Showing posts with label wedding fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding fashion. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Lack of Police 'Professionalism' Found in Bridge Disaster


A female victim of the deadly stampede, on Monday November 22, 2010, is carried onto a rescue truck, by Phnom Penh police. Hou Chanthy, 47, lost her daughter, said, "I'm thankful for the donations, but the donations will never compensate me.” (Photo: by Heng Reaksmey)
Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Tuesday, 30 November 2010
“The accident is our largest experience for the government and the authorities." [... but not when it comes to accountability!]
The government committee investigating last week's bridge disaster has said the police and military police must now be better trained for crowd management to avoid future incidents.

The investigating committee stopped short of placing direct responsibility on police, city or Water Festival authorities, after thousands of people stampeded on a crowded bridge, killing 351 and injuring 395 people Nov. 22.

Prum Sokha, secretary of state for the Ministry of Interior and head of the investigating committee, said the crowded situation on the bridge exceeded the “preparedness and capacity” of security forces. He recommended a “build-up of professionalism” for police and military police to better handle large crowds in the future.


Council Minister Sok An, who is overseeing the investigation and response to victims, said the Diamond Bridge tragedy was an experience the government intended to learn from.

“We must prepare a plan for the future to avoid a stampede like this,” he told reporters. “The accident is our largest experience for the government and the authorities. We must hold a meeting to deeply consider the experience and to increase the professionalism of authorities like the police and military police.”

The government will study better methods of crowd management, security response, emergency response and other aspects of disaster preparedness, he said.

Prime Minister Hun Sen said on Monday no one would be fired as a result of the disaster, and that no single person deserved the blame for what he called an accident caused by “carelessness.”

Meanwhile, families of victims have begun to receive donations from the public, the government and the owners of Koh Pich island. Each family is expected to receive a total $12,000 each from donations raised by television stations and other groups.

Hou Chanthy, 47, lost her daughter, Soung Channy, a garment worker, in the bridge stampede. She said she had so far received $5,000 and expected to receive more in coming days, through several distributions.

“I'm thankful for the donations,” she said. “But the donations will never compensate me.”

Monday, November 29, 2010

Egyptian blogger defiant after jail release

Abdel Kareem Nabil, known by his blogging name Kareem Amer, was  arrested in March 2006 and convicted of insulting Islam and the  President

An Egyptian blogger, recently released after serving four years for his writings, has said jail was a "cruel experience" but that his views are unchanged.

Abdel Kareem Nabil, known by his blogging name Kareem Amer, was arrested in March 2006 and convicted of insulting Islam and the President.

Nabil was an outspoken secularist. He often lashed out at Al-Azhar – the most prominent religious centre in Sunni Islam – calling it "the university of terrorism" and accusing it of encouraging extremism.

Who's responsible for the tragic death of this lady's daughter: No one according to Hun Xen!


The woman above carried her daughter's picture and cried out loud in grief for the loss of her 16-year-old daughter who died in the 22 Nov. stampeded. She visited the site of the tragedy to commemorate her daughter's spirit (Photo: Everyday.com.kh)

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Condolences for General So Sato from Angkor Borey News


Saturday, November 27, 2010

Preventing Greater Calamities Next Year – Saturday, 27.11.2010

Diamond Island Bridge - Source: nola.com

When I first received false information about the collapse of the ‘exit’ bridge at Diamond Island – Koh Pich in Khmer – due to a large crowd, a small island where festivities were usually held, I thought that this would happen anyway. Maybe I was too skeptical about any urban development in our city, as too many bad examples in the past can tell. Yet, what confirmed my fear was that I received more and more calls from friends about the rising death toll that finally reached 347, 221 of them women.

A few hours later, journalists and friends still kept calling to ask and to inform me about what had happened. Wire services published their news immediately after that. The deadly stampede was later reported to have killed so many people Cambodian history had never seen such an accident like at Diamond Island where many festival programs were celebrated this time. A few hours later, I received several calls from journalists abroad who demanded to know what happened.

The Deum Ampil online news, considered to be a mouthpiece of the government, came out before others without detailing the exact cause, but only saying that a certain number of people died, when people, mostly from the countryside, were walking on the suspension bridge during the last day of the Water Festival, known as the most exuberant festival in Cambodia.

It was actually the last day of one of the miraculous celebrations in Cambodia, where the capital Phnom Penh is almost taken over by people who come from the countryside. Phnom Penh belongs to them on the Water Festival days, and they can sleep along the streets. According to local media and words of witnesses, most people in the crowd were from among the poorest of the poor: garment factory workers, construction workers, slum dwellers, rice farmers, market sellers, and students, out for some good time in the Kingdom.

That same night the Cambodian prime minister came out live on TV several times, and during one of his speeches, he compared the ravages of the Khmer Rouge regime with the stampede tragedy.

A hospital official, speaking on condition of anonymity, was quoted by AFP as having said that many died of suffocation and electrocution – the latter was later denied by government officials and staff of the Koh Pich development company. Meanwhile, the causes remain unclear, but some witness in the crowd claim that electrocutions actually happened to those standing next to the fluorescent lights hanging all around the bridge.

Probably a more accurate and vivid description of how it happened comes from a survivor and staff of a private company, in an email forwarded to me, mentioning that out of the blue, a group of eight or nine young men came running and shouting, frightening other people walking on the bridge. With approximately 7,000 to 8000 people on the bridge, anything could happen. Within minutes, said the man, the crowd started to move, but because there were too many people, and screams “The bridge will collapse!” could be heard everywhere, and people were crushed and suffocated to death either up on the bridge or drowned under the bridge.

Earlier, online media had reported that police fired water canons at the people so that they would move faster, which was apparently a bad start when people were just fearing for their lives. This created more panic and led people into frenzy.

Investigations have been going on, and a report done by the government is expected to be released next week. The Cambodian public has been on the run in trying to find the real cause of the panic that led to the fatal stampede. What breaks people’s heart is that most of the dead were young people between 18 to 25 years, the age of strength to build the country that rose out of war just three decades ago.

One 15-year-old victim interviewed by me at Preah Ketmealea Hospital described the situation as the worst experience he had ever had.

“I felt like I was going to die. There was not enough air. It was hot and stuffy. There was no space for people to move, and they had to push each other to gasp for air,” said a 15 year old boy who had been in the middle of the crowd, Moeurn Piseth Sathya, who survived the ordeal.

On the same note, families lost wives, husbands, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters, which is now just another suffering phase to bear for Cambodians, after the suffering from the loss of family during the Khmer Rouge regime.

Vey Sdeung, 61 years old, from Phnom Penh, had to prepare the funeral for her daughter who was the only one that supported her when she was still alive. Now that she is gone, Vey Sdeung has to live with the past. “I’m so scared, and I don’t know what to do. She’s the only daughter I have,” she said with tears in her eyes.

The past few days felt very different to me. Local TV channels replayed footage from the stampede [Click here to see a video watch?v=Gjn97sqPRsQ] again and again, bringing many people to tears. People were not shy to cry and to grieve in a café or in a restaurant when they watched it. At night, many households placed bananas, lit candles and incenses in front of their houses, dedicating these to the dead, while shops, restaurants, and entertainment places did not open. It was quiet and it was as if people were recollecting themselves and acknowledging the suffering of the their fellow citizens.

Cambodia has historically suffered for many years in civil wars, and now this tragedy was added. But on the Day of Mourning – on 25 November 2010 – many people from everywhere in Phnom Penh came to pay respect to the dead at the bridge. With shared suffering comes unity among Cambodians. A student who was collecting donations for the victims spoke of a beggar who donated some of his money for the victims. In a time of tragedy like this, Cambodians everywhere seemed to come out and show their love for their fellow people, and this clearly was a moment of social unity.

In many ways, the horror found in the bridge stampede reveals a mixture of poor crowd management and planning, lax enforcement of regulations from both police and civilians, and widely-spread corruption in the country.

The government has tried to do the right thing by paying Riel 5 million [approx. US$1,200] to each victim’s family, but given the status of this bureaucratic society, probably not all people who should will be able to get it. The Prime Minister wept on the Day of Mourning, but the questions remains: What will the government do to prevent still larger crowds from creating even greater calamities next year and beyond in the future? The government has already announced that next year, the Water Festival will be held again.

Boeung Kak Are Flooded by Sand

Friday, November 26, 2010

A reader's observation


http://cambodges-newe.blogspot.com/

ម្សិលមិញ ខ្ញុំបានទៅគោរពវិញ្ញាណខន្ធបងប្អូនរួមជាតិដែលបានស្លាប់នៅស្ពានពេជ្រនោះ នាវេលាម៉ោង ៥ ល្ងាចជាងហើយ៕

ប៉ូលីសម្នាក់ដែលប្រចាំការទីនោះ បានត្អូញត្អែរប្រាប់ខ្ញុំថា គេចាត់ឲ្យពួកខ្ញុំមកយាមទីនេះ តាំងពីម៉ោង ៤ ព្រឹក រហូតដល់ថ្មើនេះហើយ មិនទាន់មានកំលាំងមកជំនួសផង។

ពួកគាត់នើយហត់ក្រោមកំដៅថ្ងៃស្ទើរខ្យល់ចាប់។

បើយើងគឹតមួយភ្លែតដូចជាតូចទេ។ តែបើគឹតឲ្យសព្វ ឃើញថា របៀប ចាត់ចែង ការងារ របស់កំលាំង សមត្ថកិច្ច យើងអន់ ពេកណាស់។ នេះហើយជាបុព្ធហេតុមួយ ដែលបណ្តាលឲ្យជនរួមជាតិស្លាប់យ៉ាងច្រើនបែបនេះ ដោយគ្មានអ្នកទទួលខុសឡើយ មានតែអ្នកទទួលត្រូវ។

http://darakhmernewss.blogspot.com/
http://cambodges-newe.blogspot.com/

Yesterday, at around 5PM, I went to pay my respect to the spirits of our compatriots who died at Pich Bridge. A police officer who was stationed there complained to me that he was ordered to stand guard at that location since 4AM, and up to now (5PM), nobody came to replace him yet. His group was very tired after staying under the scorching sun. When you think about it, [this standing guard by the police officers] was not too long, but if you think about it carefully, you can see that the organization of the police force was so lacking. This is one of the reasons why our compatriots died in such large number without anybody accepting the fault committed, whereas there are only those who accept the right thing they did [the author is playing with the world responsibility in Khmer: ទទួលខុសត្រូវ which translates to “accept what you did wrong and right”]



Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Philly Flies Cambodian Flag in Recognition Ceremony

Photo: by Men Kimseng
Cambodia's Ambassador to Washington DC, Hem Heng, far left, joins in to celebrate the flag ceremony in Philadelphia.

“Therefore, let us celebrate our flag here today. Long live the Khmers. Long live Buddhism. Long live the Khmers in Philadelphia.”

The city of Philadelphia, Penn., has flown the Cambodian flag over its streets for the first time Friday, along with those from other countries as a way to recognize the colorful members of its community.

Some 20,000 Cambodian-Americans live in Philadelphia, along with Bangladeshis, Indonesians, Nepalis and other groups.

On Friday, the city honored 19 different immigrant nations with a flag ceremony and the naturalization of 20 people.

“Please recognize all these great countries,” the town's mayor, Michael Nutter, told a gathered crowd, as flags were flown along Benjamin Franklin Parkway. “This is what America is all about. We believe in freedom. We want everyone to feel welcome here and today is part of our outreach and expression that everyone should feel welcome.”

After the ceremony, a group of Cambodians gathered the flag in a religious ceremony.

“Today's success comes from all of you, due to your solidarity,” venerable monk Rath Mony, who is the head of Wat Preah Puth Raingsey, said. “Therefore, let us celebrate our flag here today. Long live the Khmers. Long live Buddhism. Long live the Khmers in Philadelphia.”

Cambodians who came for the festival said they were excited.

“We are very happy to see that our community has successfully requested our flag to be flown in Philadelphia,” onlooker Tray Hol told VOA Khmer. “This has never happened in the last 30 years.”

“This is an official recognition of our people in Philadelphia,” said another participant, Leang Kim Chhay.

Friday's ceremony marked the first time the Cambodian flag was flown in Philadelphia, Cambodian Ambassador Hem Heng said. “Whether you are in Cambodia or overseas, this is our pride. I would like to express my appreciation to the community here for working so hard over the last 30 years to get our flag flown here today. We have only one flag. Therefore, we should all be united."

Monday, November 22, 2010

Cambodia miss on medals

Photo by: AFP
Wei Chen Yang of Taiwan (red) fights against Pen-Ek Karaket of Thailand during the men’s under-58kg Taekwondo final at the Guangdong Stadium in Guangzhou yesterday. Wei Chen Yang had disposed of Cambodia’s Chhoy Bouthorn earlier in the competition.



Cambodia’s Asian Games medal hopes in women’s taekwondo were shattered by Thailand’s Prasopsuk Rapatkor on Saturday when she edged past Sorn Davin in their under-73kg quarterfinals at the Guangdong Gymnasium.

Victory would have ensured Sorn Davin at least a bronze medal, but while the only point of the match was marked in her favour, a penalty deduction saw the scores leveled with the Thai contenstant given the superiority vote from the referee.

Prasopsuk then lost her semifinal to China’s Luo Wei, who went on to claim the gold on Saturday with a narrow 5-4 victory over Feruza Yergeshova of Kazakhistan.

It was a disappointing weekend for the Kingdom’s two aspirants in the men’s taekwondo competition. Chhoy Bouthorn proved no match to Taiwan’s Wei Chan Yang in the under-58kg round of 16 contest. A dominant display in all three rounds saw Wei Chan Yang storm to a 14-1 victory, and the 18-year-old Taiwanese sensation carried on his fine form right up to the final, where he beat Karaket Pen-Ek of Thailand with a superiority win to clinch the gold medal.

In a men’s under-54kg round of 16 bout on Saturday, Cambodia’s Chan Sovatha was made to suffer on the mat by Phimmasone Douangs of Laos, who sealed his passage into the quarterfinals with a dominant 14-2 winning margin.

Bun Kenny and Orn Sambath’s euphoria over their first round men’s tennis doubles victory on Wednesday evaporated just two days later when the Cambodian pair went down without a whimper 6-1, 6-1 to the Taiwan combo of Yi-Chu Huan and Lee Hsin-Han. The match at the Aoti Tennis Centre was wrapped up in just 37 minutes and featured some consistent serving and volleying by the Taiwanese duo, who were eventually stopped in the semifinals by a Chinese team.

President of the Tennis Federation of Cambodia Cham Prasidh, who is also Senior Commerce Minister, hailed the “delightful achievement” of Cambodia’s first round victory over a Saudi Arabian side. “We are happy we won one,” he said. “We have to take one match at a time. It is a sign that the country’s tennis is heading in the right direction.”

Meanwhile, in the boxing ring on Saturday, Cambodia’s Svay Ratha was outpointed 8-4 by Montolalu Vinky of Indonesia in their men’s 64kg last 16 bout.

It was a case of too little too late for Cambodia’s beach volleyball duo of Samath Vansak and Taing Mengheak in their men’s preliminary Pool G match on Friday. Having lost their first two outings to Chinese and Iranian teams, the team turned up trumps against an East Timor line-up in taking exactly 30 minutes to seal a 21-18, 21-16 victory. Their only win of the campaign was enough to clinch third place in the four-team group, but not enough to advance to the knockout rounds.

The other Cambodian combination of Mon Rom and Nget Sothearith went down fighting against India’s Mudunuri Kasi and Meda Kiran Kumar 21-14, 13-21, 6-15 in their last Pool E match on Friday, to find themselves bottom of the group table.

Vath Chamroeun, General Secretary of the National Olympic Committee of Cambodia who is back in Phnom Penh after a week-long stay in China, said yesterday: “The competition was too stiff for our athletes. We are beginning to show promise, and this performance is better than any of our previous performances. We have a long way to go, but I am sure this experience will help our delegation [in future events].”

Cambodian beauty pageant for disabled full of land mines



Morten Traavik knew the idea of a beauty pageant for Cambodian land-mine victims was testing taboos: 20 women scarred by the country’s decades of war parading their amputated bodies for the chance at a new prosthetic limb.

“I wanted to see if I could apply my skills as an artist … to this reality and draw attention to the issues at hand in a new way that didn’t just confirm already established preconceptions of the land-mine survivors as pitiable abominations,” the Norwegian theatre director said.

He might even have expected the backlash that soon followed from some local charities, as happened with his first pageant for land-mine victims in Angola the year before. What he did not expect was the government’s about-face in August, 2009.

Days before a photo exhibit of the contestants was set to debut in the capital of Phnom Penh, a lead-up to the live pageant being planned for December, the Ministry of Social Affairs pulled the plug. Calling the affair an affront to Cambodian tradition, it ordered the project shuttered “immediately” and asked Mr. Traavik to leave the country. The local support he had dried up.

“When the Minister of Social Affairs himself started his own campaign against Miss Landmine,” he said, “everybody ran for cover.”

Miss Landmine, a new Canadian documentary that follows the project from start to finish, premiers Monday on CBC.

By the Cambodian government’s best estimates, land mines still litter some 650 square kilometres of the country, a legacy of the Khmer Rouge and their fanatic efforts to keep their neighbours and enemies at bay. In its pursuit of North Vietnamese forces crossing into Cambodia, the United States dropped another 2.75 million tons of bombs on the country during the Vietnam War, many of which failed to explode on impact and remain active to this day.

Together, land mines and other old ordnance have killed or maimed some 63,000 Cambodians since the 1979 fall of the Khmer Rouge and continue to claim more than 200 victims a year.

In moving the pageant from Angola to Cambodia, Mr. Traavik knew he had to make a few changes. In a culture where modesty trumps most other virtues, the swimsuits had to go. Soft, candy-coloured gowns took their place.

With support from the relevant ministries and the government’s mine-action agency, Mr. Traavik and his team set to work, scouring the country for contestants. With tens of thousands of land-mine victims across Cambodia, the women weren’t hard to find. They also found some critics.

“I have the same feelings now as then,” said Punk Chhiv Kek, the president of a leading local human rights group who called the pageant “a contest of suffering.”

“In my personal opinion, the project is in poor taste,” she said. “But at the end of the day, whether to appear or not is a decision for each contestant to make. They are, or should be, free to choose what they want.”

Others were more adamant. Chris Minko, an Australian national who heads Cambodia’s disabled volleyball league, took his complaint straight to the Minister of Social Affairs, suggesting Mr. Traavik be asked to leave.

“There are more dignified ways of showcasing the ability of Cambodian women land-mine survivors, such as through the many high[ly] successful and internationally recognized Cambodian programs of sport and disability,” he said.

The ministry agreed. NGOs that had supported the project fell silent. A letter Mr. Traavik sent to about 20 non-government groups asking for their support also went ignored. More than a year on, local NGOs active in mine clearance and victim assistance were still reluctant to talk about the pageant for the record.

Lim El Djurado, a spokesman for the Social Affairs Ministry, said the government banned the project to protect the country’s customs.

“We did not allow the contest to take place because it degrades Cambodian tradition,” he said. “When you make disabled people do this kind of thing, it looks like you mock them.

“If they really want to help, they can come and provide artificial limbs and give them skills to improve their lives.”

Mr. Traavik believes he was offering the women something just as valuable. By giving them a chance to be part of something typically reserved for the able bodied, he believes he gave them a chance to reclaim their pride and self-respect. For proof, he offers the women themselves.

“If they had felt the same way as the government,” he said, “they would never have taken part.”

Among the women who did was Dos Sopheap, who posed for her photo shoot with a toy machine gun.

From a soft black gown cut just below the knee, a single leg runs to the floor. She balances herself against a whitewashed wall with one arm and holds the gun in the other. Composed and confident, she offers up only the slightest smile, an image of playfulness and power all at once.

Fourteen years ago, at the age of six, Ms. Dos was headed fishing with some neighbours when they ran into a Khmer Rouge soldier, one of a band still holding out in a few remote pockets of western Cambodia. When the soldier tossed a grenade their way, she recalled, the group ran for cover. Someone stepped on a land mine. Her father lost a hand. Ms. Dos lost her left leg.

As that young girl grew older, she learned to hide.

“I didn’t want to go to school. When I saw other kinds wearing shorts, I really wanted to but couldn’t. … All I could do was cry,” she said. “I felt like I should not have been born.”

Now, she said, “I have hope about going back to school. I believe I can do things like the others.”

In December, the Miss Landmine team slipped back into Cambodia unannounced to officially crown Ms. Dos and present her with a new, custom-fitted prosthetic leg. When the government threw the project out of the country, Mr. Traavik simply moved the pageant online. Some 2,300 votes came in from more than 30 countries.

Miss Landmine captures the trip on film. As with the pageant, though, the government has vowed to bar any attempt to screen it in Cambodia.

Stan Feingold, the movie’s director, finds the government’s stand hard to fathom.

“The Miss Landmine project has a very positive message,” he said. “Disabled people don’t have to hide in their homes and be ashamed of their injuries. Disabled people can contribute in many positive ways to Cambodian society. I don’t understand how the Cambodian government could disagree with that.”

Special to The Globe and Mail

Traditional Production of Khmer Ambok

Friday, November 19, 2010

Democracy, Freedoms Continue Backslide: Rights Activist

Photo: by Men Kimseng
Ou Virak, who is the head of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, told “Hello VOA” that Cambodia was looking more and more like China or Vietnam.

This is a “UN internal issue, it's not possible for a country to suggest the firing of someone, such as the case in Cambodia.”

Cambodia is increasingly headed toward a unilateral party system of government and backslides in democracy, a leading rights researcher said Thursday.

Ou Virak, who is the head of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, told “Hello VOA” that Cambodia was looking more and more like China or Vietnam, with the space for democratic freedoms shrinking.

Rights of expression, assembly, land, fair trial and others have eroded in recent years, he said, while human trafficking and sexual exploitation remain problematic.

Ou Virak's comments followed pressure from Cambodia to the UN to close its local rights office in Phnom Penh. Prime Minister Hun Sen told UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon during talks in Phnom Penh this week he wanted the head of the UN's rights office here sacked.

However, this is a “UN internal issue,” Ou Virak said. “It's not possible for a country to suggest the firing of someone, such as the case in Cambodia.”

To suggest as much was a “lack of diplomacy on the international stage, and made Cambodia shameful at the international level,” he said.

The UN rights office exists here per an agreement between Cambodia and the UN, stemming from the period of Untac peacekeeping in the 1990s. At the same time, Ou Virak said, Cambodia agreed to improve its human rights, as part of the peace agreements.

Ou Virak is on a two-week trip to the US, where he met with senior State Department officials and representatives of Congress to discuss Cambodia's human rights' situation.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

History of Combodian Buddhism





Much of the source material available on Cambodian Buddhism is in French. This is understandable, given that France was Cambodia's colonial power. What is available in English is only scanty. This book is an attempt to fill this gap. In a chronological order, it traces the development of Theravada Buddhism before the arrival of the French, and then the politicised Buddhism, which had its beginnings in the middle of the 19th century. That the author, Ian Harris, has made extensive research into the primary as well as secondary sources stands out clearly from the work.

Evidences
In the first chapter, Harris discusses the place of Buddhism in Cambodia's history from the period of Funan to Angkor, citing epigraphic, art historical, and other documentary evidences. Although it is difficult to establish precisely when Buddhism arrived in Cambodia, the standing Buddha in varamudra and the images of the Buddha in parinirvana point to its existence from ancient times.

While the factors that led to the development of Theravada Buddhism following the fall of Angkorian power are dealt with in the second chapter, the next two chapters are devoted to a detailed study of its various aspects. The death of King Ang Duang marked the end of the middle period and the beginning of the modern, with unexpected influences. The way the pre-modern Khmer interpreted their environment from the physical and mythological perspectives is also explained. In the modern context, Thailand, which signifies orthodox Theravada values, influenced Cambodian Buddhism.

Analysing the literary sources and practices related to the Cambodian Buddhist tradition, the author argues (in the fourth chapter) that the Tripitaka was hardly known in its entirety in Cambodia until modern times. He contends that the influence of the Indian epic Ramayana was seen in Cambodia for more than a millennium. But the story in vogue there was somewhat different from that in India and other regions of Asia. For example, in the Cambodian version, King Janaka finds Sita on a raft sailing down the Yamuna.

Umbrella war
The next chapter narrates how Cambodian Buddhism reacted to the challenge of the colonial rule and brings out the conflict between the traditionalsits and the modernists. Monasteries were in the forefront of the freedom struggle and the Coa Dai movement was founded by Ngo Van Chieu. Monks, with umbrellas in hand, staged a huge demonstration, which came to be known as “umbrella war.” During May 1930, Ho Chi Minh founded the Indo-Chinese communist party. The colonial authority established the Buddhist Institute to save Cambodian Buddhism from degeneration and to counteract Thai influence by creating a strong sense of Indo-Chinese identity.

The seventh chapter presents the religio-political dimension. From 1970, Cambodia started slipping into disorder and lawlessness. Monastries were demolished (1970-73) and converted into military bases. Resistance by the monks was met by execution. Buddhism plunged into a dark period during Pol Pot's regime and, in 1975, it was mandated, inter alia, that the monks be defrocked and made to grow rice.

The re-emergence of Buddhism after the downfall of Pol Pot, its reorganisation, and the restoration of the sanghas are dealt with in the eighth chapter. The year 1978 saw Heng Samrin attempting to unite all patriotic forces, including the Buddhist monks, and the founding of the United Front for National Salvation of Kampuchea, which succeeded in liberating the country with the aid of Vietnamese troops. The anti-religious policies of the Pol Pot regime were reversed. But the process of Buddhist revival was slow for various reasons. For one, the government itself was backed by the Vietnamese and, for another, Buddhism had lost a large number of educated monks during the troubled times. The break-up of the Soviet Union, the exit of Vietnamese from Cambodia, and the internationally monitored elections in 1993 have also had their impact on the restoration process.

The Cambodian inscriptions of the pre-Angkorian and Angkorian Buddhist periods are explained in the appendices, which also provide detailed notes and references. Those interested in the cultural history of Buddhism in general and Cambodian Buddhism in particular will find the glossary and bibliography very helpful. Ian Harris deserves to be complimented for having done an excellent job in presenting the history of Cambodian Buddhism to the academia and the lay public alike.

Experts educate locals in sports science, medicine




Local sports officials take notes during the opening day of the four-day Sports Medicine course yesterday at the Hotel Cozyna Angkor in Siem Reap. Photo by: Yeun Ponlok


The significance of science and medicine as pillars for the creation of a healthy and competitive sporting environment was the main thrust behind expert presentations on the opening day of the Sports Medicine course in Siem Reap yesterday. The National Olympic Committee of Cambodia, in collaboration with the International Olympic Committee, organised the four-day crash course to allow 27 participants gain useful knowledge from field experts representing six ASEAN neighbours.

Dr M Jegathesan (right) and NOCC General Secretary Vath Chamroeun preside over lectures at the NOCC organised Sports Medicine course yesterday. Photo by: Yeun Ponlok
Cambodia is the seventh country in Asian region – after Nepal, Indonesia, Tajikistan, Sri Lanka, Bahrain and North Korea – to hold the prestigious course.

The Chairman of the Olympic Council of Asia’s Sport Medical Commission, Dr M Jegathesan from Malaysia, emphasised in keynote remarks the crucial role the fast advancing field of sports science and medicine played in capacity building of a nation. He said this amazing branch of medicine had the power to change the health status of the population in general, while giving the sporting fraternity a definite edge in sporting excellence.

“For a developing country like Cambodia, advancement in sports science and medicine is critically important. I am glad that the country is conducting this course for the first time,” said Dr Jegathesan, who is a major voice in the propagation of sports medicine in the Asian Continent.

The President of the Cambodia Sport Medical Commission, Dr Sdoeung Chea, said the country was privileged to hold a course as important as this, adding it would be the CSMC's endeavour to keep the momentum going in the future.

NOCC Secretary General Vath Chamroeun also underlined the importance of the seminars in his address at the opening ceremony, noting it would be a great opportunity for the Kingdom’s athletes and coaches to enrich their knowledge of this specialised field. “It enables us and empowers us to confidently seek better sporting standards, and will also help us to deal with such societal problems as drugs and doping,” he said.

“More importantly, any advancement in the field of sports medicine would be additional benefits in our bid to host the SEA Games in either 2015 or 2017. We are one of the founder members and we have not been able to stage the games so far. I am confident this course will be a forerunner for positive change and will help us mobilise the much vaunted human resources.”

Yesterday opening sessions were held in two parts. There were riveting presentations from Dr Jegathesan on the Olympic Movement Medical Code, World Anti Doping Agency's Anti-doping Code and the health consequences of doping. Dr Ronnie Yeo, also from Malaysia, then dealt with topics such as pre-sports participation and the principles of sports injury rehabilitation.

The course concludes at the Hotel Cozyna Angkor on Thursday with a three-tier workshop and an evaluation.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

5th CLMV Summit Touches on Dealing Poverty and ASEAN Integration




Tuesday, 16 November 2010 09:26 DAP NEWS / VIBOL

CAMBODIA, PHNOM PENH, Nov 16, 2010-The 5th CLMV summit including Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Vietnam on Tuesday hosted in Phnom Penh and it touched on the dealing poverty reduction and ASEAN integration between the told ASEAN and young ASEAN to be narrow in the block.

Samdech PM Hun Sen said in his opening remark that we have to strengthen further cooperation to be narrow between the rice ASEABN countries and poor ASEAN, to minimize the gap between the members in a way to move forward to build the ASEAN community in 2015.

" We have to deal poverty reduction through further cooperation and turn region to attract the more investment” He said, adding that we have to process our action plan and strategy to speed up the integration.

At the same time, ASEAN secretary general Dr.Surin said: our goal is to provide the mutual benefit and reach the goals of building prosperity and security and stability in each country in Asean and the region as whole.

The dialogue partners are confidence with us and they recognized our work and we also have more partners to strengthen the cooperation. We have 1.5 trillion of trade in region and 7.7 trillion trade with the world.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Groups Denounce Torture Ahead of UN Hearing




Photo: AP
The most common forms including beating, crushed limbs, electric shock and threats of family and friends, especially for suspects in police custody, the rights committee said.

“We have no hope they will say good things from Cambodia.”

Human rights groups on Monday denounced the continued abuse of prisoners inside Cambodia’s penal system, on the eve of a UN torture committee hearing on the country.

Cambodia is a signatory of the UN convention against torture, and it will face its second hearing with the UN Committee Against Torture on Tuesday.

But the practice is still a concern, the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee, a coalition of rights and development groups, said in a statement Monday.

The rights group Licadho counted 118 instances of torture in detention in 2009 and another 101 cases in 2010 so far.

The most common forms including beating, crushed limbs, electric shock and threats of family and friends, especially for suspects in police custody, the rights committee said.

Such treatments led to prison sentences between seven and 10 years, said Chan Saveth, an investigator with the rights group Adhoc.

Meanwhile, sentences are handed out without much information from the courts, said Kong Kim Suon, a lawyer for the Cambodian Defenders Project.

Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak said the government was committed to preventing torture, saying rights groups were only “making noise” ahead of the UN hearing.

“We have no hope they will say good things from Cambodia,” he said of the statement.

Suon Sareth, secretary-general of the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee, whose members have sent their own report to the UN torture committee, said the government had made “some” progress on preventing torture.

But leaders have stopped short of making it a national priority, he said.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

KRT needs endgame: report




Photo by: Sovan Philong
The courtroom at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

via CAAI

Wednesday, 10 November 2010 15:02 James O'Toole

THE Khmer Rouge tribunal must not send its politically sensitive third and fourth cases to Cambodia’s domestic courts if it hopes to preserve fair trial standards and its own judicial legacy, the Open Society Justice Initiative says in a report set to be released today.

Government officials and Cambodian staff at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, as the tribunal is formally known, have expressed opposition to Cases 003 and 004, which feature five suspects whose names remained confidential. Referring these cases to domestic courts, the OSJI says, risks diminishing “not only the credibility of the referred cases but also the confidence in the application of international standards ... to the other cases before the court”.

“The Cambodian government’s continuing (and apparently successful) efforts to politically influence the ECCC make it impossible to believe that an entirely Cambodian institution could operate independently,” the report says.

The court’s “completion strategy” has been a topic of discussion for officials from the UN, the government and donor countries in recent months as they consider the court’s uncertain future beyond its second case, which is due to start some time next year.

“These discussions are actively going on at the moment,” international co-prosecutor Andrew Cayley said in September.

“Certainly, the motivation for that is partly to satisfy the donors that we’re not going to keep on spending their money forever, and partly also, and probably more importantly, for the government to know that the mandate of the court is going to come to an end in the not-so-distant future.”

In a meeting with United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon last month, Prime Minister Hun Sen said he would not allow Cases 003 and 004 to move forward due to concerns about national security. Minister of Information Khieu Kanharith later suggested that the cases could be remanded to domestic courts.

Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said yesterday that prosecutions following Case 002 would exceed the tribunal’s mandate, which, according to a 2003 agreement between the government and the UN, limits prosecutions to “senior leaders” and those “most responsible” for crimes under Democratic Kampuchea. Additional prosecutions, if necessary, could be handled within the Cambodian judiciary, he said.

“If something’s happening, we could handle it through the local courts,” Phay Siphan said. “We understand that our agreement between the Royal Government of Cambodia and the UN is [for Cases] 001 and 002, and we’ve learned so much from that experience.”

The OSJI argues, however, that the court’s experience has demonstrated that the Cambodian legal system alone cannot be relied upon for a fair trial.

“In view of the consistently voiced threats of political interference … there is currently no reason to believe that, absent a requirement capable of ensuring meaningful international engagement, a fully domestic successor court would be capable of conducting fair trials or of acting independently and impartially,” the report says.

Last year, international prosecutor William Smith made introductory submissions for Cases 003 and 004 to the court’s Co-Investigating Judges over opposition from Cambodian Co-Prosecutor Chea Leang; in June, French Co-Investigating Judge Marcel Lemonde announced that he was moving forward with the investigations despite a lack of support from You Bunleng, his Cambodian counterpart.

In September, the two international judges in the court’s Pre-Trial Chamber recommended an investigation into alleged political interference in the work of the court, though the three Cambodian PTC judges said this was unnecessary.

UN court spokesman Lars Olsen said the tribunal was “planning its operations according to the current caseload it has”, including Cases 003 and 004.

“Any deviation from that would have to be initiated by the signatories to the 2003 agreement, which would be the Royal Government of Cambodia and the United Nations leadership,” he said.

Khmer Krom Documentary Film Show

Khmer Krom Documentary Film Show

America's Most Wanted Goes Undercover In Cambodia [...to be aired on FOX in the US]


2010-11-11
By Kelly West
CinemaBlend.com

In what sounds like a relatively horrifying episode, this Saturday America’s Most Wanted will feature host John Walsh as he goes undercover in Cambodia to expose international sex trafficking.

It's an unfortunate reality that sex-related crimes are a global epidemic and this Saturday, America's Most Wanted will be visiting Cambodia to investigate pedophilia crimes taking place at a notorious bar. Fox released some information on the special today, revealing that in addition to Walsh’s undercover venture in Southeast Asia, the episode will also include information on American sex predators that are still at large. The episode will air on Saturday, Nov. 13 (9:00-10:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX. Below is the full description for the episode as provided by Fox.


AMERICA’S MOST WANTED cameras go undercover in Cambodia, a nation targeted by pedophiles because the abject poverty there has made it distressingly easy to “buy” underage children. Working with international law enforcement agencies, Walsh investigates a notorious Phnom Penh bar to see firsthand how young girls are offered to foreign visitors and visits a Cambodian prison to confront jailed Westerners accused of preying upon children.

Walsh also talks to Somaly Mam, a tireless advocate who has dedicated her life to rescuing Cambodia’s children from the sex trade. A sex-crime victim as a child, Mam operates a center for other victimized children, offering them hope for the future.

In the episode, Walsh will ask viewers to get involved in the fight against predators by helping him track down several American pedophiles profiled during the broadcast.

[Dictatorial] Cambodia sees Suu Kyi release as positive step [-Kafkaesque?]

(Photo: AP)
Sunday, 14 November 2010
Sebastian Strangio
The Phnom Penh Post

The Cambodian government has hailed the release of Myanmar democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi after years of house arrest, describing it as an important step on the road towards democracy.

The government of Cambodia welcomes the release of Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar,” said Koy Kuong, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

He said Suu Kyi’s release was a sign the military government is implementing its seven-step “roadmap to democracy”, the fifth of which came into force with controversial elections on November 7.


“The government of Myanmar have implemented their roadmap. They have now taken [the fifth] step towards democracy and the development of the country,” Koy Kuong said.

The 65-year-old dissident and Nobel laureate walked free Saturday after seven years of house arrest in Yangon, calling on a sea of jubilant supporters to unite in the face of repression by the country’s military rulers.

She is set to address supporters of the headquarters of her previously defunct National League for Democracy at midday today local time.

Cambodia’s reaction to the event mirrored that of other ASEAN countries, which have previously been cautious in their criticism of Myanmar’s military junta.

Today, the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs described the release as “an important step in the national reconciliation and democratisation process”.

A spokesman for Indonesia’s President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono also described it as a “positive step towards national reconciliation”.

Rights groups, however, have been sceptical of the release, describing it as a means of deflecting attention away from last week’s election, widely criticised as a sham to entrench military rule.

ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY AFP