DAP: The breaking news in Cambodia: “Cambodia removes about 3 million mines, unexploded ordnances in 2 decades” plus 6 more |
- Cambodia removes about 3 million mines, unexploded ordnances in 2 decades
- Feature: Cambodia opens rescue center for endangered pangolins
- ADB provides 251 mln USD loans for sustainable development in Vietnam
- ASEAN-China Tourism Development Forum Took Place in Shanghai
- ASEAN-China Centre Participated at China International Travel Mart 2012
- Yearender: Mideast upheavals hamper U.S. pivoting to Asia
- Laos to woo Chinese investors
Cambodia removes about 3 million mines, unexploded ordnances in 2 decades Posted: 21 Dec 2012 02:51 AM PST PHNOM PENH, Dec. 21 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia has removed and destroyed some 3 million mines and unexploded ordnances in the last two decades and the country will completely eliminate landmines in the next 10 years, a senior official said Friday. Heng Ratana, director general of Cambodian Mine Action Center ( CMAC), said that since 1992 to date, the center has cleared some 2. 5 million mines and unexploded ordnances and the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces and non-governmental organizations have removed about 500,000 mines. "We set the target to clear all types of landmines from Cambodia in the next 10 years," he said, adding that to realize this goal, the country needs an estimated 30 million U.S. dollars a year. The Southeast Asian nation is one of the world's worst countries affected by mines as the result of almost three decades of war and internal conflicts from the mid-1960s until the end of 1998. The five most mine-laid provinces are Battambang, Banteay Meanchey, Oddar Meanchey, Pailin and Preah Vihear. According to the record of Cambodian Mine and Explosive Remnants of War Victim Information System, from 1979 to Oct. 2012, landmines had killed 19,660 people and injured or amputated 44,519 others. |
Feature: Cambodia opens rescue center for endangered pangolins Posted: 21 Dec 2012 01:26 AM PST PHNOM PENH, Dec. 21 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia opened a new Pangolin Rehabilitation Center (PRC) on Friday to provide special care to the kingdom's endangered pangolins rescued from the growing wildlife trade. "The facility is established to rehabilitate injured pangolins (scaly ant-eaters) rescued from hunters throughout Cambodia," according to a joint press release from the Conservation International (CI) and Cambodian Forestry Administration (FA) on Friday. "The center aims to bolster conservation efforts for this species." The facility is located at the Phnom Tamao Zoological Park and Wildlife Rescue Center in Takeo Province and staffed by a well- trained and dedicated team who care for the pangolins until they are ready for release back into the wild, the press release said. "The center also aims to raise awareness of the plight of the pangolin and to do so have been fitted with information signs about the species, the wildlife trade and how the public can help, " it said. There are already six pangolins under its care, which are all victims of the wildlife trade and are receiving treatment for a range of injuries. Annette Olsson, Scientific Technical Advisor of CI's Greater Mekong program said that the launch of the facility gave rescued pangolins hope. "Pangolins are often transported in very cruel ways by traffickers to avoid detection by authorities. Sometimes they are kept for days in plastic bags, without food or water, hidden in small spaces. It's common for the animals to die in transit, or after rescue, due to these terrible practices," Olsson said in the statement. In Cambodia, trafficked pangolins are typically kept alive as they fetch the best price on the market live. But as they are hunted using snares and hunting dogs, many confiscated pangolins have severe injuries that require professional medical treatment before they can be released back to the wild. Nhek Ratanapich, director of the Phnom Tamao Zoological Park and Wildlife Rescue Center, said the Cambodian government cares deeply for the kingdom's wildlife and have partnered with CI to create this facility to help conserve this important species. Pangolins, or "scaly ant-eaters," are covered with protective, overlapping scales, and can quickly roll up into a tight ball when threatened. They are nocturnal and sleep in hollow trees or burrows emerging at night to forage for ants and termites, using their extraordinarily long and sticky tongue. Half of the world's species of pangolins are found in Asia where they have been hunted heavily to very low numbers. The Sunda pangolin is the only species found in Cambodia and is now very rare due to hunting pressures to supply the international illegal market, the press release said. The greatest threat to the survival of Asian pangolins in the wild is illegal hunting for meat and scales used for luxury food, tonics and traditional medicines. "The price for a live pangolin is high, often more than 100 U.S. dollars, and is often an irresistible incentive for poor hunters and farmers in spite of the international and national ban on hunting of this species," said Ratanapich. The Sunda pangolin is listed as Endangered on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List. The center is the second such recognized pangolin rehabilitation facility in Cambodia. The other is the Angkor Centre for Conservation of Biodiversity in Siem Reap province, which cares for injured pangolins from the northern part of Cambodia. |
ADB provides 251 mln USD loans for sustainable development in Vietnam Posted: 21 Dec 2012 01:24 AM PST HANOI, Dec. 21 (Xinhua) -- The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Vietnamese government signed Friday three loan agreements totaling 251 million U.S. dollars to help Vietnam improve education quality, enhance capacity of the power transmission network and improve flood and drought risk management and mitigation. At the signing ceremony, ADB Country Director for Vietnam Tomoyuki Kimura said although Vietnam has experienced rapid growth over the past two decades, future growth will depend on a labor force skilled enough to meet the needs of the job market, a reliable electricity supply to meet rapidly growing energy demands, and the country's capacity to mitigate risks and vulnerabilities posed by flood and drought. According to ADB, a 90 million U.S. dollars concessional loan from the ADB's Asian Development Fund (ADF) for the Second Upper Secondary Education Development Project will focus on improving readiness of upper secondary school graduates for tertiary and vocational career development through enhancing upper secondary education quality to meet the international standards, increasing access and retention of disadvantaged groups with a special focus on girl and ethnic minority students coming from poor and near- poor households. The second 110.19 million U.S. dollars loan agreement represents the second tranche of the 730 million U.S. dollars power transmission investment program to Vietnam that ADB approved in Dec. 2011. Meanwhile, ADB provided a loan of 45 million U.S. dollars and the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID) provided a grant of 5.9 million U.S. dollars to improve flood and drought risk management and mitigation and reduce economic losses in Vietnam. The project will upgrade infrastructure in Vietnam's Dong Thap and Tien Giang provinces and it is a part of the Greater Mekong Subregion Flood and Drought Risk Management and Mitigation project which also supports activities in Cambodia and Laos. |
ASEAN-China Tourism Development Forum Took Place in Shanghai Posted: 21 Dec 2012 12:05 AM PST
Together with Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) and supported by the Marketing & International Cooperation Department of the China National Tourism Administration, ASEAN-China Centre(ACC) hosted the "2rd China Responsible Tourism & ASEAN-China Tourism Development Forum" in Shanghai on November 16. Mr. Ma Mingqiang, Secretary-General of ACC delivered a welcome speech to the forum. Mr. Ma indicated that, an international organization jointly established by Chinese government and 10 governments of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myamar, Laos, Philipines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, ACC is committed to facilitate the co-operations among China and ASEAN Member States in the fields of trade, investment, tourism, culture and education. Mr. Ma said, abundant in natural and cultural tourism resources, both China and ASEAN Member States attach high importance to tourism industry. The 11 countries forms a huge travel market place, attracting millions of travelers all over the world. The United Nations World Tourism Organization forecasted that by the year 2015, China would receive up to 150 million tourist arrivals, while generating 88 millions outbound visitations. On a setting of such a big travel volume, both China and ASEAN Member States are facing a common challenge of how to protect their individual eco system and tourism resources. An inter-governmental organization, ACC is determined to promote the co-operation and sustainable development of tourism through increasing the flow of people by communicating the diversified tourism resources of China and ASEAN Member States to the public. To realize a balanced and sustainable way of economic and tourism development, we are responsible to call on the government, private sector and individuals to take actions together to work out the responsible tourism through protecting the eco system of travel destination, and respecting the uniqueness of local custom and culture, while promoting the tourist resources of China and ASEAN Member States. Themed as "sustainable innovation, sustainable travel, sustainable business model", the forum draws involvement of 150 participants from government, tour operator, trade association, hotel, high tech company and high education institutions. The participants shared the most up-to-date trade information and best practices, and further exchanged views on the current challenges and opportunities in future. |
ASEAN-China Centre Participated at China International Travel Mart 2012 Posted: 20 Dec 2012 07:54 PM PST Jointly organized by the China National Tourism Administration, Civil Aviation Administration of China and Shanghai Municipal People's Government, the China International Travel Mart (CITM) 2012 was held in the Shanghai New International Expo Centre November 15-18. To communicate with trade professionals and general public and showcase the results of tourism cooperation between China and ASEAN Member States, ASEAN-China Centre (ACC) and ASEAN Secretariat set up a joint booth to present the tourist attractions of ASEAN Member States. During CITM, Mr. Ma Mingqiang, Secretary-General of ACC met with visiting Dato'Sri Dr. YEN YEN NG, Tourism Minister of Malaysia; Prof. Dr. Bosengkham Vongdarathe, Tourism Minister of Laos, Vietnam, Pol Menghour, Under Secretary of State, Tourism Ministry of Cambodia; U Aung Zaw Win, Director-General of Hotel and Tourism Ministry of Myanmar, exchanged views on continuing to facilitate tourism cooperation between China and ASEAN Member States. |
Yearender: Mideast upheavals hamper U.S. pivoting to Asia Posted: 20 Dec 2012 07:54 PM PST WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 (Xinhua) -- After taking office in 2009, U. S. President Barack Obama vowed to pivot his administration's foreign policy focus from the Middle East to Asia. In the span of almost four years, the pivoting has been underscored by Washington ' s high-profile activities in Asia and deep involvement in regional affairs. However, with numerous crises still boiling in the Middle East, such as Iran's nuclear standoff, Syria's civil war, political upheavals in Egypt, escalating Palestinian-Israeli tensions, and so on, analysts argue that troubles in that volatile region are hampering Obama's ability to pivot to Asia. ASIA AS THE PIVOT? During the Bush administration, the United States was bogged down with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan which consumed much of its strategic resources. As a result, Washington has somewhat ignored Asia. But as the region has been increasingly reshaping global dynamics, America's political elite decided to pivot to Asia in order to maintain its predominant role amid the shifting of global geopolitical and economic gravity center. During his first presidential term, Obama, along with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, made frequent and high-profile appearances in the Asia-Pacific. He set Thailand, Myanmar and Cambodia as destinations for his first foreign travel after winning re-election in November, a move widely interpreted as a firm bid to showcase his commitment to the "pivot-to-Asia" strategy. However, since the unveiling of Obama's Asia policy, its phrasing has evolved from the earliest "back-to-Asia," and then to "pivot-to-Asia" and to the latest "re-balancing-in-Asia," the change of which, in the eyes of many, has reflected an internal policy adjustment. DRAG FROM THE MIDEAST Now, many analysts doubt whether Washington has sufficient strategic resources to implement its so-called "pivoting" or "re- balancing," given the enormous upheavals in the Middle East, and the pressing need for widespread spending cuts, even in U.S. defense and diplomatic operations. Some critics bluntly point out that rhetoric outweighs substance in the "pivot-to-Asia" strategy. Admittedly, the Obama administration has shown a declining interest in Middle East affairs, compared to its diplomatic fanfare in the Asia-Pacific. However, the reality of a turbulent Middle East keeps on preventing Obama from pivoting away. "The irony, of course, is that every time the Obama administration tries to turn toward Asia, the Middle East drags it back," Robert Kagan, senior fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution, commented in a recent article. As a case in point, in order to avert an all-out war between Palestine's Hamas and Israel, Obama urgently dispatched Clinton after the East Asia Summit in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, to the Middle East for mediation. "Thank goodness, President Barack Obama overcame his pivot penchant to Asia and has sent Secretary of State Hillary Clinton back to the Middle East. Her arrival can come none too soon," Brookings' Vice President Martin Indyk, who served as the two-time former U.S. ambassador to Israel, wrote immediately after the diplomatic move. In the end, under influences from Washington and Cairo, Hamas and Israel grudgingly reached a cease-fire and hence averted a full-scale war. FLARING HOT SPOTS But troubles in the region go way beyond the rockets launched from Gaza. In the case of Iran, despite the crippling sanctions imposed by the Obama administration, no breakthrough has been achieved in solving the nuclear stalemate. With fundamental differences remaining between Iran and the United States, plus an Israel that is prone to launch unilateral attacks, to settle the crisis through diplomacy is still by no means guaranteed. Many experts, including Michael O'Hanlon, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, see Iran as potentially the biggest headache for Obama's foreign policy team in the next four years. "I think priority number one is Iran and figuring out how to avoid a conflict. The potential of a conflict with Iran is still high," O'Hanlon told Xinhua. In Egypt, a major Arab power in the Middle East, serious political infighting among the Muslim Brotherhood, secular forces and supporters of former President Hosni Mubarak continues to escalate. Observers say that the scope and scale of the ongoing crisis, ignited by the controversial constitutional declaration issued by President Mohamed Morsi and the constitution drafting, has been unprecedented since the fall of the former regime. "Egypt's unbelievably complex political evolution will continue to play out in 2013," said Jessica Tuchman, president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "Unlike the end of Soviet rule in Eastern Europe, these are genuine internal revolutions that will take decades to play out." Not far away from Egypt, there is still no end in sight to a civil war that has killed over 40,000 people in Syria, as conflicts between Syria's government forces and rebels are heightening. Located at a key geopolitical juncture in the Middle East, Syria has historically been a focal point of struggles among global and regional powers. There is no way that the United States would sit on the sidelines. Urging unity of the Syrian opposition, strengthening support to the rebels, deploying Patriot Missiles along the Turkish border, drawing redlines on chemical weapons, and dispatching Eisenhower aircraft carrier offshore Syria, and etc., Washington is taking a wide array of measures to ensure that the country is on a trajectory that works best for U.S. strategic interests. A REGION AT THE CROSSROADS With its grand Middle East strategy installed for decades, the United States has been interfering with regional affairs in wide- ranging ways, including directly launching large-scale ground wars. However, the political landscape in the region has not evolved according to the roadmap outlined by Washington. Unlike what the West had expected, widespread political upheavals in the Middle East starting from last year have not led to a swift change and resolution. On the contrary, the surge of Islamic forces in the Arab world has increasingly worried U.S. policy-makers about the direction the region is heading for. A turbulent Middle East is posing urgent and multifaceted challenges to the United States. The list runs long: preventing Iran from getting a nuclear bomb while avoiding being dragged into another costly war, de-escalating tensions between Palestine and Israel, managing the growing Islamic influence in countries like Egypt, effectively swaying Syria's future, among others. To be certain, the United States cannot afford the potential price for ignoring those challenges. For decades, from the Islamic Revolution in Iran, to the pricey war in Iraq, to the most recent death of the U.S. ambassador in Benghazi, Libya, Washington knows better than anyone else that any lack of attention or mishandling of policies on the Middle East affairs will immediately draw serious backfires. These daunting challenges serve well as a grim reminder for Obama. The president will need to "pivot back to the Middle East once more, before he heads off to Asia again," said Indyk. |
Posted: 20 Dec 2012 07:49 PM PST BEIJING, Dec. 20 (Xinhua) -- Lao People's Democratic Republic launched a seminar here Thursday to attract Chinese investors after becoming a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in October. Ambassador of Laos to China, Somdy Bounkhoum, addressed the Lao Investment Promotion Seminar, highlighting Sino-Laos economic cooperation under the framework of ASEAN and the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS). The GMS is a natural economic area bound together by the Mekong River, covering 2.6 million square kilometers with a combined population of around 326 million. The GMS consists of Cambodia, China (specifically Yunnan Province and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region), Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. The "investment climate" in Laos has been improving, said Somdy, especially after it was offered WTO membership, adding that his country is ready to offer preferential policies to Chinese investors in terms of tax exemptions, land use and labor resources. Investors will enjoy corresponding preferential policies in different economic zones in Laos, including a special economic zone, an export processing zone, an industrial park, a tourism zone, a duty free zone and other zones, said the ambassador. Minister Counsellor in charge of economic and commercial affairs at the Lao Embassy to China, Khampanh Sengthongkham, spoke about the Laos advantages in attracting investments. Located at the "heart", Laos is "the only country bordering all the other countries in the GMS," said Khampanh. With a total population of more than six million, Laos has relatively low labor costs for overseas investors, he added. Laos has natural resources, large areas of fertile agricultural land, tourism resources while having virtually no damaging natural disasters all year round, according to Khampanh. He advised investors to take note on opportunities involving sectors of agriculture and forestry, electricity, mining and tourism. Xu Ningning, executive secretary-general of China-ASEAN Business Council Chinese Secretariat, said that in the first 10 months this year, Sino-Laos trade volume reached 1.37 billion U.S. dollars, up 42.8 percent year on year, far above China's average foreign trade growth rate of 6.3 percent. With a total investment volume of 3.3 billion U.S. dollars, China is the third largest foreign investor in Laos following Thailand and Vietnam, said Mao Tianyu, section chief of the Department of International Trade and Economic Affairs, Ministry of Commerce of China. Nearly 200 representatives from Chinese enterprises and government bodies of both countries attended the seminar. The one-day seminar was co-sponsored by the Embassy of the Lao PDR and China-ASEAN Business Council Chinese Secretariat. It was co-organized by Laos Botin Economic Zone Development Group Limited and Yunnan Provincial Overseas Investment Co., Ltd. and COSCO Logistics Co., Ltd. |
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