is a political principle. That political principle is that the Cambodian party and the Thai counterpart agreed to end the border disputes by setting border demarcation, since we've already agreed on this in a memorandum in 2000. So this is a political solution to the border dispute. Second, because the dispute over the Preah Vihear temple area, as well as border disputes between Cambodia and Thailand, are in a new political situation, the Thais are using this to gain Thai political popularity. So Cambodian land and a Cambodian temple are becoming hostages of internal Thai politics.Prime Minister Hun Sen obeys three principles, and one is that the dispute between Cambodian and Thailand, and the land territory situation, needs to be quickly ended through meetings from the low levels and up to the level of foreign minister.

Q. Has Thailand deployed new soldiers around two contested areas, Eagle Field and the Keo Sikha Kiri Svarak Pagoda?

A. Yes. There was a small number of Thai soldiers there, but Cambodiansoldiers there already pushed them out. They are withdrawing now. Weare waiting for the working group of the joint border committee for Cambodia and Thailand to go to that area to re-examine, so at thattime we can find the exact border that we've already had for the last 100 years.

Businesses and entrepreneurs from Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam to be honoured

Updated : 6:02 PM, 12/25/2008

Businesses and entrepreneurs from Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam to be honoured


An awards ceremony for outstanding businesses and entrepreneurs from Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam will be held on January 18, 2009, according to the Vietnam Association of Small and Medium-sized enterprises (Vinasme).

According to the organizing board, the awards will be presented to successful businesses and entrepreneurs from Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam for their remarkable achievements in production, business, services and social welfare activities.

The awards will contribute to strengthening exchanges between enterprises to explore business opportunities in the three countries.

At present, more than 100 businesses and entrepreneurs have entered the contest as candidates for the award.

The event was co-organised by Vinasme, the Economics Department under the Ministry of National Defense, and the Vietnam-Laos-Cambodia economic and development association.

A return to Thai ownership of the Preah Vihear Temple is not an option

Kasit rules out Thia ownership



A return to Thai ownership of the Preah Vihear Temple is not an option, new Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya said yesterday. But Thailand would maintain cooperation with Cambodia over the historic and controversial Hindu temple, he said.

The Preah Vihear case would be handled in line with the 1904 and 1907 Siam-Franco treaties, the 1962 International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling and the 2000 Memorandum of Understanding on boundary demarcation, he said.

The ICJ ruled in 1962 that the Preah Vihear belonged to Cambodia but the surrounding land - and access to it - have remained in dispute.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajava said in June - while he was opposition leader and in debate with former foreign minister Noppadon Pattama - that the ICJ had decided only the ruined temple building belonged to Cambodia. The piece of land on which the temple sat was Thailand's.

The People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) demanded recently the foreign ministry recall ownership of the 11th century Khmer sanctuary.

Its call was unlikely to succeed as the foreign ministry has been examining boundary demarcation and provisional arrangements for the area.

The new minister Kasit, an active member of the PAD before taking the office, said he would not change previous foreign ministry resolutions with Phnom Penh.

Vasin Teeravechyan would retain his position as co-chair of the Thai-Cambodia Joint Commission on Demarcation for Land Boundary, Kasit said.

"In general, it is our intention to cooperate with Cambodia and the Unesco (United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation), he told reporters.

The minister said Thailand should have a representative in the International Coordinating Committee (ICC) to protect and develop Cambodia's Preah Vihear.

However, Thailand would have a problem in taking up this position since the PAD opposed the idea, saying it meant recognition of Cambodia's sovereignty over the temple.

"We have to weigh between presence and absence in the ICC," said the ministry's Permanent Secretary Virasakdi Futrakul.

With a representative in the body, Thailand would have access to the temple's administration, he said. But, by the same token, Thailand could also be outvoted.

However, Thailand's national world heritage committee would make the final decision on the ICC, Virasakdi said, noting the foreign ministry would send a representative to the committee.

Kasit said his previously provocative stance in the PAD over the Preah Vihear conflict would not jeopardise relations with Cambodia as its leaders, notably Prime Minister Hun Sen, were familiar with him since they worked together on the Paris Accord on Peace in Cambodia in 1989.

Hun Sen was the first to send congratulations to Prime Minister Abhisit, he said.

24 December, 2008

Leadership: No, You Can't Have That

Leadership: No, You Can't Have That
http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htlead/articles/20081214.aspx

December 14, 2008: Cambodia has been forced to back plans to increase its military budget from $160 million to nearly $500 million. This is because about half the government budget comes from foreign aid, and the donors were not willing to see their contributions diverted to military use. The reason for the initial boost in the defense budget was a recent border dispute with Thailand. This border confrontation is still going on, and Cambodia feels vulnerable.

Thailand has 300,000 troops in its armed forces, Cambodia only 100,000. The confrontation on the border made it clear to the Cambodians that they would likely lose any war with Thailand. Increasing the defense budget won't change that, and peace talks to settle the matter continue. Even if Cambodia increased its annual military budget to $500 million, Thailand spends more than six times that, and has done so for decades.

Foreign donors are also unhappy with money, donated to demobilize troops, being stolen by corrupt officials. The demobilized troops are supposed to be given retraining and severance pay, but instead got tossed off the military payroll and left to fend for themselves. Government officials are also accused of stealing foreign aid by taking money that is supposed to go to soldiers that don't exist ("ghost soldiers," an ancient technique for stealing defense funds.)

The poorly trained, paid, equipped and led Cambodian military is not good for much beyond acting as a police reserve. Meanwhile, the global depression has led foreign donors to contribute less money to Cambodia next year, and cut that even more if officials don't cut back on the stealing.

More KR Suspects to be prosecuted

6 new tribunal suspects likely: sources [-Will Chea Leang allow the prosecution of the six?]

Wednesday, 24 December 2008
Written by Cat barton
The Phnom Penh Post

SIX more potential candidates for prosecution have been identified by Cambodia's war crimes tribunal, sources close to the UN-backed court say.

The court's international co-prosecutor Robert Petit, who proposed the investigations, would not confirm the number or names of the potential suspects citing legal reasons, but said the possibility of more cases should come as no surprise.

"There's always been a higher number than five accused discussed during and after the negotiations," he said in an interview Monday. "Those new cases represent, as far as I'm concerned, the extent of which the prosecution will be," Petit added.

Sources close to the court say three more cases are expected - two new and one supplementary - involving six additional suspects.

Petit's Cambodian counterpart, Chea Leang, has refused to sign off on the second submission, prompting Petit to lodge a "statement of disagreement". The court's pretrial chamber must now resolve the impasse, which threatens to further delay the trials.

Chea Leang repeatedly declined comment Tuesday, saying she was "too busy".

The court's internal rules say she must respond to Petit's submission this week.

Observers have urged the Cambodian side of the court to demonstrate its independence by allowing further investigations to begin.

"If ever there was a moment to show that the Court is not a tool of the Cambodian government, this is it," Open Society Justice Initiative's executive director, James Goldston, wrote in an email.
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