Archive for November 27th, 2008
Stand-off continues in Thailand
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Thailand may postpone summit due to crisis
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Coup fears rise in Thailand
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Turmoil in Thailand means it
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Military steps in to end Thailand
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Inflation on Goods Eases, But Just a Little
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Original report from Phnom Penh
27 November 2008
Inflation pressure has eased on Cambodia, but only a little, as the prices of international commodities and basic foods has slightly decreased, economists say.
Government officials and analysts said the decrease, brought on by lower fuel prices and other reduced costs, was still not enough.
“The price of commodities has a little bit reduced, not much. So we are trying to reduce it further,” said Hang Chuon Narong, general director of the Ministry of Economy and Finance.
The inflation rate was 17 percent in November, down from 30 percent the month before, he said.
The government would like to see an inflation rate of 9 percent in early 2009, he said.
The inflation rate can only be reduced if the price of fuel, which heavily influences commodities, continues its fall on international markets, said Kang Chandararoth, head of the Cambodia Institute of Development Study.
Crude oil on Saturday was down to $48 per barrel, compared to $147 per barrel in July. In Cambodia, a liter of fuel cost around 3,500 riel, less than $1, compared to 5,700, around $1.40, in August.
The price of high-quality jasmine rice was down to $40 per 50 kilogram sack in most markets, while the lower-quality rice consumed by most Cambodians was around $21 per 50 kilograms.
Vegetables in the markets followed the trend, by about 1,500 riel, or $0.37, in November, said market retailer Phay Sokhen.
“Now there is no more rain, so the price of vegetables has reduced a little bit,” she said. “It depends on the climate, not the price of gasoline.”
Fish prices had decreased by about 2,000 riel per kilogram, fish mongers said Saturday, but mostly due to the season.
Meanwhile, commodities imported from neighboring countries, especially Thailand, were down by around 1 percent in November, thanks to a recession of the Thai baht.
Pork remained the same, around 16,000 riel, or $4, per kilogram, and chicken held steady at 18,000 riel, or $4.50, per kilogram.
“I bought expensive, so I have to sell expensive too,” said Hing Chantha, a chicken retailer at Central Market.
Many Phnom Penh residents, from housewives to students to factory and construction workers said they had seen little benefit so far from a lowered inflation rate. Prices had dropped, they said, but not enough to make a difference.
Cambodian People’s Party lawmaker Cheam Yiep said the price of products always increased when fuel prices were high, but not reduced when the fuel price fell.
“Some business people are greedy,” he said. “Although some products have reduced their prices, they won’t follow it.”
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Khmer Rouge Victims Consider Reparation
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Original report from Phnom Penh
27 November 2008
Not only survivors, but Cambodia’s younger generation too is seeking reparations for the nearly 2 million victims of the Khmer Rouge. Nobody yet knows what exactly that will mean.
“We need hospitals for victims,” Chhou Ny Sinan, project officer for justice and reconciliation of Youth for Peace, said Thursday, during a two-day seminar on reparations for victims. “We need support to build centers for the old, widows and children.”
Victims of the regime, non-governmental agencies and other participants discussed Wednesday and Thursday the needs of victims, as a Khmer Rouge tribunal moves forward.
Some victims said they needed common reparation, such as monuments, schools and hospitals. And they need real justice.
“We need a place that we can pray for the souls of the victims,” said Seng Theary, executive director of the Center for Social Development, whose parents were killed by the regime. Crying, she added: “1.7 million lives, who died, this is costly and we must have respect for them, and give them honors.”
Other survivors of the regime, such Chum Mei, a former prisoner of Tuol Sleng, whose director, Duch, is to go on trial next year, and Sum Rithy, who lived through a Khmer Rouge prison in Siem Reap, said individual reparation should be available.
The internal rules of the Khmer Rouge tribunal do not allow for individual reparation, such as awarding cash to victims, but for “psychological” or common reparation.
“Compensation cannot be done for individuals,” Kong Srim, president of the tribunal’s Supreme Court, said Thursday.
However, lawyers for the tribunal said the internal rules are not clear enough in their definition of “psychological.”
They asked for recommendations for an amendment to the rules.
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Plans Tentative for Renewed Tribunal Talks
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Original report from Washington
27 November 2008
“We are hoping to be able to have a meeting with Cambodia in the first week of December,” UN Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs Peter Taksoe-Jensen told VOA Khmer. “We haven’t nailed down the exact meeting time, but it looks as if we will be able to find time to meet and discuss cooperation between the UN and Cambodia on the tribunal.”
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said Wednesday there was so far no schedule for a meeting and referred questions to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Officials at the ministry were not immediately available for comment.
A visit by Taksoe-Jensen, who is an assistant to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon would coincide with the tribunal’s struggle with corruption allegations and donor confidence, as well as preparations for the courts’ first-ever trial, of prison chief Duch, early next year.
Cambodian tribunal officials have denied the allegations.
Talks would show the UN’s continued attachment to the courts’ credibility and effectively, said James Goldston, executive director of the Open Society Justice Initiative, the tribunal monitor that first pointed out allegations of corruption and mismanagement.
“Reports of corruption must be treated seriously, addressed properly, and acted on immediately if the [tribunal’s] trials are to be seen as fair and credible,” Goldston said.
Staff who initially reported corruption, on the Cambodian side of the courts, should meanwhile be protected against reprisals, he said.
Monks To March on UN Over Border Dispute
Thursday, November 27th, 2008Original report from Washington
27 November 2008
The Community Center of Khmer Buddhist Monks will organize the march Dec. 10 to appeal to the UN to honor the 1991 Paris Peace Accords and have its signatories defend Cambodia’s borders.
Venerable monk Sao Khorn, head of the Massachusetts center, said Cambodian monks living on pagodas along the border were suffering a violation of human rights and sovereignty.
A monthslong military standoff between Cambodia and Thailand is centered around a the Keo Sikha Kiri Svara pagoda on disputed land near Preah Vihear temple, occupied now by Cambodian monks and troops from both sides.




