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Archive for November 24th, 2008


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Thailand plans to slash interest rates as the financial crisis hits

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Bangkok/Seoul: Thailand signalled it was ready to cut interest rates for the first time since last year and South Korea pledged more aid for its troubled borrowers, as Asian nations look to shield the...

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Thailand plans to slash interest rates as the financial crisis hits

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Bangkok/Seoul: Thailand signalled it was ready to cut interest rates for the first time since last year and South Korea pledged more aid for its troubled borrowers, as Asian nations look to shield the...

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Reports Sheds Light On Cambodian Monkey Trade

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Posted on: Monday, 24 November 2008, 08:05 CST In a report to be released today, the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV) says Cambodia breaching international rules by allowing th...

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Cambodian activist awarded German prize

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Berlin - A Cambodian woman dedicated to fighting human trafficking and the sexual exploitation of children and women received a German prize on Monday for her work. Somaly Mam was honoured with the Ro...

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Cape trail expert to called to Cambodia

Monday, November 24th, 2008
From Table Mountain to Cambodia, Capetonian Stephen Lamb will be taking the skills and experience he acquired when building the Hoerikwaggo Trail camps to the remote forests of Asia where he will esta...

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Opposition To Visit Former King in Beijing

Monday, November 24th, 2008
By Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
24 November 2008


Opposition leader Sam Rainsy is expected to travel to Beijing this week to meet former king Norodom Sihanouk.

Royal Palace officials said Sihanouk, who is in Beijing for medical care, will fix a meeting for Tuesday, having already met Prime Minister Hun Sen several weeks ago.

No detailed information on the meeting was available, and a Royal Palace official declined comment.

Sam Rainsy told VOA Khmer his audience with the former monarch, who abdicated in 2004, was private.

Opposition officials said recent political and economic developments could be on the agenda.

The Sam Rainsy Party won 26 of 123 National Assembly seats in July's elections, which the party labeled fraudulent, a claim Hun Sen's ruling Cambodian People's Party, which won 90 seats, denies.

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Protesters surround Thailand’s parliament

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Thousands of anti-government demonstrators surrounded Thailand’s parliament on Monday in an attempt to force the administration of prime minister Somchai Wongsawat to resign.The demonstration is the...

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Hun Sen Leaves for Laos, Vietnam Summit

Monday, November 24th, 2008

By Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
24 November 2008


Prime Minister Hun Sen on Monday left for a two-day official visit to Vientiane, to sign agreements trade agreements and attend a summit of Laos, Cambodian and Vietnamese leaders.

The two countries hope to develop investment on the border of Vietnam, in a zone called the Development Triangle Area of CLV, or Cambodia-Laos-Vietnam.

“The visit will strengthen bilateral friendship, and both prime ministers will negotiate and sign an agreement on the promotion and protection of investment,” said Sri Thamrong, a political adviser to Hun Sen.

The business exchange between Laos and Cambodia amounts to around $1 million, mainly in agriculture. The two neighbors hope to open two international gateways, at Stung Treng and Ratanakkiri provinces, to boost trade and tourism.

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Murder Case Delayed for Fallen Police Chief

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Heng Pov in 2007

By Chiep Mony, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
24 November 2008


A murder conspiracy trial for Heng Pov was postponed Monday until January next year, following a morning in court where the former police chief said he was running out of money to pay his defense.

Heng Pov, who was Phnom Penh police chief until 2006, is serving 58 years in prison on charges stemming from murder, extortion and unlawful detention.

He is facing a conspiracy charge for involvement in the 2003 murder of military police commander Gen. Sao Sokha.

Phnom Penh Municipal Court Judge Iev Kimsry opened the session early Monday, when Heng Pov and his lawyer requested the release of the defendant’s funds, which were frozen after his arrest.

Heng Pov told the court Monday he would no longer answer questions without the release of funds, and attorney Kao Soupha said he could not continue defending his client without more money.

“If the court still wants to try my client, I will not defend this case for Heng Pov, because Heng Pov already told the court that he needs lawyers,” Kao Soupha told reporters following the hearing. “If the court does not release the frozen funds for his lawyers, he will not answer the courts questions.”

In a Nov. 19 letter to Phnom Penh Municipal Court President Chiv Keng, Kao Soupha said Candadia Bank has $938,193 belonging to Heng Pov.

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Cambodian Anti-Prostitution Activist Wins Human Rights Award

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Somaly Mam hopes her work will help make other victims happy
Cambodia's red light district attracts sex toursists from around the world
Literacy is one area AFESIP focuses on

24.11.2008
Deutsche Well (Germany)

A survivor of child slavery and prostitution, Somaly Mam battles forced prostitution in her native Cambodia. For helping to better the world for others like her, Mam received the Roland Berger Human Dignity Award Monday.

“Myself acquainted with misfortune, I learn to help the unfortunate” -- so said the poet Virgil over 2000 years ago. The saying, however, is one that could have come from the mouth of Somaly Mam, a Cambodian woman who lived through slavery and prostitution as a child and faced every conceivable form of violence.

Having escaped that misfortune, Mam now uses her horrendous life experience to help fight for the rights of other young women who have been in her situation. Twelve years ago, she founded an NGO for women and children who were used as sex slaves called AFESIP, or Acting for Women in Distressing Situations.

On Monday, November 24, German President Horst Koehler recognized Mam's work by presenting her with the Roland Berger Human Dignity Award. The award, intended for those who work in the field of human rights and financed by the Roland Berger Foundation, is endowed with a million euros. This is the first year the prize has been awarded.

Childhood over at ten

Born around 38 years ago to parents she would never know, Mam was raised by foster parents in the eastern Cambodian province of Mondolkiri. At the age of 10, she moved in with an older man whom she referred to as “Grandpa” and began her work as a domestic slave to the attentive man. Her childhood ended then; running the home became her most important duty.

Four or five years later, Mam was handed over by “Grandpa” to a man twelve years her senior, forced to marry to settle an outstanding debt. That her grandfather had made such a decision about her life, her body and her destiny is something she didn't question.

“In Cambodia, women don't have the right to say no,” she said. “Women and children must sacrifice their entire life to the family.”

Her husband disappeared shortly after their marriage and “Grandpa” then brought her to a bordello in the Cambodian capitol of Phnom Penh.

“I thought I owed him something. He fed me so I thought I had to be thankful and do everything for him.”

Trust fell by the wayside

The years following saw Mam held as a sex slave. In those years, violence, malnutrition, abuse and drugs intertwined. Attempts at escape were always hindered.

“My pimp would catch me and barricade me in a cage with snakes,” Mam recalls.

The memory floods the beautiful woman's brown eyes with tears when she relates it even today. Still, she speaks and writes about her experiences often. Her memoir, “The Road of Lost Innocence” was published two years ago.

"I can smile and speak today, but deep in my heart, I don't feel as normal as you,” she told guests at the book's launch party. “I don't know how to love another person. I don't know how to trust anyone.”

Mam has, however, learned to trust at least one man: Pierre Legros, a Frenchman she met in Cambodia who helped her to flee from the brothel. She went with him to France, married him and later returned with him to Cambodia, where she founded AFESIP.

The organization and its workers, with support from UNICEF, have thus far freed a thousand women and children from forced prostitution. AFESIP helps them to win back their self-confidence, to re-enter the community, to read and write and later, to train for future careers.

Every time Mam helps a young girl, she is faced once again with her own fortune and sees the pain and suffering in them reflecting back at her like a mirror. It's an immense burden but also an advantage, Mam believes.

“If I hadn't had the experiences that I'd had, I couldn't have been able to help these young girls so well.”

Threats an everyday experience

The necessity of Mam's work is clearly shown when one looks at the horrific statistics concerning sex slavery in Cambodia. A UN report estimates that 50,000 women and young girls are victims of sexual violence every day. Ninety percent of children freed from brothels have tested positive for HIV. The country ranks as a top destination for sex tourists, which supports a continuation of forced slavery and human trafficking.

Still, not everyone agrees with Mam's work. She's publicly attacked politicians and businessmen in her homeland for their involvement in corruption and prostitution. Threats of murder and verbal attacks at the “whistleblower” are an everyday part of life for Mam, as are muggings and kidnappings. But she won't let that stop her.

“Every day, when I see these victims, these women who have been abused, who have so much pain, I know I simply can't turn my back on them. I have to fight with all my power. I will never give up. Never.”

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