News Update :

In Scambodia, Hun Xen's order is the law, not the one in the book: Cambodian leader orders ban on spit-roasting cows in front of restaurants

Penulis : bang Sreymom on Monday, February 27, 2012 | 3:59 AM

Monday, February 27, 2012


This is CRUEL?

And this is NOT,  F#@!ing Priminister?

Beating of Buddhist Monks is Buddha's teaching according to the F#$%@ing commie CPP?
Monday, February 27, 2012
Associated Press

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia’s prime minister has banned spit-roasting cows in front of restaurants, calling it too cruel a sight.

Hun Sen said Monday he is ordering the ban after Buddhist monks told him the activity runs contrary to Buddha’s teachings on the sanctity of life and encourages violence.


The practice is also unhygienic, Hun Sen said during a “clean city” forum in the capital.

He said restaurants may still grill and sell spit-roasted beef, but must cook it out of customers’ sight. He added that they can advertise it with signs or pictures.

Cows are treated with respect in Buddhist Cambodia, which is influenced by Hindu culture.

The government issued a directive last month banning the practice but it was widely ignored.
comments | | Read More...

Who cares "who's who in the courtroom"?

comments | | Read More...

Khmer Krom: UN Committee Condemns Vietnam’s Persecution Of National Minorities

February 27, 2012
Source: http://www.unpo.org/article/13942

At the UN’s review of Vietnam’s efforts to eliminate racial discrimination, international experts heavily criticized the country’s discriminatory practices towards religious and ethnic minorities.

Below is an article published by Queme:

The Vietnam Committee on Human Rights regrets that Vietnam missed a precious opportunity to engage in a meaningful dialogue with the United Nations in Geneva on 21-22 February 2012 during the examination of its 10th-14th periodic reports on implementation of the UN International Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) to which it acceded in 1982. Instead of addressing real challenges, Vietnam confined itself to propaganda. “Vietnam cites the quantity of laws it has adopted as proof of the rule of law in Vietnam. It pretends to believe that everything in the garden is rosy, simply because it says so. In fact, many of Vietnam’s mass-produced laws are rarely or never enacted; the stark reality for religious and ethnic minorities is the anti-human rights policy of the regime”, said Vo Van Ai, President of the Vietnam Committee for Human Rights (VCHR).

“Vietnam’s presentation of its periodic report was surreal”, said Mr. Ai. “The delegation began by describing the resounding success of its policies on ethnic minorities, supporting its claims with Soviet-style statistics - 100% of cities have primary schools and free clinics! It then proceeded to lament the lack of access to education and health in the remote regions where ethnic communities live. In fact, the report was more like a bad exercise in propaganda than a genuine effort to address problems of racial discrimination in Vietnam”.


The CERD experts saw through Vietnam’s claims, and sharply criticized the delegation for presenting a theoretical vision of racial discrimination, with a long list of laws but no concrete details on their implementation. Regretting that no factual examples of discrimination were mentioned, French expert Regis de Gouttes observed that “the lack of complaints against racism is not proof that racism does not exist. On the contrary, this could stem from the victims’ lack of knowledge of their rights, or their lack of confidence in the Police and judiciary”. He also questioned the system of ho khau, or household registration permits, which is the basis of all discrimination. The US expert Carlos Manuel Vazquez commented that Vietnam’s claim that “discrimination is prohibited” is no guarantee that it does not exist on the ground.

The UN experts also criticized Vietnam’s legal system, notably Article 87 of the Penal Code on “undermining the unity policy; sowing divisions between the religious and non-religious” which the government claimed was enacted to protected minorities. Mr. Vazquez noted that this article was “so vaguely worded as to be used against minorities, especially those engaged in peaceful demonstrations”, and called on Vietnam to revise it. The Vietnamese delegation initially avoided this question, then stated that they would “think about it”, adding that if ethnic minorities had their rights, there were also people who “abused” these rights. Such people were “deceitful and harmful, and must be sanctioned by the law”. Article 87 is one of a whole chapter of “national security” provisions in the Vietnamese Penal Code. Since 1995, the UN has repeatedly pressed Vietnam to revise these “catch-all” provisions which criminalize the legitimate exercise of human rights.

Taking up reports by NGOs, notably the 30-page alternative report of the Vietnam Committee on Human Rights, the CERD experts expressed concern about the use of negative stereotypes that stigmatize ethnic minorities as being “backward” or “uncivilized”. Once again, the Vietnamese delegation responded that such stereotypes were “prohibited”. In practice, however, these negative misperceptions are very real. “The Vietnamese government, the state-controlled media and the Vietnamese population in general continue to refer to ethnic minorities by the derogatory term “moi” (“savages”), whereas the word “Kinh”, used for the majority Vietnamese population, is a term which implies superiority”, commented Vo Van Ai.

The CERD expressed further concern about abuses of political and economic rights suffered by ethnic and religious minorities. French expert Regis de Gouttes and several other experts cited violations such as expropriation from ancestral lands, forced population displacement, restrictions on the rights of freedom of movement and expression, violence, arbitrary arrests and religious persecution. Mr. de Gouttes expressed particular concern about repression against “Khmer Krom Buddhists, affiliated to the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, as well as Montagnards and Hmongs, who are predominantly Christian”.

Chinese expert Huang Yong’An, who is also Rapporteur for the CERD examination of Vietnam, raised the serious problem of state confiscation of lands: “A Chinese proverb says, “oppressive government drives the people to rebellion”. When we look at the conflicts in ethnic minority regions, we find that many are related to issues of land-use rights. One NGO report said, I quote, “peaceful demonstrations on these issues are repressed by excessive force and violence, resulting in frequent arrests”.

Confronted by the experts’ concerns on human rights violations, the Vietnamese delegation simply repeated that “there is no racial discrimination in Vietnam”. On specific allegations of Police violence used to repress demonstrations of ethnic Hmongs in May 2011, the government denied all use of force. In fact, many press agencies reported Vietnam’s use of armed helicopters and troops to disband these peaceful demonstrations in Dien Bien province. Vietnam even mobilized support from armed forces in Laos to prevent Hmongs escaping across the Vietnam-Laos border.

Several experts urged Vietnam to develop mechanisms to enable ethnic minorities to claim and defend their rights. Nigerian expert Waliakoye Saidou urged Vietnam to recognize the competence of the CERD Committee to receive complaints from victims of abuses in Vietnam, in accordance with Article 14 of the ICERD Convention. The Vietnamese delegation made no reply. Asked whether Vietnam was considering the creation of a National Human Rights Commission on the lines of the Paris Principles, the delegation replied that it was considering the creation of such a Commission according to the “country’s specific conditions”, which would not necessarily conform with the Paris Principles. “Under current circumstances in Vietnam, where spurious laws have remained unchanged for decades, where there is no independent civil society and especially no independent judiciary, a National Human Rights Commission would be a parody of justice, a total farce”, said Vo Van Ai.
comments | | Read More...

[Khmer Krom] Monks await justice

Penulis : bang Sreymom on Sunday, February 26, 2012 | 11:19 AM

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Khmer Krom and Buddhist monks gather yesterday at the grave of the venerable Eang Sok Thoeun. (Meng Kimlong/Phnom Penh Post)

Tuesday, 28 February 2012
Tep Nimol
The Phnom Penh Post

Khmer Krom and Buddhist monks gathered yesterday in the capital for a ceremony to mourn the five-year anniversary of the venerable Eang Sok Thoeun’s death, who was found with his throat slit in February 2007.

The body of Eang Sok Thoeun, a Khmer Krom monk, was found at the Tronum Chhroeung pagoda in Kandal the morning after he protested with some 300 other monks at the Vietnam Embassy in Phnom Penh, demanding improved treatment for ethnic Khmers in southern Vietnam.

Officials and monks from the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Association gathered yesterday at their murdered brethren’s grave in Dangkor district, calling for the government to arrest those responsible for his death.

“The authorities have not arrested the killer,” Kim Sisomna, a leader for the association said.


Dangkor district deputy governor Seng Kun said police officials were still searching for a suspect.

“Police officials have not been careless in attempting to find the killer and punish him through the law,” the deputy governor said.
comments | | Read More...

Building 10 rises at Borei Keila


Evictees protest yesterday in the Borei Keila community where a new building is being constructed on the eviction site in Phnom Penh. HENG CHIVOAN


Residents evicted from the Borei Keila community protest on the site of their former homes yesterday. Signs displayed by residents demanded adequate compensation from the Phan Imex company. Heng Chivoan

Tuesday, 28 February 2012
Khouth Sophakchakrya 
The Phnom Penh Post
The letter, a copy of which has been obtained by the Post, claimed the 30 women and children detained in Prey Speu social affairs centre last month had been “invited” by authorities to live there and receive vocational skills training, and that their escape had been instigated by the opposition party and civil society organisations.
Another building is rapidly rising on the plot of land reserved for the tenth and last building promised to evicted Borei Keila residents.

Behind 100 protesting evictees, construction workers continued pounding away yesterday at a steel structure that started coming up last week, along with a ninth building that appeared two weeks ago.

A Phan Imex representative had previously told the Post that the ninth building was not meant for evicted residents.

Sorn Srey Touch, 41, said she had been visiting the district hall regularly over the past five years in hopes that authorities would tell her it was her time to claim a flat.

The company, which claimed it could not build the final two buildings in 2010 due to bankruptcy, now seemed able to erect them for the 400 families that had been left in limbo, she said.


“If they don’t build it for me, is it constructed to sell?” she said.

In 2003, Phan Imex Company signed an agreement with the government to construct 10 buildings on two hectares of land to house 1,776 families, in exchange for the rights to a remaining 2.6 hectares.

Evictees yesterday protested a letter that Phnom Penh municipal governor Kep Chutema had sent to the deputy prime minister and council of ministers on February 21.

The letter, a copy of which has been obtained by the Post, claimed the 30 women and children detained in Prey Speu social affairs centre last month had been “invited” by authorities to live there and receive vocational skills training, and that their escape had been instigated by the opposition party and civil society organisations.

“This statement lacks facts and accountability,” chanted the crowd of villagers.

Spokesman for the opposition Sam Rainsy Party Yim Sovann said the governor had mistaken his facts.

“The people were illegally detained. They understood their rights and left of their own accord,” he said.

Protestors lined the pavement next to the two buildings under construction before occupying an adjacent road for an hour.

Phan Imex owner Suy Sophan could not be reached for comment yesterday.
comments | | Read More...

Bar lowers boom on KRT ‘failure’


Prime Minister Hun Sen delivers a speech in Phnom Penh earlier this month. (Pha Lina)

Co-investigating judge You Bunleng in a handout photo. (ECCC)

Tuesday, 28 February 2012
Bridget Di Certo 
The Phnom Penh Post 
“You have to be careful when you criticise people and you don’t have any substantive information in your hand. You could be subjected to defamation law” (sic!) - Ek Tha, representative of the Council of Minister’s Press and Quick Reaction Unit [KI-Media Note: Go ahead PQRU! Let's see if you can sue the International Bar Association.]
Present government interference at the UN-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal has led to a “failure of credibility”, International Bar Association executive director Mark Ellis said in a report released yesterday.

The report, the second from the IBA, attributes that failure directly due to the lack of judicial independence in Cambodia.

“A history of corruption within the Cambodian justice system, coupled with a weak disqualification mechanism, fails to adequately safeguard internationally accepted standards of judicial integrity,” the report states.

“The court’s handling of Case 003 and the Supreme Council of Magistracy’s rejection of Judge Kasper-Ansermet, the International reserve co-investigating judge, only highlight these shortcomings,” it continues.


A litany of allegations of political pressure, official obstruction and uncontrolled corruption on the part of the Cambodian government and the national side of the court is catalogued in the 30-page report, including the “pervasive and institutionalized nature of the executive interference with the Cambodian judiciary, and the deeply concerning failure by judicial bodies to deal with it”.

Ellis is critical of actions and statements by Prime Minister Hun Sen toward controversial cases 003 and 004 and in blocking certain executive members from giving testimony to the tribunal as part of investigations.

He is also critical of actions and statements by Cambodian Co-Investigating Judge You Bunleng in his involvement in blocking the Supreme Council of Magistracy appointment of Kasper-Ansermet, a role Ellis called a “significant conflict of interest”.

Hun Sen and You Bunleng were not the only Cambodians under the microscope in Ellis’ report – Trial Chamber Judge Nil Nonn, who is now presiding over Case 002 against an elderly trio of Khmer Rouge senior leaders, “should have been disqualified” the report states.

“Nil Nonn is on record as admitting to taking bribes in relation to cases. Moreover, there have been allegations that several other judges and Court officials secured their positions by paying bribes to members of the executive”.

The report also accuses the UN of adopting a “detrimental hands-off approach” at the tribunal and concludes that “ensuring the effective investigation of alleged governmental influence in judicial matters would go some way to tackling the actual and perceived institutional legitimacy problems that threaten the future of the ECCC”.

Tribunal legal affairs spokesman Lars Olsen yesterday said he had “no comments at all on a report by third parties”.

UN Special Expert David Scheffer did not respond to requests for comment.

The co-investigating judges “fiasco” is at the heart of the report. Hun Sen stalled the appointment of Kasper-Ansermet, telling the UN “prudent consideration” of the appointment was required due to the judge’s use of social-media website Twitter.

Kasper-Ansermet has tweeted links to critical articles and reports on the work of his predecessor Siegfried Blunk and Cambodian counterpart You Bunleng.

The IBA report analyses the criticisms levied against Kasper-Ansermet’s use of Twitter and draws the conclusion that his “Twitter posts fall short of infringing on international standards regarding a judge’s public involvement in controversial topics and government criticism,” adding that Kasper-Ansermet exercised “appropriate restraint”.

Ek Tha, representative of the Council of Minister’s Press and Quick Reaction Unit, told the Post the criticisms of the government were unfounded.

“You have to be careful when you criticise people and you don’t have any substantive information in your hand. You could be subjected to defamation law,” Ek Tha said.

“From the government’s point of view, it is very clear that there is no interference from the executive in the work of the ECCC.”
comments | | Read More...

One tourist dies, many hurt in Cambodia crash

28 February 2012 
AFP 

PHNOM PENH: A Russian woman was killed and dozens of foreign tourists were injured when their bus swerved and flipped onto its side after its front tyre burst in Cambodia on Tuesday, police said.

The vehicle crashed as it took 46 passengers, including 40 foreign tourists, from Cambodia’s popular seaside port of Sihanoukville to the Thai border, according to Ouk Sopha, head of traffic police in western Koh Kong province.

“All passengers were injured, including many Western tourists. A 23-year-old Russian girl died after being admitted to hospital,” he told AFP by telephone.


The driver, who police believe was driving at high speed before the crash, fled the scene.

Traffic accidents are a leading cause of death in Cambodia, killing more than 1,600 people in 2010.

Better roads — allowing people to go faster — and more vehicles contribute heavily to this bloody toll, but bad driving is the main cause behind most accidents, police say.
comments | | Read More...

Seven Finns injured in fatal bus crash in Cambodia

Feb 28 2012
YLE, AFP

Seven Finns were injured in a tourist bus accident that also claimed the life of a Russian man in Cambodia on Tuesday. One of the Finns was so badly injured that he was taken to hospital in Bangkok, Thailand.

Of the 48 passengers on board the bus, 40 were foreign tourists, who were heading from Sihanoukville to the Thai border when one of the front tyres blew out and overturned.

All of the passengers were injured, some seriously, and were treated at local hospitals, according to the AFP.

Police said speed was a factor in the accident.

The driver of the bus fled the scene, according to police.
comments | | Read More...

Bus crash in Cambodia kills Russian, injures 40 others

February 28, 2012
Associated Press

PHNOM PENH (Cambodia) A bus crash in Cambodia has killed a Russian woman and left dozens of people injured, including 40 other Western tourists.

Ouk Sokha, the traffic police chief of southwestern Koh Kong province, says the accident occurred Tuesday when one of the bus' front tires burst. The bus was carrying the tourists to Koh Kong from the popular beach resort town of Sihanoukville.

Ouk Sokha said some of the injured were in serious condition and all had been taken to a hospital. Six Cambodian passengers were among the injured.


He said he was not yet able to give more details about any of the victims, including the Russian woman who was killed.

Nearly 2,000 people died in traffic accidents in Cambodia last year.
comments | | Read More...

IMF forecasts Cambodia's economic growth could reach 6.5% within year

PHNOM PENH -- The International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicted that Cambodia's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth would reach 6.5 percent this year, according to the IMF's press release on Tuesday.

The prediction is based on the buoyant garments exports, increasing tourist arrivals, and a gradually improving real estate sector as well as increasing agricultural sector, said the press release.

However, it said that the fragility of the global recovery exposed Cambodia's narrow export base to significant downside risks.

“Cambodia is highly sensitive to economic activity in the U.S. and Europe, which account for about two thirds of its total exports and the bulk of high-end tourist arrivals,” it said, adding “any immediate financial spillovers, however, would likely be limited and mostly indirect.”


The IMF's forecast was the same as the recent predictions by the government of Cambodia, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

The IMF said that the country's inflation rate was 5.75 percent in 2011, driven by higher food and fuel prices, and is expected to ease only gradually in 2012, in part reflecting a moderation in global commodity prices.

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen said on Monday that the country's GDP in 2011 was 7 percent, or US$13 billion.
comments | | Read More...

IMF says Cambodian economy to grow 6.5 per cent, but warns of risks

Feb 28, 2012
DPA

Phnom Penh - Cambodia's economy is expected to grow 6.5 per cent in 2012, up from 5.75 per cent last year, the International Monetary Fund said in its annual review, adding that government policies to boost the investment climate were paying off.

However, in its assessment, which was released overnight, the US-based body warned the kingdom's economy was vulnerable to the global slowdown, adding that its narrow export base made it susceptible to 'significant downside risks.'

Cambodia's economy is based on agriculture, garment manufacturing, tourism and construction, with the last three helping to buoy the economy last year. The garment industry was the largest foreign exchange earner in 2011 worth 3.75 billion dollars in exports.


'If you look at the report there has been quite a bit of progress on several fronts and that progress needs to be continued,' IMF country director Faisal Ahmed told dpa Tuesday, adding that one key area needing attention was the financial sector.

The IMF assessment called again for a moratorium on banking licences - more than 30 banks now operate in Cambodia, making it 'overbanked' - until the central bank has sufficient capacity to regulate the sector.

'The current degree of concentration and fragmentation poses risks to financial stability, while not delivering sufficient benefits from competition and innovation,' the report stated.

Stagnant tax revenues combined with increased spending following 2011's floods had cut the government's deposits to around 4 per cent of GDP, leaving it with limited room to tackle future challenges.

The IMF recommended the government boost efforts to increase the tax take and raise spending on infrastructure and high impact social programmes. Further improvements to the business environment would also reap rewards, contributing to an expectation of 7.6-per-cent growth over the medium-term.

The IMF again cautioned that guarantees to firms involved in build-operate-transfer power projects, particularly hydroelectric dams, could generate 'potentially large contingent liabilities.'

The high cost and poor reliability of the electricity supply has long proven a brake on inward investment, which is why the government has signed deals for dozens of projects over the next decade. However it has also guaranteed to buy all of the electricity generated by at least some of those projects.

Although the risk posed by that guarantee might not seem significant given the current shortage of electricity, the IMF said, 'the sheer size of these projects, and the fact that risks for complex infrastructure projects are difficult to quantify ex ante, call for continuous and careful monitoring.
comments | | Read More...

Find us on Facebook

សូមចុច Like ដើម្បីទទួលអី្វៗ ថ្មីជារាងរាល់ថ្ញៃ

Blogger news

About

 
Design Template by panjz-online | Support by creating website | Powered by Blogger