Archive for November 10th, 2008
Heavy Security Planned for Festival Influx
Monday, November 10th, 2008Original report from Phnom Penh
10 November 2008
At least 424 racing boats will join the festivities from Tuesday to Thursday, a commemoration of the victory of the Angkorian navy over Cham adversaries in the 9th Century on the Tonle Sap lake and to honor the fertility of the Mekong and Tonle Sap rivers.
More than 5 million Cambodians from across the country are expected to attend the three-day festival, up 1 million from 2007, said Phnom Penh Police Chief Brig. Gen. Touch Naroth.
Streets east of Norodom Boulevard between Psar Chas and Independence Monument will be closed from noon to midnight for all three days, Touch Naroth said.
During the three days, freight trucks and tourist buses will not be allowed in the city limits, as traffic becomes increasingly heavy.
Boaters said in the days before the festival they were excited to begin the competition.
“This year, we trained better than in the past,” said Nouth Vanda, 37, a racer from Kampong Thom. “So we cannot lose the race.”
Thailand to push for Thaksin extradition wherever he goes
Monday, November 10th, 2008Cambodia, Thailand agree on border dispute agenda
Monday, November 10th, 2008ABC Radio Australia
Cambodia's lead negotiator has described the agenda agreement as a "big step".
Officials from the two countries have been meeting in the Cambodian city of Siem Reap.
The talks -- set to last three days -- are aimed at sorting out the territorial claims and ending the military stand-off.
The foreign ministers of both countries are scheduled to meet on Wednesday.
Two rounds of emergency talks after the October clashes made little progress, with both sides only agreeing not to fire on each other again.
Cambodian government mourns police chief
Monday, November 10th, 2008New case of bird flu found in northern Thailand
Monday, November 10th, 2008Thailand seizes heroin valued at around $30 million
Monday, November 10th, 2008Russia could write off Cambodia’s $1.5 bln debt
Monday, November 10th, 2008"Russia and Cambodia are holding talks to write off Cambodia's debt of around $1.5 billion. The principal sum (about 70%) of the debt could be written off as part of Russia's participation in the Paris Club of Creditor Nations," said Valery Yazev, deputy speaker of the lower house of Russia's parliament, after a trip to Cambodia and Laos.
Yazev said the debt's outstanding part could be divided into two and settled at concessional interest rates.
The vice-speaker said the next round of negotiations on settling Cambodia's debt to Russia would be held early next year in Moscow.
Cambodians rely on magic against modern Thai weapons
Monday, November 10th, 2008"Thai soldiers have modern weapons, but I am not scared," says Chum Khla. "I have magic charms to protect myself."
As well as the scarf which he ties around his head, the 28-year-old soldier wears a protective talisman belt and carries two small Buddhist figurines.
"I have had countless gunfights in the past with former Khmer Rouge fighters, but I have never been in any danger," he says, owing his safety to the amulets.
Outgunned in their border standoff which began in July, Chum Khla and his comrades carry on traditions of using mystical Buddhist objects and tattooing spells on their bodies to protect themselves.
The contrast between the Thai and Cambodian sides facing off in disputed territory near the ancient Preah Vihear temple is startling.
The Thai military is backed by state-of-the-art jets and heavy weapons, while many Cambodians wear flip-flops as they carry Cold War-era arms.
Days after October 15 clashes on disputed land left three Cambodians and one Thai dead, many Thai soldiers were fitted with body armour.
Cambodian commanders, meanwhile, gave their troops colourful scarves with mystical symbols said to have been imbued with protective powers by a Buddhist monk.
Charms, talismans and superstitions are universal among soldiers around the world. But the tattooed Cambodians, battle-hardened by decades of civil war which ended in 1998, put more stock than most in magic symbols.
Cambodian and Thai leaders have agreed to prevent further clashes, but the troops at the border are not taking any chances -- they continue to deck themselves out in all the charms they can get their hands on.
"I believe 100 percent that these magic things can help spare my life in battle," says Cambodian soldier Koy San as Thai troops camp on a slope above him.
"I have both a magic scarf and a string of talismans around my hip. I wear them all the time," says the 35-year-old.
Tensions between Cambodia and Thailand began in July when Preah Vihear was awarded UN cultural heritage status, angering nationalists in Thailand who still claim ownership of the ruined monument.
A World Court ruling in 1962 declared the temple belonged to Cambodia, but much of the surrounding area remains in dispute.
The Cambodians admit magic items are not the only source of their protection -- military strategy and speed also help.
"We have magic things, but we have to be fast and our hands must be quick to grab our weapons and jump into the trenches. Then our lives are saved," says a grizzled 38-year-old soldier who declined to give his name.
The Cambodian government is seemingly not counting on magic to defend its territory. In the midst of the border dispute, the impoverished country decided to double its military budget to 500 million dollars next year.
But the 38-year-old soldier says he is even more of a believer in magic after the October fighting, during which his commander was killed.
"He also had a talisman, but he took it off as he took a nap. And he did not have a chance to put it back on when the shootout suddenly happened... so his life was ended," says the soldier.
Khan Yorn, abbot of a pagoda in the disputed area, says he has made countless protective belts for soldiers stationed there.
"A lot of soldiers have asked me for belts which are inscribed with Buddhist dharma so that they can have happiness, but I cannot say the amulets can prevent bullets," Khan Yorn says.
But he quickly notes something miraculous might have happened during last month's firefight.
"When the gunfire broke out, I was staying in the monk house, and the bullets were spraying around the pagoda like we spread rice husks," he says. "But they did not hit my monk house."
Cambodia launches investigation of police chief’s helicopter crash
Monday, November 10th, 2008DPA
Hok Lundy, a close ally of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, died along with deputy army commander Sok Sa Em and two pilots when their helicopter crashed en route to the police chief's home province of Svay Rieng near the Vietnamese border.
Government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said an investigation into the incident had begun but declined to provide any further details.
'We are unable to provide specific details until the investigation is completed,' he told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.
National media reported Hok Lundy's funeral was held under tight security at his Phnom Penh home on Monday.
The police chief's remains would be sent to Svay Rieng but a date for the burial had not been set, the French and Khmer language newspaper Cambodge Soir reported.
Hok Lundy was appointed as Cambodia's chief of police in 1994.
One of his daughters is married to one of Hun Sen's sons. In 2006 the police chief was denied a visa to enter the United States amid allegations of involvement in human trafficking.
Source | Comments Off





