KI Media: “TOR SOU! (Struggle!​)” plus 24 more

KI Media: “TOR SOU! (Struggle!​)” plus 24 more


TOR SOU! (Struggle!​)

Posted: 29 Jul 2011 11:59 AM PDT

Dear Countrymen and Friends,

You are cordially invited to review my new PowerPoint, "TOR SOU!" (Struggle!)," accompanied by a Khmer song performed by the Messenger Band. The photos require no explanation.

I hope you will find the slide show informative and educational.

Sincerely,

Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVVweQUT2L8&feature=player_embedded

KOUL Panha - ED of COMFREL, Receive Asia's Premier Prize, the Ramon Magsaysay Award

Posted: 29 Jul 2011 09:40 AM PDT

Dear all,

The Executive Director of the Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (COMFREL), Mr. KOUL Panha, is being recognied for his work by the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation (RMAF).

Please see the attached file for details.

Best regards,

COMFREL

Politiktoo​ns No. 171 : "The Debt Ceilling Deadlock"

Posted: 29 Jul 2011 09:11 AM PDT

Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://politiktoons.blogspot.com and also at http://sacrava.blogspot.com)

Introducing Dahnie Tran of Boston

Posted: 29 Jul 2011 09:07 AM PDT

Fri, Jul 29, 2011
Originally posted at: http://blog.khmerican.com/post/8214166920/introducing-dahnie-tran


Dahnie Tran was born and raised in Lowell, Massachusetts. Growing up, she was exposed to the vibrant Khmer culture — from Sinn Sisamouth's golden voice being heard in restaurants to the fragrant incense that wafted out of Buddhist temples nearby. It was a positive experience for her to be surrounded by many other Cambodians who shared the same passion as her, and she desired to extend what she experienced to other Khmer communities throughout America.

By the time Tran began Wellesley College in 2007, she made it her lifelong mission to unify and strengthen Khmer communities throughout America. "While most of my friends at school decided on studying abroad in developed nations such as France or Singapore, my heart was set on Cambodia where I knew I could never escape from even if I tried. That's how strongly I felt about Srok Khmer," said Tran.

She spent an entire summer in Cambodia, learning about the rich culture and riveting history of the developing country. Every day, she ventured out on her own to conduct interviews and informally talk to Cambodia's locals—from the street "tuk tuk" driver to the rural rice paddy farmer.

"I asked them about the state of their country and most important, how they felt about it all," said Tran.

After learning about their stories, Tran was so moved and inspired by them that she dedicated the rest of her college career focusing on Cambodian-related topics so as to expose as much of her country's culture and history to those around her. Tran stands firmly behind Khmerican's vision on connecting Khmer communities throughout the United States and beyond. "People will start talking then engaging in discussions with one another. Eventually, we will all be tighter, more cohesive Khmer community in America and even beyond!" said Tran.

Tran joins Khmerican as a staff reporter focusing on social issues and culture.

Hor 5 Hong's letter to Marty Natalegawa regarding the ICJ temporary order

Posted: 29 Jul 2011 01:56 AM PDT


The Spirit of the Khmer Lotus Revolution (in Khmer, French and English)

Posted: 29 Jul 2011 01:31 AM PDT

Cambodia's Burgeoning Youth Population Increasingly Seduced By The "perfect High" - Report by US Amb. Carol Rodley

Posted: 29 Jul 2011 12:08 AM PDT

Reference id 10PHNOMPENH113
Subject Cambodia's Burgeoning Youth Population Increasingly Seduced By The "perfect High"
Origin Embassy Phnom Penh (Cambodia)
Cable time Wed, 17 Feb 2010 07:29 UTC
Classification UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Source http://wikileaks.org/cable/2010/02/10PHNOMPENH113.html
History First published on Mon, 11 Jul 2011 23:11 UTC

VZCZCXRO5438
RR RUEHCHI RUEHDT RUEHHM RUEHNH
DE RUEHPF #0113/01 0480729
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 170729Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY PHNOM PENH
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 1675
INFO RUCNASE/ASEAN MEMBER COLLECTIVE
RUEHNA/DEA WASHDC 0007
RHHMUNA/USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMUNB/JIATF WESTHide headerUNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 PHNOM PENH 000113

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/MLS, EAP/RSP, DRL, INL/AAE -- BRANDON NEUKOM
BANGKOK FOR DEA AND TCAO -- SCOTT ROLSTON

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SNAR [Narcotics] PGOV [Internal Governmental Affairs] PREF [Refugees] PREL [External Political Relations] ASEC [Security] EAID [Foreign Economic Assistance] CB [Cambodia]
SUBJECT: CAMBODIA'S BURGEONING YOUTH POPULATION
INCREASINGLY SEDUCED BY THE "PERFECT HIGH"

REF: A. 2009 PHNOM PENH 391 (MINI-DUBLIN)
¶B. 2009 PHNOM PENH 203 (METH BUST)

SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED - NOT FOR INTERNET DISTRIBUTION

¶1. (SBU) SUMMARY: A recent uptick in drug use, particularly
ice - the crystallized form of methamphetamine preferred by
Cambodia's new urban elite - has resulted in increased
scrutiny of the social triggers and available treatment for
Cambodia's young population. Reported increases in teens
holding "drug parties," domestic violence, rape, and gang
activity have a potential to affect social stability and in
part have been attributed to lack of jobs, inadequate
recreational activities for the youth, the wide availability
of methamphetamines, and absence of effective drug treatment
facilities. Drug treatment centers have long been accused of
human rights abuses, and the Royal Government of Cambodia
(RGC) is just now beginning to grapple with a response. As
the youth population continues to swell and job creation
continues to diminish or stagnate, there is an acute need to
address drug dependence in Cambodia. END SUMMARY.

The Youth Problem
-----------------

¶2. (SBU) A recent Interagency Conflict Assessment revealed
that the growing youth population and low law enforcement
capacity are two of the most significant issues threatening
Cambodia's political, economic and social stability.
Cambodia enjoyed double digit economic growth over the past
decade. High growth rates have created expectations of
continued prosperity among young people in a society where
the median age is 25 and 24% of the population is between the
ages of 15 and 25. As the global economic crisis hit
Cambodia's export-driven economy, a widening gap developed
between expectations and reality. The effect struck
particularly hard on a naive Cambodian youth population who
are slowly realizing that their expectations of easy jobs and
money may be left unfulfilled. As a result, they are overly
susceptible to negative social forces, and rates of drug
abuse and illicit activity are on the rise.

¶3. (SBU) Stories of "spoiled children" running into trouble
with the law litter the local media. These same teens in
rehabilitation centers tell of selling gifts from their
parents, such as motos and jewelry, to buy drugs. One
rehabilitation resident stated he spent $1000 of his parent's
money in one month on drugs, a huge sum in a country where
the average family lives on less than a dollar a day. GDP
per capita has steadily increased over the past decade, with
only a slight drop in 2009 due to the global economic crisis.
While reliable estimates on the size of Cambodia's emerging
middle class do not exist, one of the country's leading think
tank directors believes it to be anywhere from 5-10% of the
population. For the Cambodian youth that is part of this
growing middle class, the new concept of disposable income
appears to be both seductive and dangerous.


The Drug Problem
----------------

¶4. (SBU) Officially, law enforcement and education leaders
state that the majority of middle class youth regularly
attend school, stay out of trouble, and drug use has
decreased due to "Prime Minister Hun Sen's crackdown on drugs
and violence." However, this assessment does not necessarily
reflect the reality on the ground. Although the exact number
of illicit drug users in Cambodia is not known, the National
Authority for Combating Drugs (NACD) estimates it to be
6,000. According to NGOs and law enforcement experts working
in the field, the actual figures are likely to be much higher
- the United Nations has estimated that as many as half a
million people in Cambodia may be drug users. Experts from
the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations
Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and others have reported
sharp spikes in drug use and increased production. According
to DEA, there has been an uptick in regional contacts
discussing the amount of drugs coming from Cambodia, and
large lab busts indicate that Cambodia is no longer simply an
easy transit route (Ref B). Off the record, the same RGC
officials who laud the government's ability to control
delinquent behavior told Poloff that there has been a sharp
increase in violence and drug use among youth specifically
from middle class and wealthy families.


PHNOM PENH 00000113 002 OF 004


¶5. (SBU) University students corroborate this by stories of
rising drug use and premarital sex at school (both taboo in
Cambodian culture). A Muslim student from Kampong Cham
University told Poloff that approximately "65% of students
take meth regularly. It is cheap, cool, easy to access, and
then they can't stop." According to another student, "Five
years ago it was mainly gangs - now everyone does it." An
administrator for a semi-private drug rehabilitation center
in Phnom Penh stated that just under half of his clients are
students, with another third just out of school and the
remainder social "undesirables" such as the homeless, sex
workers, and street children who are placed there by the
authorities. Middle class teens regularly buy easily
available drugs and are known to rent rooms in guest houses
with friends to hold "drug parties." Apparently this has
become so widespread that in early February the district
Governor of one of the more notorious drug areas in Phnom
Penh warned guest house owners that failure to stop such
gatherings would result in their businesses being shut down.
High-end night clubs throughout Phnom Penh are filled with
youth who have enough money to both enter the clubs, and
purchase the party drug of choice - ice - which is readily
available and sells for approximately $40-$50 a dose.

¶6. (SBU) The effects of ice are widely known - a highly
addictive crystallized form of methamphetamine which attacks
the pleasure centers of the brain, can cause sleeplessness,
paranoia, depression, hyper sexuality, and with prolonged
high-dose use, stimulate psychosis and the potential for
extreme violence. Dubbed the "perfect high," the ice
return-to-use rate after twice using has been documented as
high as 95% (compared to 20% for heroin or crack). Studies
in the U.S. show strong correlations between meth use and
increased criminal activity, domestic violence, child abuse,
and rape. According to an expert who has been working on
organized crime issues in Cambodia for over 10 years, meth
use is "off the scale." Describing meth use as a "cancer
eating the Cambodian family and culture from the inside out,"
the expert warned that the paranoia associated with meth and
the level of Post Traumatic Stress in the country from the
Khmer Rouge era has created a "dangerous brew" where
individuals go from normal to extreme violence in a fraction
of a second. Although there is currently no empirical
evidence linking it to drug use in Cambodia, local NGO
Licadho reports the number of rape cases has been steadily
increasing over the past few years, with approximately 60% of
last year's cases involving victims who were minors. Also
disturbing is the fact that many of the perpetrators were
also minors.

The Social and Economic Problem
-------------------------------

¶7. (SBU) Besides availability, experts believe that the rise
in drug use among the middle class youth can be attributed to
a change in the culture where both parents now work and have
less control over the daily activities of their children.
Overcrowding in schools, little interaction between students
and teachers, and no linkage between schools and parents have
been described as obstacles to controlling drug use.
Furthermore, although a principal at one of the prestigious
high schools in Phnom Penh stated that drug use decreased
since he constructed a huge gate around the school, locked
students in during class time, and began providing drug
awareness training, he indicated that parents lack knowledge
about drugs and should be more involved in their children's
lives. He also blamed a lack of alternatives for youth, and
believed that more sports opportunities or vocational
training would help to decrease drug use among the idle
middle class.

¶8. (SBU) In addition to the social effects, the economic
burden of meth abuse can be substantial. The costs
associated with meth use in Cambodia are just beginning to
emerge and can be seen in the form of lab cleanups, law
enforcement including the arrest and incarceration of drug
users, and social and health services. Many of these
expenses currently fall on NGOs and international donors.
According to experts, it is likely that the percentage of the
Cambodian population addicted to meth at the very least
equals that in the U.S. where it is estimated to be at 0.1%.
The economic cost of meth use in the U.S. has been estimated
by the RAND Corporation to be approximately $23.4 billion,
including the burden of addiction, premature mortality, lost
productivity, and drug treatment. Although Cambodia's

PHNOM PENH 00000113 003 OF 004


population is much smaller with a lower rate for services,
its economy is nevertheless ill equipped to handle the costs
associated with drug addiction.

The Treatment and Human Rights Problem
--------------------------------------

¶9. (SBU) In 2008 the NACD reported that 2,382 people were
detained in government rehabilitation centers. Official
numbers for 2009 are not yet available, however an official
at the Cambodian Anti-Drug Department stated that
specifically the number of youth sent for treatment has
increased. According to a deputy director of the NACD,
parents with money try to hide their children's drug use by
secretly sending them to rehabilitation centers, often
abroad. This phenomenon was confirmed by Channarith Chheng,
director of a local think tank, who stated the majority send
their children to private clinics in China or Australia - due
both to the poor quality of rehabilitation centers in
Cambodia and the readily accepted story that their child has
gone abroad to visit family or study. Culturally, drug use
is unmentionable, and certainly does not happen among "good
families," which may explain why so many of the middle and
upper class drug users are secretly sent to government
rehabilitation centers or abroad for treatment.

¶10. (SBU) Given the reports of human rights abuses and lack
of treatment at local rehabilitation centers, it is not
surprising that those who can send their children outside
Cambodia for treatment. The eleven government-run
rehabilitation centers in Cambodia are boot camps at best
and, according to a recent Human Rights Watch (HRW) report,
"torture centers" at worst. Drawing from interviews
conducted in 2009 with 74 people including 53 who had been
detained one or more times in a government center, the HRW
report details cruel and inhuman treatment of drug users and
other "undesirables" sent to Cambodia's rehabilitation
centers. Such treatment includes being shocked with electric
batons, whipped with twisted electrical wire, beaten, forced
to perform arduous exercise and labor, and sexual abuse.
Although he realized it is unrealistic, HRW author Joseph
Amon told Poloff that his recommendation to immediately and
permanently close all rehabilitation centers was intended to
"spark discussion" of alternatives. He is particularly
concerned that NGOs are working with the centers rather than
looking at ways to support change.

¶11. (SBU) Indeed, few deny the validity of human rights
concerns in these centers, where the majority of detainees
are involuntary and approximately 1/3 are under the age of
eighteen. Poloff visited one private and four government
centers, and was openly told of involuntary methods to
control the detainees, such as intense exercise and tying
detainees up, and was shown electric shock wands which were
"used fairly regularly" because the detainees could "get
violent."

¶12. (SBU) Most RGC officials insist clients at the
rehabilitation centers are there voluntarily; however the
concept is far from clear. During a recent speech, the head
of the NACD told the audience that "all drug users go to the
centers voluntarily, and if they don't volunteer, we arrest
them." This seemed to be the case in early December when the
NACD was looking for volunteers for a human drug trial of a
relatively unknown substance, Bong Sen, provided by the
Vietnamese to "cure drug addiction." When volunteers did not
materialize, drug users were rounded up and taken to the
local police station where the director of the trial, Dr.
Meas, told Poloff he "negotiated and convinced them to
volunteer." Bong Sen had not been registered with the
Ministry of Health for use in Cambodia, and information on
the substance, its registration, and whether it had been
subject to an ethical review was not made available to the
"volunteers" or organizations involved, thereby foregoing
informed and voluntary consent.

¶13. (SBU) At the Center for Education Correction and Vocation
Training for the Victims of Drugs (CECVTVD), a center which
Poloff visited but to which HRW was denied access, 10-20
detainees to a room are padlocked in from the outside at
night and for a portion of the day after lunch. According to
the director, the center receives about 20 new clients each
month, 90% of whom are brought by parents or the police who
have been asked by parents for assistance, and at least half
of whom are students. According to the director, drug use is

PHNOM PENH 00000113 004 OF 004


"shameful" and "unspeakable" for the family. Children as
young as 10 have been housed at his facility and do not go to
schoo during their months of "rehabilitation."

¶14. (SBU) Expenses related to drug treatment are required by
law to be paid by the RGC. Nevertheless, these centers
readily accept donations from parents, who also bring food
and other items of comfort during the usual 3-6 month stint
in the center. According to the HRW report and observers,
while the centers take in the homeless, street children and
sex workers, the majority of clients are from well-off
families who can afford a $50-$200 a month "donation." These
families can also better afford the alleged bribes needed to
secure a spot in a detention center rather than being sent to
prison after a drug related arrest. Given the lack of
treatment provided at the centers, the profits can be high
and costs low.

Working on the Problems
-----------------------

¶15. (SBU) Although Cambodian officials dismissed both the
report and its recommendation to close the centers, attention
to the issue has recently sparked discussion about
alternative forms of treatment. Instead of working within
the centers to provide health and other essential services -
as at least one NGO attempted before cancelling the program
due to human rights issues - donors are now discussing ways
to increase community services to eventually eliminate the
need for residential centers. The idea is that, with more
treatment options available for drug users, the numbers sent
to government-run rehabilitation centers will slowly
decrease. The Australian government has pledged funding for
community services through its HIV/AIDS Asia Regional Program
(HAARP). UNODC has an ongoing pilot program focusing on
community based treatment in a few provinces. The head of
NACD is receptive to changes in the approach to drug
treatment, recently requested UNODC's program be expanded
from the original 10 to 350 communes, and indicated that most
of the centers will be closed by 2015. At that point, the
NACD hopes to have more community based treatment options
available, and will also have one "center of excellence" in
Sihanoukville which is currently being built with Vietnamese
funding. After a recent meeting with government officials,
UNODC Regional Representative Gary Lewis stated he believes
that the government is "concerned" by human rights abuse
allegations in the HRW report and their intention to find
alternatives is "sincere."

¶16. (SBU) At the last Mini-Dublin meeting, donors discussed
the need to focus on a health and community response to the
drug problem rather than a law-enforcement approach (Ref A).
A prominent Cambodian intellectual whose own cousin is in
China for drug treatment stated that "drug use among
teenagers is increasing, and the government alone cannot
control and manage its spread." He believes civil society
can play an important role and that education, public
awareness, job opportunities, sport and other cultural
activities are the core solution to the drug problem. Others
echo his views.

¶17. (SBU) While WHO, UNODC and others provide public
awareness and are beginning to focus more on community based
treatment, the Embassy is enhancing life skills training in
schools, building capacity in health care, constructing
sports infrastructure throughout the country, and has an
increased emphasis on programs and opportunities for
Cambodia's youth. However, until the job market is ready to
absorb the approximately 200,000 youth leaving high school or
university each year, the potential for increased drug use
and associated economic burdens and social instability
remains a real concern. Moreover, we will continue ongoing
dialogs regarding involuntary confinement and other alleged
human rights abuses at senior levels in an effort to
eliminate or mitigate the negative impact of the centers
until alternative forms of treatment are expanded to reach a
wider population.

RODLEY

The Silk Road to Australian drug treatment: WikiLeaks cable [-Hun Xen's nephews and nieces sent abroad for drug treatment under the guise of study?]

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 11:56 PM PDT

Rich Cambodian parents are secretly sending their drug-addicted children for detox in Australia and China to avoid the social stigma of drug use and the poor quality of rehabilitation centres in Cambodia.

The details of a rising drug problem in Cambodia are buried in one of 777 US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks two weeks ago in a rare large dump of every cable from an American embassy, in this case the embassy in Phnom Penh.

The country, which emerged in the 1990s from decades of civil war to become one of the region's best performing economies, is struggling to deal with an explosion in drug use caused by Cambodia's porous borders, indigenous drug industry, rapidly expanding young urban population and "ruthless gangster" business elite.

Under the tabloid-style heading "Burgeoning Youth Population increasingly Seduced by the 'Perfect High'", US ambassador Carol Rodley details stories of "drug parties", violence, rape and "spoiled children" who spend as much as $1000 of their "parent's money in one month on drugs, a huge sum in a country where the average family lives on less than a dollar a day".


With the use of ice, the "party drug of choice", spreading from gangs into the mainstream community (the UN estimates "as many as half a million" drug users in the country), the medical need for treatment and rehabilitation has collided with cultural taboos over drug use. To most Cambodians, "drug use is unmentionable … and certainly does not happen among 'good families'."


This has resulted in rich families trying "to hide their children's drug use by secretly sending them to rehabilitation centers, often abroad … the majority send their children to private clinics in China or Australia" with the "readily accepted story that their child has gone abroad to visit family or study".

Further compounding the problem with local treatment is the poor state of Cambodia's 11 rehabilitation centres, which, according to the ambassador "are boot camps at best and … 'torture centres' at worst". Treatment includes "being shocked with electric batons, whipped with twisted electrical wire, beaten, forced to perform arduous exercise and labor, and sexual abuse".

Despite these problems there is growing attention on the issue in Cambodia, with a slow increase in "community services to eventually eliminate the need for residential centres" and the importance of "civil society" as a core solution to drug use. The US ambassador singled out the Australian government for its pledge to fund community services through the HIV/AIDS Asia Regional Program.

While US activities in South-East Asian countries such as Cambodia may not grab the headlines compared to Afghanistan or Iraq, cables such as this give a glimpse into the massive health and social work that occupies much of international diplomacy.

Historical Context for Vietnamization of Cambodia (e.g. Viettel/Metfone; Hun Sen's rise to power)

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 11:54 PM PDT

Brother Enemy–the War after the War
A History of Indochina Since the Fall of Saigon
By Nayan Chanda
(MacMillan Publishing Co., New York, 1986)
Excerpts from Chapter 10 (A Red Christmas)

A Backdoor Entry for the Front

An interesting glimpse of the behind-the-scenes Vietnamese preparation for launching the Cambodian front was given by Dinh Can, a former officer of the South Vietnamese army engineering corps.  Can got off rather "lightly" from the reeducation camp for old-regime officers run by Hanoi… His suspicion that the Vietnamese were planning something in Cambodia had grown since the summer of 1978 when orders had come for urgent repair on routes leading to Cambodia.  Since October, Vietnam.  Theese units had actually occupied stretches of Cambodian territory along the border.  In mid-November the Vietnamese army had launched a big operation in Cambodia's Kratie Province along Route 13.  The bloody battled had ended with near decimation of a Khmer Rouge division and had secured the area for use as a "liberated zone".  But its intended purpose was not clear to Can of red dust at his work headquarters near the border.  To his surprise, the visitors were none other than Le Duc Tho and General Dong Van Cong, deputy commander of the Seventh Military Region.  They had come to supervise the launching of the Cambodian resistance organization and the installation of a forward headquarters for the Vietnamese army.


The site chosen for unveiling the newest Cambodian liberation front—the Kampuchean National United Front for the National Salvation (KNUFNS)—was two miles inside Cambodia.  It was a small clearing in the middle of a rubber plantation east of the Cambodian township of Snoul… On the morning of December 2, 1978, several thousand Khmers gathered in the bright sunshine to witness the formal launching of the KNUFNS.  Most of the assembled men and women had come in a convoy of trucks from Khmer refugee camps in Vietnam.  Several hundred front soldiers composed of deserters from Khmer Rouge divisions as well as ones trained in Vietnam also had assembled, proudly sporting their new green uniforms and caps.  A newly written national anthem was sung as dozens of newly fashioned red-and-yellow front flags fluttered in a gentle breeze.


One after another, fourteen members of the front Central Committee were given bouquets of flowers brought from Vietnam as they were introduced to the cheering crowd.  Front chairman Heng Samrin read out the KNUFNS program as those assembled shouted in approval with raised fists.  After the meeting, Heng Samrin walked up to thank Le Duc Tho, who had watched the ceremony from a distance like a proud mother hen.  "I did not think you would have done things so perfectly," a beaming Samrin told Tho.


After the meeting, resistance army units and the front leaders set out to visit villages along the border from which Khmer Rouge units had withdrawn.  They explained to the population the eleven-point program of the front to oust Pol Pot regime and restore family life, markets, money, and religion and to put an end to the border war with Vietnam.  A radio station in Ho Chi Minh City, calling itself "Voice of the Kampuchean People," began broadcasting the front program and reports of the struggle.  Thousands of leaflets calling for an uprising against the Pol Pot regime were dropped by Vietnamese aircraft over Cambodian provinces close to the border.


The founding of the front seemed like a rerun of an old movie.  Twenty-eight years after the Vietnamese helped to set up the first Cambodian national liberation organization—the United Issarak Front—to fight against French rule and eight years after they joined hands with the anti-U.S. National United Front of Cambodia, the Vietnamese were back again promoting another "liberation struggle" in the neighboring country.  Even the Vietnamese leader in charge of training Khmer resistance cadres was the same Le Duch Tho who helped set up the United Issarak Front and had been in charge of a special politburo office for Cambodia since 1966.  However, the enemy this time was neither French colonialism nor U.S. imperialism but Hanoi's onetime Communist allies.


A striking symbol of the rerun to the old tradition of Cambodia-Vietnam collaboration was the new flag—five yellow towers on a red background.  This banner, originally used by the Khmer Issarak in the 1950s, was abandoned by the Pol Pot group in 1975 when Democratic Kampuchea adopted a three-towered red flag.


The symbolism was, however, lost on most Cambodians, whose principal concern was the life and death of families and friends still left under Khmer Rouge control.  It was the common hatred for the Pol Pot regime that had brought together under Vietnamese guidance the disparate collection of survivors—middle-class refugees, escapees, defectors.  Many of the assembled Khmers both on the dais and among the crowd harbored grave doubt about Vietnam's ulterior motives, but they saw no other alternative to seeking help to fight the murderous regime that seemed to threaten the existence of Cambodia.  The fourteen Central Committee members presented at the meeting represented that uneasy coalition.  Six of them, including Chairman Heng Samrin, were former Khmer Rouge, four were pro-Hanoi Cambodian Communists (Khmer Issarak), and the other four included urban intellectuals and a monk.


While the meeting was in progress, Vietnamese regular units ringed the area and antiaircraft gunners kept a wary eye on the horizon.  After the ceremony was over, Dinh Can and his men were ordered to clear a wooded area a little more than a mile inside Cambodia's Kratie Province to be used as the forward headquarters of the Vietnamese army.  Aluminum container boxes, which once dotted American bases in Vietnam, were brought in, thatched houses and bunkers built, electrical generators and radio equipment set up under the trees.  The headquarters, named Tien Phong, or "Vanguard," was soon to unleash a storm on Cambodia.

Aust backed opposition, anti-corruption in Cambodia: WikiLeaks

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 11:48 PM PDT

With the recent release of hundreds of cables from the US embassy in Phnom Penh, the WikiLeaks spotlight turns to Cambodia, a fast growing country of 15 million people and number seven on the list of recipient countries of Australian aid.

Confidential cables leaked include detailed diplomatic manoeuvring by the international community, especially the US, the UK, France, Japan and Australia, over the UN-sponsored Khmer Rouge Tribunal (KRT). The KRT is tasked with prosecuting former regime leaders responsible for the genocidal "Killing Fields" of the 1970s that saw several million people killed.

In 2009, Australia risked a breach of international unity when it sided with the Cambodian government against the United Nations on anti-corruption mechanisms for the KRT. Australia's main concerns appeared to be mission creep, cost and a desire to let the Cambodian people own the process.

One cable suggests Australian ambassador Margaret Adamson had inside knowledge of the court, saying "sources at the court told [Adamson] the Pre-Trial Chamber (PTC) had reached a decision on UN co-prosecutor Robert Petit's appeal to indict up to six additional suspects in a Case 3 at the KRT. She stated that the decision — which she did not reveal — was not being announced until the judges thought that the time was right."

There are also hints that Australia and the Cambodian expat community living in Australia are heavily involved in trying to bolster the opposition in Cambodia. One opposition MP told the US ambassador he would get more support locally by being a "lesser opposition voice in parliament" but more support from richer expats in Australia and elsewhere "by positioning himself as a strident voice" against the government. In 2007, media freedom was so "fragile", non-government candidates "had to buy airtime on the state-owned television network with Australian funding".


Of particular interest is one colourful cable describing Cambodia's "top 10 tycoons". One is Kith Meng, a dual Cambodian-Australian citizen with a BA from Australian National University. Kith Meng, aka "Mr Rough Stuff", is described in the US cable as a "ruthless gangster" and "is notorious for using his bodyguards to coerce others into brokering deals". As CEO of Royal Group of Companies, he runs the influential Cambodia Television Network, several gambling companies and is an "exclusive distributor of Canon products". He owns 45% of ANZ Royal Bank, the local joint-venture of ANZ bank.

Less successful in Phnom Penh than Kith Meng is Kevin Rudd's Asia Pacific Community proposal, with the Cambodian foreign minister Hor Namhong expressing "frustration" in a private meeting with the Americans in 2010 "that initiatives such as Australia's Asia Pacific Community (APC) result in duplication of existing frameworks such as that of APEC, ARF, EAS, and ASEAN". The ambassador noted that this echoed comments by the Cambodian Prime Minister in January and "indicated the timing of the APC is not right nor is its role in the region clear".

Yesterday, Crikey reported cables revealing that rich Cambodian parents are sending their drug-addicted children for detox in Australia and China to avoid the social stigma of drug use and the poor quality of rehabilitation centres in Cambodia. The details were buried in one of 777 US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks two weeks ago in a rare large dump of every cable from an American embassy.

Overall, Australia's engagement with Cambodia, especially Canberra's role in supporting the KRT, appears to be popular with the Cambodian people. The five main supporters of the KRT — the US, Japan, the UK, France and Australia — all having the most favourable ratings in a public opinion poll taken in 2008.

[Thai] Defense Council: Use GBC to Negotiate Troop Withdrawal

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 11:39 PM PDT

29 July 2011
Thai-ASEAN News Network

The Defense Council recommends the withdrawal of Thai and Cambodian troops from the disputed area around the Preah Vihear Temple to be discussed at the next meeting of the General Border Committee.

Defense Ministry spokesman Colonel Thanathip Sawangsaeng disclosed yesterday after a meeting of the Defense Council that the council suggested the government to negotiate with Cambodia through the General Border Committee on the troop withdrawal from the vicinity of the Preah Vihear Temple as ordered by the International Court of Justice.

Thanathip further said that the existing bilateral mechanisms with Cambodia will be used to talk about the matter and negotiations are needed to create better understanding between the two countries.


He noted that the Defense Ministry has assigned the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters's Border Affairs Department to coordinate with Cambodia to ensure transparent and equal operation on both sides.

However, the Defense Ministry spokesman affirmed that the situation along the Thai-Cambodian border remains peaceful and life goes on for villagers.

Thanathip added that the Defense Council also expressed condolence to families of military officers who were killed in the recent helicopter crashes in the Kaeng Krachan National Park in Petchaburi Province and provided moral support for all military personnel to carry on their duty.

Trade, tourism along Thai-Cambodian border active after World Court ruling

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 11:34 PM PDT

Friday, 29 July 2011
MCOT

Cross border trade at Chong Sa-ngam border crossing with neighboring Cambodia in Si Sa Ket on Sunday has reportedly been revived as many Cambodians queued up for the opening of the border crossing in the morning to exchange products with Thai traders.

Cambodians crossed the border to buy and sell large amounts of consumer products. Border trade activities were seen as active again amidst security provided by police officers from Phu Sing Police Station and local army rangers.

Apart from the trade, tourism along the Thai-Cambodian border was also boosted as many tourists have been visiting the area, asking for information about cross-border excursions to attractions such as Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom in Siem Reap, according to Hattachai Pengchaem, head of the trade and tourism operators association in Chong Sa-ngam.


Hattachai said that the return of the active trade and tourism can be attributed to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) or World Court July 18 rulings on the Thai-Cambodian border, adding that both Thai and Cambodian traders have expressed their confidence in the border situation.

The rulings applied to both Thailand and Cambodia, requiring that both countries withdraw troops from the disputed border area near Preah Vihear Temple.

Cambodian girl dies from bird flu: WHO

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 11:07 PM PDT

Jul 29, 2011
AFP

PHNOM PENH - A FOUR-YEAR-OLD Cambodian girl has become the seventh person to die from bird flu in the country this year, officials said on Friday.

The child, from north-western Banteay Meanchey province, died on July 20, the health ministry and the World Health Organization said in a joint statement. Tests confirmed she had contracted H5N1 avian influenza.

'I urge parents and guardians to keep children away from sick or dead poultry,' Cambodian Health Minister Mam Bun Heng said.


All seven of Cambodia's bird flu cases since January have been fatal. Six of the victims were children.

The girl is the 17th person in Cambodia known to have become infected with the virus and the 15th to die from complications of the disease since 2005, they said.

The H5N1 strain of avian influenza has killed 330 people worldwide since 2003, the statement said.

China pledges active support to GMS countries in environment, biodiversity conservation

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 11:01 PM PDT

July 29, 2011
Xinhua

The government of China will still continue its active support to the Greater Mekong Sub-region (GMS) countries in order to strengthen and expand the sub-regional environmental cooperation, Xu Qinghua, special representative of Chinese environment minister, said here Thursday.

"As a long-time supporter for GMS cooperation, China will continue to be an active player in promoting environmental cooperation in the area to promote sustainable development," he told the 3rd GMS Environment Ministers' meeting.

"The Chinese government attaches great importance to cooperating with other GMS countries and we deem good domestic environmental performance as the basis for better sub-regional cooperation," he said.

Xu also said China plans to provide potable water and air monitoring equipment to Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam to help strengthen the local efforts for environmental protection.


"Besides these, we will also organize policy and technical training programs on urban solid waste management for GMS countries," he said. "We hope to do what we can to help improve regional environmental management capacity."

Meanwhile, Xu said China's Yunnan province and Guangxi region have witnessed improved environmental management capacity.

By 2010, in Yunnan province alone, there are 162 nature reserves, including 16 national reserves, covering a total area of 2.96 million hectares, he said.

In Guangxi autonomous region, there are 78 nature reserves of different kinds with a total area of 1.45 million hectares.

The forest coverage in the two areas reached 47.5 percent and 58 percent respectively.

The GMS countries have engaged in regional environmental cooperation since 2006 through the Core Environment Program and Biodiversity Conservation Corridors Initiative (CEP-BCI). This program, at cost of 30 million U.S. dollar, is expected to end in December 2011.

Cambodian Minister of Environment Mok Mareth said Thursday that the 3rd GMS Environment Ministers' meeting would endorse the action plan 2012-2016 of CEP-BCI for environment cooperation to ensure balanced and sustainable economic growth in the GMS countries which include China, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

One way Viet trade with Cambodia grows by 56.7%

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 10:53 PM PDT

Cambodia trade grows by 56.7%

VNS (Hanoi)

HCM CITY — Trade between Cambodia and Viet Nam was worth US$1.35 billion in the first half of the year, a year-on-year increase of 56.7 per cent, trade officials said.

Addressing the Vietnamese Business Forum organised by the Ministry of Industry and Trade and the Vietnamese embassy in Phnom Penh on Tuesday, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade of Viet Nam Le Danh Vinh said trade and transit agreements signed between the two countries have helped promote their commercial links.

Trade between the two countries topped $1.82 billion last year, while Cambodia licensed 89 Vietnamese FDI projects worth nearly $2 billion.


Vinh praised the significant contributions of the Vietnamese community in the neighbouring country, saying they were a major factor in the close ties between Cambodia and Viet Nam.

The chairman of the Vietnamese Business Association in Cambodia, Nguyen Van Dinh, said most Vietnamese businesses operating in Cambodia were medium and small enterprises who wanted easier access to bank loans.

Vinh wanted Vietnamese authorities to simplify import-export formalities, enabling temporary import and re-export of vehicles.

Ministers from Mekong nations look to extend environment program [-Hun Xen's all talk no action?]

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 10:47 PM PDT

PHNOM PENH, Jul 28, 2011 (dpa) -- Environment ministers from the six nations that comprise the Greater Mekong Subregion group agreed Thursday to extend to 2016 a plan linking development with concerns for the environment.

The six are: Cambodia, China, Thailand, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam. The original five-year program agreed in 2005 was designed to bring under one roof efforts that balanced development with protection for the environment.

Final approval rests with heads of government, who are scheduled to meet at a GMS summit in December.

The original 30-million-dollar cooperation program, known as the Core Environmental Program and Biodiversity Conservation Corridors Initiative, is scheduled to expire on December 31.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen told delegates that environmental issues had become "a hot topic" on the global agenda particularly in relation to energy.

"Energy is vital for economic growth, vital for development, but also poses a great environmental risk," Hun Sen said, before alluding to a recent regional spat with Cambodia's northern neighbour Laos about the proposed Xayaburi dam on the mainstream of the Mekong.


Laos recently announced it would postpone construction of the dam for further assessment of its potential impact following a storm of criticism over its earlier unilateral decision to go ahead with building it.

Experts fear the 3.8-billion-dollar dam would cause significant damage to fish stocks, which are a vital source of protein for some of the poorest people in the region, and which would also damage water and sediment flow.

"All member countries have to strengthen cooperation over water resource management on the Mekong River, which is a matter of life and death for people living (along its length)," Hun Sen said.

Sanath Ranawana, the senior natural resources specialist at the Asian Development Bank, which manages the program, said the GMS area was growing rapidly.

"So this program is quite important and crucial for balancing what this region might do in the future -- (for) development in the future -- with how it can manage its resources in a sustainable way," he said.

Ranawana said the new program would link a number of key development areas to the environment, such as energy, agriculture, tourism and transport.

"The countries recognize very well that environment is an integral aspect that they need to take care of," he said. "The ecosystem services that are generated from the conservation landscapes are what underpin the whole economic program."

Speak Truth To Power series in KI-Media - Baltasar Garzon (Spain) "Internati​onal Law"

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 10:30 PM PDT

Speak Truth To Power series in KI-Media - Baltasar Garzon (Spain) "Internati​onal Law"
http://www.scribd.com/fullscreen/61180348?access_key=key-1s86erghp3kwm2tktwcl

Expressions of Cambodia: When ancient glory meets modern tragedy

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 10:19 PM PDT

Expressions of Cambodia: When ancient glory meets modern tragedy
http://www.scribd.com/fullscreen/61179798?access_key=key-1ndzn9g0l0cqu92dbga8

COMFREL Release the Result of Workshop on Voter's Voice in Remote Areas; Koh Chhiveang, Ek Phnom, Battambang province

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 10:03 PM PDT

Dear all,

COMFREL is please to release its press release on the result of workshop on voter's voice in remote areas; Koh Chhiveang, Ek Phnom, Battambang province was held on July 15, 2011.

Please see the attached document for details.

FYI : If you need releases or articles related to workshop on voter's voices, elections reforms, democracy/political reforms, decentralisation and governance, please feel free to visit our website :

Best regards,

COMFREL


http://www.box.net/shared/yv65dordokaom1ov3cxu

Yuon - A Poem in Khmer

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 09:48 PM PDT

Khmer Euy - A Poem in Khmer Thach Burei

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 09:42 PM PDT

Cambodia Sends 32 Soldiers To Join Military Exercise In Mongolia

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 08:12 PM PDT

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, July 29 (Bernama) -- Cambodia on Friday morning dispatched a group of 32 soldiers to take part in the multi-national military exercise 2011 in Mongolia from July 29 to August 13.

Speaking at the Phnom Penh International Airport before departure, Choeun Chamnith, a battalion commander at the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces, who leads the mission team, said that the participation would give chance to Cambodian troops to exchange knowledge and skills with other countries' soldiers.

"It will help upgrade our troops' capacity in military skills, rescue and humanitarian activities," Xinhua news agency quoted Chamnith as saying.


He said the participation is a part of international peacekeeping operations under the framework of the United Nations and it reflects cooperation among countries in the region in peacekeeping efforts.

The participating countries in the Mongolia's exercise are Cambodia, United States of America, Canada, India, China, Japan, Singapore, Russia and Vietnam.

This was the third time Cambodia has sent troops to join exercises in Mongolia.

Closing Order of Case 002 against Senior KR Leaders Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary, Ieng Thirith

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 07:56 PM PDT

In light of the start of trial hearings beginning on 27 June 2011 of Case 002 against the surviving Khmer Rouge senior leaders Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary and Ieng Thirith, KI Media is posting installations of the public document of the Closing Order of Case 002.  The Closing Order of the Co-Investigating Judges forms the basic document from which all the parties (Co-Prosecutors, Co-Lead Lawyers for all civil parties, Defense Lawyers) will be making their arguments before the Trial Chamber judges (one Cambodian President, 2 Cambodian Judges, 2 UN judges).  Up until now, the hearings involving these four surviving senior Khmer Rouge leaders have been in the Pre-Trial Chamber over issues of pre-trial detention and jurisdictional issues.  Beginning in June 2011, the Trial Chamber will hear the substantive arguments over the criminal charges (e.g. genocide, crimes against humanity, penal code of 1956).  Available in Khmer and French.  Contact the ECCC for a free copy.


CLOSING ORDER
of Co-Investigating Judges You Bunleng and Marcel Lemonde, 15 September 2010

Srae Ambel Worksite
Location and Establishment

369.            Srae Ambel Worksite is a complex of salt fields located on the coast of Kampot District in Kampot Province. Applying the CPK's system of identifying administrative boundaries it was in Kampot District, Sector 35 of the Southwest Zone.1590 Witnesses interviewed were all working in the fields of Kampong Kandal (now call Boeung Roung 1 and 2, with an area of 1400 hectares), Ses Sar (314 hectares), Traey Koh (796 hectares) and Boeung Touk (200 hectares).1591 It appears that other locations were also part of Srae Ambel Worksite including Chrey Yul, Kbal Romeas, Kampong Nung, Kep, Kep Thmei, Lok, Angkaol Rey and Sre
Koh.1592
370.            The salt fields existed prior to 17 April 19751593 and were placed under the authority of the CPK before that date.1594 Their surface was significantly extended during the DK era.1595 Most of the witnesses arrived at Srae Ambel in the months following 17 April 19751596 and the site was still in operation until January 1979.1597 The salt fields are still active today.
Functioning
Structure and Personnel
371.            Srae Ambel Worksite was officially referred as "State" salt fields and was under the direct authority of the CPK Party Centre and especially the Ministry or Committee of Industry1598 headed by its Chairman Cheng An alias An until his arrest in early November 197 8.1599 The Ministry or Committee of Industry was under the supervision of Vorn Vet, a member of the Standing Committee and Deputy Prime Minister for economic affairs.1600
372.            Salt production was a direct concern of the Party Centre.1601 During the meeting of the Standing Committee dated 22 February 1976, which Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and Khieu Samphan attended, the increase in national salt production from 50,000 to 60,000 tons was instructed by "Angkar".1602 Increasing production for the years 1977 to 1980 was also planned by the Standing Committee's "Party's Four Year plan to build socialism in all fields".1603 It appears that the salt produced was transported and distributed throughout Cambodia.1604 [REDACTED] explains that Khieu Samphan was responsible for allocating the various material items produced to the population and that he would periodically exchange telegrams with one unit or another regarding the distribution of salt, rice, clothes and other material items.1605


373.            Srae Ambel was visited by high level party members, which reflects its importance to the central authorities. Witnesses state that Ta Mok (Southwest Zone Secretary and member of the Standing Committee, deceased), Vorn Vet (Deputy Premier in Charge of the Economy, deceased) and Chou Chet alias Sy (West Zone Secretary, deceased) went there.1606 One former cadre states that Nuon Chea inspected the worksite in late 1977. During his visit he convened a meeting in one of the salt fields with a battalion and instructed the workers "to
strive to work [so that] in the future the country would be prosperous and make a great leap".1601 It also appears that foreign delegations visited the worksite in 1978.1608
374. Srae Ambel was presented by the CPK as a model of success of the revolution and was regularly lauded for over fulfilling all assigned objectives.1609 Its cadres and its masses of workers were characterised as particularly strong politically, a unit about which there were "no worries" regarding security.1610 During the speeches in 1977 and 1978 commemorating the 17 April victory, Khieu Samphan congratulated the salt production units and described them as advanced model units and examples to be followed by the entire country.1611
375. Although it is not entirely clear from the evidence, it seems that the first Chairman of the worksite was Pon alias Sin Keum Ean until his arrest and transfer to S-21 on 26 February 1978.1612 Choeun, originally Pon's Deputy, subsequently replaced him.1613 According to a former cadre, [REDACTED] governed Kampong Kandal, Ry (a female) governed a battalion at Ses Sor and [REDACTED] controlled the site of Trauy Koh1614 after the arrest of Veng.1615 Workers were organised into battalions, companies and platoons.1616 Technicians from the salt fields explain that they had no right to give orders to the workers and that they themselves were monitored closely by Team or Unit Chairmen.1617 Workers and technicians were told during meetings organised by the leadership of the worksite that production increases and goals were to be achieved by hard work.1618
 

Brain Food for the Stingy

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 07:45 PM PDT

Jesus sat down opposite the place where the offerings were put and watched the crowd putting their money into the temple treasury. Many rich people threw in large amounts. But a poor widow came and put in two very small copper coins, worth only a few cents.

Calling his disciples to him, Jesus said, "Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything—all she had to live on."

- St. Mark (the Holy Bible)


ECCC Law

Posted: 28 Jul 2011 07:43 PM PDT

Law on the Establishment of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia for the Prosecution of Crimes Committed During the Period of Democratic Kampuchea

("ECCC Law")

the inclusion of amendments as promulgated on 27 October 2004

FINAL PROVISION

Article 48

This law shall be proclaimed as urgent.

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