The Phnom Penh Post - ENGLISH: “not interesting for viewers” plus 9 more

The Phnom Penh Post - ENGLISH: “not interesting for viewers” plus 9 more


not interesting for viewers

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 07:13 PM PDT

We must give them what they want. Rainsy's arrival is not interesting for our viewers.

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on why its stations aired a 14-minute story calling CNRP ralliers unruly, but not other opposition news
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A regal tale of decline and betrayal

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Princess Norodom Arun Rasmey, president of the royalist Funcinpec party, greets supporters during a campaign rally in Phnom Penh earlier this month

The past 20 years have not been easy for the Funcinpec royalists.

After overwhelmingly winning Cambodia's first democratic election in 1993, the party, led by then-King Norodom Sihanouk's son Prince Norodom Ranariddh, was strong-armed into a power-sharing coalition by the now-ruling Cambodian People's Party.

It was all downhill from there.

Ranariddh was ousted from his position as first prime minister to Hun Sen's second in a coup d'état four years later that saw bloody battles on Phnom Penh's streets.

Since that first ephemeral peak in '93, Funcinpec's fortunes have plunged dramatically, with the CPP slowly eroding its power in successive coalitions that have left it a tiny minority partner with little political clout.

It won just two seats in the 123-member National Assembly in the 2008 elections.

"This is the last stage for Funcinpec.… The trend of their popularity has gone from being the winner to being the loser," political analyst Kem Ley told the Post this week.

"The Cambodian people have no hope in Funcinpec [now]."

Set up by Sihanouk from exile in Paris in 1981, the party originally appealed to voters looking for a return to Cambodia's so-called golden age under Sihanouk's rule from 1965 to 1970, Ley said.

With Cambodian demographics now firmly skewed towards the youth and Royal appeal waning further in the wake of Sihanouk's passing last year, the popularity of the royalists has diminished almost altogether, observers say.

"What's interesting is that Funcinpec's decline is in parallel with the decline of royalty as an institution in Cambodia," eminent Cambodia scholar David Chandler said.

"There is no popular feeling for royalty anymore … only among older people."

The roots of Funcinpec's demise are often traced to the 1997 coup that saw its military forces overrun and party leaders forced to flee the Kingdom after a number of extrajudicial killings of loyalists. Amid international pressure, Ranariddh and others were allowed to return for the 1998 election, winning 43 seats. With the rise of the Sam Rainsy Party as a viable opposition force, the party won only 26 seats in the 2003 election. After Ranariddh was toppled as leader three years later, the party suffered dramatically, losing almost all of those seats in the 2008 election.

"Things went wrong in 2006.… The Funcinpec leadership at that time was all around Ranariddh, but they were not loyal to him," a longtime Ranariddh adviser told the Post.

Nhek Bun Chhay, the current secretary-general of the party and an ally of Hun Sen, is alleged to have engineered the coup against Ranariddh, who went on to form an eponymous party that won two seats in 2008.

According to Funcinpec spokesman Tum Sambo, the royalists could win up to 15 seats this election thanks to a recent merger with the former Norodom Ranariddh Party (later renamed the Nationalist Party after Ranariddh was forced out last year) and a new party president in Sihanouk daughter Princess Norodom Arun Rasmey.

"We have joined together. All our supporters are back to one party with one voice.… After the King Father's passing, more people will vote for the party," Sambo said.

But observers are not as optimistic.

"For the majority of voters, I don't think we can simply equate that two plus two [seats] will equal four seats," political analyst Chea Vannath said.

Instead of emerging as an opposition force, Funcinpec's longstanding partnership with the CPP has undermined its voter base, she added.

"Looking at the dynamism of the different parties and the dynamism of voters … they see Funcinpec as affiliated to the ruling party. So the common voters would rather vote for the big party."

Chandler agrees: "They just didn't have the voter base that Sam Rainsy managed to achieve.… They were [historically] strapped and outmanoeuvred by Hun Sen."

In a sign that many Funcinpec members hold no illusions of a return to prominence, party spokesman Sambo said that in his opinion, the royalists should join the CNRP.

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"If Funcinpec joined the opposition party … with all the old Funcinpec members … in my own thinking, it would be better for the party," he said.

Party splits and defections have plagued Funcinpec over the years, with much of the CNRP leadership, including Sam Rainsy, Kem Sokha and Mu Sochua, all former Funcinpec members.

According to a long-serving adviser of Ranaridd, who wished to remain anonymous, the recent merger will not do anything for the party.

"They are not on the Cambodian radar screen. They cannot garner any votes. They have no political platform.… They just have people running around like chickens without heads."

A dyed-in-the-wool royalist himself, he has accepted that Sihanouk's name is no longer enough in modern Cambodian politics.

"People want to know what you are going to do about unemployment, immigration, inflation, education.… Being a King's daughter is not enough anymore."

Princess Norodom Arun Rasmey, president of the royalist Funcinpec party, greets supporters during a campaign rally in Phnom Penh earlier this month. HENG CHIVOAN
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A government soldier walks in front of a burned-out tank during the coup that deposed then-Prime Minister Prince Norodom Ranariddh in Phnom Penh in 1997.
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Police seeking clues in brutal double murder

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Police in Phnom Penh's Por Sen Chey district are investigating the killing of two young women whose bodies were found bound, strangled and stabbed yesterday after they had been missing from their homes since Monday, police said.

The decomposing bodies of victims Vorn Sreyleak and Nguon Srey Leakhana, which were stumbled upon by a construction worker, were tied together with electrical wire, with rope around their throats and stab wounds to the backs of their heads, according to police, family members and neighbourhood residents.

"We are still investigating the case, and we have not identified the perpetrators," said Mak My, police chief of Kraing Thnong commune.

Another officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the crime was likely motivated by money, as the victims' possessions had been stolen.

"This is a murder-robbery case, I think," he said. "However, our expert officials are still working more."

Vorn Sokpom, 25, speaking from her sister Sreyleak's cremation ceremony, said her sister hadn't been seen or heard from since 9am on Monday morning, when she had left her school. Sreyleak had said she was going to a party with a friend, but Sokpom did not know if she ever made it there, as the friend did not attend the funeral, she added.

"The friend did not come. If he came, he might know what happened; [or] he might not know," she said, noting that Sreyleak had been robbed of an iPhone 5 and nearly one damlung of jewellery.

Nguon Phy, Leakhana's father, said that his daughter had also been robbed of about a damlung of gold, as well as her new motorbike.

"Until now, police are still investigating, so we can't say anything. What I saw was that my child's neck was tied with hammock rope, and the back of her head was stabbed many times with a knife," he said. "I would like to appeal to authorities to arrest the perpetrators."

Leakhana and Sreyleak studied at Methodist School of Cambodia and lived in Phnom Penh's Thmey commune.

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Workers paid out on doorstop of election

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Garment workers demonstrate against Pine Great factory owner and appeal to Prime Minister Hun Sen and his wife

A months-long battle to secure back pay waged by 750 garment workers has ended only days before the national election — with the government footing the bill.

The $450,000 payout to the Pine Great (Cambodia) factory workers, whose factory owner skipped town in April, is being financed through a loan from the national budget, with payment to be made today.

Workers previously expressed concern that they would be unable to pay transportation costs so they could cast ballots if they did not receive their pay by Friday. They further vowed to protest in front of the Ministry of Social Affairs on Election Day if the wages remained unpaid.

Upon hearing the news, the out-of-pocket employees "laughed and thanked Prime Minister Hun Sen for helping them receive their wages after spending more than three months demanding" them, Keo Sokhom, a worker representative, said yesterday.

Touch Somuth, a member of a Ministry of Social Affairs committee formed to handle the dispute, said that because Pine Great's Chinese owner had fled the country, the committee had decided to try to distribute pay to all workers at the Meanchey district factory today.

Those who could not make it, he added, could pick up their money at the Ministry of Social Affairs.

While in favour of the decision to pay the workers money rightfully owed to them, Moen Tola, head of the labour program at the Community Legal Education Center, questioned the timing of the payments.

"We see political manipulation more than commitment to the sole issue," Tola said yesterday.

Rather than paying money out of the public budget, the government should set up a system where companies deposited a certain amount of money to avoid complications like those seen at Pine Great if a company became insolvent, Tola said.

Regardless of the government's motive behind the payments or how they were going about making them, Sokhom said the action secured the Pine Great workers' votes.

"We will go to vote, and we will vote for Cambodian People's Party, because they always help the workers," Sokhom said.

Earlier this year, the Ministry of Economy and Finance paid out $6.5 million to more than 7,000 workers at Yung Wah, a Gap supplier, who were owed compensation.

ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY SEAN TEEHAN

Garment workers demonstrate against Pine Great factory owner and appeal to Prime Minister Hun Sen and his wife, Bun Rany, in front of the Social Affairs Ministry earlier this month. VIREAK MAI
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Airport upgrade to use satellites for ground navigation

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Phnom Penh International Airport's navigation system will be upgraded today with the instalment of a new satellite-based system that aims to improve efficiency and reduce fuel usage, an aviation official said.

Chhun Sivorn, director of the Air Navigation Standards and Safety Department of the State Secretariat of Civil Aviation, said besides ground navigation, the airport will be able to provide performance-based navigation (PBN), a concept developed by the UN's International Civil Aviation Organization.

"We are going to implement the PBN in Cambodia on 25 July," Sivorn said.

Under the system, navigation doesn't need to rely on ground facilities with beacons. When a plane departs Bangkok to Phnom Penh, if it is equipped with PBN, "the aircraft [is] navigated by the satellite in space", he said. The move saves money and the human resources needed to maintain ground facilities, he added.

It also saves fuel, as it allows the aircraft to choose shorter routes, skipping over beacon-based facilities.

The airport will still use ground facilities for older aircraft without the necessary PBN equipment, he said. Siem Reap will get its upgrade in December, while Sihanoukville will follow next year. The project is part of a Japanese-funded initiative for new air traffic management systems in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

Launched in January 2011, the project lasts until January 2016, on a budget of around 500 million yen ($5 million).

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Philippine-Cambodian rice deal still on hold

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Four months after the Philippines and Cambodia signed an agreement to increase rice trade, the plan is stuck in limbo.

Philippine Ambassador to Cambodia Noe Wong and Cambodian Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh signed a deal in April for the Philippine National Food Authority to import rice through the Cambodian state-owned enterprise Green Trade.

Thon Virak, Green Trade's director, said yesterday that the company is waiting to schedule a meeting because relevant partners are busy preparing for the election.

"We are still waiting for the delegation from the Philippines to come here for a detailed discussion," Virak said. "We plan to send the invitation letter to them, but need to wait for Cambodia's new government to form after the national election."

Last year, a similar agreement between Cambodia and the Philippines was also planned but could not be finalised after Cambodia reportedly delayed a decision to lower prices to levels the Philippines was demanding.

The Philippines aims to achieve rice sufficiency this year but is planning to import around 187,000 tonnes of rice for stocks.

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Financial Cup sides cash in on final group games

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

The seventh and final round of group stage fixtures in the 2013 Financial Challenge Cup was completed at Beeline Arena on Tuesday night, with table toppers Maruhan group capping off a fine campaign with an 18-2 annihilation of Ernst & Young.

Meanwhile, Wing made sure of their second place with a 3-1 defeat of HwangDBS, while Cam Ed routed FTB 5-1 to finish third. PwC proved too much for KPMG, winning their tie 4-1 to grab fourth in the standings.

The sides now progress to playoff matches next Tuesday from 6pm at Beeline Arena. The Finals day is slated for Sunday, August 4.

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FBT enters Cambodian market

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

The Thai sports goods manufacturer aims to sell high-quality merchandise at affordable prices.

As you enter the lobby of the newly built multi-storied National Olympic Committee of Cambodia headquarters in the iconic Olympic Stadium complex, you cannot miss an eye-catching collection of sports apparel and equipment neatly racked or stacked behind huge glass panels.

So what's special about the one-stop shop full of splashy sportswear and don't-you-want-to-try-me gear, T-shirts, shorts, track suits, boxing gloves, tennis rackets and even petanque boules?

Just another one of those outlets you might think, until you realise it's an exclusive Football Thai franchise, the fastest growing sports brand in Southeast Asia, which has a market niche. FBT is in 40 countries and counting.

More significantly, this is the first FBT foray into Cambodia as a retailer, despite the Thai manufacturing giant's having been omnipresent in the Kingdom's sports sphere for a few years now as a provider and sponsor associated with the NOCC and some of its affiliates.

Just about every matchball that was kicked during the second half of the just-concluded Metfone C-League football championship was sponsored by FBT, and so were the referees' uniforms for part of the season.

As many as 4,000 runners taking part in the International Phnom Penh Half-Marathon wore specially designed shirts given away by FBT, whose involvement with Cambodian sports is growing deeper with every passing major event.

When the country's big contingent heads to the SEA Games in Myanmar, every member will be kitted out in training and competitive clothing provided by FBT, under a purchase deal with NOCC's main sponsor, NagaWorld.

"Our relationship with NagaWorld has been very cordial and long-standing. They have been using our brand for their football team and we provided clothing to the SEA Games squad that NagaWorld sponsored in Indonesia [in 2011]," FBT director of international marketing Thamchai Chokephaibulkit told the Post in an exclusive interview during his recent visit to Phnom Penh.

"For us, Cambodia has a special place. We want to support Cambodian sports in every conceivable way. At the same time we would like to establish our brand. There are exciting marketing possibilities. We have a strong presence in other ASEAN countries and we wish to add Cambodia to that list.

"As a manufacturer, wholesaler and retailer, FBT can control the quality of its products to the end customers, and at the same time have the flexibility to suit all types of markets," added Thamchai, whose brother Monchai is the deputy managing director, while his three sisters also hold strategic management positions in operations wholly controlled by the family.

Producing high-quality products at affordable prices has remained FBT's business philosophy, and this market mantra has not only helped the brand flourish but also to stay competitive with some of the world's best known names.

It was nearly 60 years ago that a then 20-year-old odd-job man stitched up a football by hand when Thailand had mostly only seen Europeans play with them.

Kamol Chokenphaibulkit knew nothing about the game, except that he has had requests from some foreigners now and then to repair or patch up balls.

When he finally managed to get one into good shape and size on his own, it became an obsession — and then a profession that would ultimately change his and his emerging family's life.

He started importing bladders from Germany, one of only a few countries making footballs at the time. From putting together two or three footballs in a day and selling them one by one, the number increased as he decided this would be his chosen path.

He hired a few hands for help, rented a shop in Bangkok's Lat Krabang district. He had a clear vision of what lay decades ahead.

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He registered the business as a company – Football Thai – in 1952. The rest is the stuff of legend in Thailand's manufacturing sector and sports goods industry.

Today, that famous combination of letters that adorn the chests and sleeves of millions of brand loyalists generates an annual turnover of $50 million, providing gainful employment for nearly 3,000 workers in two factories where every day 20,000 pieces of clothing, up to 15,000 footballs and 10,000 pairs of shoes are produced.

The company's product range list is remarkably long and includes numerous other items from American footballs to petanque boules, through punching bags and squash rackets, and even medicine balls.

Yet the man directing the international marketing operations makes it absolutely clear that FBT will not stop looking for continental expansions, greener marketing pastures in more and more countries, while sticking to its vows on high quality and affordable pricing.

"That part of our promise will never change," said Thomchai.

There is more to FBT in Cambodia than a mere showroom in Phnom Penh. It is bound to prop up its visibility and influence, and in, the context of Cambodian sport, FBT could well mean "For Better Times".

A staff member displays a training jacket at the FBT shop in the NOCC headquarters building. The Thai sports goods manufacturer aims to sell high-quality merchandise at affordable prices. SRENG MENG SRUN
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FBT director of international marketing Thamchai Chokephaibulkit says the company wants to support Cambodian sports
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International brawls set for Beeline Arena card

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Four foreign boxers will clash with Cambodian fighters at Beeline Arena tomorrow, as part of Bayon TV's monthly international "Khmer Fighter" event.

The first match-up at 65kg sees Krud Meanchey Club's Em Vutha take on Brazilian Pachero. Ung Virak of Commando 911 Club then comes up against Frenchman Sebatioe Billro at 73kg, before Ministry of Interior Club's Sao Se Noeun faces Simone Cecchini of Italy at 65kg.

Military Camp 31 Club's Vong No wraps up the evening's action with a 67kg bout against France's Raphe Boch.

TRANSLATED BY CHENG SERYRITH

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Real economic debate missing in this campaign

Posted: 24 Jul 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Dear Editor,

Political parties vying for parliamentary seats in the upcoming election rarely talk about their plans for the economy — just when it is absolutely crucial to do so.

For a country that experienced war and genocide during large parts of the 20th century, Cambodia has certainly achieved remarkable growth over the past two decades.

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Gross domestic product increased almost six-fold between the first democratically held election in 1993 and the current one.

In per capita terms, an average Cambodian today earns more than four times what he did 20 years ago.

As a result, Cambodia is set to join the rank of middle-income countries — albeit at the lower end — later this year.

But Cambodia's next stage of development is rife with perils.

While much of our past growth was underwritten by tax incentives, inexpensive labour and abundant natural resources, the contributions from the garment and mining sectors will not last. Rising labour costs and increasingly contentious industrial relations mean that some investors will leave in search of cheaper destinations.

Furthermore, in a world well-served by modern transportation and telecommunication links, Cambodians and Cambodian businesses will have to contend with counterparts far beyond our borders in search — and in defence — of jobs and markets.

It is perhaps too early to talk about the middle-income trap. But Cambodia's future growth risks becoming directionless, inequitable and unsustainable in the absence of serious reforms and strategic investments in some important areas.

Take education, for example. The effort to rebuild the education system after the fall of the Khmer Rouge has yielded admirable results in terms of physical infrastructure and enrolment and literacy rates.

But fundamental problems persist. While curriculums are frequently updated, the underlying pedagogy is not.

The four-hour school days are shorter than those in neighbouring countries, and the introduction of student-centred learning has not been particularly successful.

In tertiary education, the main focus of many universities seems to be the number of degrees granted rather than equipping students with practical skills in response to job market demands.

And due to low salaries and benefits, the teaching profession struggles to attract and retain young, capable and passionate graduates who instead opt for better-paying jobs in the private sector.

Fundamental education reforms are long overdue. Now that access to physical assets such as schools and textbooks is no longer a major issue, the emphasis must be on improving the quality of education to ensure that the next generation of Cambodians are ready for a global economy that is less labour-intensive and more knowledge-driven.

The environment is another area deserving much more attention than it currently receives. According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation, Cambodia's primary rainforest cover has declined steeply from over 70 per cent of total forest area in 1970 to just three per cent in 2007, making the rate of deforestation in Cambodia among the fastest in the world.

The scramble for mining rights and economic land concessions has also contributed to the rapid depletion of valuable nonrenewable resources.

Putting Cambodia's growth back on a sustainable path requires a complete re-evaluation of the impacts these large-scale commercial activities have on the environment and the livelihood of the rural poor.

Last but not least, Cambodia depends to a considerable extent on foreign assistance to fund its annual budget. On the one hand, foreign aid helps fill the funding gap for social services such as health and education.

On the other, having ready access to aid money reduces the incentives to strengthen domestic revenue collection through a broader base of taxation and more effective enforcement measures.

This is neither an ideal nor tenable long-term arrangement. Cambodia needs a plan for an orderly medium-term exit from aid.

A self-funded budget is critical because it is a sustainable source of financing for physical and social infrastructure, as well as a mark of fiscal responsibility.

These reforms are an important first step towards building a solid foundation for the future.

Reforms are never easy, but recent events offer some cause for optimism. Not too long ago, visitors flying into Phnom Penh at night were greeted by a city mostly enveloped in pitch darkness.

But the Phnom Penh skyline has undergone drastic change, with luxury apartments and high-rise buildings going up at dizzying speed.

This is a sign that, while we have endured much hardship, we have also made significant progress.

At the same time, it is important to remember that the ultimate measures of a country's development are not the scale or height of its buildings, but the quality of life and well-being of its citizens.

These can only be achieved through pragmatic efforts backed by genuine political will.

You Sokunpanha holds a master's degree in public policy degree from the University of Michigan and currently works in banking in Phnom Penh.

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Phnom Penh's rapidly changing skyline illuminates the night sky last week.
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