KI Media: “Khmerican is now up and running!” plus 24 more

KI Media: “Khmerican is now up and running!” plus 24 more


Khmerican is now up and running!

Posted: 06 Sep 2011 05:42 PM PDT

Giant crocodile captured alive in Philippines

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 02:39 PM PDT

Khmerican Website Fosters Engagement and Centralize Resources for Community

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 02:16 PM PDT


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

KHMERICAN WEBSITE FOSTERS ENGAGEMENT AND CENTRALIZE RESOURCES
FOR COMMUNITY

SEPTEMBER 25, 2011

NEW YORK, NY — Phatry Derek Pan and Sophath Oun have officially launched a web portal for Khmer America, after debuting a well-received preview just over a month ago. Version 1.0 at www.khmerican.com will provide original news and photographs by a nationwide network of citizen journalists. Through collections of relevant information and resources, the website will also serve as a much-needed collaborative hub for action on various issues of interest to the community.

In the month after it was announced, the Khmerican preview website and blog together received nearly 6,000 unique visitors and more than 13,000 page views from 41 countries, with 75% from the United States, followed by Cambodia. The preview was a publicity initiative that included members of the community endorsing the website's key features: articles, photo essays, calendar of events and announcements. The buzz generated over 250 early access subscribers and received press attention from Radio Free Asia and The Faster Times.

Pan, co-founder and CEO, expressed part of the reasoning behind the new venture in one of the recent interviews. "We believe that Khmerican can strengthen communities on a local and national level. If I am trying to get my peers and younger friends to be more conscious of what is going on in their community, I think connecting them with a portal illustrating the progress of Khmer America would foster that type of engagement."


In addition to content, various databases will facilitate finding notable entities and resources — for example, a master list of Khmer student organizations and their contact information. Oun, co-founder and webmaster, also emphasized the desire to create something issue-oriented, not a "Cambodian Facebook" but "an army of well-informed, proactive netizens passionate about community building."

The nascent Khmerican contributor team presently includes 10 staff members from seven states between California and Massachusetts and is open to expanding its base of reporters and creative professionals.

Media Contact:

Phatry Derek Pan
Co-Founder and CEO
The Khmerican
206-599-9444

Vann Nath, Witness to Atrocities, Succumbs in Hospital

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:52 PM PDT

In this photo taken on Aug. 9, 2010, a Cambodian survivors, Vann Nath, 66, is seen at Tuol Sleng genocide museum, formerly Khmer Rouge's notorious S-21 prison in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Nath lapsed into a coma in late August, 2011, after developing breathing difficulties, and his daughter Vann Chan Simen says he passed away on Monday, Sept. 5. Monday, 05 September 2011 (Photo: AP)
Monday, 05 September 2011
Reporters, VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh

"I very much regret losing Vann Nath."
Vann Nath, a Khmer Rouge prisoner who survived by painting portraits of Pol Pot, died in Phnom Penh on Monday, following an 11-day coma brought on by a heart attack, family members and health officials said.

Vann Nath, who was born in 1946 into a poor family in Battambang province, survived the Khmer Rouge's notorious Tuol Sleng prison and had been an ardent supporter of victims' justice at the UN-backed tribunal.

He served as a witness in Case 001 at the tribunal, which put Kaing Kek Iev, the supervisor of Tuol Sleng prison better known as Duch, on trial for atrocity crimes.

More than 12,000 Cambodians were tortured and sent to their deaths at the prison, known to the Khmer Rouge as S-21. Vann Nath was among seven known Tuol Sleng survivors. He said later he had been spared in order to paint portraits of Pol Pot, and he went on to pen a memoir about his time at the prison.


When Duch was given a commuted sentence of 19 years—a decision that is still under consideration at the tribunal's Supreme Court Chamber—Vann Nath said he could "accept" the court's decision.

He died at a local private clinic at 12:45 pm, according to family members. His body was prepared at the clinic and transported to his home in Prampimakara district, Phnom Penh, where it was to be prepared for a seven-day Buddhist ceremony.

His wife, Kit Eng, 62, said she regretted the loss of a "good husband."

"We always appeared together at the [tribunal] to find justice for victims," said fellow prison survivor Chhum Mey. "I very much regret losing Vann Nath."

In peacetime, Vann Nath created indelible images came to characterize the terror of the Khmer Rouge and its policies of torture and imprisonment. His death was deeply felt across the diplomatic and civic community.

In a joint statement, the embassies of France and Japan called him a "tireless freedom fighter" who had preserved the reality of the Khmer Rouge period through his painting and writing.

Huy Vannak, a spokesman for the tribunal, said he personally regretted the passing of Vann Nath before the court was able to reach a final verdict for his captor, Duch. That decision, which includes appeals for his release and for more jail time, is expected later this year.

Lath Ky, a tribunal monitor for the rights group Adhoc, said he felt "very sorry" for Vann Nath's death, and he urged to court to take it as a message to speed its work, including finding a final verdict for Duch.

"I think Vann Nath's family, as well as all of the other civil parties and other survivors, want to see a final resolution to the Duch [trial] as very soon as possible," said Clair Duffy, a court observer for the Open Society Justice Initiative.

His death was also a reminder of the age and poor health of four detained regime leaders who have yet to be tried, said Chhang Youk, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia.

Government spokesman Phay Siphan said Monday Vann Nath's death meant the loss of a "living witness" to Khmer Rouge atrocities who had made "important contributions to the dispensation of justice."

"Yuons Penh Srok Khmer" a Poem in Khmer by Sam Vichea

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:35 PM PDT

Artist Vann Nath, Khmer Rouge Survivor, Dies at 66

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:35 PM PDT

Paintings by human rights icon and artists Vann Nath depicting how torture devices were used hang on the walls of Tuol Sleng Prison in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, June 2011. (Photo: VOA - D. Schearf)

September 05, 2011
VOA News

Cambodia's Vann Nath, one of only seven survivors of a vast and notorious Khmer Rouge torture center, died Monday at age 66.

The human rights icon and artist was hospitalized late last month after heart problems and has been in a coma for days. His son-in-law called his death "a big loss for the history of Cambodia."

Vann Nath was one of only a handful of people to emerge alive from Phnom Penh's infamous Tuol Sleng prison, where more than 12,000 people died in the 1970s under Khmer Rouge rule. He later became a leading advocate for victims of Khmer Rouge atrocities.


His widow, Kith Eng, blamed his lengthy illnesses, which included chronic kidney disease, on the torture suffered at Tuol Sleng. She told the Associated Press last month she believes her husband would have lived a long and happy life, but for the year spent at the hands of his captors.

Vann Nath's 1998 memoir - A Cambodian Prison Portrait: One Year in the Khmer Rouge's S-21 Prison - is the only written account by a survivor of the prison.

S-21 was later converted to a genocide museum, where many of Vann Nath's paintings depicting torture adorn the walls.

News of Vann Nath's death comes as an international tribunal prepares to begin the long-awaited trial of the four most-senior surviving Khmer Rouge leaders - all charged with atrocities during the group's 1975-1979 rule. The defendants, including the nominal Khmer Rouge head of state, 79-year-old Khieu Samphan, face charges of religious persecution, torture and genocide in the deaths of as many as 2 million people.

Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot died in 1998.

The tribunal also is deliberating an appeal by convicted war criminal Duch, the one-time chief of Tuol Sleng prison. Duch was convicted of war crimes and imprisoned earlier this year for 30 years - a sentence later reduced to 19 years because of time served in detention.

Tribunal spokesman Lars Olsen, speaking Monday, described Vann Nath as the survivor "who gave voice to victims" both through his advocacy at the tribunal and through his lifelong work at the Tuol Sleng museum.

Some information for this report was provided by AP and AFP.

'Killing Fields' Painter Dies

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:30 PM PDT

Vann Nath shows one of his paintings at an exhibition in Phnom Penh, July 12, 2007. (RFA)

The death of a key witness to the Khmer Rouge's brutal era will be a big loss to Cambodia's history.

2011-09-05
RFA
"The trial has been delayed and the victims are dying one by one," he said. "And by comparison, the accused persons have been receiving more support for health and security or safety than the victims.
Vann Nath, a noted Cambodian artist who survived the Khmer Rouge's torture and execution centre by painting portraits of its brutal leaders, died on Monday aged 66, his family said.

Vann Nath, whose paintings later exposed to the world the horrific torture committed by the hardline communist movement between 1975 and 1979, had been battling kidney and lung ailments for several years.

He fell into a coma late last month after suffering a heart attack, his immediate family members said.

"He had been long suffering from kidney failure and lung disease," his son, Vann Chanarong, said. "My father died around 12.45pm [Cambodian time]."


"His death is going to be a huge loss for Cambodia's history," his son-in-law, Lon Nara, said.

Vann Nath's grieving widow, Kith Eng, said his chronic illnesses stemmed from the torture he suffered at Tuol Sleng or S-21 prison, where around 15,000 people were killed as the Khmer Rouge sought to eliminate perceived enemies of the revolution.

Vann Nath was the first of the survivors of the prison to testify before a U.N.-backed tribunal trying members of the Khmer Rouge regime on war crimes charges.

Eating beside corpses

He described at a hearing in 2009 how hunger drove him to eat insects, saying he and others at the prison also ate food beside corpses of starved fellow prisoners.

"The conditions were so inhumane and the food was so little," Vann Nath told the tribunal, as he broke down in tears. "I even thought eating human flesh would be a good meal."

Following his testimony, the tribunal sentenced the overseer of the Tuol Sleng prison, Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Comrade Duch, to 30 years in prison last July for crimes against humanity, torture, and premeditated murder.

Vann Nath survived Tuol Sleng prison due to his painting skills, as he was forced to produce portraits of Pol Pot and other Khmer Rouge leaders, escaping what was known as the "Killing Fields."

Van Nath's death leaves only two surviving Tuol Sleng prison inmates.

"He should have waited to see if justice was done at the trial of the Khmer Rouge leaders," said Chum Meng, 80, one of the two survivors. "He should not have passed away without knowing the truth yet."

"Van Nath had painted and drawn many pictures about the S-21 prison for the younger generation," Chum Meng said.

Timely reminder

Neth Paktra, spokesman for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), as the tribunal is formally known, said Vann Nath's death was a "huge loss" to the tribunal as it forges ahead with its hearings.

"He was an important witness of the trial."

Hong Kim Soun, civil party lawyer of the ECCC, said Vann Nath's death is a timely reminder for the tribunal to speed up its hearings.

"The trial has been delayed and the victims are dying one by one," he said. "And by comparison, the accused persons have been receiving more support for health and security or safety than the victims.

"Even though there are so many victims that make the court impossible to provide such security support, a prolonged waiting for justice, to see that justice is done, is almost useless for those who died before the court get its job done."

Vann Nath, born in 1946, was trained as an artist but had to work at a cooperative farm after the Khmer Rouge seized power in April 1975.

He was accused of being an enemy of the regime in 1978 and imprisoned at Tuol Sleng, and kept there until January 1979 when the regime fled ahead of invading Vietnamese troops, who found only seven inmates alive at the prison.

He later painted images of torture and wrote a memoir of his year spent there.

The Khmer Rouge's radical policies left up to two million people dead through overwork, disease, malnutrition and execution.

Reported by RFA's Khmer service. Translated by Sum Sok Ry. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.

Cambodia: The miracle of Taom, the Christian village reborn after 40 years of persecution and neglect

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:24 PM PDT


Hours from the city of Siem Rap, the village owes its existence to 30 people attracted to Christianity. In three years, the local neo-gothic church, which had been turned into a barn, was renovated and is now used for Sunday Mass. Fr Winarta, an Indonesian Jesuit, tells the story of the small ...

Monday, September 05, 2011
By Asia News

Phnom Penh – The Catholic community of Taom (Battambang Diocese, Angkor Wat) can be reached from the city of Siem Rap after travelling for hours on a muddy road. Its life revolves around the fervent activities of its 29 members and 2 Indonesian Jesuit missionaries. AsiaNews recently visited the tiny impoverished village that was reborn last year after 40 years of oblivion and neglect when 30 locals were baptised.

Fr Stephanus Winarta SJ, from Java (Indonesia), is in charge of St John Parish Church in Siem Reap, and has followed the young community for some time. When he arrived there were no Catholics in Taom, he said. The St Mary Parish Church built by the French in the early 1900s had fallen into ruin under the Khmer Rouge regime, alternatively used as a barn and for human habitation.

"Then one day, a miracle occurred, and a few locals asked to be baptised," the priest said. "In three years, 30 people became Catholic, participating in catechism courses organised by Fr Heribertus Bratasudarma, an indonesian Jesuit who has lived in cambodia for 11 years. In 2010, the bishop of Battambang baptised them and now they lead the community.


Fr Winarta said he was struck by their enthusiasm. In a few months, they salvaged the old church building and asked the young Jesuit to perform Mass there once a week.

Now the church bell tolls and Catholics can leave their fields for the church. During Mass, which includes singing, residents from neighbouring villages come as well. Two Japanese volunteers sent by the Jesuit Social Centre to care for the sick and teach children to read and write also join the service.

The spiritual rebirth of the village has led Fr Winarta to invite Mgr Giovanni D'Aniello, apostolic nuncio to Cambodia and Laos.

Siem Reap parish has about 500 members, 40 per cent of Vietnamese descent, plus a number of foreigners.

Overall, Cambodia has about 20,000 Catholics (0.15 per cent). Foreign missionaries and about ten local priests run the Church.

Since the 1990s, the Cambodian Church has been going through a renaissance. When the Khmer Rouges took power, all foreign missionaries were expelled.

The local clergy was wiped out as priests, nuns and men religious died under torture or from deprivation. (M. H.)

US companies find Asean market increasingly important

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:14 PM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR (Sept 5, 2011 - Bernama): American companies expect the Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) market to become increasingly important for their businesses, according to the findings of the Asean Business Outlook Survey 2011.

The majority of companies or some 73% of the survey respondents said they expect Asean's importance to their business will increase over the next two years, with 85% of them planning to expand their business in Asean.

No company is planning on any cutback, it said.

The survey also revealed that the ASEAN Free Trade Agreement was vital for US businesses, with 80% of respondents saying that their companies used the tariff benefits of the FTAs Asean has completed with its trade partners.


"The Asean-China FTA was also highly rated with 49% of companies using its benefits," the survey revealed.

The Asean Business Outlook survey, which is now in its 10th year, seeks to understand the outlook on business growth and perceptions of doing business in Asean.

It interviewed 327 senior executives from US companies in Malaysia, Cambodia, Indonesia, Singapore, The Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam.

The survey was conducted by The American Chamber of Commerce in Singapore (AmCham Singapore) in collaboration with many other related associations and chambers.

Meanwhile, on Malaysia, the survey said Malaysia improved in a number of local business factors, such as the availability of raw materials and low cost labour in 2011.

"However, new concerns have appeared, including the availability of trained personnel for some positions and problems with laws and regulations.

"Corruption, a long-standing issue, has greatly improved, with only 35% dissatisfaction this year compared to 63% in 2010," the survey said, adding that overall, 80% of the respondents still predicted that their business will expand in Malaysia.

The survey also revealed that all respondents had predicted an increase in the housing cost as well as living cost and three quarters of the respondents expect an increase in the interest rate.

Vice President of AmCham Malaysia, Datuk Tim Garland said the American companies' positive business forecast and expansion in Malaysia were great testaments to the effective implementation of Malaysia's Government Transformation Program (GTP) and Economic Transformation Program (ETP).

"AmCham Malaysia is excited to be part of Malaysia corporate expansion in Asean and we will be working closely with all key stakeholders towards reducing regulatory barriers and improving the ease of doing business locally and in Asean, for existing and potential American investors as they share in Asean growth," he said.

The majority of respondents, he said, are satisfied or neutral towards the government's guidelines and the fairness of their applications, and with local government institutions.

Sand mining puts nations' environments at risk

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:09 PM PDT

LEECH Ly Yong Phat, the destroyer of Cambodia environment and a Hun Xen's crony
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Denis D. Gray, Associated Press

Koh Kong, Cambodia -- Round a bend in Cambodia's Tatai River and the virtual silence of a tropical idyll turns suddenly into an industrial nightmare.

Lush jungle hills give way to a flotilla of dredgers operating 24 hours a day, scooping up sand and piling it onto ocean-bound barges. The churned-up waters and fuel discharges, villagers say, have decimated the fish so vital to their livelihoods. Riverbanks are beginning to collapse, and the din and pollution are killing a promising ecotourism industry.

What is bad news for the poor, remote Tatai community is great for Singapore, the wealthy city-state that is expanding its territory by reclaiming land from the sea. Sand from nearby countries is the prime landfill and also essential building material for Singapore's spectacular skyline.


As more countries ban its export to curb environmental damage - entire Indonesian islands have been all but wiped off the map - suppliers to Singapore scour the region for what still can be obtained, legally or not. Cambodia, a poor country where corruption is rife and laws are often flouted, is now the No. 1 source.

Singapore is by no means the only nation taking part in what is a global harvest of sand from beaches, rivers and seabeds. Officials and environmentalists from China to Morocco have voiced concern and urged curbs. As construction booms in emerging economies and more sources dry up, however, exploitation of the remaining ones is likely to intensify.

Sand mining began anew in May on southwestern Tatai River, which empties into the ocean almost directly north of Singapore, across 1,300 kilometers (800 miles) of open water.

Despite denials by the main owner of sand mining rights in Koh Kong province, two Cambodian officials said the sand is destined for the island nation.

Singapore will not say where its sand comes from; the Construction and Building Authority said it is not public information. The National Development Ministry said the state's infrastructure development company buys it from "a diverse range of approved sources."

The mining visible on the Tatai River clearly violates some of Cambodia's own legal restrictions, not to mention a recent government order to suspend it temporarily.

Vessels of a Vietnamese company were tracked by boat from about 10 kilometers (6 miles) upriver to the Gulf of Thailand, where nearly a dozen seagoing barges, tugs hovering around them, took on the sand.

The AZ Kunming Singapore, a 5,793-ton (5,255-metric ton) barge pulled by the AZ Orchid, was seen arriving empty from the open ocean, its tug flying a Singaporean flag. Both are registered with the Singapore government, which would not comment on the barge's cargo or destination.

Ships from several countries, including China, were spotted in sand-mining operations in Koh Kong province, where residents joked about going to Singapore and planting a Cambodian flag there.

The vessels included one from Winton Enterprises, a Hong Kong-registered group that was subcontracted to export sand to Singapore, according to Global Witness, a London-based environmental group that published a detailed account of the trade last year.

The report said that miners had penetrated protected mangrove, estuary and sea grass areas, breeding grounds for marine life along a coastline and hinterland harboring some of the country's last wilderness areas.

Cambodia's Cabinet spokesman, Siphan Phay, who was investigating the issue in Koh Kong, appeared angry that the temporary halt order was being ignored. He described the activity as illegal mining destined for Singapore, a surprising statement given that government ministers awarded the concession.

A police officer in the economic crime division, who demanded anonymity given the issue's sensitivity, also said the sand is going to Singapore.

Ly Yong Phat, who holds the major concession in Koh Kong, has at times openly acknowledged the Singapore connection. But in a recent interview, amid tightening restrictions and mounting criticism, he said his company had not shipped sand to Singapore for more than a year because "our sand did not meet their standards."

The dredging, he added, was for local sale and to deepen river channels.

However, a Malaysian company, Benalec Holdings, said it was ready to tap up to 530,000 tons for a reclamation project in Singapore from several sources in Cambodia, including Ly Yong Phat's LYP Group.

Known as the "King of Koh Kong," Ly Yong Phat is one of Cambodia's biggest tycoons and a senator with close ties to Prime Minister Hun Sen. His holdings include hotels, a casino and agricultural plantations.

Land reclamation has enlarged Singapore by more than a fifth, and up to 100 square kilometers (nearly 40 square miles) more are slated for reclamation by 2030. What was once seabed is now Changi, among the world's finest airports, and more recently the Marina Bay complex, which includes a 2,560-room hotel and casino developed by Las Vegas Sands Corp.

Mountains of sand are needed for such fills. U.N. statistics show Singapore imported 14.6 million tons last year, ranking it among the world's top customers. Global Witness estimated that nearly 800,000 tons a year, worth $248 million, were streaming to Singapore from Koh Kong alone.

The U.N. figures show that Cambodia supplied 25 percent of Singapore's imports in 2010, followed by Vietnam, Malaysia, Burma and the Philippines. With its secrecy and lax enforcement of environmental regulations, Burma could emerge as a major supplier.

The damage caused by sand extraction has spurred clampdowns on exports.

Malaysia imposed a ban in 1997, though the media there frequently report on massive smuggling into neighboring Singapore. Former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad complains that sand pirates are "digging Malaysia and giving her to other people."

An Indonesian ban came in 2007, following years of strained relations with Singapore over the sand on islands lying between the two countries. When miners finished with Nipah Island, reportedly all that was left was three or four palm trees protruding above the waterline. Environmental groups say smuggling is believed to be continuing.

Vietnam banned exports late last year.

Cambodia outlawed the export of sand from rivers in 2009 but allows it from some seabeds. Recently, some government officials said that rivers where seawater flowed into fresh water, replenishing sand naturally, were exempt.

Global Witness spokesman Oliver Courtney said the trade in Cambodia revealed a "mismatch between Singapore's reliance on questionably sourced sand and its position as a leader for sustainable development." The city-state prides itself on environmentally sound urban planning.

The dredging of the Tatai River began on May 17 "with a fury," creating a veritable traffic jam on the water, said Janet Newman, owner of the riverside Rainbow Lodge.

"Before, you could see crab pots bobbing in the river everywhere and fishermen going out. Now there is nothing and nobody," the British woman said.

Chea Manith of the Nature Tourism Community of Tatai said 270 families along the river have seen an estimated 85 percent drop in catch of fish, crab and lobsters and were being forced to eke out a living from small garden plots. Tourists have all but vanished.

Armed with a petition, village leaders, tourism operators and a wildlife group met with Ly Yong Phat in early July. He appeared sympathetic, Newman said. He substantially reduced the dredging and has promised to stop altogether in October.

A subsequent letter from the Minister of Water Resources and Meteorology ordered the LYP group to halt operations temporarily on the Tatai, citing a breach of regulations. The letter was obtained by Cambodia's Phnom Penh Post newspaper, which made it available to the Associated Press.

Hun Sen himself expressed concern over the mining in the river.

"We hoped that the prime minister's recent promise to review the impacts of the sand trade would lead to proper regulation of dredging operations," said Courtney of Global Witness. "Unfortunately, the pledge does not appear to have been followed up with meaningful action."

The mining has continued on the Tatai, and violations, such as dredging closer than 150 meters (165 yards) from riverbanks, were clearly evident.

Cambodian artist who survived Khmer Rouge prison dies

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 01:03 PM PDT

Monday, Sep 05, 2011
AFP

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - A prominent Cambodian artist who was one of the few survivors of the Khmer Rouge's main torture centre, where he painted portraits of leader Pol Pot, died Monday aged 66, his family said.

Vann Nath, who struggled for years with ill health including kidney problems, had been in a coma since suffering a cardiac arrest on August 26, his son-in-law Lon Nara told AFP.

"He passed away. It's a big loss for the history of Cambodia," Lon Nara said, adding that Vann Nath had helped to tell the world about the atrocities committed by the hardline communist movement between 1975 and 1979.

Vann Nath was one of just a handful of people to survive the Tuol Sleng detention centre, where around 15,000 people were killed as the paranoid movement sought to eliminate perceived enemies of the revolution.


Vann Nath's life was spared only because he was put to work during his one year in prison painting portraits of mysterious leader Pol Pot, until the Khmer Rouge was ousted from the Cambodian capital by Vietnamese forces.

He went on to become one of Cambodia's most celebrated artists, often portraying harrowing scenes from everyday life inside the prison.

Tuol Sleng, also known as S-21, is now a genocide museum and many of Vann Nath's works adorn its walls, depicting torture methods such as prisoners being whipped and having their fingernails pulled out with pliers.

He was also a high-profile supporter of the Khmer Rouge trials at Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court, which he said he hoped would bring justice to the traumatised nation.

In June 2009, he became the first survivor to testify in the trial against Tuol Sleng jail chief Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch.

Describing how hunger drove shackled prisoners to eat insects that fell from the ceiling of the prison, Vann Nath said he was so famished he dreamed about eating human flesh.

"Even though I've tried my best to forget, it still haunts me," he told the court.

Duch was sentenced to 30 years in jail last year for war crimes and crimes against humanity. The case is now under appeal with a ruling expected later this year.

Tribunal spokesman Lars Olsen said the court was "saddened" by the death of Vann Nath "who gave a voice to victims both through his testimonies before the court and through his lifelong work at Tuol Sleng museum."

Under the Khmer Rouge, up to two million people died of starvation, overwork or execution in a bid to create an agrarian utopia.

"Brother Number One" Pol Pot died in 1998 without ever facing justice.

Vann Nath is survived by his wife, two daughters and a son.

Cambodia makes 7th troop withdraw from border with Thailand

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 12:57 PM PDT

PREAH VIHEAR, Cambodia, Sept. 5 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia on Monday pulled out another 500 troops from the border area with Thailand, marking the seventh of such withdrawals since the two neighboring countries' military tension began to ease in July.

The troops in the Battalion No. 408 stationed along Cambodian and Thai border, some 32 kilometers west of the 11th-century Preah Vihear temple, moved back to their barracks in Siem Reap province.

The troop pullback ceremony was held on Monday with the participation of Gen. Kun Kim, deputy commander-in-chief of the Royal Cambodian Armed Force, and Gen. Chea Dara, deputy commander-in-chief of Royal Cambodian Armed Forces for Preah Vihear Direction.


Kun Kim reiterated that the pullout was made at the behest of Prime Minister Hun Sen, adding the withdrawals have been made only outside the provisional demilitarized zone (PDZ) defined by the International Court of Justice.

"The pullout from the PDZ of about 17 kilometers surrounding the Preah Vihear temple must be done simultaneously with Thai troops," he said.

On July 18, the International Court of Justice ordered Cambodia and Thailand to immediately withdraw their military personnel from the provisional demilitarized zone on the disputed border near Preah Vihear temple and allow ASEAN observers access to the provisional demilitarized zone to monitor ceasefire.

The conflict between Cambodia and Thailand broke out just a week after the Preah Vihear temple was listed as World Heritage Site on July 7, 2008.

Thailand claims the ownership of 4.6 sq km of scrub next to the temple.

However, the military tension has eased since former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's Pheu Thai Party won a landslide victory in July's general election.

"ក្រយៅមេខ្មែរសម័យយើង" a Poem in Khmer by NhiekKiri

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 09:38 AM PDT

Language and National Identity in Asia: Cambodia -

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 09:26 AM PDT

Language and National Identity in Asia
Edited by Andrew Simpson
Oxford University Press, 2007

Chapter 13: CAMBODIA
by Dr. Steve Heder

13.2 Pre-colonial History: Before, During, and After the Angkorian Period

Khmer, the national language of Cambodia, is categorized as one of the Austro-Asiatic family of languages, closely related to Mon, distantly related to Vietnamese and possibly also to Thai (Huffman 1970). A written Khmer has existed since at least the sixth century, being standardized when a script based on the Pallava way of writing Sanskrit was formulated for Old Khmer. Speakers of the Austro-Asiatic languages that begat contemporary Khmer, Mon, and Vietnamese probably moved southward out of what is now south China into what is now Southeast Asia some 4,000 years ago. Those who spoke Old Khmer eventually established scattered, competing chieftainships around the Dang Rek escarpment which forms the modern border between Thailand and Cambodia and in the Mekong river delta and coastal areas that straddle both sides of what is now the frontier between southern Vietnam and Cambodia. The warring lowland chiefs flourished through interaction with maritime trade that produced multi-religious, culturally syncretic societies, but when these polities declined as sea-borne commerce moved elsewhere, the cockpit of Khmer political contestation shifted up the Mekong and Tonle Sap Rivers to the plains north of the Tonle Sap Lake and below the Dang Rek, culminating in the seventh to eighth centuries with more state-like political creations that inscribed Khmer on stone. These were the precursors of the principalities that built the monumentally awe-inspiring Angkor Wat and other temple complexes between the ninth and thirteenth centuries. The temples were the cosmic-symbolic centres of classical 'empires' that at times stretched to the shores of the South China Sea and the Malay Peninsula. Their stitching together of widely separated centres of population - some primarily Khmer, others not - signified a quantum leap in political organization. However, it was not until the twentieth century that, in interaction with European political concepts, the temples were interpreted by Khmer as emblematic of a single and particular national culture associated with the Khmer language (Edwards 1999).

The word 'Kampuchea' was evidently first applied to these Angkorian polities (Mabbett and Chandler 1995), in which Old Khmer was the main vernacular language of elites and of many ordinary people alike, but in which other languages were spoken, constituting a cosmopolitan Cambodian civilization, in which a variety of cultural idioms were internalized. Thus, Angkorian civilization was heavily influenced by South Asian Brahmanist and varied Buddhist ideals, models, concepts, and vocabulary, and Chinese influences are also apparent. All of these were mixed and elaborated in fantastically creative ways that made the Angkorian polities re-creations of universal cosmic powers on earth (Wolters 1999).

Like most other such pre-modern empires, their inherent socio-economic and socio-political contradictions meant they experienced repeated episodes of political disintegration, as rivals challenged every established hierarchy, attempting to re- localize power and re-legitimate it as a new centre of the universe. Such claims to universality were, however, generally tolerant of diversity, culturally eclectic, and subject to frequent reinvigoration by new ideas, in a context where multi-religiosity was often seen as an indication of power (Harris 2005).

During the Angkor period, many Sanskrit terms were incorporated into Khmer, and rich poetic and other literatures in Khmer and Sanskrit developed, the texts of which were often considered sacred (Jacob 1996). This increased the distinction between written and spoken versions of Khmer, which was loaded with linguistic markers of the relative social status of speakers. From the thirteenth century, with the increasing adoption of Theravada Buddhism, its sacred language Pali became a major source of loanwords into Khmer, adding a new layer to the dichotomy between high and low Khmer. All of this was indicative of a lasting pattern, according to which Khmer speakers at all social levels have 'enjoyed using for effect vocabulary drawn from different foreign origins' (Jacob 1993: 164).

Having flourished for over four hundred years, Angkor as the centre of Khmer civilization was eventually abandoned in the fifteenth century as the centre of power shifted southeast to downriver sites such as Udong and Phnom Penh, closer to the newly developing maritime trade and further away from exposure to attack by increasingly aggressive Siamese forces. For the next several hundred years, the Khmer kingdom remained under heavy pressure both from Siam to the west, and Vietnam to the east, and in the process forfeited significant amounts of territory as both Siam and Vietnam expanded their areas of direct and indirect control.

By the early nineteenth century, the Cambodian polity known as Krong Kampu- cheatheupatai had in fact become geographically isolated from the maritime trade that was crucial to the development of neighbouring kingdoms centred on Bangkok (Siam) and Hue (Dai Nam). It was less centralized and had not travelled as far down the path of proto-national ethnicization as its neighbours (Lieberman 2003), leaving its subjects with a weaker sense of shared identity and the state a much less formidable entity with a limited reach. Its realm was highly vulnerable to attack from without and susceptible to disintegration from within. During the first half of the nineteenth century, it was overrun by rapacious Siamese military expeditions, annexed by Dai Nam, and beset with civil wars and rebellions, devastating its population and creating difficult conditions for cultural continuity. Bangkok and Hue imposed their candidates on the throne, and, at times, the court was in some ways almost as Siamese or - briefly - Vietnamese as it was Khmer. Hue's attempts to Confucianize and Vietnamize Cambodia violated the previous Southeast Asian pattern of expanding political control by multi-ethnic coalition-building and working through local rulers, not only provoking elite-led popular rebellion, but adding a persistent element of poison to Khmer-Vietnamese relations (Chandler 2000).

Krong Kampucheatheupatai had its court at Udong, and the largest population centre was at the riverside entrepot of Phnom Penh. Long-established towns and villages were populated primarily by Theravada Buddhist Khmer speakers, but were also home to more or less assimilated Chinese from various dialect groups and Muslims who spoke Western Cham, an Austronesian language written in an Arabic script and with many borrowings from Arabic, Malay, and Khmer. Living near or in the hills were a multiplicity of Lao and other ethnic groups whose links to the realm were intermittent and primarily economic. Some of the uplanders' languages were in the Mon-Khmer family, others related to Malay and Polynesian.

Although many Chinese were socially segregated into dialect groups, incorporation into the Khmer elite and Khmer society was relatively easy. Formally, any Chinese born in the kingdom was considered Kampuchean if he or she adopted Khmer customs and dress. In practice, many did become part of Khmer society and its elite, though maintaining a Chinese cultural distinctiveness, as no necessary connec­tion was made between cultural and political loyalties. At this time, ruling over a multicultural realm was still seen as indicative of royal greatness, and because of this the palace did not hesitate to appoint Chinese, Sino-Khmer, and Cham as provincial officials (Edwards and Chan 1995).

Despite political turmoil, court and Buddhist literature (in Khmer and Pali) was diverse. Literary Khmer was a sophisticated mix of Sanskrit, Pali, and the high language reserved for royal and aristocratic discourse. After years of contact, Khmer had adopted much Thai vocabulary and even - it seems - syntax, especially at the court, but also in popular speech (Huffman 1973). This provided the linguistic groundwork for a nineteenth-century vogue for imitating Thai that contributed to a new wave of creative experimentation in literary style (Jacob 1996), paralleling a similar process on the religious front where the introduction of Siamese courtly and religious culture encouraged a renaissance in the practice of Theravada Bud­dhism. This was also a period of rising Chinese literary influence on Cambodian texts via bilingual Sino-Khmer writers (Nepote and Khing 1987).

Still, Khmer was the lingua franca of political administration and the language of religious communication between Buddhist monks and the laity. The many young peasant men who became monks often learned to read and write at least some Khmer. However, as in the past, most written records were not for commonplace consumption: they were holy objects. Moreover, texts were recorded on perishable materials. This and the unsettled situation meant few survived from earlier centuries. Thus, for most Khmer-speakers, spoken literature - folktales, songs, riddles, and proverbs - remained much more important than written texts.


Note that some conventions contrast the word Khmer as a reference to the language and an ethno- linguistic group speaking it with the term Kampuchea and its Western-language derivatives such as Cambodia and Cambodge which have been used to designate a series of multi-ethnic polities existing from the sixth or seventh century through to the present. By such conventions, Kampucheans/Cambodians would include all these polities' ethnically diverse entourages, followers, subjects, and citizens. However, these correspondences have been far from perfect and appear to have lost their applicability in the late twentieth to early twenty-Wrst-century context.


How Sophalay De Monteiro, a Cambodian citizen, became Tran Hoang Phuc, a citizen of Vietnam

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 09:02 AM PDT

Tran Hoang Phuc and his wife display their wheel power in Cu Chi, Viet Nam. Formerly stateless, he could not legally buy a motorbike until he became a Vietnamese citizen recently. (UNHCR/K.McKinsey)


Statelessness: Giving up a beloved name and lifetime limbo for citizenship

CU CHI, Viet Nam, September 5 (UNHCR) – Tran Hoang Phuc is proud of his name, one he chose himself. It means "golden happiness" in Vietnamese.

After more than 35 years in a Kafkaesque stateless limbo, the former Cambodian refugee gave up his birth name and selected a distinctly Vietnamese name as a condition of acquiring citizenship in Viet Nam, his home since 1975. It did indeed symbolize a happy ending for some of the very last victims of the anarchy unleashed by Cambodian dictator Pol Pot in the 1970s.

His original name, Sophalay De Monteiro, carried with it a proud ancestry – Portuguese missionaries to Cambodia in the 18th century – but also made him stand out in his adopted homeland every day of those 35 years.


"Giving it up was a small price to pay for finally getting Vietnamese citizenship," he told UNHCR, eagerly displaying his new papers, including the all-important family book, which regulates all dealings between citizens and the government in Viet Nam.

"This is very important because it means we can have ID cards," said Phuc, 50. "We can do many things. I can now get a passport and travel outside the country."

It means he can do much more basic things as well – such as buy a motorbike. In a country where almost every family owns a motorbike, thousands of stateless former Cambodian refugees like Phuc could not even legally buy this common form of transportation.

Phuc married a Vietnamese woman 32 years ago, soon after he came to the country. What pained him the most was watching their two children suffer because they were also stateless due to his lack of legal status.

Over the past few years, UNHCR has worked with Viet Nam to remove decades-old bureaucratic obstacles and enable this small group of former refugees – the last of hundreds of thousands who sought refuge in Viet Nam in the 1970s – to get citizenship.

Largely unnoticed, Viet Nam has become a leader in Asia and the world in ending and preventing statelessness.

Most of the Cambodian refugees resettled or went home by the early 1990s, but a few thousand, like Phuc, were disowned by Cambodia. Unable to return, they became stateless.

"If we'd had citizenship when we arrived in Vietnam, I could have done more for my children, earned more," Phuc says, the pain clearly showing in his face. "My children should have had a much better life, but the family ended up going backwards instead of forwards.

"I didn't realize that their lives would be very difficult because they did not have a nationality. When we got to Viet Nam they had nothing, and back then we didn't realize that citizenship would be important if they wanted any benefits in society."

His daughter Sheila, a star student, had to pass up a scholarship in Japan. His son, Kostal, recalls being excluded from the Communist youth movement as a small schoolboy, and later found even his courtship prospects blocked.

"Finally I met a girl I loved and her parents didn't care about the ID card, but we couldn't legally marry because I didn't have the ID card," says Kostal De Monteiro, 29. He eventually got citizenship through his Vietnamese mother, so was able to keep his original name.

Phuc felt he could never be fully accepted as long as he was stateless, despite learning Vietnamese fluently and integrating well into this community known to tourists for the elaborate system of tunnels that the Viet Cong used to evade the U.S. Army during the war in the 1960s and 1970s.

These days life is brighter for the whole family. Phuc, one of some 2,300 former Cambodians who received citizenship in 2010 or who are on track to do so, was a respected leader of refugees in this community and is still advising his fellow new citizens on the rights their new status confers.

At 50, he's no longer planning much for his own future, but rejoicing in his children's prospects. His daughter hopes to study in France now that she has citizenship. His son has been promoted to senior accountant, gotten a raise, can buy property, and is being offered business trips abroad now that he can get a passport.

"The differences come down to who has a nationality and who is stateless," says Phuc. People who have always had citizenship, identity cards and passports seldom consider their value, he said. But those without them know all too well how valuable a legal identity is.

"I'm very, very happy," he said. "My children will have much, much brighter futures because of the benefits of being Vietnamese, so they can enjoy their lives."

By Kitty McKinsey
In Cu Chi, Viet Nam

Mental developmen​t must be done in accordance with the developmen​t of materials - Op-Ed by Ven. Maha Phirom

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 08:44 AM PDT

Sahmakum Teang Tnaut (STT) - Press Release

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 08:40 AM PDT

NGOs monitoringthe rehabilitation of Cambodia’s railways are essential to just and inclusive development

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 08:32 AM PDT

MP Son Chhay's Letter to H.E Sok An on landgrabbing in North-eastern provinces

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 08:22 AM PDT

Brain Food

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 08:19 AM PDT

When words are many, sin is not absent,
but he who holds his tongue is wise.


- Book of Proverbs (the Hebrew Bible)


"សង្ឃឹមស្វាចូលនិវត្តន៍?" a Poem in Khmer by Sék Serei

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 07:53 AM PDT

Maid nightmare continues

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 07:41 AM PDT

Monday, 05 September 2011
Sen David
The Phnom Penh Post
Opposition MP Mu Sochua said the fact no company had lost its licence or been sanctioned by the government suggested they were owned by well-connected individuals.
Two more women recruited from villages to work as maids in Malaysia by a government-licensed company returned at the weekend, saying they were penniless and scarred by abuse.

Both had been recruited by Philimore Cambodia Co Ltd, a member of the Association of Cambodian Recruitment Agencies. They said they had been beaten, forced to work long hours and not given enough food.

Hok Pov, 21, said she was paid for only one month after working for five months in a house as well as a factory. She said she worked from 4am to 1am.

"I had no day off," she said. "I was forced to work in my employer's house and at his factory. Sometimes he slapped me and pulled my hair. All he gave me to eat were noodles."


Klich Sokong, 25,said her employer also hit her and forced her to work overtime. She had worked for a year without receiving payment, while the company that recruited her turned a deaf ear to complaints, she said.

"I could no longer endure it. I decided to escape from my employer and went to the police in Malaysia. They sent me to the Cambodian embassy." The women returned with the help of the Community Legal Education Centre.

Opposition MP Mu Sochua said the fact no company had lost its licence or been sanctioned by the government suggested they were owned by well-connected individuals.

"Who owns these companies? Why do they seem to act with impunity? Why are these companies still operating freely?" she asked.

A letter sent to the Labour Ministry by the Sam Rainsy Party, to which she belongs, seeking answers to these questions had yet to be answered, she said. The government was protecting the companies, not regulating them, she said.

Oum Mean, secretary of state at the Ministry of Labor, declined to speak about a specific company, pointing instead to the recent approval of a new sub-decree aimed at protecting Cambodian workers abroad.

"I think it is a good and positive sub- decree," he said, explaining that it would rein in all recruitment agencies that did not follow its regulations.

Mu Sochua has dismissed this as "a sub-decree for the sake of a sub-decree", saying it allowed the government to appear to be taking action while it turns a blind eye to the abuses the women suffer once they are recruited.

ACRA president An Bunhak defended Philimore, saying it "is a member of the association and a legal recruitment agency". He also disputed allegations that the recruiting company had not helped the women, saying it had filed police complaints in Malaysia but the women came home before Malaysian police could follow through.

Lao Lyhock, a director of Philimore Cambodia, said he was too busy to comment when contacted by the Post.

Land disputes in Siem Reap [-Land revolution starting in Siem Reap?]

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 07:35 AM PDT

15 January 2010: Villagers from 2 communes in Bantey Srey district, Siem Reap province, protest against demarcation for land concessions that could affect their properties (Photo: Hang Savyouth, RFA)
Monday, 05 September 2011
May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

More than 1,000 families from four districts in Siem Reap province involved in ongoing land disputes released a joint statement on Friday asking for intervention from government officials.

Villagers involved in six separate land disputes with various private companies in four districts claim a total of 3,138 hectares of land has been taken from them since 2003, according to the statement.

It calls on national government officials to urge provincial authorities to return the land, and urges authorities to stop jailing villagers who attempt to enter land they claim to own.

Tok Pounleuk, a villager from Chi Kraeng district where 175 families claim to have been stripped of 475 hectares of land, said the villagers released the joint statement to inform government leaders that there is solidarity among communities involved in land disputes across the province.

"We lost the land together and we have the same problem, so we have to approach the situation together," he said.


Banteay Srei villager Keo Sophy said 90 families in her community had been affected after 183 hectares of land was taken from them in 2003.

Keo Sophy said the land had yet to be returned and provincial authorities had been unwilling to intervene.

"We have been waiting for so long. We have decided to issue this joint statement to alert the government officials about the problem, otherwise we will remain cheated," she said.

On August 26, Prime Minister Hun Sen warned that economic land concessions would be withdrawn if the companies they were granted to failed to solve land disputes with villagers who had lived in their concession area for "a long time".

Am Sam Ath, senior investigator for rights group Licadho, said the villagers had been dealing with the effects of the land dispute for a long time but provincial authorities had failed to help them.

"We are worried about those who have lost their land . . . they become poorer from one day to the next," he said.

UN Convention Against Corruption

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 07:24 AM PDT

United Nations Convention Against Corruption

(UNCAC)

In accordance with article 68 (1) of resolution 58/4, the United Nations Convention against Corruption entered into force on 14 December 2005. A Conference of the States Parties is established to review implementation and facilitate activities required by the Convention.

Cambodia acceded to the UNCAC
on 5 September 2007


Chapter III: Criminalization and law enforcement

Article 17:

Embezzlement, misappropriation or other diversion of property by a public official


Each State Party shall adopt such legislative and other measures as may be necessary to establish as criminal offences, when committed intentionally, the embezzlement, misappropriation or other diversion by a public official for his or her benefit or for the benefit of another person or entity, of any property, public or private funds or securities or any other thing of value entrusted to the public official by virtue of his or her position.


Brain Food

Posted: 05 Sep 2011 07:11 AM PDT

Life is available only in the present moment.

- Thich Nhat Hanh


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