Archive for November 26th, 2008
Thailand asks India to explain
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008Political turbulence continues as the mob rules the roost
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008Governments warn citizens against visits to Thailand
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008Opposition Concerned Over Economy
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008
By Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer Original report from Phnom Penh
26 November 2008
“I say that because of the economic crisis and also because of the lack of country management in general,” he said. People were worse off than they were 15 or 20 years ago, he said.
Sam Rainsy spoke to VOA Khmer following a private meeting with former king Norodom Sihanouk in Beijing earlier this week.
Joblessness, the loss of production in forests and fisheries and depreciating value of goods in the months ahead could lead to “turmoil,” he said, and people “protesting for solutions to their living.”
Sam Rainsy’s remarks come as the International Monetary Fund adjusted Cambodia’s expected growth rate for 2009, down to 4.25 percent from a height of 10 percent in recent years.
Cambodian People’s Party lawmaker Cheam Yiep said he trusted Prime Minister Hun Sen’s plan to weather the economic storm.
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Vendors Clash With Border Police Over Fee
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008Original report from Phnom Penh
26 November 2008
More than 100 porters gathered in front of the Poipet border checkpoint Wednesday morning, angered by a new policy that forces them to pay 150 riel per kilogram to a private company in order to pull their goods to Thailand for sale.
Porters said the fee, which was instituted Monday and is enforced by state border police, was unfair, especially because they already have export licenses from the government.
Pheak Vutha, 14, said he was kicked by a border policeman during the heated demonstration after encouraging other porters to bypass the police and cross the border.
“When I joined the demonstration with my mom, I shouted, ‘Here, we should go! We should go!’” he told VOA Khmer by phone Wednesday. “And when the border police heard that, they were angry with me and took me to the border police post, and [the policeman] kicked me two times with his boots. Now I’m hurt on my head and my body, and I appeal for the Cambodian government to withdraw [the policeman] who kicked me.”
The new fee is being charged by Chhouk Lon Enterprise Export Import, whose owner, Lim Tang Por, said Wednesday he had a license from a former Bantey Meanchey provincial governor.
He denied porters’ claims was a relative of Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Youth Offered EdC Job After Brother’s Death
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008Original report from Phnom Penh
26 November 2008
Men Chanpong, 13, was buried alive Friday night by an EdC bulldozer in Lor Kambor village, Svay Pak commune, Russei Keo district, where villagers say he was working part time.
EdC has denied employing the boy, but paid compensation to his father and promised a job to Men Chanthy, the 23-year-old brother of the boy.
Rights and union officials said such compensation, common in Cambodia, perpetuated a system of impunity and weakened the rule of law.
“They gave my son a job in the company, but I don’t know what it is because I just got a call this morning to get an application,” Men Chanseng, 47-year-old father of the boy, said Tuesday.
Men Chanseng himself is a construction worker. He would not confirm whether his son worked for EdC, but he confirmed receiving compensation from the company.
Chea Sunhel, director of EdC’s supply department, denied the boy worked for the company and said Tuesday EdC was giving Men Chanthy a job in addition to compensation because the family was poor.
“He might work as a security guard or, if he is literate, he can record meter readings,” Chea Sunhel said. “It depends on his abilities.”
Rong Chhun, president of the Cambodian Confederation Union, said such compensation was not worth the life of a child.
“It is not fair, because if the company keeps paying just $1,000 or $2,000 for the family of the deceased, and there is nothing happening to it, that means impunity in Cambodia is still high,” he said.
In Cambodia a habit exists where a perpetrator of a crime pays compensation to a family in order to avoid the courts, which themselves are widely criticized as corrupt and politically biased.
Ny Chakrya, a rights investigator for Adhoc, said if the legal system cannot punish perpetrators, Cambodia cannot meet the rule of law.
“If impunity continues, none of the cases will be involved with the people. They will not file in court, they will not cooperate and they will not join in legal reform to strengthen the rule of law in Cambodia. So the legal system here will become weaker and weaker.”
Passengers Scramble as Flights Canceled
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
26 November 2008
Flights for Bangkok Airways, Thai Airways and Asia Air were canceled Wednesday morning, and passengers were given the chance for refunds to purchase other tickets out or were allowed to change their flight dates.
The cancellations followed the closure of Thailand’s Don Muang and Suvarnabhumi airports Tuesday, after pro-opposition protesters stormed their terminals in a bid to unseat the ruling government.
“The flights to Bangkok were temporarily delayed indefinitely, because of the anti-Thai protesters occupying the airports of Don Muang and suvarnabhumi,” Leang Preng, a spokesman for Thai Airways, said.
Thai Airways typically has four flights a day to Bangkok, two from Phnom Penh and two from Siem Reap.
Each flight has up to 170 passengers, Leang Preng said.
“I not only missed my flight, but I’m missing my job,” Long Remy, a Cambodian-French citizen, said at Phnom Penh International Airport Wednesday. “I have to work on Friday, and I cannot leave my job.”
He was visiting his family in Cambodia and hoped to fly via Korean Air on Thursday.
Pen Samnang, a resident of Australia, said he would seek a refund and fly by Singapore’s Silk Air.
“I have a lot of jobs in Australia, and I have booked hotels for them,” he said.
“We are concerned that the delay of the flight to Bangkok will affect tourism to Phnom Penh and Siem Reap,”general director of Cambodian Civil Aviation. “The flights from Bangkok to Phnom Penh are four flights, and to Siem Reap are five flights. Some flights between 70 seats for a small plane and more than 100 seats for a big plane.”
Hopefully tourists will change their transit destination away from Thailand, through Vietnam, Singapore or Malaysia, for example, he said.





