Beautification claims first home

TUESDAY, 31 AUGUST 2010 15:02
RANN REUY
PHNOMPENHPOST

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Photo by: Rann Reuy Police gather near homes in Siem Reap’s Salakamroek commune that are set to be cleared as part of a beautification project that could ultimately displace 300 families.

Siem Reap province

ABOUT 50 Siem Reap city officials and hired workers yesterday demolished one home in Salakamroek commune and promised to return in a week’s time to clear two more as part of a beautification effort that officials say will ultimately displace some 300 families.

Oeun Pov, the deputy governor of Siem Reap city, said officials had initially planned to tear down all three structures on Monday, but had postponed the destruction of two houses after the owners begged for a grace period.

A total of 32 families in Salamkroek’s Wat Damnak village are set to be displaced by a road and park project, which is being funded by a US$300,000 grant from France and is part of the broader beautification effort.

Oeun Pov said half of the affected families in Wat Damnak village had already accepted a compensation package of US$300 each and a 1-hectare plot of land in Banteay Srei district’s Run Ta Ek commune, as well as lumber and corrugated sheeting to help with the construction of new homes.

He said that the families were not eligible for land titles “because they live along the river”.

Moeun Naisim, the widow whose house was torn down by officials yesterday, said the relocation site is unacceptable because it is more than 30 kilometres from Siem Reap city.

“I do not have a motorbike, I do not have a bicycle. How can I live there?” she said.

Riverside families signing petition

MONDAY, 30 AUGUST 2010 15:01
KHOUTH SOPHAKCHAKRYA
PHNOMPENHPOST

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Photo by: Pha Lina Residents of a Russey Keo district community set to be affected by a park project at their floating home yesterday.

MEMBERS of more than 100 families in Russey Keo district that are set to be evicted to make way for a public park have thumbprinted a petition to express their outrage over the project.

Huot Danin, a representative of the families in Klaing Saing village, located in Russey Keo commune, said the petition would be sent to Prime Minister Hun Sen this week.

He said the families had been spurred to protest their pending eviction after Russey Keo commune officials instructed them on Friday to tear down their homes, distributing a notice dated August 23 and signed by Russey Keo district governor Khlaing Huot. The notice states that the families have 10 days from the date of the notice to comply with the eviction order, meaning they face a deadline of September 2.

“The commune ordered us to pull down our homes from 10 days after the day the announcement was signed to make way for the public garden, but they did not tell us where we can live after we pull down our homes,” Huot Danin said.

Phnom Penh Governor Kep Chuktema announced the pending eviction, which local officials have said would affect at least 800 families in three Russey Keo villages, during a speech on August 10.

At the same event, Heu Heng, director of Sokimex Company, said the park would be roughly 250 metres long and 100 metres wide. He said that Sokimex, which has a petroleum depot on National Road 5 near the proposed park, is providing US$700,000 to support the project.

Chan Samang, the chief of Russey Keo commune, said she knew that some families were unhappy with the proposed project, but that most were not displeased.

“All the development always has some effects on some people, but this project will also provide many interests to many people in the affected communities,” she said.

No information regarding relocation or compensation plans has yet been provided.

Koh Kong villagers attempt to block road

MONDAY, 30 AUGUST 2010 15:02
MAY TITTHARA
PHNOMPENHPOST

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Photo by: Photo Supplied Villagers involved in a land dispute plead with police in Koh Kong province’s Sre Ambel district during a protest on Friday.

VILLAGERS involved in a long-simmering land dispute in Koh Kong province say they will send a new petition to authorities, after four protesters suffered injuries this past weekend while attempting to block a national road.

Ouch Leng, a programme officer for rights group Adhoc, said villagers blocked National Road 48 in Sre Ambel district Friday as part of a demonstration aimed at drawing attention to a dispute that could see 34 families evicted.

But a motorist who was angry with the traffic jam caused by the protest clashed with villagers, resulting in injuries to four of them, Ouch Leng said.
“The car owner tried to crash into the bed that villagers used to block the road,” said Ouch Leng, who described the injuries as “not serious”.

The villagers say they could be on the verge of eviction after a company owned by Koh Kong businessman Heng Huy set today as a deadline for the clearance of roughly 100 hectares of disputed land. The Supreme Court last year ruled that the land belonged to Heng Huy and another businessman.

Pher Nherng, a representative of the villagers, called the protest a “last choice” after Heng Huy began clearing parts of the disputed farmland last week. He said villagers yesterday began preparing a complaint to send to provincial, district and commune officials urging them to stop allowing military police to support Heng Huy. Last week, military police stood by as workers hired by Heng Huy cleared parts of the farmland. Pher Nherng said villagers also want authorities to issue land titles.

Heng Huy yesterday questioned how villagers could be issued land titles.

“How can they issue another land title to villagers if the land is already owned?”

Sre Ambel district governor Tuon Seila said that he would forward the complaint to provincial officials.

From Tinseltown to the Trash Heap: One Man, Big Change

YouthGive contributing writer Matt Robertson shares his story from travels in Cambodia:

Huffington Post
More pictures here.

Words from pleading voices ring out: “Scott, take my child…take my child to study, please…please take him!” These words still echo in my mind a month after returning to the States from my exploration through Cambodia. Women bring their children up to us, asking for a chance at education for their child, as we tour through the garbage dumps looking for abandoned kids with no support. These images will stay with me forever.
This scene was one of many I witnessed while volunteering last month at the Cambodian Children’s Fund in Phnom Penh. The experience provided for me an absolutely illuminating perspective, having grown up in a privileged Northern California community, taking excellent education for granted.
I had taken a year off from Pitzer College and used the opportunity to join my mother on a three-month sojourn throughout Southeast Asia. After she returned to California, I decided to continue exploring with one of my best friends. After lounging and soaking in the Indonesian culture and reveling in the backpackers highway for three weeks (good fun!), we decided it was time to look beneath the surface and see if we could return the gift of travel by somehow giving back to the part of the world we were blessed to be traveling in. Read more of this post

Duch hires Cambodian lawyer

FRIDAY, 06 AUGUST 2010 18:08
By: JAMES O’TOOLE
Phnompenhpost

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Photo by: COURTESY OF THE ECCC Tuol Sleng prison chief Kaing Guek Eav (centre) appears at the Khmer Rouge tribunal last year with co-lawyers Francois Roux (left) and Kar Savuth

FORMER Tuol Sleng prison chief Kaing Guek Eav has hired a Cambodian attorney to replace Francois Roux, the international co-lawyer he dismissed last month after breaking with him in stunning fashion during closing arguments of the Khmer Rouge tribunal’s first case.

The Khmer Rouge jailer, better known as Duch, last week became the first person convicted at Cambodia’s war crimes tribunal, receiving a 30-year sentence for crimes against humanity and grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions. With credit for time already served in detention, he stands to spend roughly 19 more years in prison.

Although Duch reportedly wanted a Chinese lawyer to replace Roux – “He doesn’t want a lawyer from a free country to judge the communist people,” defence attorney Kar Savuth explained last month – he will settle for 41-year-old Kang Ritheary, a private practice attorney with the Asean International Law Group in Phnom Penh.

“Kaing Guek Eav had provided the Defence Support Section with certain criterions for the selection of an international co-lawyer,” United Nations court spokesman Lars Olsen said Friday.

“The Defence Support Section did not find any international lawyers that met those criterions. Therefore, Kaing Guek Eav chose instead to be represented by two Cambodian lawyers.”

Defendants at the tribunal are typically represented by one Cambodian and one international lawyer each, with some enlisting additional lawyers and consultants.

Kar Savuth said last week that Duch planned to appeal the judgment against him. Duch has also been a subject of investigation in the court’s second case, but a January order from the court’s Co-Investigating Judges indicated that he would not be indicted; as such, Kang Ritheary’s work with Duch will likely be limited to appeal proceedings before the Supreme Court Chamber.

Kang Ritheary served as an adviser to the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which has helped gather much of the evidence used by the tribunal, from 1997 to 2001. He served as a government lawyer from 1995 to 2001, according to a copy of his CV posted on the Asean International Law Group website.

Last month, prior to the verdict, the court announced that Duch had dismissed Francois Roux due to a “loss of confidence” in his representation. This followed the dramatic split from Roux by Duch and Kar Savuth during last November’s closing arguments, when the pair bucked the defence’s long-running strategy of expressing remorse and limited responsibility for the crimes committed at Tuol Sleng. Instead, they called for Duch’s acquittal and release, a turnabout that Roux later called a “bad surprise”.

Roux has since moved on to head the Defence Office at the UN-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon.

Hun Sen Praises Tribunal Verdict in Duch Case

Wednesday, 04 August 2010
By: Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh
Source: VOA News

Prime Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday praised the Khmer Rouge tribunal’s sentencing of torture chief Duch, in the premier’s first public statement since the decision last week.(Photo:AP)

Prime Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday praised the Khmer Rouge tribunal’s sentencing of torture chief Duch, in the premier’s firstpublic statement since the decision last week.

Victims have said they are unsatisfied with the commuted sentence of the prison chief, under whose supervision more than 12,000 people were tortured and executed.

Hun Sen said the courts had made an independent decision free of political influence.

“The Royal Government of Cambodia respects the Khmer Rouge tribunal’s decision because the court is independent,” he said in public remarks. “We respect the independence of the court. The court sentenced Duch to 35 years in jail. It is up to the court, which the Royal Government of Cambodia must respect.”

In fact, Duch was handed a commuted sentence of only 19 years, following leniency and time served.

And tribunal observers say the court risks being tainted by political influence, with a number of senior officials refusing to cooperate with the international investigating judge and public statements by the premier against further indictments at the UN-backed court.

“The tribunal is facing problems of independence…relating to summonses of witnesses and progress on Case Nos. 003 and 004,” said Long Panhavuth, a tribunal monitor for the Cambodian Justice Initiative. “The government has not allowed the arrest of more suspects.”

Bu Meng, a former prisoner in Duch’s S-21, was not convinced of the court’s independence.

“The tribunal verdict seems to have had pressure from some circle or someone,” he said. “But [Prime Minister] Hun Sen said the court has independence and non-interference. That’s his right. The rights of the victims are different.”

Tribunal spokesman Reach Sambath said the verdict had the support of donor countries in a decision that was jointly arrived upon by international and national judges.

Union group threatens to strike

WEDNESDAY, 04 AUGUST 2010 15:02
By: MOM KUNTHEAR
Phnompenhpost

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Garment workers fill the street in front of the National Assembly last month as part of a demonstration organised in response to the recently approved sector minimum wage.Photo by: Uy Nousereimony

ACOALITION of 13 union leaders sent a letter to the Ministry of Labour and the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodiayesterday threatening to organise strikes unless talks are scheduled by August 15 to renegotiate the sector’s newly established minimum wage.

The leaders reiterated their objection to a decision last month by the Labour Advisory Committee, a body made up of government officials and industry representatives, to raise the minimum monthly wage for garment workers by US$11 to $61. Some in the labour movement had been calling for the wage to be increased to as much as $93 per month.

“We don’t want conflict, but we want to find justice for the workers who work hard but receive low wages,” said Cambodian Labour Confederation President Ath Thun.

But Chuon Momthol, the deputy director of the Labour Advisory Committee and president of the Cambodian Union Federation, said the wage had already been finalised and dismissed talk of a strike. The LAC ruled that the wage can next be renegotiated in 2014.

“Ath Thun can do this in the factories where members of his union work, but he can’t do it all over the country,” Chuon Momthol said. “We cannot keep holding negotiations again and again just because they ask for them.”

Chuon Momthol said that “90 percent” of workers were satisfied with the wage increase, which will be instituted in October.

The minimum wage for garment workers was last renegotiated in 2006, when it was increased from $45 per month to $50.

In a series of incidents last month, thousands of workers in the garment sector staged wildcat strikes in protest of the new minimum wage.

GMAC secretary general Ken Loo confirmed having received the letter, but said he could not comment as he had yet to read it. Officials at the Ministry of Labour could not be reached for comment.

Country boundaries in Google Earth

A MUST READ ARTICLE

July 22, 2010
Originally posted atTambon Blog

Yesterday, on the Google LatLong blog better country boundary depictions were announced for both Google Earth and Google Maps,

Preah Vihear area with disputed boundary line, Google Maps

especially taking into account disputed boundaries. The Thai boundary has become more detailed, and if you compare the picture below with the screen shot from February at Ogle Earth a new dotted line has been added and the original boundary line close to the Thai claims has disappeared.

The other place on the Thai-Cambodian boundary where it has quite a tense situation between both armies over yet another Khmer temple ruins is Prasat Ta Muen Thom, where (at least from the Thai view) the boundary is beyond this temple, but the current boundary displayed the ruins right into Cambodia – and here there’s not even a dotted line. Ogle Earth’s analysis of this new feature in the maps also mentions these two Thailand examples.

But keep the nationalist furor down – Google does not define the national boundaries, they only try their best to show them in their great software, so this latest step of showing where there are disputes and a clear boundary cannot be shown is the right next step. They only need to identify all of the places where the boundary isn’t clear yet. And that’s not easy, not only are there these two locations where the boundary is disputed between Cambodia and Thailand, also quite recently I learned from an article in The Nation that there are also many issues lingering for the Thai-Burmese boundary. And back in 1984 there was even a short military fighting at the Thai-Laotian boundary over two villages, not sure if at least this part of the Thai boundary is completely settled by now.

Such boundary issues will also complicate the setup of Geograph Thailand, since it is impossible to decide which 1×1 kilometer square belongs to Thailand and which one not. And since most of the boundary is in dense jungle and also often not allowed to enter anyway, let alone to cross it at any place except the official border crossing, it won’t be possible to take as many boundary photographs as I did at the German-Dutch boundary in the German Geograph – thanks to Schengen the country boundaries in Euroland are often hardly noticeable. Read more of this post

FACTBOX: Land grabs and forced evictions in Cambodia

08 Jul 2010 14:47:00 GMT

By: Thin Lei Win

Source: Thomson Rueters Foundation

A Cambodian farmer cuts rice stalks in a paddy field in Takeo province, 80 km (50 miles) south of Phnom Penh in this file phot taken December, 2008. About 85 percent of the population are farmers. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea

BANGKOK (TrustLaw) – Tens of thousands of impoverished Cambodians have been forced off their land by foreign investors, powerful companies and individuals in the last decade as the economy grew, pushing upproperty values. Land-grabbing and forced evictions are worsening landlessness – a major impediment to cutting poverty and boosting development in the country.

Here are some of the most contentious land grabs and forced evictions in Cambodia.

1. Dey Krahorm (Phnom Penh)

Set on a prime two-hectare (five-acre) plot of land facing the Mekong River, this slum had up to 1,400 residents. They say they hold land rights under a 2001 land law. Moreover, the prime minister declared the site a Social Land Concession in 2003, meaning it would be transferred to the poor, but the land still ended up in the hands of a company called 7NG.
Activists say unelected community representatives sold the land to 7NG in 2005 without the knowledge of the people living there. Talks about payments were still underway when the authorities evicted the residents in January 2009.

Scores, perhaps hundreds, of families were evicted, with violence involved. Rights activists and police said eight people were injured. Activists say few villagers received adequate compensation. The plot of land where Dey Krahorm was located is worth an estimated $44 million.

After the eviction, residents were transported by truck to Damnak Trayeung relocation site on the outskirts of Phnom Penh. Many are still homeless as of May 2010 and the Housing Rights Task Force said 70 percent of those relocated have moved back to Phnom Penh and are living in low-rent housing areas.

2. Group 78 (Phnom Penh)

Group 78 was another community living in central Phnom Penh on around three acres of prime real estate valued at more than $15 million, next to the Australian Embassy and in the same area as Dey Krahorm. According to Amnesty International, most of its 150 or so families who were evicted from the area in 2009 were poor street vendors, teachers or low-level civil servants who say they have been living there for nearly 20 years.

They have applied for formal title several times and have official documentation such as property transfer documents and family record books as proof of their tenure, but the authorities have repeatedly rejected them, activists said. The municipality offered four compensation options – all of them, according to rights groups, inadequate.

After threatening since June 2006 to evict the residents for different and often contradictory reasons, the city authorities did so in July 2009 using dozens of armed police. The families were forced to accept a compensation of $8,000 per household, which rights groups say is considerably below the market value of the land, is not enough to buy a house in Phnom Penh and fails to take into account the varied size of the families. The evicted now live on the outskirts of Phnom Penh but continue to work in the city.

3. Snoul (Kratie)

During the 2008 rainy season, the 250 or so ethnic Stieng families in four villages in Srey Cha Commune in Snoul district found excavators clearing their cassava plants. They later found out that in May 2008 the provincial governor had leased 769 hectares of their forest and farmland to an agro-industrial company for a rubber plantation without their knowledge.

The Community Legal Education Centre (CLEC) said the lease contravenes both the 2001 land law and later sub-decrees that protect indigenous lands. After 10 months, the land clearing was stalled but the Stieng families still lack the ownership documents they need to recover the land.

The company has filed a criminal complaint criminal complaint against three village activists. The CLEC is representing them and lawyers say unless the community proves it owns the land, the charges will hang over them for years. The CLEC also says the families rely heavily on the cassava plants for their livelihoods but cannot work on the fields while the dispute is going on.

4. Spean Ches (Mittapheap 4)

More than 100 families were evicted from Mittapheap 4 village, also known as ‘Spean Ches’, in April 2007. Many had lived there since the 1980s. Activists said they face an unsubstantiated claim of ownership by a powerful individual.

Although the villagers never saw her title alleging ownership of the land, the district authorities and the governor of the municipality issued eviction notices and told them to move. The villagers’ complaints went nowhere and they were evicted.

Witnesses said 150 soldiers, military police and police armed with AK-47s, electric batons, wooden sticks and shields took part. They fired at the ground and above the head of villagers and beat the people who tried to salvage their property, resulting in 18 injuries. Thirteen men were arrested and imprisoned for more than a year and the houses were burnt down. The victims’ families said they have since lodged multiple complaints with national authorities but to no avail.

5. Chi Kraeng (Siem Reap)

This is a complex, long-running dispute over 475 hectares of rice fields in Chi Kraeng district in Siem Reap. In March 2009, witnesses said 100 police shot and injured four farmers and detained at least nine people during a dispute between two different groups of villagers.

Rights groups said Chi Kraeng farmers’ land was taken away from them by local businessmen with close ties to district and provincial officials. Media reports, however, said the dispute stretches back to 1986, when a large village was divided equally between Chi Kraeng and Anlong Samnor communes.

No policemen have been arrested in connection with the incident while 11 Chi Kraeng villagers remained behind bars. The police said they were not at fault.

6. Kong Yu (Ratanakiri)

Kong Yu (also written as Kong Yuk) and Kong Thom are two ethnic Jarai villages in Ratanakiri province in the highlands of northeastern Cambodia. The villagers and a powerful company have been embroiled in a legal dispute over 450 hectares of land since 2004.

Lawyers for CLEC and Legal Aid of Cambodia argue the disputed land is indigenous community land and as such, under the 2001 land law, it cannot be transferred to individuals outside the community. They also said the land sale contracts are invalid as the villagers had been tricked and pressured into signing them.

However, the authorities do not recognise the villagers as an indigenous community despite their evidence. In October 2008, the company’s employees began clearing the farms and a burial forest despite an injunction from a provincial judge.

Moreover, 10 legal aid lawyers acting for the communities were threatened with disbarment and possible criminal charges, activists said. Formal complaints against them were made to the Cambodian Bar Association in June 2007. By the end of the year, all but two had resigned and stopped working on the case.

7. Boeung Kak (Phnom Penh)

One of the few large open spaces in central Phnom Penh, the area around Boeung Kak lake was once home to around 4,000 families who depended on the lake for their livelihood. Residents say they have been living here since the 1980s when they returned to the city after the fall of the Khmer Rouge.

Despite their claims to the land under the 2001 land law, the land management team, financed by the World Bank, refused to give them land titles in 2007. Soon afterwards, the land was leased for 99 years to a private developer, who started pressuring the families to leave the area.

In August 2008, the developer began filling in the lake, a move activists say could lead to severe flooding in the north of Phnom Penh. Over 1,000 families have already been evicted after accepting “woefully inadequate compensation under conditions of duress”, said a group of non-governmental organisations who filed a complaint with the World Bank over its conduct. An investigation by a World Bank Inspection Panel is underway. More than 70 percent of the lake is now filled and over 3,000 families are still facing eviction.

Sources: Reuters, Losing Ground Report, Untitled Report, Land and Housing Rights in Cambodia Parallel Report 2009, Phnom Penh Post, Sithi Cambodian Human Rights Portal

Reuters AlertNet is not responsible for the content of external websites.

The cost of a Cambodian life to the Siam is: $927 (30,000 baths)

Thailand recognizes its mistake in the shooting and killing of a Cambodian citizen

29 June 2010
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

An Saray, chairman of the Cambodia-Thailand liaison in Phnom Dey pass, located in Sampov Loun district, Battambang province, told Koh Santepheap in the morning of 28 June that Thailand recognized its mistake in the shooting on Cambodian civilians that caused the death of one man last week. He indicated that Thailand paid 30,000 baths ($927) in compensation to the family of the victim after it sent back the victim’s body to Cambodia on 24 June.

One Cambodian citizen among a group of 4 men is suspected of being shot and killed by Thai black-clad soldiers when they went to Thailand to smuggle motorcycles back to Cambodia. The victim, 44-year-old Dim Doeur, lived in Trapaing Prolit village, Santepheap commune, Sampov Loun district, Battambang province. The other 3 men escaped safely back to Cambodia.

An Saray said that even though these Cambodian men crossed the border illegally, Thailand still shouldn’t use weapons to shoot and kill them like this because it is contrary to the agreement concluded between the two countries whereby no shooting or torture should be inflicted on people illegally crossing the border.

NOTE: The siamese black clad soldiers are known for their brutality and inhuman crimes. They are not different from animals for they shoot and kill the Cambodian civilians almost every week. About the compensation, I think the siams give the price to the poor dead as high as the price of Hun Sen´s head. Here

Plan to hold an “Anger Day” against Thai invasion

29 June 2010
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

Thai troop (AFP)

Cambodian NGOs plan to organize a meeting to commemorate and to express the anger against the 2nd anniversary of the Thai invasion of Cambodia along the border near Preah Vihear temple which took place on 15 July 2008. One high-ranking government official welcomed the plan to hold the “Anger Day” against Thai invasion on Cambodia on 15 July. However, this government official also warned the NGOs not to profit from this occasion to serve the interest of Cambodia’s opposition party.

Rong Chhun, representative of the Cambodia Watchdog Council (CWC) and President of the Cambodia Independent Teachers’ Association (CITA), announced that 15 July is the date for the Anger Day against the Thai invasion of Cambodia and that it will be held in front of the public park located in front of the old building of the National Assembly which now houses the Supreme Court.

Rong Chhun said that at the beginning of July 2010, he will send a letter to the Phnom Penh city authority to inform about them on the commemoration of this date, although, this is not to ask for an authorization from the city.

NOTE: Such an event should be held against the Viet as well because the Viets are also active in invading our lands just like that of Thailand. Here.

SRP MPs for Kampong Cham visited Cambodia-Vietnam border markers

KI Media

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Mao Monyvann, Cheam Channy and Thak Lany, SRP Lawmakers for Kampong Cham province, visited Cambodia-Vietnam border markers #125, 126, 127, and 128 in Ponhea Krek district, Kampong Cham province on June 23, 2010.

“Men live on the land, we live from our rice fields and our farms, but they [Viets] took all our rice fields, how can I live? How can I live?” – Message from a Cambodian farmer from Ponhea Krek district, Kampong Cham to the Khmer leaders.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3


ILO calls for murder inquiries

phnompenhpost

MONDAY, 21 JUNE 2010 15:02

CAMERON WELLS

Sok Sam Oeun (left) and Born Samnang wait at the Appeal Court during a break in proceedings last year.

THE International Labour Organisation has renewed calls to immediately drop charges against two men accused of killing union leader Chea Vichea and for the Supreme Court to “rapidly review” an appeal from a man convicted of the killing of union leader Ros Sovannareth.

In a report released Friday, following a review of Cambodia’s compliance with a convention ensuring workers’ right to form unions without interference from employers or officials, the ILO also urged that the killer of a third unionist, Hy Vuthy, be brought to justice.

As part of two weeks of meetings in Geneva assessing various countries’ levels of compliance with a handful of conventions, the ILO’s Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations earlier this month reviewed Cambodia’s implementation of Convention 87, which concerns workers’ free association and collective-bargaining rights.

The committee last week said that the government had failed to submit a report outlining steps taken to meet the convention’s requirements. The conclusions issued Friday by the Committee on the Application of Standards, however, noted that the report was submitted June 7, but that it had yet to be analysed by ILO reviewers.

“The committee regretted the lack of information relating to the long-awaited independent investigations to be carried out into the assassinations of the trade unionists Chea Vichea, Ros Sovannareth and Hy Vuthy,” Friday’s report says.

The committee “urged the Government … to ensure full and impartial investigations into the murders of the abovementioned Cambodian trade union leaders and to bring, not only the perpetrators, but also the instigators of these heinous crimes to justice.”

Chea Vichea, then-head of the Free Trade Union of Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia, was gunned down in 2004 while buying a newspaper near Wat Lanka. Two men, Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun, were convicted of the crime later that year, but the Supreme Court ordered their provisional release in December 2008, citing contradictory evidence.

Ros Sovannareth, a union leader at the Trinunggal Komara Garment Factory, was shot dead by two assailants while driving his motorcycle on Kampuchea Krom Boulevard in May 2004. Thach Saveth was convicted in that case in 2005 and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Hy Vuthy, FTU president at the Suntex Garment Factory, was shot and killed in 2007. No one has been arrested for that slaying.

Moeun Tola, head of the labour programme at the Cambodian Legal Education Centre, said he agreed that the case against Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun should be dropped immediately.

“The government should drop the charges against the two scapegoats,” he said. “The evidence against both men was not there. The government needs to strengthen the judicial system in Cambodia.”

He expressed hope that the report would prompt the government to pursue all three cases more aggressively, despite the fact that similar calls were issued by the ILO in 2009.

“If the government had a real purpose to arrest the real killers, it is very possible,” he said. “If they escape to Malaysia or Singapore, the government can still find them. It is possible.”

Oum Mean, secretary of state at the Ministry of Labour, declined to comment on the ILO’s report on Sunday.

Khmer-Thai border checkpoint at Boeng Trokuon closed after dispute with the planting of border post no. 37-38

By Khmerization
Source: Kampuchea Thmey

Cambodian troops inspect one of the border posts in dispute.

Thai troops have ordered the Boeng Trokuon border checkpoint in Banteay Meanchey province closed on Sunday 13th June after they got angry with Cambodian troops who uprooted border post no. 37 and 38 they had earlier planted, reports Kampuchea Thmey.

Mr. Nou Yath, chief of Boeng Trokuon Checkpoint, said that a few days earlier Thai troops had unilaterally planted border post No. 37 and 38 at the old location which was disputed by the Cambodian side. He added that Thai soldiers planted the border posts in order to build a village for Thai people to live. The Cambodian side said the Thai side had violated the 2000 Memorandum of Understanding and ordered Border Guard Unit No. 807 to uproot the posts.

Mr. Nou Yath said on 13th June, a group of Thai soldiers came to stop Cambodian farmers from farming on their lands near border post No. 34 and 35 and then they closed the border at that point.

Mr. Sar Chamrong, Deputy Governor of Banteay Meanchey province, confirmed that Thai troops had closed the border, but re-opened it the same day after negotiation. However, Mr. Chamrong did not elaborate on what decision was reached at the negotiation.

Boeng Trokuon Checkpoint is situated 50 kilometres north of Poipet International Checkpoint in O’Bei Choan commune in Thmor Puok district of Banteay Meanchey province. It is an important point of border trades between the two countries where Cambodian rice, cassava and other primary produce are exported to Thailand, as well as an important point for Thailand’s exports of numerous products to Cambodia.Here.here.here


Fire families wait for relocation, new land

phnompenhpost

TUESDAY, 08 JUNE 2010 15:03

By :KHOUTH SOPHAKCHAKRYA

A Tuol Kork resident helps rebuild his family’s home, which was destroyed in a March 8 fire. On Monday, 68 families that want to rebuild in Boeung Kak 2 commune asked officials to begin distributing plots of land, and a group of 170 families that have agreed to relocate to Dangkor district learned they may move before the end of the month.

TUOL Kork district officials on Monday told a group of 170 families made homeless by a March 8 fire in Boeung Kak 2 commune that they could be relocated to an undeveloped site in Dangkor district’s Choam Chao commune at the end of the month.

Also Monday, 68 other families that have continued to resist relocation protested in front of City Hall, calling on local officials to grant them land to build new homes at the site of the fire.

At a meeting with the first group of families, held at Neak Von pagoda, Tuol Kork deputy governor Thim Sam An said infrastructure at the Choam Chao district relocation site would not be fully in place before families arrive.

“We cannot connect the electricity and water line, including the drainage system, by the end of this month. We will have to do these things step-by-step after the relocation,” he said. “But if you agree to go, we will relocate you this month.”

Boeung Kak 2 residents and housing rights advocates have criticised the Choam Chao site for its propensity to flood, but Thim Sam An said that the authorities were “making an effort” to fill in flood-prone areas.

Some residents said Monday that they were willing to wait up to two months to be relocated, provided that officials gave them tarpaulins so they could build roofs over temporary shelters in Boeung Kak 2.

Lim Kim Eng, 68, attends a protest Monday at which residents of Tuol Kork district’s Boeung Kak 2 commune demanded permission to rebuild homes destroyed in a March 8 fire. Her sign reads: “Commune and district authorities have delayed us from rebuilding our homes for three months.”

“Right now, our roofs are ruined, and we have no money to buy new tarpaulins,” said Sam Sam Ang, a representative of the families. “We ask that the authorities distribute some tarpaulins to us … while we wait for relocation.”

Meanwhile, 68 families that have continued to resist pressure from the authorities to relocate demonstrated in front of City Hall on Monday morning, demanding that local authorities begin allocating plots of land promised to them at the fire site.

Kong Saly, a resident who participated in the protest, said that villagers want officials to distribute 3.92-by-5.5-metre plots of land to each family.

“For three months we’ve waited for the authorities to distribute plots of land to us, but now it’s the rainy season, and our roofs are ruined,” she said.

In the fire’s immediate aftermath, officials told residents they could rebuild in the commune provided that they accepted 3.92-by-5.5-metre plots – a downgrade for many of the families – and left sufficient space for new access roads.

Parking fees spark complaints

phnompenhpost

TUESDAY, 08 JUNE 2010 15:02

By : CHHAY CHANNYDA

RESIDENTS and business owners living on a section of Charles de Gaulle Boulevard where parking fees were recently collected as

A group of men sit on parked motorbikes along Charles de Gaulle Boulevard on Monday. The street was recently the site of an experiment in parking fees that has drawn complaints.

part of a one-week experiment are preparing to submit a complaint to Prime Minister Hun Sen, representatives said Monday.

Under the experiment, which ended last Wednesday, customers visiting shops on a 120-metre stretch between Streets 107 and 109 in Prampi Makara district were allowed to park cars and motorbikes for free for up to one hour, but were charged between 500 riels to 20,000 riels (US$4.80) if they stayed for longer.

Huot Chhon, the owner of a shop selling spare motorbike parts, said he did not know when the complaint would be submitted, but that he was trying to collect as many thumbprints as possible. “I’m worried that in the future the city would start this officially along the road. It will affect our business,” he said.

Prampi Makara district governor Som Sovann said Monday that decisions about whether to undertake additional experiments or to impose permanent fees would be made by City Hall, and that there had not yet been any meetings about the experiment that ended last week.
City Hall officials could not be reached for comment on Monday.

A notice dated May 25 said the point of the exercise was to reduce the number of vehicles along Charles de Gaulle and discourage “anarchic parking”.

Masato Koto, an urban planning consultant who came up with the scheme, said last month that the long-term plan is to make Phnom Penh more pedestrian-friendly.

“In other countries, sidewalks are only for pedestrians,” he said. “But Cambodia is different. Here sidewalks are for parking cars, so we have to change this characteristic.”

Sam Rainsy’s speech at Philadelphia, PA on May 23, 2010

ki-media

Letter of Appreciation from SRP-Pennsylvania

Dear Compatriots,

On behalf of Sam Rainsy Party of Pennsylvania, I would like to express my sincere appreciation to everyone for attending the meeting discussion on May 23, 2010. It was a tremendous opportunity for us to familiarize you and to share our concerns regarding the current and future issues on our native country, Cambodia.

Again, thank you for attending our event. Please click on links below to view web photo album of the event.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW SRP-PA WEB PHOTOS ALBUMS

Sincerely,

R. Visal
SRP of Pennsylvania

Part 1 of 4

Part 2 of 4

Part 3 of 4

Part 4 of 4

Fighting the flames

phnompenhpost

MONDAY, 07 JUNE 2010 15:03

By : UY NOUSEREIMONY

Fighting

A man attempts to extinguish a fire at a petrol vendor’s shop in Phnom Penh’s Russey Keo district on Sunday. Phnom Penh Municipal Fire Department Deputy Director Oum Bunthoeun said local residents had assisted firefighters in combating the blaze after narrow roads prevented trucks from accessing the site.

Sacrava’s Political Cartoon: The [Border] Post No. 270

ki-media


Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://sacrava.blogspot.com)

SRP MPs to visit border ( Takeo )


“Min Cheh Upama” a Poem in Khmer by Sam Vichea

ki-media


Flyover fallout

phnompenhpost

THURSDAY, 27 MAY 2010 15:04

By: SOVAN PHILONG

A boy

A boy peers out from behind a gate on Wednesday near a road that is scheduled to be cleared to make way for a flyover connecting the controversial Boeung Kak lake development with Street 169. The flyover could displace more than 50 families who said they believed they would be unaffected by the massive real estate project.

City nixes Khmer Krom ceremony

phnompenhpost

THURSDAY, 27 MAY 2010 15:03

By: MEAS SOKCHEA

CITY officials have rejected a proposal for a June 4 public ceremony marking the 61st anniversary of a French colonial ruling that

Photo by: Tracey Shelton Monks attend a ceremony last year marking the 60th anniversary of a ruling that ceded territory to Vietnam. City Hall has rejected a proposal for a similar ceremony organisers are planning for next month.

formally ceded former Cambodian territories in the Mekong Delta to southern Vietnam, according to a letter dated May 21.

Khmer Krom advocacy groups had planned to hold the ceremony in the park outside Wat Botum, with organisers expecting to attract up to 5,000 people, including 2,000 monks.

The letter, signed by Phnom Penh Governor Kep Chuktema, states that the organisers should send a new proposal to the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts, and suggests that they hold the ceremony at Chaktomuk Conference Hall in order to maintain “security and good public order”.

Thach Setha, executive director of the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Community, which is organising the event, said he has already contacted Minister of Culture Him Chhem, who told him that the Chaktomuk facility is closed for renovations.

He said that he sent another letter to Kep Chuktema on Wednesday, again seeking permission to hold the ceremony. He added that the event had already been organised and would go ahead whether or not City Hall gives its official blessing.

“We cannot miss this because the King has sent his representative to participate in the ceremony. So we must hold the ceremony as planned,” he said.

Kep Chuktema could not be reached for comment on Wednesday, while Koet Chhe, deputy chief of the Municipal Cabinet, declined to comment, saying he had not seen Thach Setha’s follow-up letter to the governor.

Paying respect

phnompenhpost

WEDNESDAY, 26 MAY 2010 15:04

PHA LINA

Cambodians

HIV-positive Cambodians pause for a moment of silence in memory of people who have fallen victim to AIDS. This tribute came during the 11th National Candlelight Memorial Day, held Tuesday at the Nun Many pagoda in Phnom Penh. Ly Po, deputy director of the National AIDS Authority, said at the event that he wanted to “eliminate discrimination against HIV patients” in Cambodia.

Court forces end to protests

phnompenhpost

WEDNESDAY, 26 MAY 2010 15:03

MAY TITTHARA

Svay Rieng residents say villagers were forced to promise not to demonstrate

FOUR villagers accused of being “ringleaders” in a heated land dispute in Svay Rieng province say authorities have forced them to

Photo by: PHOTO COURTESY OF ADHOC Police stand near demonstrators outside Svay Rieng provincial court on Tuesday.

sign documents pledging not to continue protests, residents said Tuesday.Chan Hoeung was one of four villagers from Romeas Hek district who faced eight hours of questioning from provincial court officials Tuesday as part of a dispute with a private company. He said he and three others were peppered with questions while officials took their photographs.

“The provincial court forced us to sign an agreement with them to stop protesting about this land dispute,” he said.

“If we protest again, they will arrest us because they have our photos already.”

One villager still detained
The questioned men were accompanied by roughly 150 supporters, villagers and rights groups said.

They represented approximately 400 families in five communes in Romeas Hek who say they are in danger of being forced from their homes because of a land concession awarded to the Peam Chaing Rubber Company.

The villagers had sought to convince the court to release Yea Yeoung, who was arrested earlier this month after police accused him of destroying property and “briefly kidnapping” a company representative.

But Chheang Am, the provincial governor, said authorities would not release the man, though he added that he considered any legal issues concerning the four villagers questioned Tuesday to be resolved. The court had summoned 11 other villagers as part of the dispute.

“We did not arrest the villagers for this land dispute. But we cannot release the man who was arrested because he threatened to kill a company representative,” Chheang Am said.

Keo Sothea, a provincial prosecutor assigned to the case, declined to comment.

The villagers said they were met with Military Police officers armed with stun batons and rifles when they showed up at court Tuesday.

Rights groups decried Tuesday’s outcome, contending that local authorities were trying to threaten the villagers by suggesting their protests are illegal.

“Authorities did not accuse just the villagers. They also accused NGOs too,” said Ouch Leng, a land programme officer for the rights group Adhoc.
“They said villagers have no right to protest and NGOs persuaded the villagers to protest.”

Disputed land concession
The dispute centres on roughly 800 hectares of land claimed by the villagers and the Peam Chaing Rubber Company.

In 2007 the government awarded the company a 3,960-hectare concession that included the villagers’ land.

Local officials say the company has planned to compensate the villagers in the future with some 700 hectares of land. Both commune and district officials have sided with the company, accusing the villagers of living on the land “under anarchic conditions”.

But Adhoc’s Ouch Leng said the villagers were being treated unfairly.

“Authorities do not have a clear understanding about democracy and economic land concessions,” he said. “They only think that the people that are awarded the concessions are the owners. They do not think about how it will affect villagers.”

ខ្ញុំមានមោទនភាពដែលបានកើតជាពូជខែ្មរ​ និពន្ថដោយពូជខ្មែរ Poem by Pouch Khmer

Originally Posted at: The Son Of the Khmer Empire

May 25,2010 at 5:27 pm

ឪកូនខែ្មរអើយ កុំភ្លេចទឹកដី​​                           សូមខែ្មរប្រុសស្រី ឃ្មាតឃ្មីការពារ
ដីកេរ្ដិ៍មរតក ខែ្មរទាំងអស់គ្នា                          កុំឲ្យពួកមារ វាមកឈ្លានពាន

ពូជខែ្មរមានសាសន៍ ឃើញច្បាស់ប្អូនបង      ជាតិខ្មែរមិនឆ្កង មានចិត្ដជាទាន
រក្សាវប្បធម៌ កូនខែ្មរគ្រប់ប្រាណ                      ពួកចោរសាមាន្យ វាហ្នឹងរាថយ

ខែ្មរស្រលាញ់ខែ្មរ ប្រែជាប្រយោជន៍             ខែ្មរមិនអសោចន៍ ខែ្មរមិនចុះខ្សោយ
កុំជឿបង្វែ ប្រយ័ត្នថ្លោះថ្លូយ                            ជាតិខ្មែរតែមួយ ជឿខែ្មរដូចគ្នា

ខែ្មរចេះជួយខែ្មរ ទើបខែ្មរចំរើន                     ជាតិខែ្មរយើងកើន ទូទាំងកម្ពុជា
ខែ្មរមិនសាមគ្គី ពិតជាចាញ់មារ                    ខែ្មរជួបវេទនា​​​​​​​​ ដូចសព្វថ្ងៃនេះ

បើខ្មែរចេះយល់​​​​​​​ ​​ ​​​​​​​​​​​​ ដល់តម្លៃមខ្លួន                នោះពួកសៀមយួន​ មិនហ៊ានជាន់ជិះ
សូមខ្មែរគ្រប់រូប ទូទាំងប្រទេស                  កុំបីប្រហេះ​​ ​ ប្រយ័ត្នបាត់កេរ្ដិ៍

យើងជាតិខេមរា ដូនតាសាងទុក              ដីកេរ្ដិ៍ឪពុក ​ ជួយរក្សាថែ
កុំជឿអ្នកផ្សេង ក្រៅពីជាតិខែ្មរ                   កុំជឿបង្វែ នាំខែ្មរវិនាស

បើខែ្មរជឿខែ្មរ ខែ្មរពិតគង់្វង់                          ខែ្មរមិនលិចលង់ ខែ្មរមិនព្រាត់ប្រាស់
បើខ្មែរគ្រប់រូប ខំប្រឹងខ្នែងខ្នះ                      ខែ្មរទាំងក្មេងចាស់ បានផុតទម្និញ

លើទឹកដីខែ្មរ ត្រូវខែ្មររស់នៅ                       មិនម៉ែនសត្រូវ រស់នៅទៅវិញ
យួនមានសិទ្ធិ៍ធំ ដេញខែ្មរឲ្យចេញ             ខែ្មរសែនទម្និញ រស់ក្រោមអាណា

ខែ្មរជាម្ចាស់ដី ប្រុសស្រីគ្មានសិទ្ធិ៍               រស់មានកម្រត់ ជាតិខែ្មរខ្លោចផ្សា
យួនរទេស រស់ដោយរដ្ឋា                            ឯជាតិខេមរា រដ្ឋាសម្លាប់

នឹកឡើងហួសចិត្ដ អាណិតឈាមខែ្មរ         យួនវាយដូចឆ្កែ ជាតិខែ្មរចុះអាប់
បើជឿយួនខ្លាំង មិនយូរខែ្មរស្លាប់                  មិនយូរមិនឆាប់ ស្លាបអស់ពូជខែ្មរ។

យួនធ្វើបាបខ្មែរ​​និពន្ធដោយពូជខ្មែរYoun Keep Killing Khmers by Pouch Khmer

Originally Posted at: The Son Of Khmer Empire

May 25,2010 at 5:14 pm

យួនធ្វើបាបខែ្មរ គ្មានត្រាប្រណី                        យួនប្លន់យកដី កេរ្ដិ៍ពីដូនតា
យកដីខែ្មរ ដីជាទីស្នេហា                                    វាប្រឹងប្រហារ ខេមរាឲ្យសូន្យ

ជាតិខែ្មរទាំងឡាយ ជិតឆ្ងាយកុំភ្លេច               ចូចាំជានិច្ច កល្បិចយួន

ក្រោកឡើងកូនខែ្មរ ការពារជាតិខ្លួន               នាំគ្នាវាយយួន ជាតិចោរឬស្សា

ប្រវត្ដិសាស្រ្ដ ប្រាប់ច្បាស់ថាខែ្មរ                     ត្រូវយួនបង្វែ ប្រែក្បត់ដូនតា

ក្បត់ជាតិខ្លួន ជឿយួនបច្ចា                               ក្បត់ជាតិខេមរា ដូនតាសាងទុក

ព្រៃនគរខ្មែរ គឺជាសាក្សី                                   នោះគឺជាដី កេរ្ដិ៍ពីឪពុក

ច្រើនឆ្នាំខែហើយ ជាតិខែ្មរកើតទុក្ខ               ព្រោះតែរណ្នុក រុកឲ្យខែ្មរបែក។។។

សំគាល់ះ​លំនាំបទ កំហែងឈើទាល

61st Anniversary of the Painful Loss of Kampuchea Krom – Organized by KKF Europe

Original Post: The Son Of the Khmer Empire

May 21,2010 at 9:45 pm


Officials to make call on Kraya handouts

Phnompenhpost

May 14,2010 at 8:03

FFICIALS in Kampong Thom province’s Kraya commune say they will decide this month whether to grant plots of farmland to

Photo by: Heng Chivoan Former residents of a disputed section of land in Kampong Thom province’s Kraya commune sit near an excavator that was burned as part of a demonstration last year.

villagers evicted from their land in December, but affected families remain concerned they will not be able to plant crops ahead of this year’s wet season.

The evicted villagers – many of them military veterans – have been shifted to a relocation site at Kraya’s Thmor Samleang village, where they have built homes, but are still awaiting replacement farmland promised by the authorities.

Kampong Thom Deputy Governor Out Sam On said there had been a delay in the granting of the land because officials were checking to see that prospective plots did not have other owners.

“We have eight committees to study about providing farmland to the villagers,” he said, and added that on May 23, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) in Phnom Penh would make a decision as to the size of land to be granted to each family.

On December 15, some 1,700 families were evicted from Kraya commune to make way for a rubber plantation to be developed by the Vietnamese Tin Bien company.

Om Saran, an evictee residing at Thmor Samleang, said that if villagers did not get farmland in the run-up to the rainy season, when farmers typically begin planting rice seedlings, they would have no crops to harvest later in the year.

“We are worried that if authorities do not provide us farmland on time, villagers will not have food for the next year,” he said.

His fellow villager Prum Roth alleged that since the eviction, local officials had treated the residents like “animals”.

“The authorities only cheated us to agree to move to a new place and then abandoned us. They should provide us with farmland as soon as they can, as they know we depend on farmland,” he said.

Poe Oumoete, provincial monitor for rights group Licadho, called on officials to speed up the process of finding the land.

But Pich Sophea, Santuk district governor, said the Kampong Thom provincial council was merely awaiting the decision of MAFF.

“If they approve, our local authorities will start helping the villagers, he said. Ministry officials could not be reached for comment on Thursday.