Aussies help make Angkor greater

Friday, December 18, 2009

091218_sr15
Dr Damian Evans left director of the Robert Christie Research Centre and Dr Michael Spence vice chancellor of the University of Sydney.

The Australian Research Council has announced another round of funding for the Greater Angkor Project (GAP), spearheaded by the University of Sydney. The state organisation will grant AUS$900,000 over five years to the project – a collaboration with the Apsara Authority, and the Ecole Francaise d’Extreme Orient.

The good funding news came as the university celebrated 10 years of the Greater Angkor Project with a gala dinner at Bayon Temple on December 15. Attended by Australian ambassador Margaret Adamson, Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sok An, and the King’s representative, His Royal Highness Samdech Norodom Sirivudh. At the event, university vice-chancellor Michael Spence celebrated the program for both its research value and for its strengthening of international relationships.

Cambodia to expel Uighur asylum-seekers from China

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — A group of Muslims who fled China after deadly ethnic rioting and sought asylum in Cambodia will be deported, most likely back home, government spokesmen said Saturday.
The 20 Uighurs were being expelled because it was determined they entered the country illegally, Foreign Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong said. He said two other Uighurs have gone missing.
The United States and United Nations urged Cambodia to stop the deportation. A spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency said it had not finished evaluating the Uighurs, including two children, for refugee status.
Cambodia has been under intense pressure from China, which has called the ethnic Uighurs criminals after they fled the country with the help of a secret network of missionaries. The expulsion comes as Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping visits Cambodia on Sunday as part of a four-country tour.
Interior Ministry spokesman Lt. Gen. Khieu Sopheak said the Uighurs would be expelled this week.
"I can't say where they will be sent, but I assume their final destination will be China, where they come from," he said.
Some countries have refused to send Uighurs — such as ones released from U.S. detention at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba — back to China over concerns about retribution and abuse.
The Uighurs had been in joint custody of the U.N. refugee agency and Cambodian authorities. Khieu Sopheak said they were now under the "sole protection" of the Cambodian government.
Uighur exile groups said daily telephone contact with the Uighurs had been lost.
An evaluation of the Uighurs for possible refugee status had not yet been completed, said Kitty McKinsey, spokeswoman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Bangkok.
"Last night, UNHCR conveyed a message to the Cambodian government asking them to refrain from deporting them and offering our assistance to the Cambodian government to deal with the cases," she said.
The United States urged Cambodia not to send the Uighurs back to China.
"We are deeply disturbed by the reports that the Cambodian government might forcibly return this group of Uighurs without the benefit of a credible refugee status determination process," said U.S. Embassy spokesman John Johnson in Phnom Penh. "We strongly urge the Cambodian government to honor its commitment under international law."
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said last week the Uighurs were "involved in crimes." She did not elaborate.
China's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment Saturday.
Overseas Uighur groups say Uighurs have been rounded up in mass detentions since the ethnic rioting in July. The Chinese government says nearly 200 people, mostly majority Han Chinese, died in the violence.
China has handed down at least 17 death sentences over the rioting.
Wang Lixiong, a China-based writer on Uighur and Tibetan issues, said the deportation reflected China's powerful influence in the region. China says it is the top foreign investor in Cambodia.
"When I learned the Uighurs landed in Cambodia, I was pessimistic because Cambodia is a small country that will not be able to stand against China's pressure," said Wang. "In reality, all countries bow to China's power. There is no sense of justice left in the international community."
Associated Press writers Cara Anna and Isolda Morillo in Beijing and Grant Peck in Bangkok contributed to this report.

Cambodia to send 20 Uighurs back to China: US rights group

WASHINGTON - (AFP) – Cambodia is sending 20 Chinese Muslims who fled there after July unrest in Xinjiang back to China where they face possible persecution, a US-based Uighur rights organization said Friday.
The group has been taken to the Phnom Penh airport and is about to be put on a plane to Shanghai, said Henryk Szadziewski of the Uighur Human Rights Project in Washington.
"There is a plane ready to take them away," he said, adding that his organization had received the information from local sources in Cambodia.
US State Department spokesman Gordon Duguid told reporters, "we are deeply disturbed by reports the Cambodian government might forcibly return this group of Uighurs without the benefit of a credible refugee status determination process.

Cambodia to Deport Uighurs Despite Persecution Fears

Filed at 12:54 a.m. ET



PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Cambodia plans to deport at least 20 Muslim Uighurs who fled China after deadly ethnic violence this year, a government official said on Saturday, despite concerns they will face persecution by Beijing.

The Uighurs, a Turkic Muslim ethnic group involved in rioting in western China that killed nearly 200 people in July, were smuggled into Cambodia in recent weeks and applied for asylum at the United Nations refugee agency office in Phnom Penh.

"The Cambodian government is implementing its immigration law. They came to Cambodia illegally without any passports or visas, so we consider them illegal immigrants," said Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong.

Human rights groups say they fear for the lives of the Uighurs if they are deported to China.

"Cambodia will be sending these Uighurs to a terrible fate,

possible execution and likely torture," said Amy Reger, a researcher at the Washington-based Uighur American Association.

She cited the case of Shaheer Ali, a Uighur political activist who fled to Nepal in 2000 and was granted refugee status by the United Nations. He was forcibly returned to China from Nepal in 2002 and executed a year later according to state media.

Reger's group received reports at least 20 of the Uighurs were put on a flight to Shanghai early on Saturday. But she said it appeared they had not yet been deported.

Washington is "deeply disturbed" that the Uighurs may be forcibly returned, said John Johnson, U.S. embassy spokesman in Phnom Penh. "The U.S. strongly urges the Cambodian government to honour its commitments under international law."

Cambodia's Foreign Ministry spokesman said he did not know their location.

UN OFFERS HELP

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office said it believed they were still in Cambodia.

"We have conveyed a message to the Cambodian government to refrain from deporting them," said Kitty McKinsey, a spokeswoman for the UNHCR office.

The U.N. body had offered assistance to the Cambodian government to resolve the case, McKinsey said.

Beijing has called the asylum seekers "criminals," although it has offered no evidence to back up the allegations.

Rights groups say Cambodia is bound by a 1951 convention on refugees pledging not to return asylum-seekers to countries where they will face persecution. Cambodia is one of two Southeast Asian nations to have signed the convention.

When asked about Cambodia's obligations under the 1951 convention, Koy said: "We are implementing our internal laws."

The Uighurs have put Cambodia's leaders in an awkward position ahead of a visit on Sunday by Chinese Vice-President Xi Jinping, who is expected to sign 14 agreements related to infrastructure construction, grants and loans.

China is Cambodia's biggest investor, having poured more than $1 billion (617 million pounds) in foreign direct investment into the country.

The July 5 riots, which began with protests against attacks on Uighur workers in south China, killed 197 people, most of them Han Chinese. More than 1,600 were wounded, official figures show.

At least eight people have been sentenced to death for murder and other crimes during the rioting, and nine other people have been executed, Chinese state media have reported.

(Editing by Jason Szep and Paul Tait)

Hun Sen only hurting himself with his vitriol

Sat, Dec 19, 2009
The Nation/Asia News Network  .
With their respective strategies already standing in stark contrast, Abhisit Vejjajiva and Hun Sen can only drift even farther apart in a diplomatic showdown unseen in the history of Asean.
Certainly, Hun Sen's latest swipes at the Bangkok government, which he practically cursed to burn in hell, will not help.
The Cambodian leader has crossed every line that existed. Starting with appointing a convicted Thai politician as his country's economic adviser, he then expelled a Thai diplomat and arrested another Thai citizen after apparently tapping their phones, taunted Abhisit on a daily basis, called for an uprising by the red shirts and claimed Thailand was set to breach Cambodian sovereignty in a bid to destroy Thaksin Shinawatra.

Simarak threatens to sue Suthep

Simarak na Sakhon Nakhon said that she will take legal actions against Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban or any other persons who fail to stop accusing her son, Mr Sivarak Chutiphong, of playing a drama plotted by ousted prime minister Thaksn Shinawatra and Cambodian leader Hun Sen.
“Both Thaksin and Hun Sen are benefactors of me and my family and I will not let them down because of helping my son out of jail”, the mother of Mr Sivarak, the Thai engineer sentenced to seven years in jail and later released by the royal pardon of Cambodia’s King Narodom Sihamoni, said on Saturday.

Cambodia, Vietnam OK deal on river ports

CAMBODIA and Vietnam signed a bilateral deal Thursday that will allow greater access to each other’s port facilities, an agreement both sides said would boost trade across the border.

The deal means that ships from Cambodia will enjoy unlimited access to Vietnamese ports on the Mekong, and vice versa, following a more restrictive agreement signed in 1998 that limited Vietnam’s vessels to Phnom Penh.

Pawn in a political game - Many believe Hun Sen engineered Sivarak's arrest just to help his pal Thaksin

It was good news the Cambodian king granted a royal pardon to jailed Thai engineer Sivarak Chutipong. But it was regrettable the Puea Thai Party and certain other people used the occasion to attack Thailand's Foreign Ministry by accusing its staff of causing the arrest of Sivarak, said Nongnuch Singhadecha, a writer for Matichon.
Puea Thai's swift strike against the Foreign Ministry after Sivarak's release only affirmed the belief among some observers that his arrest had been engineered by Hun Sen and ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra to discredit the Abhisit Vejjajiva administration - making it look ineffectual in freeing Sivarak from jail.
It also seemed to be aimed at Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya, who Puea Thai and Thaksin consider their arch enemy.
Nongnuch believed the drama would be used by Puea Thai in its no-confidence debate early next year in the House of Representatives against Mr Abhisit and Mr Kasit.
Nongnuch asked if Sivarak was really a security threat to Cambodia, then why was Hun Sen in such a hurry to go ahead with a royal pardon as requested by Sivarak's mother and Puea Thai chairman Chavalit Yongchaiyudh. If Sivarak was really guilty as charged, he should have served time in jail and Hun Sen should not have helped secure his release so soon.
So in Nongnuch's opinion, Sivarak's arrest was really engineered by Hun Sen so he could help his pal Thaksin and Puea Thai.

Thai-Cambodian military relationship still good: Thai defense minister

BANGKOK, Dec. 18 (Xinhua) -- Though the diplomat tension between Thailand and Cambodia have continued, the military relationship between the two countries is still good, Thai Defense Minister General Prawit Wongsuwan said Friday.     The militaries are responsible for the Thai-Cambodian matters, while the government and foreign ministry are in charge of the political affairs, Thai News Agency quoted General Prawit as saying.
    The Thai and Cambodian defense ministers met on Nov. 27 in Thailand during a meeting of the Thai-Cambodian General Border Committee (GBC).

Thailand preparing military action against Cambodia: Pheu Thai MP

An opposition MP yesterday accused the government of planning military force against Cambodia if Prime Minister Hun Sen and Thaksin Shinawatra took any action deemed to violate Thai sovereignty.
This would include establishment of a government in exile for Thaksin on Cambodian soil.
Pheu Thai MP Jatuporn Prompan said the military option was suggested in a confidential paper Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya sent to Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on November 16 as a guideline for handling the conflict with Cambodia in a worstcase scenario.

Cambodia Tribunal Charges Former Khmer Rouge Head of State With Genocide

Cambodia's U.N.-backed war crimes tribunal has charged the Khmer Rouge's former head of state with genocide, the third such charge this week against a former leader of the brutal regime.
Khieu Samphan, looks on during hearing at U.N.-backed genocide tribunal in Phnom Penh (file photo)
Photo: AP
Khieu Samphan, looks on during hearing at U.N.-backed genocide tribunal in Phnom Penh (file photo)

A court spokesman says Khieu Samphan was brought before investigating judges of the U.N.-assisted tribunal Friday and charged.

Khmer Rouge head of state Khieu Samphan charged with genocide


Khieu Samphan in court during a public hearing in 2008
Khieu Samphan in court during a public hearing in 2008

An international tribunal in Cambodia charged the country’s former head of state with genocide today, in a move that could further delay the drawn out trials of former leaders of the murderous Khmer Rouge regime.
Khieu Samphan became the third Cambodian to be charged with genocide this week after Ieng Sary, the former Foreign Minister, and Nuon Chea, the second in the Khmer Rouge hierarchy after the late Pol Pot.
All have already been charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity, as well as murder and torture for the crimes committed by the Khmer Rouge during the four years that they ruled Cambodia after 1975.
The paperwork required by the new charges is likely to further delay the conclusion of proceedings against a group of already old and ill men.

Tribunal charges 3rd ex-Khmer Rouge with genocide

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — A tribunal charged the Khmer Rouge's 78-year-old former head of state with genocide Friday, adding new momentum to long-delayed trials against the brutal regime that ruled Cambodia 30 years ago.
Khieu Samphan was brought before investigating judges of the U.N.-assisted tribunal, who issued the charges, making him the third former Khmer Rouge leader this week to be charged with genocide, tribunal spokesman Lars Olsen said.

Cambodian A/H1N1 death case rises to 6

 PHNOM PENH, Dec. 18 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia has confirmed another death case of influenza A/H1N1, bringing the total number to six, official news agency AKP reported on Friday.
    The new death case has been found on an 18-month baby living in Battambang province, said Ly Sovann, deputy director of the communicable diseases control department of the Health Ministry.
    As of Dec. 17, he said, the country's total number of infected cases of A/H1N1 has increased to 531, including 44 new cases during this week.
    Dr. Ly Sovann called on people to be more careful and to protect themselves from this deadly pandemic.

RP cosmetics makers eye Laos, Myanmar, Cambodia

THE BUREAU of Export Trade Promotion (BETP) will send a trade mission to Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia next year to find buyers of Philippine-made personal care products, the Philippine Exporters Confederation Inc. (Philexport) said on its Web site.
These markets are particularly attractive to exporters, as their economies have registered fast growth and increasing demand for personal care products, Philexport said.


An outbound business matching mission is slated to visit the three countries in October next year, the statement quoted BETP Assistant Director Michael Dodjie R. Fabian as saying.


This comes as exports of personal care products to these three markets are "currently neglible," while those to other Southeast Asian markets accounted for roughly 40% of the country's outbound shipments of these items, Philexport said.

Bangkok lodges demands for restoration of diplomatic ties

091216_04a
Hun Sen and Thaksin hug after a meeting at Hun Sen’s home on Monday. AFP
THE Thai government laid out conditions on Tuesday that it says Cambodia must meet in order for diplomatic ties to be restored, as fugitive former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra met with Cambodian officials in his capacity as government economics adviser.

Thai government spokesman Panitan Wattanyagorn said Tuesday that if Cambodia wants to bring an end to the conflict between the two countries, it must dismiss Thaksin as a government adviser, recant statements that Thai officials say insulted their justice system and stop interfering in Thai politics.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Koy Kuong called the conditions offered by Thailand “nonsense”.

“We don’t have to apologise or to correct anything, so these three conditions are absolutely unacceptable,” he said, adding that Thailand “should not interfere into Cambodia’s internal affairs”.

But despite these harsh words, Koy Kuong said Cambodia stands ready to restore diplomatic ties if Thailand is willing.

A crucial moment of choice

The time is now, in the negotiations in Copenhagen, to come together for a positive future for ourselves and our children

COMMENT
Ed Miliband

091218_06
A girl rows her boat across a flooded village in Kandal province after heavy rains in October. AFP

We must summon the political will to expand the realm of the possible.

HAVING arrived in a city besieged by people and paper, I am clear about one thing: Copenhagen is not just another international negotiation. It is a crucial moment of choice for all of us. I am determined that we will make the right choice.

Whether these talks succeed or fail, the world will be transformed by the middle of this century. Our choice is how. We can choose a future we want for ourselves and our children or we can let events choose a less positive future for us.

If we succeed in tackling climate change, the world will have been transformed by our own efforts. Nations will have worked together to reduce our carbon emissions. We will have built a carbon-neutral energy system – with new jobs and new growth. We will have deployed a huge array of low-carbon technologies. Our economies will be more energy secure. Cooperation will have triumphed over rivalry.

If we fail, the world will already have seen a two-degree rise in temperature. It will be irreversibly on its way to four degrees and beyond.

A map I launched last month shows how unmanageable that world will be – with flood and drought making food and water scarce for hundreds of millions of people. Competition for resources will be triumphing over cooperation.

This is the choice we will be making in Copenhagen. We have the technology, and, despite the recession, the necessary transformation of our energy system is affordable. The question is whether we can summon the collective political will.

Thais ignoring prisoner-swap deal: Hun Sen

By Phnom Penh Post - PRIME Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday accused Thailand of flouting a prisoner-exchange agreement in which four Cambodian inmates condemned to death in the neighbouring country were set to come back to the Kingdom.

In the midst of a lengthy tirade against the government of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva at the National Institute of Education, Hun Sen said his counterpart had yet to make good on a deal brokered in June, when Thai Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban visited Phnom Penh.

“Abhisit asked me to exchange prisoners, and I agreed with him,” Hun Sen said. “We agreed that the two Thai prisoners would serve their jail term in Thailand and the … Cambodian … prisoners would be jailed in Cambodia.”

KR killings revealed, by accident


091218_01
Photo by: DC-CAM
Skulls of Khmer Rouge victims are shown at Kraing Ta Chan, a security centre identified in the tribunal’s investigation for Case 002.
A KHMER Rouge tribunal staffer on Thursday provided estimated death tolls for security centres and execution sites related to the ongoing investigation of five regime leaders, going far beyond what had previously been made public in a presentation that the court later described as unauthorised.

Hang Vannak, the complaint and applications manager for the court’s Victims’ Unit, delivered his presentation on the scope of the investigation before an audience of 400 civil party applicants at the tribunal.

Judges in November distributed a list of 20 execution sites, security centres, cooperatives and work sites throughout 16 provinces that were being investigated, but provided little information on the types and scale of specific crimes committed at any of them.

Sam Rainsy called to court over border spat

Phnom Penh Post

Opposition leader Sam Rainsy and a Sam Rainsy Party deputy commune chief have been summoned to appear at Svay Rieng provincial court for questioning in relation to the lawmaker’s uprooting of wooden markers near the province’s border with Vietnam on October 25.

A citation issued Wednesday by Judge Long Kesphyrom stated that Sam Rainsy was charged with racial incitement and the destruction of property.

CAMBODIA: A METROPOLIS OF RICEFIELDS


Photo of S K MONOHA at Stung Sangker, Battambang, 2008.

By S K MONOHA of Cambodia, France

While walking among the ruins of Angkor's temples, it allows us to admire the magnificent architecture built in sandstone and laterite to honour the BRAHMIN HINDOU Kings and gods of Angkor, such an experience gives us a very incomplete understanding of what Angkor was like as a city. The majority of everyday architecture, erected in timbers, bamboo and palm fronds, has disappeared almost without a trace. This makes it very difficult to reconstruct an image of the city, to understand the extent and structure of different suburbs and to imagine the everyday life that existed in them. Ponds, medieval earth platforms, embankments, canals and ancient habitation mounds give us some idea, but there is another common feature of the landscape that may also prove to be useful in facing this challenging task- ricefields.

Man shot on border in critical condition

Friday, 18 December 2009
By May Titthara
Phnom Penh Post

AN illegal logger who survived a shootout with Thai troops that killed his father-in-law “will die” unless he receives medical treatment soon, according to rights activists in Oddar Meanchey province.

Srey Naren, provincial coordinator for rights group Adhoc, said the life of Phal Sokha – whose injured leg is infested with maggots – hangs in the balance.

Thais ignoring prisoner-swap deal: Hun Sen



Friday, 18 December 2009
By Cheang Sokha and James O'toole
Phnom Penh Post

PRIME Minister Hun Sen (pictured) on Wednesday accused Thailand of flouting a prisoner-exchange agreement in which four Cambodian inmates condemned to death in the neighbouring country were set to come back to the Kingdom.

In the midst of a lengthy tirade against the government of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva at the National Institute of Education, Hun Sen said his counterpart had yet to make good on a deal brokered in June, when Thai Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban visited Phnom Penh.

Genocide charge for Cambodia's K.Rouge ex-head of state


By Suy Se

PHNOM PENH (AFP)— Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court Friday charged Khmer Rouge former head of state Khieu Samphan with genocide over the regime's slaughter of Vietnamese people and ethnic Cham Muslims.

The 78-year-old has already been charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in the hardline communist regime that murdered up to two million Cambodians during its nearly four-year rule.

"This morning Khieu Samphan has been brought before the court and informed that the charges against him have been extended to include genocide against the Chams and the Vietnamese," the UN-backed court's spokesman Lars Olsen told AFP.

The tribunal issued genocide charges for the first time earlier this week against two other leaders of the brutal regime -- former KhmerRouge number two Nuon Chea and foreign minister Ieng Sary.

Last month the court announced it was investigating incursions into Vietnam as well as executions of Cambodia's Cham minority committed by the 1975-1979 regime.

The court's investigating judges have also accepted domestic charges of homicide, torture and religious persecution against Khieu Samphan. Profile: KhmerRouge's 'naive' head of state

His Cambodian defence lawyer Sa Sovan told AFP the latest charges had been expected, and he downplayed his client's role in the regime as important "only in name".

"I am not surprised by the charges... I have nothing to say about (them). It is their right. We will wait for the judges to decide," Sa Sovan said.

"If the court officials understand what justice is, I hope he will be set free," he added.

Estimates for the number of Chams who died under the Khmer Rouge range from 100,000 to 400,000, but it is not known how many Vietnamese were killed, according to Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Centre of Cambodia.

"We are satisfied with the charges but they should have been brought at the very beginning," Youk Chhang told AFP. "The Khmer Rouge considered the Vietnamese to be historic enemies, racial enemies," he said.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge a communist utopia, killing through starvation, overwork, torture and execution.

But as the perpetrators were also Cambodian that mass killing cannot be classed as genocide, Olsen said.

Genocide is defined by the United Nations as "acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group".

Final arguments were heard last month in the trial of prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, known by the alias Duch, who was charged with warcrimes, crimes against humanity, torture and premeditated murder in the court's first trial.

Khieu Samphan is in detention at the court, awaiting trial along with Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and the former foreign minister's wife, former social affairs minister Ieng Thirith.

There are almost 240,000 Cham Muslims in Cambodia, mainly in the central provinces, making up 1.6 percent of the population in the predominantly Buddhist country, according to a recent survey by the US-based Pew Research Centre.

The tribunal, created in 2006 after several years of haggling between Cambodia and the UN, has faced accusations of political interference and allegations that local staff were forced to pay bribes for their jobs.

Cambodian and international prosecutors have openly disagreed over whether the court should pursue more suspects, while the Cambodian investigating judge has refused to summon high-ranking government officials as witnesses.

FACTBOX-Five facts about China-Cambodia relations

18 Dec 2009

Dec 18 (Reuters) - Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping arrives in Cambodia on Sunday on the final leg of an Asian tour that has also taken in Japan, South Korea and Myanmar.

Here are five facts about relations between China and Cambodia:

* China had close relations with the ultra-Maoist Khmer Rouge and its leader Pol Pot. Under their 1975-1979 rule an estimated 1.7 million people -- 21 percent of the population -- perished in the Khmer Rouge's attempt to turn the impoverished nation into an agrarian utopia.

Thai-Cambodian military relationship still good: Thai defense minister


BANGKOK, Dec. 18 (Xinhua) -- Though the diplomat tension between Thailand and Cambodia have continued, the military relationship between the two countries is still good, Thai Defense Minister General Prawit Wongsuwan (pictured) said Friday.

The militaries are responsible for the Thai-Cambodian matters, while the government and foreign ministry are in charge of the political affairs, Thai News Agency quoted General Prawit as saying.

The Thai and Cambodian defense ministers met on Nov. 27 in Thailand during a meeting of the Thai-Cambodian General Border Committee (GBC).

China Is Disputing Status of Uighurs in Cambodia

By EDWARD WONG
Published: December 17, 2009


BEIJING — The Chinese Foreign Ministry has hinted that it is seeking or will seek the return of 22 Uighurs who fled to Cambodia after the eruption of deadly ethnic riots in July in western China and a subsequent government crackdown.

The Uighurs are a Turkic-speaking ethnic minority group concentrated in western China whose members often say the Chinese government, dominated by ethnic Han, discriminates against them. The 22 Uighurs in Cambodia entered the country about a month ago with the aid of an underground network of Christian missionaries in China that usually helps North Koreans reach nations where they can seek refugee status.

Amnesty calls on Cambodia not to deport Uighurs, cites torture


Friday, 18 December 2009

Amnesty International issued an open letter calling on the Cambodian government to refuse any extradition request by China over Uighur who fled violence.

Two of the 22 Uighurs who sought asylum through the UNHCR offices in Phnom Penh say they witnessed security forces killing and beating Uighur demonstrators in Urumqi on July 5, the Uighur American Association said.

Cambodian King reaffirms close ties with Viet Nam


Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni receives Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh. — VNA/VNS Photo Dinh Xuan Tuan

PHNOM PENH — The Cambodian people are good neighbours who will always stand side by side with the Vietnamese people, King Norodom Sihamoni said during his talks with Vietnamese Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh in Phnom Penh yesterday.

The talks took place immediately after a red-carpet welcome ceremony that King Sihamoni gave to the Party leader on his official visit to Cambodia.

Party General Secretary meets Cambodian leaders




Vietnam pursues the consistent policy of fostering its traditional solidarity, friendship and comprehensive cooperation with Cambodia, said Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh to Cambodian parliament and government leaders on December 17.

In his meeting with National Assembly Chairman Heng Samrin, Senate President Chea Sim and Prime Minister Hun Sen, Mr Manh said that this is an invaluable asset of both nations, and one of the elements to create power for both countries in their national building and development.

Migrants' remittances even during crisis: IOM


New study by the International Organisation for Migration says Cambodians are still finding ways to send money back home


091218_07
Photo by: SOVAN PHILONG
A woman withdraws money Thursday from an ACLEDA Bank ATM in Phnom Penh. Migrant workers often send money back through ACLEDA branches on the Thai border, according to an IOM study.

Migrant workers are a clear case of brain drain [on Cambodia].

MIGRANT remittances to Cambodia had remained robust during the economic crisis, according to a new International Organisation for Migration (IOM) study shown Thursday in Phnom Penh.

IOM project coordinator Bruno Maltoni admitted it was still difficult to assess the total value of remittances into the Kingdom due to the informal nature of much of the work Cambodian’s do abroad.

Nevertheless, a sample study of about 210 migrants in Thailand showed that remittances remained strong, he said, also citing a November World Bank report highlighting the resilience of migrant remittances to developing countries during the crisis.

“The predicted decline in remittances is far smaller than that for [other] private flows to developing countries,” said the report.

Maltoni estimated there were some 248,000 Cambodian migrant workers in Thailand, a number which could rise to 316,000 by 2018, generating a significant flow of US dollars to family back in the Kingdom, he said.

To study remittances, the IOM conducted sampling in Cambodia’s Kampong Cham and Prey Veng, and Thailand’s Trat and Rayong provinces, extrapolating a set of conclusions from the data, said Maltoni.

The study found 71.8 percent of migrant workers said they sent less than US$100 home, but with some frequency – 68.8 percent of the total claimed they sent the money at least three times a year.

Looming court battle on party dissolution involving Democrats

By The Nation- The party dissolution case involving the Democrats will rest with the final decision by Suchart Sukhagganond, the registrar of political parties and concurrently the Election Commission chairman, EC member Sodsri Sattayatham said on Friday.


The Democrat Party stands accused of involving in alleged irregularities stemming from the Bt258 million campaign contributions.

 
 
 
 
Copyright © Khmer Firm