Thursday, December 11, 2008

Spending down as land sales fall

Wednesday, 10 December 2008
Written by Soeun Say
The Phnom Penh Post

Businesses feeling crunch as fewer land sales mean fewer new rich with
money to burn

THE end of Cambodia's property boom is increasingly being being felt
across the economy as a downturn in land sales means fewer newly-rich
Cambodians hit the capital with money to spend.

Sam An, 43, who runs a private automobile dealership on Phnom Penh's
Monivong Boulevard, said his sales have declined by up to 50 percent
over the last six months from a peak during the building boom of 2006,
2007 and the early part of 2008.

"Many of our buyers made a lot of money from selling land and came to
buy cars here," he said. "Now they are so quiet."

Sok Narin, 28, said he used to make a handsome profit from selling
Suzuki motorbikes from his private dealership in 7 Makara district to
people arriving from the provinces with cash in hand.

"At this time last year I sold between four and five motorbikes per day,
but now my business is very quiet," he said. "I think that this is
because the property market is not good."

Cambodia's sole Toyota distributor, TTHK Co Ltd, told the Post last
month that it has sold only 1,200 vehicles this year, well short of the
2,000 previously anticipated, after sales plummeted almost 50 percent
since May.

RM Asia Co Ltd, the country's second-largest automobile importer, said
sales of Ford vehicles have declined about 10 percent within the last
few months.

Va Teang, 35, who owns a gold shop at Pochentong Market in Phnom Penh,
said her income has dropped 50 percent because of the real estate market
slowdown.

Mel Trea, 72, a farmer-turned-land speculator from Prakar village in the
outskirts of Phnom Penh, said the land boom had made him rich over the
past five years.

"I never thought that I would have a great chance like this," he said.

"I earned a lot of money from land I sold during 2006 and 2007 when the
land was fetching very high prices. If I had bought land for $1,000 per
hectare I sold it at $10,000 per hectare; if I bought at $10,000 I sold
at $100,000."

With the proceeds, he built a villa for his family and bought cars and
motorcycles. With few buyers around, his wealth is locked up in his
remaining land bank and his spending money has dried up.

"Now, the property market is very quiet," he said. "It's not like the
last few years when I was very busy speculating."

Kang Chandararot, president of the Cambodia Institute of Development
Study, said it was inevitable that the slowdown in real estate sales
would be felt throughout the economy.

"The world economic crisis has already affected the real estate market
in Cambodia," he said. "If the real estate market collapses, it can make
life difficult for other people doing businesses in Cambodia, especially
car and motorbike sellers."

Ngy Tayi, undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Economy and Finance
said the government was considering how it could intervene to boost the
sector.

"I can't give you an answer as to what we will do, but I can say the
government is discussing the issue and considering helping them in the
near future," he said.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

[PIMEX] China loans Cambodia $305m

Dec 3, 2008
China loans Cambodia $305m

PHNOM PENH - CHINA on Wednesday gave impoverished Cambodia more than
US$200 million (S$305 million) in loans and grants to re-build the
country's infrastructure, a government official said.

Chinese and Cambodian officials inked an agreement to give a
200-million-dollar-loan to rebuild roads in the kingdom during a meeting
between Prime Minister Hun Sen and China's visiting top political
advisor Jia Qinglin, government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said.

During the meeting, Mr Jia also announced a grant of US$7.26 million and
the same amount as a non-interest loan, he said.

The announcement came just a day before the annual aid meeting between
the government and international donors.

Last year, Cambodia's donors pledged US$689 million to the impoverished
country, including tens of millions from China.

China, a former patron of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime, routinely
gives Cambodia hundreds of millions in aid outside the donor structure,
and has been repeatedly praised by Mr Hun Sen for not attaching any
conditions to its money. -- AFP

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China loans Cambodia $305m

Dec 3, 2008
China loans Cambodia $305m

PHNOM PENH - CHINA on Wednesday gave impoverished Cambodia more than
US$200 million (S$305 million) in loans and grants to re-build the
country's infrastructure, a government official said.

Chinese and Cambodian officials inked an agreement to give a
200-million-dollar-loan to rebuild roads in the kingdom during a meeting
between Prime Minister Hun Sen and China's visiting top political
advisor Jia Qinglin, government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said.

During the meeting, Mr Jia also announced a grant of US$7.26 million and
the same amount as a non-interest loan, he said.

The announcement came just a day before the annual aid meeting between
the government and international donors.

Last year, Cambodia's donors pledged US$689 million to the impoverished
country, including tens of millions from China.

China, a former patron of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime, routinely
gives Cambodia hundreds of millions in aid outside the donor structure,
and has been repeatedly praised by Mr Hun Sen for not attaching any
conditions to its money. -- AFP

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

In Phnom Penh, gloomy mood among shopkeepers

In Phnom Penh, gloomy mood among shopkeepers

Chom Chao (Cambodia), 06 October 2008. For several months now, customers are hard to come by in Phnom Penh, especially on the eve of the Water Festival (Photo: John Vink/Magnum)

11 Nov 2008
By Chan Soratha
Ka-set
Unofficial translation from French by Tola Ek
KI Media

While the Water Festival will take place during three days and thousands of provincial visitors will come to Phnom Penh, the capital, business among small shopkeepers has been bad for past several months, even though, these shopkeepers claim that the current period is when people buy the most. The crisis with Thailand does not help boost orders either, some shopkeepers said, several of their wholesale customers from border provinces have decided to slow down their business activities. The following gives an overview of the situation.

Market gloom

Channy is bored in her mosquito net shop that she operated for the past eight years in Phsar Olympic market. "I can't say that I sell much! Customers from the province have disappeared this year! Maybe people are afraid to spend their money right now…" she tried to explain.

It is 2PM and the market alleyways remain desperately deserted. Shopkeepers kill their time by chatting among themselves. Be Vouch Shaing, comfortably wedged behind piles of clothes, said that she does not understand the situation. "I've never seen this! Every year, near the Water Festival period, we make good business. Look at my stock! The volume remains the same!"

The shopkeeper disarray can be seen in every market in the capital. If Cambodian customers are nowhere nearby, tourists are nowhere to be found either. "November had always been a good month, but this year: nothing! There are very few tourists who came to the market," Sok Eng, a souvenir store shopkeeper in Tuol Tompoung market, lamented.

The same complaints can be heard at the O'Russei market. Chheng's dry fish has no buyer since the July general election. "Before, I sold 200 kilos each day, but now only 10 kilos! Can you imagine that? I'm waiting to see what I can switch my business to!" she grumbled.

Whose fault?

While everyone displays their gloom, Laing, a jewelry shopkeeper at the Tuol Tompoung market, blamed the financial crisis which shook up the US as the culprit of her misfortune. "During the past years, I sold my jewelry well starting from September.. Now we are in already in November, I don't know what I am going to do … but, I only know how to sell jewelry!" she said in desperation.

At the Phsar Kandal market, shopkeepers are busy chatting about the future of their businesses. Meng's trees find no buyer for the first time since 1989. "Maybe people don't want to spend their money on superfluous stuff when inflation takes out a big chunk from their budget…" he speculated with other shopkeepers who nodded their agreement.

Concerns over the financial crisis

Chan Sophal, president of the Economic Association of Cambodia, indicated that fear about political instability in the country slows down consumption in Cambodia. "When people are not assured, they don't spend and they save for the upcoming hard time. However, if domestic consumption is not getting back on track, the Cambodian economy will pay a price for it, and it could even collapse," he warned.

To Kang Chandararoth, director of the Cambodia Institute for development studies, the border conflict with Thailand would not have an impact on the consumption level by Cambodians, but, according to Kang Chandararoth, the galloping inflation and the worldwide financial crisis eroded the purchasing power and now people are looking twice before they spend.

Monday, November 10, 2008

AFP:Cambodia probes chopper crash that killed police chief

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — Cambodian authorities on Monday pledged to
investigate a helicopter crash that killed the country's powerful top
policeman, amid conflicting reports about the doomed craft's last moments.

Chief of police Hok Lundy died along with deputy army commander Sok Sa
Em and two pilots on Sunday evening when their chopper went down in bad
weather shortly after taking off from Phnom Penh airport.

"There will be an immediate investigation of the cause of the crash,"
government spokesman Khieu Kanharith told AFP, without providing further
details.

Ministry of interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak said that "in general, the
crash was caused by bad weather" but there were witness reports that the
tail of the helicopter may have hit something on its way down and caught
fire.

"According to eyewitnesses, there was a fire on the tail of the
helicopter before the crash, but this is not the official reason for the
crash," Khieu Sopheak said.

Hok Lundy had been a close associate of Prime Minister Hun Sen for
nearly three decades, and one of his daughters is married to one of the
premier's sons.

Born in 1950 and a former governor of southeastern Svay Rieng province,
where the crash occurred, Hok Lundy was appointed national police chief
in 1994.

He was routinely criticised by international organisations for alleged
human rights abuses and corruption within his force, and last year Human
Rights Watch said Hok Lundy "represents the absolute worst that Cambodia
has to offer."

The police chief was accused of involvement in drug trafficking and
politically motivated killings, including a 1997 grenade attack against
anti-government demonstrators that killed at least 19 people and wounded
more than 120 others.

However, he was also praised by US officials for cooperation in
counter-terrorism.

Human rights groups protested a decision to allow him a visa to the
United States last year for counter-terrorism talks with the FBI.

The State Department had refused him a visa in 2006 due to allegations
he was involved in trafficking prostitutes.

Before leaving for his trip last year, Hok Lundy said the allegations
against him were cooked up by his political opponents.

"The US government thinks that I am a good law enforcement leader," he
told local media.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Cambodia celebrates 55th anniversary of Independence Day - Xinhua

Cambodia celebrates 55th anniversary of Independence Day
www.chinaview.cn 2008-11-09 17:36:32

PHNOM PENH, Nov. 9 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia on Sunday celebrated the
55th anniversary of Independence Day with 50,000 people joining a public
parade in front of the Royal Palace.

Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni went to the Independence Monument in
early morning to burn the victory torch before the public parade started.

"This day is a great, valued day that we Cambodians got independence
and had full freedom from France. We became a state with sovereignty and
have equal rights as other countries in the world," Sihamoni said in his
speech.

"We have peace, political stability, unity and the government is
trying to reduce poverty step by step," he added.

Meanwhile, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said in his speech that
the country is moving forward to reform to have good governance, reduce
poverty, promote social security and economic development.

"We always organize a big event like this every five years and this
time about 50,000 people participated in the ceremony," said Chea
Sokhom, deputy secretary general of the committee for organizing
national and international festivals.

Cambodia gained independence from France on Nov. 9, 1953.

Editor: Lin Liyu

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Angered Workers Torch Korean Boss’s Car

By Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
/28 October 2008/

Khmer audio aired 28 October 2008 (883 KB) - Download (MP3) audio clip
<http://www.voanews.com/mediaassets/khmer/2008_10/Audio/Mp3/081028_HR_Angered_Workers.Mp3>

A group of construction workers attacked the offices of the Camko City
development on the outskirts of Phnom Penh Monday night, lighting a car
on fire and throwing stones through the windows of the offices,
officials and workers said.

The angered workers are part of a workforce of more than 1,000 people
who went on strike Monday, claiming they were owed wages for the month
of October.

"The workers are angry enough to burn cars and throw stones because the
person who is in charge of the wages told them a lie," Ham Samnang, a
construction worker, said. "They promised to pay them by the 24^th . Now
it is the 27^th ."

Workers had no more money and were starving, he said, in addition to
owing rent.

The workers earn between $80 and $150 per month, he said.

A group of the striking workers gathered inside the compound of Camko
City Co. Monday and attacked the car of the company's South Korean
general manager.

Company officials declined to comment Tuesday, but Lim Samnang, an
advisor of administration at Camko City, said the company had erred by
not paying the workers on time.

The company usually pays its workers before the 25^th of the month, he
said, but the payment is currently late by two days.

Police said no workers were arrested during the demonstration. Camko
City is a South Korean investment of $2 billion developing 119 hectares
of commercial and residential areas in Phnom Penh's Russey Keo district.

Sok Sovanareth, president of the Cambodian National Federation of
Building and Wood Workers, said Tuesday the company should pay its
workers on time to avoid violence.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

The European Union and the United Nations Spend Euro18.7 Million on Four Projects in Cambodia - Saturday, 25.10.2008

The European Union and the United Nations Spend Euro18.7 Million on Four
Projects in Cambodia - Saturday, 25.10.2008
Posted on 26 October 2008. Filed under: Week 583 |
The Mirror, Vol. 12, No. 583

"Phnom Penh: On 24 October 2008, there was a press conference at the
headquarters of the United Nations Development Program – UNDP – to
announce achieved partnership programs between the European Union and
the UNDP in Cambodia to improve the quality of life .

"The European Union provided Euro 18.7 million for the UNDP in Cambodia
in the sectors of health, governance, justice, and of rural development.

"During this conference, Mr. Raphael Dochao Moreno, the Chargé
d'Affaires of the Delegation of the European Commission to Cambodia,
said that the report on that day focused on different achievements of a
wide cooperation between the Commission of the European Community and
the secretariats, funding agencies, and different programs of the United
Nations, particularly in Cambodia, and it focused on the promotion of
human rights in development. The cooperation of the European Union and
the UNDP with Cambodia intends to achieve the UN Millennium Development
Goals.

"Mr. Dochao Moreno added that during recent years, the Commission of the
European Union had contributed more than Euro 18 million to finance the
implementation of different development projects in Cambodia. This
development projects relate to the health sector, the improvement of the
quality of life, rural development, capacity building for commune
councilors, as well as the expenses for the Khmer Rouge Tribunal.

"As for the expenses in the health sector, Euro 5.7 million go to the
Ministry of Health and the United Nations International Children
Emergency Fund – UNICEF. As for the strengthening of democracy and the
capacity building for village and commune councilors, the UNDP is
responsible for its administration by spending Euro 10 million. The UNDP
is responsible also for the administration of Euro 1 million for the
Khmer Rouge Tribunal and of Euro 2 million for rural development.

"At the same time, responding to questions by journalists, who had asked
what Cambodia should do to reach its development goals, the UN Resident
Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative for Cambodia, Mr. Douglas
Broderick, said that Cambodia must have good governance, build up human
resources, eliminate corruption, organize the tourist sector well, and
especially develop investments in the agricultural sector – particularly
increasing paddy rice yield for exportation. Rasmei Kampuchea, Vol.16,
#4725, 25.10.2008

Newspapers Appearing on the Newsstand:
Saturday, 25 October 2008

Friday, October 24, 2008

Cambodian, Thai border committees ink agreement to ease border tension

Cambodian, Thai border committees ink agreement to ease border tension
www.chinaview.cn 2008-10-24 16:53:49

SIEM REAP, Cambodia, Oct. 24 (Xinhua) -- Regional border committees
of Cambodia and Thailand here on Friday signed an agreement to ease
their months-long tension along the border near the 900-year-old Preah
Vihear Temple.

The agreement was reached during the 11th annual meeting of the
regional border committees (RBC) attended by officers from the fourth
military region of Cambodia and the second army area of Thailand.

According to the deal, Thailand and Cambodia will cooperate to
realize peace at the border area and restore the region to its prior
situation, General Chea Man, chairman of Cambodian RBC and commander of
the fourth military region of Cambodia, told reporters at a press
conference.

At the area near the Preah Vihear Temple, both sides are determined
to keep the utmost restraint in order to avoid confrontation or armed
clash as previously occurred, he said.

The Thai side also made the same promise in its press release issued
to reporters here on Friday upon the conclusion of the two-day meeting.

On Oct. 15, a gunfire exchange between both troops near the temple
killed two Cambodian soldiers and one Thai trooper.

"Both sides agreed to cooperate with equality and we respect the
sovereignty and border of each other," said Chea Man.

"We will continue the talks to solve the issue with peaceful deals.
We have to exchange information, protect the environment along the
border, take action against crimes, make sure of economic development
along the border, and guarantee easiness for the people to have a proper
living standard," he said.

Meanwhile, Lt. General Wiboonsak Neeparn, chairman of the Thai RBC
and commanding general of the second army area of Thailand, told
reporters that the Thai side has affirmed its readiness to coordinate
with the Cambodian side to ensure peace, security and tranquility along
the Thai-Cambodia border.

In a statement issued here on Friday after that meeting ended, the
Thai military said it has achieved its objectives, namely "to develop a
good understanding and relationship between the armed forces with a view
to easing tension in the border areas."

It said the meeting has discussed how to deal with the narcotics
trade, among other things.

Under the Thai constitution, any agreement reached by the government
with another state needs parliamentary approval. The army statement said
Oct. 28 has been earmarked for parliament to debate border matters, a
date mentioned by Thai Foreign Minister Sompong Amornviwat in Beijing.

On Friday in Beijing, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Thai
counterpart Somchai Wongsawat reached consensus on the sidelines of the
ASEM Summit to avoid future clashes.

"The two sides have to advise our troops not to have confrontations
any longer," Sompong told reporters.

Cambodian Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation
Hor Namhong, standing alongside Sompong, echoed his counterpart,
describing the premiers' talks as "very good, very friendly."

In July, tensions ran high after the ancient Preah Vihear Temple was
awarded world heritage status by UNESCO, angering nationalists in
Thailand who still claim ownership of the site.

The tension later turned into a military stalemate, in which upto
1,000 Cambodian and Thai troops faced off for several weeks.

In early October, at least one Cambodian soldier and two Thai troops
were wounded during sporadic exchange of gunfire and two other Thai
soldiers were seriously injured after stepping on a landmine at the
border area, the report said.

In 1962, the International Court of Justice decided that the Preah
Vihear Temple and its surrounding area belong to Cambodia.

Editor: Du Guodong

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Is Cambodia ready for its own stock market?

Is Cambodia ready for its own stock market?
Posted By: The Asia File at Oct 20, 2008 at 09:30:23 [General]

Capital markets can be vital tools of development, helping the better
companies in poorer countries to get access to the money they need to
grow, creating wealth and employment in the process.

However, given the fragile nature of stock markets, it is important that
countries don't run before they can walk. Which is why Cambodia's
decision to press ahead with the launch of its own stock exchange next
year is slightly concerning.

After all, this is a country where business and personal disputes are
still routinely settled with a late night shoot-out in the capital,
Phnom Penh. Is Cambodia really ready for the wild fluctuations, the
speculators and the scams that typically dominate new equity markets in
developing economies?

Whatever you think, you have to commend the Cambodian government's
resilience in sticking to its plans for a 2009 launch, despite the
ongoing global turbulence.

Hang Chuon Naron, secretary general of Cambodia's Ministry of Economy
and Finance, told the Phnom Penh Post that he hopes a stock market will
provide a more long-term source of finance than the foreign aid (around
$600m annually) that the country is currently reliant upon.

"We hope the stock exchange will provide longer-term finance compared to
what we have relied on in the past, such as banks, national budgets,
foreign aid and foreign investment," he said. "I think in five or ten
years, the stock exchange will play a key role in strengthening
Cambodia's financial sector, but we must proceed carefully to build
trust from our people and investors."

But while he's right about the long-term benefits of a stock market as a
cheap place to raise capital, the problem across the developing markets
of Southeast Asia is the pre-dominance of short-term speculators,
chancers and crooks.

This article in today's Bangkok Post sums up the dodgy share trading
scene over the disputed border in Thailand rather nicely.

"On any given day, investor cliques can join hands, even sometimes with
company management and major shareholders, to push share prices one way
or the other," the article notes. "For these investors, fundamentals are
meaningless - indeed, the larger and more prominent the company, the
less attractive it is for speculators, due to the greater difficulty in
manipulating prices for large-cap stocks." While Southeast Asia's
comparatively inexperienced and poorly funded regulators do their best
to get on top of these types of market abuse, they are generally
fighting a losing battle against the better-funded and more powerful crooks.

But trading scams on illiquid markets are not just the preserve of Asia.
When I covered London's Aim market for The Telegraph, I would get a
complaint at least once a week from an investor concerned about alleged
insider trading or ramping/deramping. And, on more than one occasion, I
shared lunch or a drink with small-cap executives and brokers who showed
a well-hardened disdain for market rules and minority shareholders.

Malaysia Seeks To Diffuse Thai-Cambodia Border Row

Malaysia Seeks To Diffuse Thai-Cambodia Border Row
News 2008-10-20 16:31

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's foreign minister said Monday (20 Oct) his
planned visits to Thailand and Cambodia are a friendly effort to help
diffuse a border dispute between the neighbors, and not interference in
their affairs.

Rais Yatim said Malaysia and the 10-member Association of Southeast
Asian Nations, or ASEAN, have an interest in ensuring the border
conflict does not intensify and jeopardize regional peace.

The dispute, if not checked, could embarrass ASEAN and mar its
credibility as a regional bloc, he warned.

A brief but deadly gunfight erupted between Thai and Cambodian soldiers
last week over disputed land near the centuries-old Preah Vihear temple,
sparking fears of war.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has rejected outside help in the conflict.

"We don't consider ourselves as (outsiders). We consider ourselves
within ASEAN and if we cannot play the role of a neighbor, the role of a
good friend, then what are we for?" Rais told reporters.

"This is not a positive dot for ASEAN. This could be looked at as a very
questionable development ... we have to convince the world that we can
take care of our problems and relationship with each other," he said.

Malaysia, Cambodia and Thailand are all members of ASEAN, which has a
policy of noninterference in member nations' domestic affairs. ASEAN
also includes Brunei, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore
and Vietnam.

Rais Yatim said he would fly to Thailand on Tuesday (21 Oct) or
Wednesday (22 Oct), and to Cambodia later this month, to urge both
parties to resolve the conflict through peaceful negotiations.

He said he would submit a letter of concern from Prime Minister Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi to the Thai and Cambodian leaders and urge them not to
"resort to physical or military means."

The World Court awarded the 11th century temple to Cambodia in 1962, but
sovereignty over surrounding land has never been clearly resolved.

Hun Sen is expected to meet Thai Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat later
this week in their first face-to-face meeting since the deadly gunbattle
erupted 15 Oct, killing two Cambodian soldiers and wounding 10 from both
sides.

Rais said his visits are partly in response to a request by ASEAN
Secretary-general Surin Pitsuwan for member nations to make "friendly
overtures so that the skirmish is undertoned." (AP)
MySinchew 2008.10.20

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Thai-Cambodian border meeting postponed

BANGKOK (AFP) – Thai and Cambodian military officials have postponed talks aimed at calming a border dispute which recently escalated into a deadly shoot-out, officials from both sides said on Sunday.

Senior army representatives had been due to meet on Tuesday in the Cambodian town of Siem Reap, but negotiations have been put off until later in the week.

"The regional border meeting scheduled on October 21 was postponed as the two countries are not yet ready," said Colonel Taweesak Boonrakchart, spokesman for Thailand's northeastern army division.

"On the Thai side, we have to get approval from parliament before the government can sign any pacts."

The talks would now be held on Thursday or Friday, still in Siem Reap, Taweesak told AFP.

Cambodia's deputy defence minister General Neang Phat said he expected the meeting to occur on Thursday morning.

Thai and Cambodian troops at the disputed border remained calm Sunday, and soldiers from both sides could be seen chatting with each other.

"The relations between our troops are better. We try to be calm here -- flexible, but strong," said Cambodian Colonel Som Bopharoath.

Two Cambodian soldiers were killed and seven Thai troops injured on Wednesday when a firefight erupted between soldiers stationed on disputed land near Cambodia's ancient Preah Vihear temple.

Emergency talks the day after ended with Cambodian and Thai officials agreeing to joint border patrols -- which have not started yet -- but offered no lasting solution to the military stand-off along the border.

Tensions between the neighbours flared in July when Preah Vihear was awarded United Nations World Heritage status, rekindling long-simmering tensions over ownership of land surrounding the ancient temple.

FM: Postponement of Thai-Cambodian border resolution meeting in Siem Reap

BANGKOK, Oct 19 (TNA) – Cambodia has postponed the meeting to settle the
border dispute between Cambodia and Thailand without giving any reason,
Thailand's Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced Sunday.

Thai army commander Lt-Gen. Viboonsak Neepal and Cambodian Army
commander Cheamon were originally scheduled to meet in Siem Reap on
Tuesday for talks to settle the border dispute.

Thailand's ministry of foreign affairs revealed that it was informed by
the army that Cambodian deputy prime minister and defense minister Tia
Banh called for postponing the Regional Border Committee meeting between
the two countries.

It is believed that the postponement resulted from concern that the
meeting, if held according to the original schedule, won't be able to
reach any agreement to settle the border dispute focused on the 11th
century Preah Vihear temple without a negotiation framework approved by
the Thai parliament.

Meanwhile, Dr. Prat Booyawongvirote, Permanent Secretary for Public
Health said that Boonrit Khantee, a Thai paramilitary ranger who was
wounded in the head, is still in coma and under close medical
observation in the intensive unit.

A doctor in charge of administering treatment said that Ranger Boonrit
was on a respirator and had complications. Seven Thai soldiers were
wounded and two Cambodian soldiers were killed in the skirmish at the
Thai-Cambodian border on October 15. (TNA) General News : Last Update :
16:33:09 19 October 2008 (GMT+7:00)

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Cambodia #54 - News : day after fighting - 16.10.2008

Thai-Cambodia dispute continues

Thai-Cambodia dispute continues
Thu 16 Oct 2008, 9:53 GMT


By Chor Sokunthea

PREAH VIHEAR, Cambodia (Reuters) - Thai and Cambodian army commanders ended five hours of talks on Thursday with no agreement to withdraw their forces after heavy fighting near a disputed 900-year old temple left two Cambodian soldiers dead.

"We did not make much progress. Troops on both sides will stay where they are," Thai General Wiboonsak Neeparn told reporters after returning to the Thai side of the border.
 

He said they had agreed on joint border patrols to ease tensions after Wednesday's 40-minute gun and rocket battle, the worst clash in years between the historic enemies.

But his Cambodian counterpart, General Srey Doek, denied any deal over the site, where soldiers backed by armour and artillery faced off in an area controlled a decade ago by remnants of the Khmer Rouge, Pol Pot's guerrilla army.

The Hindu temple has stirred nationalist passions in both countries for generations, but officials on both sides have toned down their rhetoric since the fighting on Wednesday.

"Our policy to resolve this conflict is through negotiations," Thai Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat told reporters in Bangkok.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has kept silent, but his foreign minister urged negotiations, saying the incident was between soldiers and "not an invasion by Thailand."

But people on the streets of Phnom Penh were angry.

"We need to defend our land. We must not lose to the Thais," said security guard Bun Roeun, 36, flicking through newspaper reports of the clashes. "If the Thais continue their attempt to cross our border, I am ready to join the army to fight back."

The confrontation comes amid great political instability and an economic slowdown in Thailand, as protesters in a long-running Bangkok street campaign urge the army to launch a coup against the elected government.

"It's hard to see how Cambodia gains from starting a war with Thailand at this point," said Tony Kevin, a former Australian ambassador to Phnom Penh.

"But if you look at the very tense and riven state of Thai politics, it's easy to see how a Cambodian war could be of interest as a distraction," he said.

China and the United States expressed concern over the violence and urged both sides to use restraint.

DECADES-OLD DISPUTE

Preah Vihear, or Khao Phra Viharn, as the Thais call it, sits on a jungle-clad escarpment overlooking northern Cambodia but has been accessible mainly only from Thailand.

The International Court of Justice awarded the temple to Cambodia in 1962, a ruling that has rankled Thais ever since.

The court failed to determine the ownership of 1.8 square miles (4.6 sq km) of scrub next to the stunning but remote Hindu ruins, which have been off-limits to tourists for months.

The dispute over this small parcel of land became highly politicised in Thailand in July when protesters trying to overthrow the Bangkok government adopted it as a cause.

Bangkok has urged its citizens to leave Cambodia, mindful of the 2003 torching of its embassy and Thai businesses in Phnom Penh by a nationalist mob incensed by a row over Angkor Wat, another ancient temple.

In 2003, Thai commandos flew into Phnom Penh airport in the middle of the night to help evacuate 600 Thais during the riots.

Security was beefed up outside the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh, but there were no crowds outside and it was operating as normal, a Thai official told Reuters.

Several big Thai companies have operations in Cambodia and some have pulled out Thai nationals, but they said operations were normal.

Thailand's political crisis has damaged consumer confidence and consumption at a time when exports are sluggish due to the global economic slowdown.

A top adviser to Thailand's finance minister said on Wednesday the country risked sinking into recession in the first half of 2009 if the political stalemate did not end soon.

(Additional reporting by Nopporn Wong-Anan in Kantaralak, Ek Madra in Phnom Penh, Ed Cropley in Bankgok; Writing by Darren Schuettler; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Cambodia #53 - News : fighting in Preah Vihear - 15.10.2008

Cambodia #52 - News : fighting in Preah Vihear - 15.10.2008

http://www.watchcambodia.blogspot.com

Cambodia #07 - News : Preah Vihear - 20.07.2008

http://www.watchcambodia.blogspot.com

Fresh fighting on Thailand, Cambodia border

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Singapore very disturbed by Thai—Cambodian border situation

Thursday, October 16
Channel NewsAsia/AFP

SINGAPORE: Responding to media queries on the exchange of fire between
troops at the Thai—Cambodia border, Singapore's Ministry of Foreign
Affairs said the republic is very disturbed by the turn of events.

A ministry spokesman said Singapore reiterated its call for both parties
to exercise utmost restraint in the broader interests of the region, and
urged both sides to resolve their differences through further negotiations.

Thai and Cambodian troops exchanged fire along the border on Wednesday,
killing two Cambodian soldiers, as a dispute over land near an ancient
temple turned deadly.

Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong said that two of his country's
soldiers were killed and two others wounded in the clashes, which
erupted sporadically for more than two hours before tapering off.

Lieutenant General Wiboonsak Neeparn, the army commander for
northeastern Thailand, said that five Thai troops were wounded.

Gunfights broke out in the afternoon in a number of small patches of
disputed land just a few kilometres (miles) away from the 11th century
Preah Vihear temple, an UN World Heritage site which is on Cambodian
territory.

Cambodia and Thailand have been sparring over land near the temple since
July, and tensions soared this week after talks on Monday failed and
about 80 Thai troops entered a disputed area, enraging Cambodia.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Asia bracing itself for downturn in property markets

*Asia bracing itself for downturn in property markets*

Saturday, 11 October 2008
Property Wire

Asian property markets are falling victim to the global credit crisis
and seeking ways of lessening the impact at a local level.

In Cambodia the real estate boom which began in 2007 is over according
to a leading economist and in the Philippines real estate professionals
are calling for investment trusts to be approved in a bid to boost the
market.

'Our property markets are closely connected with the stock markets in
South Korea and other Asian countries. If these markets fall, we are
affected,' Kang Chandararot, head economist at the Cambodia Institute of
Development Study.

'Also South Korean and other Asian markets are very closely connected to
the US and these countries are our biggest investors. We will see a
recession in the short term, perhaps in six to 12 months,' he added.

The South Korean government issued a statement this week urging banks to
sell foreign assets to increase liquidity. South Korea is Cambodia's
biggest investor and a fall in South Korea would be especially harmful
to local growth.

No figures on the depth of the decline are available, but industry
experts said the impact could be felt soon. Cheam Yeap, chairman of the
National Banking and Finance Committee, said the global finance crisis
might affect the real estate market, but not the economy as a whole as
it is sufficiently diversified in tourism, agriculture and garment
manufacturing to withstand the downturn.

Property firms in the Philippines believe that establishing real estate
investment trusts (REITs), will help to boost the local market. Jaime
Ayala, president of Ayala Land, Inc., said it would open up another
avenue to raise capital and give the public a new investment vehicle.

'It will be a win-win situation. It will allow us to get more capital to
allow us to develop more projects, and at the same time, this will be a
nice form of investment for the public,' he said.

'This will spur economic activity since this will give investors good
yields. This will also give property companies a chance to develop more
projects,' said Jeffrey C. Lim, chief finance officer of SM Prime Holdings.

A bill allowing the introduction of REITs is currently going through the
House and Senate.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Cambodia vulnerable to internet scams

*Cambodia vulnerable to internet scams *

*Wednesday, October 01, 2008
ABC Radio Australia*

Internet scams are nothing new, but developing countries with new
internet users are offering scammers a whole new pool of fresh victims.
And Cambodia with about 44-thousand people connected to the web is a
prime target.

Presenter: Liam Cochrane
Speakers: Amy, Cambodian actress; Bill Caelli, Institute of Information
Security at Queensland University of Technology.

Click here to listen: Windows Media

COCHRANE: When 21-year-old Cambodian actress Amy checked her email
earlier this month, there was an unexpected message waiting for her.

AMY: When I checked it said that I won the lottery from the UK and I get
an amount on this, maybe a lot of money and then I feel surprised and I
replied to them with their requirements, like write down my name, write
down my phone number and my email address.

COCHRANE: She didn't know it at the time but Amy was being lured into an
internet scam that fools people into giving away millions each year. For
Amy, there was extra reason to be hopeful. Her sister-in-law had
recently won a visa in the annual American visa lottery and Amy thought
perhaps she really had won the 300 thousand pounds the email offered.
But there were signs that something was suspicious.

AMY: After I send them, they send me back immediately and say that
contact this bank and contact that bank. In the end I find that they
want to see my account, so I feel wonder and think why do you need to
see my account, and I'm not sure with that, so I need to tell my friend.

COCHRANE: Initially, Amy's Cambodian friends were excited about her good
luck, but still she had doubts.

AMY: So I ask my British friend and he told me, 'They cheat you Amy,
they cheat, they cheat you.' I'm very very hopeless and I still don't
believe that so I asked him, 'Why, what's the reason that you know that
I was cheated by them, why?.

COCHRANE: The reason the British man knew, was that internet scams are
well known and avoided by most internet users.

But in countries like Cambodia, where the internet is still emerging,
innocent users are prime targets for scam artists trying to steal money
or identities. The lottery scam is a variation of what's known as a
"419" scam or a "Nigerian scam", so-called because they first started in
Nigeria using a legal loophole known as clause 419. Typically, scammers
send out thousands of emails telling people they have inherited or
embezzled millions of dollars and need a bank account to stash the
money, in exchange for a slice of the spoils. In Nigeria, there's even a
cheeky pop song that boasts of ripping off gullible foreigners. It might
seem like a joke to some, but police say millions of dollars are lost
each year, a fact hidden by the victims reluctance to admit they were
fooled and report the crime. A UK study in 2006 found that 150 thousand
pounds a year was lost to these scams, with each victim losing an
average of 31 thousand pounds. That led to failed businesses and broken
marriages, said the study. Bill Caelli is from the Institute of
Information Security at Queensland University of Technology. He says
there's little a government can do about protecting the gullible.

CAELLI: The problem here is basically one of education and awareness,
that's about the best thing we can do at the present moment. Even the
concept of trying to block the source of those particular messages won't
work because the scammers simply change their addresses.

COCHRANE: New technology might help, but until internet users realise
that anything that seems too good to be true, is probably a trick,
scammers around the world will continue to chop the dollars from foreign
bank accounts.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Cambodia: Parliament Endorses New Cabinet

PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA: Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen promised to
combat corruption and advocate good governance as he unveiled the
country's new Cabinet on Thursday (25 Sept).

Cambodia's newly elected lower house of parliament, overwhelmingly
packed with lawmakers from Hun Sen's ruling party, voted to approve the
Cabinet, which is filled with the same ministers who served in Hun Sen's
administration the past five years.

"A new term but with the same old face," Hun Sen, 57, told the National
Assembly after the vote.

Hun Sen's Cambodian People's Party took 90 of 123 seats in July
elections, ensuring that it will have a free hand in virtually all
legislative matters.

Hun Sen, Asia's longest-serving leader, said his new government will not
"waver in its commitment to accelerate development and comprehensive
reform."

He has made similar promises in the past to foreign aid donors, who give
hundreds of millions of dollars in aid each year to the impoverished
Southeast Asian nation.

But critics have often criticized his government for doing little to
control corruption, illegal logging and land-grabbing by well-connected
businessmen.

Cambodia was ranked 166 among 180 countries in Transparency
International's 2008 Corruption Perceptions Index, where the No. 1
country is the least corrupt. Transparency International is a
Berlin-based international non-governmental agency.

Hun Sen responded to the findings with his trademark rebuff, saying many
issues in Cambodia have been exaggerated by his critics.

"It is their right to write whatever they want," he said. "Nothing is
perfect in this world. Social injustice and corruption occur everywhere.
The difference is how small or big they are."

All 26 lawmakers of the Sam Rainsy Party, Cambodia's main opposition
group, boycotted Thursday's vote, as did three other lawmakers from the
Human Rights Party. The two parties have disputed the results of July's
election, saying they were rigged to help secure votes for Hun Sen's
party. (AP)

MySinchew 2008.09.25

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Cambodia: Ruling Party Dominates New Parliament

*Cambodia: Ruling Party Dominates New Parliament*
Foreign 2008-09-24 15:24

Mysinchew.com
PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA: Cambodia's newly elected lower house of parliament
held its inaugural session Wednesday (24 Sept) that saw the ruling
party's already firm grasp on power grow even tighter in the
impoverished Southeast Asian nation.

Prime Minister Hun Sen's party now holds 90 of 123 seats, ensuring that
the Cambodian People's Party will have a free hand in virtually all
legislative matters.

"They have been ruling the country single-handedly, and they still are,"
said Ou Virak, director of the nonprofit Cambodian Center for Human
Rights. "Their one-party rule is just more legitimate than before."

An election on 27 July election handed Hun Sen's party 17 seats beyond
the 73 it already held, further cementing the CPP's majority.

Ou Virak and other rights activists say the virtual one-party system
risks damaging the country's fragile democracy and giving unfettered
power to Hun Sen, a former Khmer Rouge soldier who has dominated the
country's politics for decades.

They say the ruling party's supremacy will weaken an already limited
system of checks-and-balances and make it more difficult to voice
dissent and air grievances about social injustices.

Hun Sen is a former soldier in the Khmer Rouge movement that wreaked
havoc in Cambodia when it held power from 1975-1979. He has been at the
center of the country's politics since 1985, when he became the world's
youngest prime minister at age 33. He has held or shared the top job
ever since, bullying and outfoxing his opponents to stay in power.

The parliament will vote Thursday ( 25 Sept) on a new Cabinet _ an
exercise seen only as a formality given the domination of Hun Sen's party.

King Norodom Sihamoni presided over Wednesday's event at the Nation
Assembly, and called for the lawmakers to "succeed in fulfilling your
duties for the great benefit of our nation." Sihamoni is a
constitutional monarch who holds no executive power.

The lawmakers were dressed in green silky wrapped skirts and white
turtleneck, long-sleeved shirts _ the traditional Cambodian outfit used
in functions attended by the king.

The Sam Rainsy Party, Cambodia's main opposition group, has 26 seats in
the parliament. The other three smaller parties hold combined seven
seats. (AP)
MySinchew 2008.09.24

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

South Korean investment changes the face of modern Cambodia

By Raphael Minder

Published: September 23 2008 03:00 | Last updated: September 23 2008 03:00

A young Cambodian couple smile for David Kim, the South Korean
photographer, as he takes their wedding pictures.

Last November Mr Kim moved with his wife to Phnom Penh, the Cambodian
capital, using the proceeds from the sale of his photo shop in Seoul to
open Luk Studio. The business has made "a really good start" as more and
more Cambodians turn to professionals to capture their union, he says.

Although his business is still in its infancy, Mr Kim has already hired
three people to help manage bookings and photo shoots.

"I had my company in Korea for three years, but demand wasn't growing
any more and there was simply too much competition," says the
32-year-old. "I can already say that I am the number one here because
nobody was really offering this [service] professionally."

Mr Kim is making a grassroots contribution to a much more substantial
flow of South Korean money and expertise entering Cambodia.

Last year South Korean investments there grew fivefold, making Cambodia
the second-biggest recipient of Korean investment after China, according
to the Korean International Trade Association. South Korea briefly
overtook China two years ago as the biggest source of foreign direct
investment, accounting for 23 per cent of projects approved by Cambodian
authorities that year. Although China regained its leadership, several
large-scale Korean projects are in the pipeline, in sectors including
construction and finance.

Observers find it hard to explain exactly why Koreans have zoomed in on
a country that is not particularly close to them, either geographically
or culturally. "A lot of Korean businessmen are looking to invest abroad
and somehow Cambodia seems to be now better known, particularly among
small and medium-sized businesses, than other countries," says Anh
Ho-young, South Korean deputy trade minister.

One suggestion is that the historic disconnect between the countries has
helped. Decades of war have fuelled a profound distrust in Cambodia of
its neighbours.

Also, "Koreans are Asia's most adventurous frontier market investors
right now", says Douglas Clayton, who has been investing in south-east
Asia for two decades and manages Leopard Capital, a Cambodian fund.

"They understand how Korea itself was rapidly developed from a frontier
market into a developed society and see the possibilities to repeat that
process in transitional economies like Cambodia.

"For historical reasons, Koreans are not eager to place all their bets
on China, so they are interested in alternative low-cost production
centres," he adds.

The most visible sign of South Korean investment in Cambodia is the
redrawing of Phnom Penh's skyline. Two Korean construction companies are
erecting skyscrapers that will be the city's tallest buildings.

Meanwhile, a joint venture between Korean and Cambodian companies is
developing a satellite city, appropriately named Camko City. The $2bn
(€1.4bn, £1bn) project is financed by Shinhan, a Korean bank, and is
also due to house Cambodia's future bourse - again with financial as
well as training assistance from the Korean stock exchange.

In the six years since he arrived in Cambodia, Won Jong-min estimates
the Korean community has grown from less than 500 to about 10,000. He
settled there "not because of business but because I fell in love with
the beautiful nature" around the temples of Angkor Wat, Cambodia's
cultural treasure.

Mr Won has since founded K-Channel, a Korean-language broadcaster that
is expanding rapidly and is expected to break even after just two years
on the air.

His success owes much to the fact that Koreans remain close-knit and
rarely learn Khmer, even though many marry Cambodians or form property
partnerships with locals to circumvent restrictions on foreign land
ownership.

"Demand for more Korean [TV] content and entertainment is very strong,"
says Mr Won.

Some pundits date the flourishing of business ties between the two
countries to a state visit by Roh Moo-hyun, the former South Korean
president, in late 2006, accompanied by a cohort of Korean executives.

Hun Sen, Cambodia's long-standing prime minister, has also encouraged an
open door policy. Last year, when a Cambodian chartered aircraft crashed
on a domestic flight with 13 Koreans among its 22 passengers, he headed
the search-and-rescue team, a gesture that did not go unnoticed in Seoul.

"It's very rare for any prime minister to lead this kind of rescue, and
I think it shows just how close this prime minister feels to Korea,"
says Mr Anh.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Cambodia announces final official result of general election

PHNOM PENH, Sept. 2 (Xinhua)

Cambodia's National Election Committee (NEC) Tuesday announced the final
official result of the4th mandate election of members of the National
Assembly.
NEC Secretary General Tep Nytha declared the official results from
province to province on national television and radio. According to the
final official results, the Cambodian People's Party(CPP) won 90 seats,
the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) 26, the Human Rights Party (HRP) 2, the
Funcinpec Party 2, and the Norodom Ranariddh Party (NRP) 2 seats. Tep
Nytha said that the oldest Member of Parliament is Chea Sutfrom CPP, who
was born in 1928. Altogether 11 political parties had run for the July
27 election this year. A total of 8,125,529 voters were registered to
vote at 15,255 polling stations nationwide and 17,000 local and
international observers watched the polling process, according to NEC
figures.The voter turnout rate this year was only 75 percent, lower than
83 percent in 2003, 94 percent in 1998 and 90 percent in 1993,said NEC.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Khmer Boxing - Vorn Viva vs Craig Jose

Khmer Boxing - Nuon Soriya vs Valdet Gashi

TVK_News_Aug17_Hun-Sen-Met-The-King.

VK_News_Aug16_#3-TVK-Fund-Activities-Go-To-Preah-Vihear.

TVK_News_Aug16_#2-TVK-Fund-Activities-Go-To-Preah-Vihear.

Thailand, Cambodia agree to tourism for Preah Vihear once military tensions ease

Written by Thet Sambath and Brendan Brady
Wednesday, 27 August 2008

Thai Prime Minister Samak met with Cambodian Defence Minister Tea Banh
over the dispute, agreeing to restart tourism to the ancient site after
troops leave the area

AFP
Tourists stroll through the ruins at Preah Vihear. Officials hope to
draw in more visitors.
T
HAILAND and Cambodia have agreed to cooperate to develop tourism at
areas along the border once the military standoff is resolved, Thai
Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej said Monday.

The Thai premier made the statement in Bangkok after meeting with
Cambodia's defence minister, Tea Banh, who is also a deputy prime minister.

"Territorial problems which cannot be resolved by now will be left for
negotiations later," and a "middleman will be appointed to oversee
promoting tourism with an aim to bring back tourists," Samak was quoted
as saying by the Thai government news service, Thai News Agency (TNA).

He added that the temple cannot be opened to tourism until all military
personnel have withdrawn, according to TNA.

Monday's agreement to promote tourism at Preah Vihear temple came after
Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong and his Thai counterpart, Tej
Bunnag, failed in talks August 19 and 20 to reach a resolution on the
border dispute.

The two sides agreed they would meet again in October pending a survey
and demarcation of the area to be carried out by the Joint Border
Commission.

I never thought this area would become popular with tourists.

On the Cambodian side, developing tourism at Preah Vihear could give a
major boost for a corner of the country long notorious as the last
region occupied by Khmer Rouge fighters.

Locals hopeful
The prospect of a tourism boom has enterprising Cambodians in the area
licking their lips at the potential windfall.

Tep Savy, 43, an owner of a small guesthouse in Sa Em, about 25
kilometres from the base of the pitted mountain road to the temple, said
her village had been an active battlefield between Khmer Rouge and
Cambodian military forces since she moved there in 1979.

"I never thought this area would become popular with tourists. It's
going to go from a war zone to a tourist boom town," she said.

She said that since the temple's World Heritage listing, her 12-room
guesthouses, which before was lucky to see a guest every couple of days,
is now regularly fully booked.

She said she planned to add more rooms but would wait for the temple
standoff to cool down before making the investment.

Chim Phalla, from Komuoy village at the base of the Dangrek mountain
range on which the temple sits, has "high hopes to earn a fortune" by
quitting his job as a grocer and opening a restaurant to capitalise on
the expected influx of tourist dollars.

Tourism Minister Thong Khon told the Post that the government would
develop comprehensive plans to encourage the development of tourism
infrastructure for Preah Vihear temple, including road access from Phnom
Penh and Siem Reap.

The Unesco listing should also promote Preah Vihear's spot on
multinational temple tours through Cambodia, Thailand and Laos, he added.

Infrastructure
Early this month, Prime Minister Hun Sen ordered that the 80 km road
connecting Anlong Veng town to Preah Vihear temple be paved as the
dispute with Thailand has lent new significance to the ancient ruins of
Preah Vihear temple.

The prime minister followed up last week, ordering the construction of a
new 9km road from Prey Veng village in Oddar Meanchey province to Ta
Moan Thom temple complex, also along the border with Thailand.

Thailand and Cambodia have been locked in a military standoff at the
temples for six weeks.

Tensions have eased, but troops are still only yards apart in some
disputed areas.

TVK_News_Aug16_#1-TVK-Fund-Activities-Go-To-Preah-Vihear.

Thailand, Cambodia agree to tourism for Preah Vihear once military tensions ease

Written by Thet Sambath and Brendan Brady
Wednesday, 27 August 2008

Thai Prime Minister Samak met with Cambodian Defence Minister Tea Banh over the dispute, agreeing to restart tourism to the ancient site after troops leave the area

AFP
Tourists stroll through the ruins at Preah Vihear. Officials hope to draw in more visitors.
T
HAILAND and Cambodia have agreed to cooperate to develop tourism at areas along the border once the military standoff is resolved, Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej said Monday.

The Thai premier made the statement in Bangkok after meeting with Cambodia's defence minister, Tea Banh, who is also a deputy prime minister.

"Territorial problems which cannot be resolved by now will be left for negotiations later," and a "middleman will be appointed to oversee promoting tourism with an aim to bring back tourists," Samak was quoted as saying by the Thai government news service, Thai News Agency (TNA).

He added that the temple cannot be opened to tourism until all military personnel have withdrawn, according to TNA.

Monday's agreement to promote tourism at Preah Vihear temple came after Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong and his Thai counterpart, Tej Bunnag, failed in talks August 19 and 20 to reach a resolution on the border dispute.

The two sides agreed they would meet again in October pending a survey and demarcation of the area to be carried out by the Joint Border Commission.

I never thought this area would become popular with tourists.

On the Cambodian side, developing tourism at Preah Vihear could give a major boost for a corner of the country long notorious as the last region occupied by Khmer Rouge fighters.

Locals hopeful
The prospect of a tourism boom has enterprising Cambodians in the area licking their lips at the potential windfall.

Tep Savy, 43, an owner of a small guesthouse in Sa Em, about 25 kilometres from the base of the pitted mountain road to the temple, said her village had been an active battlefield between Khmer Rouge and Cambodian military forces since she moved there in 1979.

"I never thought this area would become popular with tourists. It's going to go from a war zone to a tourist boom town," she said.

She said that since the temple's World Heritage listing, her 12-room guesthouses, which before was lucky to see a guest every couple of days, is now regularly fully booked.

She said she planned to add more rooms but would wait for the temple standoff to cool down before making the investment.

Chim Phalla, from Komuoy village at the base of the Dangrek mountain range on which the temple sits, has "high hopes to earn a fortune" by quitting his job as a grocer and opening a restaurant to capitalise on the expected influx of tourist dollars.

Tourism Minister Thong Khon told the Post that the government would develop comprehensive plans to encourage the development of tourism infrastructure for Preah Vihear temple, including road access from Phnom Penh and Siem Reap.

The Unesco listing should also promote Preah Vihear's spot on multinational temple tours through Cambodia, Thailand and Laos, he added.

Infrastructure
Early this month, Prime Minister Hun Sen ordered that the 80 km road connecting Anlong Veng town to Preah Vihear temple be paved as the dispute with Thailand has lent new significance to the ancient ruins of Preah Vihear temple.

The prime minister followed up last week, ordering the construction of a new 9km road from Prey Veng village in Oddar Meanchey province to Ta Moan Thom temple complex, also along the border with Thailand.

Thailand and Cambodia have been locked in a military standoff at the temples for six weeks.

Tensions have eased, but troops are still only yards apart in some disputed areas.

Cambodia mulls allowing foreigners to buy property

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — The Cambodian government is considering allowing
foreign ownership of property such as apartments and office buildings to
boost the country's economic growth, an official said Wednesday.

Under the current rules, foreign property investments can only be made
through the name of a Cambodian national, and many are unwilling to risk
losing their assets to unscrupulous local partners.

Information Minister Khieu Kanharith said the government is evaluating
the policy to ensure that foreigners will be allowed to own buildings
and apartments but not land.

"The important thing is that foreigners cannot own land... They can buy
things above the ground only," Khieu Kanharith told AFP.

He said that the plan would attract more foreign investment and more
skilled foreign workers to the impoverished nation.

"This policy will boost our economic growth," Khieu Kanharith added.

The move comes after the private sector last year urged the government
to allow foreign ownership of certain properties like apartments or
factories, saying a liberalised real estate market would spur the economy.

Cambodia's investment law was amended in 2005 to allow foreign ownership
of buildings, but the legislation has yet to be implemented and the
initiative has floundered.

Despite current restrictions, billion-dollar skyscraper projects and
sprawling satellite cities promising to radically alter Phnom Penh have
bloomed over the past few years.

They are mainly backed by South Korean companies working through local
partners.

After decades of turmoil, Cambodia has emerged as a rising economy in
the region -- posting average 11 percent growth over the past three
years on the back of strong tourism and garment sectors.

But officials warn that the country, which still relies on international
aid for half of its annual budget, must diversify by seeking more varied
foreign investments.

Khmer Boxing - Angkor's Kbach Kun Boran Khmer

Khmer Boxing - Eh Phuthong High Light

Khmer Boxing - Eh Phuthong vs. Andrus Kirn (73 kg)

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Tourist visits double at Preah Vihear Despite a Dispute Between Thai and Cambodian Soldiers

Tuesday, August 19, 2008
eTravel Blackboard

Domestic tourism to Preah Vihear has more than doubled since its UNESCO
World Heritage listing on July 7, despite the dispute between Thai and
Cambodian soldiers which has been centred on the temple grounds.

The presence of machine guns and rocket launchers could not deter proud
Cambodians from visiting Preah Vihear to pay their respects to the
mythic 11th-century temple and its new hoard of guardians.

"Since Thai troops entered the temple, there have been fewer foreign
tourists, but the number of locals visiting has doubled," general
director of the Preah Vihear National Authority, Pheng Sameoun told the
Post on Sunday.

According to Pheng Sameoun, the dispute has stirred such a torrent of
interest in the temple that, if the surrounding infrastructure was
developed considerably, it could come to rival the Angkor Wat temple
complex as Cambodia's leading domestic holiday destination.

Chheang Solina, 22-year-old Phnom Penh high school student, said she was
shocked last Sunday when she saw Thai and Cambodian soldiers occupying
the temple, but was reinvigorated walking through its corridors.

"When I arrived at the top of the temple, and breathed in the fresh air,
I had a feeling of great pride to be born as a Khmer," she said.

She added that she was happy because the Naga statues seemed to eat the
Thai troops.

Bad roads and high transportation costs didn't stop Seng Vireak, 19, and
his family from making the daylong trip from the capital, bearing food
and supplies to hand out.

Many locals have been witnessed making donations of money to monks and
soldiers living there.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Cambodian King returns home from China

PHNOM PENH, Aug. 15 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni returned home Friday from China, where he had attended the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.

Cambodian government officials and royal family members welcomed King Sihamoni at the Phnom Penh International Airport.

Sihamoni, along with former King Norodom Sihanouk and former Queen Norodom Monineath Sihanouk, left for Beijing on Aug. 1 for the Olympic Games.

During his stay in China, Sihamoni met with Chinese President Hu Jintao on Aug. 11.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Troops 'to leave border temple'

Thursday, 14 August 2008
BBC News

Cambodia and Thailand have reached a deal to withdraw most of their troops from territory both claim at a hill-top temple, Cambodian officials say.

The agreement was reached at a meeting of military officers from the two countries on Wednesday.

Only a small contingent from each side would remain at Preah Vihear temple, a top general said.

More than 1,000 troops have been engaged in a stand-off at the ancient site for a month.

An international court awarded the temple to Cambodia in 1962, but land surrounding it remains the subject of rival territorial claims.

The decision by Unesco in June to list Preah Vihear as a World Heritage Site reignited lingering tensions over unresolved border disputes between the two countries.

'Avoid confrontation'

The troop withdrawal would take place in the next few days, Cambodian General Neang Phat told journalists.

"Both sides agreed to redeploy the troops, who are stationed in the pagoda, to the lowest possible number in order to avoid confrontation with each other," he said.

Foreign ministers from the two countries will meet early next week for more talks, the general said.

The dispute erupted on 15 July. Thai troops moved into an area both sides claim after Cambodian guards arrested three Thai protesters there. Both sides then rapidly increased their military presence at the site.

Earlier this month, Cambodia accused Thailand of occupying a second border temple, Ta Moan.

The row was fuelled by domestic politics on both sides. Anti-government protest groups in Thailand exploited the issue to attack the ruling coalition, which had initially backed the Unesco listing.

The troop build-up also came just days before a general election in Cambodia - and the temple issue came to dominate the polls.

But tensions now appear to be easing somewhat, with both sides calling for dialogue.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Prime minister orders road to Preah Vihear to be paved

Tuesday, 12 August 2008
Written by Sambath Teth
The Phnom Penh Post

The ongoing dispute with Thailand over territory around the Hindu ruins lends urgency to infrastructure improvements

Bulldozers, excavators and other road construction equipment have been sent by military engineers to Anlong Veng and Trapaing Prasat districts to help construct an 80-kilometre road connecting Anlong Veng town to Preah Vihear temple as interest in the historic ruins grows.

"I got orders from Prime Minister Hun Sen to pave the road from Anlong Veng district town to Sa Em village, Kantout commune, Choam Ksan district, Preah Vihear and to finish it as soon as possible," said Kvan Siem, commander of military engineers at General Command Headquarters.

Kvan Siem expects that the road will take just over a year to complete.

"It is a very important road. We need it to be finished as soon as possible in order to make traffic flow smoothly," Kvan Siem said.

"The government expects more people to be travelling to the site and has ordered the road to be built as soon as possible," said one RCAF general who asked to remain anonymous.

While the amount of funds for the construction of the road has not yet been released, Hun Sen advised Deputy Prime Minister Sok An in a Council of Ministers meeting on Friday to use charitable funds, including money raised by the Bayon TV foundation, to pave the road.

Seng Savorn, director of the Council of Ministers, said that government funds will be used to pave the stretch of road from Anlong Veng district to Sa Em, and the funds from Bayon TV's foundation will be used to construct a connecting road up the hill to the temple.

Huot Kheang Veng, assistant to Hun Mana, Bayon TV's director, said that he is unaware of Hun Sen's order to use the station's foundation funds to link to Preah Vihear temple, an increasingly popular tourist site.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Cambodia reasserts claim over border temples

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia: Cambodia reasserted its claim Tuesday over ancient border temples that also are claimed by Thailand ahead of talks next week on lingering territorial disputes.

The foreign ministers of the two countries are to meet Monday in Thailand to try to defuse military standoffs along their shared border — first near the 11th century Preah Vihear temple and then at the 13th century Ta Moan Thom temple.

Ta Moan Thom is several hundred miles (kilometers) west of Preah Vihear, where Cambodian and Thai soldiers have been facing off for four weeks in a dispute over 1.8 square miles (4.6 square kilometers) of nearby land.

The Cambodian Foreign Ministry said in a statement Tuesday that Ta Moan Thom "is clearly situated in the Cambodian territory."

It said a nearby temple, Ta Moan Toch, which has been occupied by Thai troops also belongs to Cambodia.
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Thailand has also laid claims to both temples.

Late last month, Cambodian officials said Thai soldiers had occupied the site and prevented Cambodian troops from entering. Thai military officials countered that their troops had been in the area for years.

Last week, the standoff there appeared to have eased, with both sides pulling back their soldiers.

But Thai troops have reoccupied the area since then, Maj. Ho Bunthy, a Cambodian army commander in the area, said Tuesday.

He said about 50 Cambodian soldiers have now positioned themselves in close proximity to about 120 Thai troops who are stationed on the temple grounds and in a camp nearby.

"The Thai troops are guarding a gate to the temple, and Cambodian soldiers are standing just outside the gate," he said in a telephone interview.

The two countries share about 500 miles (800 kilometers) of land border, which has not been fully demarcated.

The dispute surrounding the Preah Vihear temple escalated last month after UNESCO approved Cambodia's application to have it named a World Heritage Site. Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej had backed the bid, sparking demonstrations by anti-government protesters who claimed the temple's new status would undermine Thailand's claim to the surrounding area.

The dispute has continued despite two rounds of talks since last month, with the countries referring to two different maps.

Cambodia uses a French colonial map demarcating the border, which Thailand says favors Cambodia. Thailand relies on a map drawn up later with American technical assistance

Cambodia reasserts claim over border temples

The Associated Press
Published: August 12, 2008

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia: Cambodia reasserted its claim Tuesday over ancient border temples that also are claimed by Thailand ahead of talks next week on lingering territorial disputes.

The foreign ministers of the two countries are to meet Monday in Thailand to try to defuse military standoffs along their shared border — first near the 11th century Preah Vihear temple and then at the 13th century Ta Moan Thom temple.

Ta Moan Thom is several hundred miles (kilometers) west of Preah Vihear, where Cambodian and Thai soldiers have been facing off for four weeks in a dispute over 1.8 square miles (4.6 square kilometers) of nearby land.

The Cambodian Foreign Ministry said in a statement Tuesday that Ta Moan Thom "is clearly situated in the Cambodian territory."

It said a nearby temple, Ta Moan Toch, which has been occupied by Thai troops also belongs to Cambodia.

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Thailand has also laid claims to both temples.

Late last month, Cambodian officials said Thai soldiers had occupied the site and prevented Cambodian troops from entering. Thai military officials countered that their troops had been in the area for years.

Last week, the standoff there appeared to have eased, with both sides pulling back their soldiers.

But Thai troops have reoccupied the area since then, Maj. Ho Bunthy, a Cambodian army commander in the area, said Tuesday.

He said about 50 Cambodian soldiers have now positioned themselves in close proximity to about 120 Thai troops who are stationed on the temple grounds and in a camp nearby.

"The Thai troops are guarding a gate to the temple, and Cambodian soldiers are standing just outside the gate," he said in a telephone interview.

The two countries share about 500 miles (800 kilometers) of land border, which has not been fully demarcated.

The dispute surrounding the Preah Vihear temple escalated last month after UNESCO approved Cambodia's application to have it named a World Heritage Site. Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej had backed the bid, sparking demonstrations by anti-government protesters who claimed the temple's new status would undermine Thailand's claim to the surrounding area.

The dispute has continued despite two rounds of talks since last month, with the countries referring to two different maps.

Cambodia uses a French colonial map demarcating the border, which Thailand says favors Cambodia. Thailand relies on a map drawn up later with American technical assistance.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Brief Introduction to Cambodia

Cambodia

The Kingdom of Cambodia (pronounced /kæmˈboʊdɪə/, formerly known as Kampuchea (/kampuˈtɕiːə/), , transliterated: Preăh Réachéanachâkr Kâmpŭchea) is a country in South East Asia with a population of over 13 million people. Cambodia is the successor state of the once powerful Hindu and Buddhist Khmer Empire, which ruled most of the Indochinese Peninsula between the eleventh and fourteenth centuries.

A citizen of Cambodia is usually identified as "Cambodian" or "Khmer," though the latter strictly refers to ethnic Khmers. Most Cambodians are Theravada Buddhists of Khmer extraction, but the country also has a substantial number of predominantly Muslim Cham, as well as ethnic Chinese, Vietnamese and small animist hill tribes.

The country borders Thailand to its west and northwest, Laos to its northeast, and Vietnam to its east and southeast. In the south it faces the Gulf of Thailand. The geography of Cambodia is dominated by the Mekong river (colloquial Khmer: Tonle Thom or "the great river") and the Tonlé Sap ("the fresh water lake"), an important source of fish.

Cambodia's main industries are garments, tourism, and construction. In 2007, foreign visitors to Angkor Wat alone almost hit the 4 million mark.[1] In 2005, oil and natural gas deposits were found beneath Cambodia's territorial water, and once commercial extraction begins in 2011, the oil revenues could profoundly affect Cambodia's economy.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambodia

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Cambodians pray for peace in temple standoff.

Buddhist monks and government officials held a peace vigil Friday at an ancient temple near disputed border land, lighting incense and praying in the shadow of armed troops from Cambodia and Thailand.

Mist hovered over the mountaintop Preah Vihear temple as some 1,000 people prayed for an end to the tense standoff that started July 15 and has fueled nationalist passions in both countries.

"We are gathering here to pray to the souls of our ancestors asking for peace," said Cambodian Tourism Minister Thong Khon, referring to Khmer kings who built the temple from the 9th to 11th centuries. "We also pray for success in our defense of our territory."

Prime Minister Hun Sen's wife, Bun Rany, also attended the ceremony.

"Her presence gave a moral booster to our people and soldiers to keep up their bravery in defending our territory and the temple," Thong Khon said, adding that she distributed food and sleeping gear to Cambodian villagers and soldiers.

Thailand and Cambodia both have long-standing claims to 1.8 square miles (4.6 square kilometers) of land near the temple. The dispute flared earlier this month when UNESCO approved Cambodia's application to have the complex named a World Heritage site. Thailand's Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej had backed the bid, sparking anti-government demonstrations near the temple.

Both sides have stationed soldiers near the site.

About 800 troops from Cambodia and 400 from Thailand remain at a pagoda near the temple complex, despite a tentative agreement reached by foreign ministers Monday to redeploy them in an effort to ease tension.

"There is no order to redeploy our troops yet," said Lt. Gen. Chea Saran, a Cambodian deputy commander of the army.

"As long as Thailand is not redeploying its troops, why should we?" he added.

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen has said his government was ready to go along with a proposed redeployment of Cambodian troops but will not act without Thailand taking the same step. Thailand's government says the matter is being handled by the National Security Council.

Cambodian soldiers stood guard with weapons in their hands during Friday's ceremony, which included 67 Buddhist monks who chanted blessings along the stone path leading to the temple.

In 1962, the International Court of Justice awarded Preah Vihear and the land it occupies to Cambodia. The decision still rankles many Thais even though the temple is culturally Cambodian, sharing the Hindu-influenced style of the more famous Angkor complex.

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