Sunday, September 30, 2007

U.N. envoy lands in Myanmar for talks

CRACKDOWN: Riot police and soldiers patrol Yangon streets to block anti-government protests first led by Buddhist monks. The military confined many monks to their monasteries.(Photo: STR/AFP/Getty Images)

The streets of Yangon are quiet as the diplomat arrives to meet with military rulers after their crackdown on protesters.

September 30, 2007
By Henry Chu,
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer


NEW DELHI -- A U.N. special envoy arrived in Myanmar on Saturday for talks with the country's military rulers, whose ruthless crackdown on anti-government protesters has sparked international outrage.

The streets of Myanmar's main city, Yangon, were virtually empty of demonstrators for the first time in nearly two weeks and devoid of the gunfire and chaos that marked three days of violent suppression by soldiers and police. Security forces continued to patrol and seal off parts of the city, including the Buddhist monasteries whose monks spearheaded the protests.

After landing in Yangon on Saturday afternoon, United Nations envoy Ibrahim Gambari immediately traveled to the new capital of Naypyidaw, near Pyinmana about 200 miles to the north, where the generals who rule Myanmar live in relative isolation from the people.

Details of Gambari's schedule were not available, nor was it clear whether he would be allowed to visit pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who is under house arrest and has been detained for most of the last 18 years.

"I expect to meet all the people that I need to meet," Gambari said in Singapore before departing for Myanmar, also known as Burma. He did not elaborate.

In Washington, Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, urged Myanmar's leaders to give Gambari "access to all those he wishes to meet with, including religious leaders as well as Aung San Suu Kyi."

Analysts question how much Gambari, a former Nigerian foreign minister, can achieve in talks with an iron-fisted junta that has repeatedly shown itself impervious to outside pressure.

His mission to Myanmar reflects the growing international concern and anger over the generals' brutal clampdown on protesters, in which the government acknowledges that 10 people have been killed. Diplomats and dissident groups estimate the death toll to be many times that figure, as high as 200.

Some observers feared a repeat of a 1988 massacre of pro-democracy protesters in which an estimated 3,000 people were killed.

The demonstrations began last month in response to steep fuel price increases but soon became an outlet for anger over 45 years of autocratic military rule. Last week, as many as 100,000 people marched in central Yangon, also known as Rangoon, including a large number of monks, who are revered in this predominantly Buddhist country.

The uneasy quiet on Yangon's streets Saturday, however, suggested that the armed crackdown that began Wednesday may have succeeded in containing the biggest challenge to the military's rule in nearly 20 years.

"Peace and stability has been restored," state-run newspapers said. The authorities had handled the protests "with care, using the least possible force."

Small groups gathered to taunt and curse soldiers and police but quickly escaped through alleyways when authorities began to charge, the Reuters news service reported.

Internet connections remained cut off, constricting the flow of photographs and video that had helped galvanize world opinion against the junta.

"The strategy is to neutralize the demonstrators, and they seem to have done that very effectively," said Tim Huxley, executive director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies-Asia.

Human rights organizations and Burmese activist groups in exile have called on leading nations, especially China, Myanmar's traditional ally, to pressure the regime to stop using force against its opponents. The U.S. has imposed new sanctions on Myanmar, and the Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations, one of the few multilateral organizations to which Myanmar belongs, issued a statement expressing its "revulsion" over the bloody crackdown.

On Saturday, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said, "I hope the Burmese regime can be told today by Mr. Gambari just how seriously we view this, and that there is a huge anger across the world about the deaths and about the violence that's been perpetrated against the Burmese people."

But international condemnation, and efforts such as Gambari's visit, probably will have little effect, Huxley said.

"External leverage is extremely limited," he said. "There's been a variety of external pressure over the years -- the dramatic approaches, including successive U.N. envoys who have made representations and failed, representations in very muted form by fellow members of ASEAN and sanctions imposed by Western countries to varying degrees -- and none of them have had significant effect."

henry.chu@latimes.com

Being a junior partner of the CPP, Funcinpec already gloats about winning over Prince Ranariddh one more time ... for sure

Funcinpec hopes to win the lawsuit against Prince Ranariddh one more time

30 September 2007
By Keo Nimol
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Socheata

Funcinpec spokesman declared on 29 September that he hopes that the judgment regarding the real estate difference between Funcinpec and Prince Ranariddh, former Funcinpec president, by the appeal court on 03 October will render justice to Funcinpec one more time for sure.

Nouv Sovathero, Funcinpec spokesman, said: “For us, the plaintiff, we hope that, based on the court power, it will provide justice one more to Funcinpec which is the victim, and the reason we are suing was not to bring shame to Prince Ranariddh or anybody else, this is a legal demand on real estates and lands which belong to the party, and it should be returned back to the party, that’s all.”

On 28 September, the NRP, led by Prince Ranariddh, issued a statement in which it said that it is concerned about the upcoming judgment by the appeal court on 03 October, regarding the appeal case of Prince Ranariddh who rejected the sentence issued by the Phnom Penh municipality court. The NRP also said that it has very little confidence that the judgment will provide justice for the prince.

Liv Sovanna, Prince Ranariddh’s defense lawyer, said on 29 September that, up until now, he did not receive the summon from the appeal court yet, and based on the sentence by the Phnom Penh municipal court handed down last March, Prince Ranariddh could be jailed for 18 months also.

King-Father cancels all audience and visits ... because his moral is and will remain very low

Translated from French by Luc Sâr
Communiqué
From
Norodom Sihanouk
Phnom Penh, September 27, 2007

I am expressing my most affectionate, deepest, and moving gratitude to all the Khmer and Foreign Personalities and People who, very often, approve me, send me, have gifts, fruits, dishes, desserts, candies etc… etc… delivered to me.

I am very touched by their noble gestures and I will never forget them as being “Sihanoukists” or sympathizers, friends, “relatives” ….

But, I am asking to all of you not to send me anything anymore, not to offer me, and this, starting from today.

Regarding the requests for audience, I would be very grateful to all the Personalities and People not to ask to see me, and to all those close to me, not to give me impromptu visit or otherwise, because my moral is and will remain very low.

Thank you infinitely

(Signed) Norodom Sihanouk

Vietnam allows Monk Tim Sakhorn’s relatives to visit him

29 September 2007
By Mayarith
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Socheata

MP Son Chhay indicated that Vietnam agreed to allow the relatives of former Monk Tim Sakhorn to visit him in the Vietnamese jail. However, the demand for his release is still being negotiated.

Son Chhay said: “The (Vietnamese) embassy met with me yesterday. They told me about a number of reasons, on their Vietnamese side, which led to the arrest of Mr. Tim Sakhorn, and the Vietnamese provided clarification answers on a number of the requests I made. They promised me that they will not impose hardships, nor torture Mr. Tim Sakhorn. And they said that they will help make arrangement for the family of Mr. Tim Sakhorn to meet him because the Vietnamese law allows it. I told them to push this issue further, they should release Mr. Tim Sakhorn as soon as possible. As I told you earlier, because I will meet with the Vietnamese Parliament delegation this Monday, the (Vietnamese) embassy is making arrangements to provide good results regarding Mr. Tim Sakhorn, so that the discussion meeting between the Cambodian (National Assembly) Foreign Affairs Committee and the Vietnamese (Parliament) Foreign Affairs Committee will go well and there would not be any issues of concern.

Another multi-star general promoted ... pretty soon the Royal Cambodian Armed Force will only have generals in its rank and file

Nhim Vannda promoted to 4-star general

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

Prime minister Hun Sen promoted Nhim Vannda to the position of 4-star general, a high-ranking position in the RCAF. Nhim Vannda is the minister in charge of special mission and also the first vice-president of the National Committee for Disaster Management. This promotion was signed by King Sihamoni on 26 September 2007. In addition to his achievement in serving the nation and the people, Nhim Vannda also received praises from Hun Sen and King Sihamoni. He was bestowed several honor medals, and this year, he received the “nation development” medal which is the highest honor bestowed in Cambodia.

NRP asks the international community to follow up on Ranariddh’s appeal case

Saturday, September 29, 2007
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The NRP asked the international community and civil society organizations in Cambodia to follow the evolution of the appeal case of Prince Ranariiddh. The court hearing on this appeal will be held by the appeal court on 03 October. In its statement issued on 28 September, the NRP said that the international community and civil society organizations are paying attention mainly to the KR Tribunal, but, they did not pay attention to the lawsuit against Prince Ranariddh who was unfairly sentenced by the Phnom Penh municipal court, even though he did nothing wrong. The NRP said that it has very little confidence that Prince Ranariddh will receive justice from the appeal court decision. This is why the NRP is calling on civil society organizations and the international community, as well as all pro-democracy people, all nationalists, all people who love justice, to help follow up on the appeal court hearing on 03 October at 2:00 PM, in order to provide justice for the prince.

Hun Sen orders a decree for awards to sports medal winners, maybe he should award funding for the athletes first

September 30, 2007
Cambodia drafting sub-decree for awarding winners of sports medals

The Cambodian Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports was drafting a sub-decree to specify the amount of cash award for winners of medals at international sports events, an official said here on Saturday.

The sub-decree stipulates that winner of a gold medal at the Olympic Games will be awarded with 10,000 U.S. dollars, silver medal with 7,000 U.S. dollars and bronze medal with 5,000 U.S. dollars, said Mil Kado, deputy director general of general department for sports at the ministry.

For tournament in Asia, winner of a gold medal will receive 5,000 U.S. dollars, silver medal 3,000 U.S. dollars, and bronze medal 2,000 U.S. dollars, he said.

For regional tournament, player with a gold medal can get 3,000 U.S. dollars, silver medal 2,000 U.S. dollars and bronze medal 1,000 U.S. dollars, he added.

With the sub-decree, the government is trying to encourage the kingdom's athletes to improve their records, he said.

The sub-decree is prepared according to the order of Prime Minister Hun Sen, and will be sent to the Council of Minister and later to Hun Sen himself for official approval, he added.

Source: Xinhua

Hun Sen-Sponsored 'Preah Sdach Korn' Book Needs 2d Edition To Meet Demand

25 Sep 07
By Bo Proeuk
Rasmei Kampuchea

Translated from Khmer and posted online

A book based on a period in the Cambodian history entitled "Preah Sdach Korn" [the August King Korn] written by Doctor of Political Science Professor Ros Chantrabotr, deputy president of the Royal Academy of Cambodia, was published for the second time with exclusive right by Angkor Publishing House, which is one of Cambodia's biggest publishers behind many famous books.

A responsible of Angkor Publishing House told Reaksmei Kampuchea on 24 September that the Preah Sdach Korn second edition was necessary when the first edition could not satisfy the large demand of the readers, students, and researchers of Cambodian history. This officer in charge of Angkor Publishing House went on to say that the second edition contains no alterations or additions to the content of the original version. The difference from the previous edition is in the cover paper that is not hard to lower the cost so that all strata of people can afford the book.

Preah Sdach Korn is the research work of Dr. Ros Chantrabotr written under the sponsorship of Prime Minister Hun Sen and his wife. The first publication of 5,000 books did not meet the demand of the general public, youths, intellectuals, students, and teachers.

Preah Sdach Korn contains 355 17.5-cm by 25-cm pages, divided into three sections and 11 chapters. The first section describes Cambodia of the post-Angkor period. The second section deals with the research and describes the history of King Korn. The third section depicts the capital of Preah Sri Chettha or Preah Sdach Korn. This book also contains pictures and illustrations of documents from the inscriptions pertaining to this historical period.

The above responsible officer said that the book has received wide support from readers of different backgrounds. He said he was happy to see Cambodian children of the present time paying greater attention to reading research books. However, he regretted that some opportunists have illegally published this book Preah Sdach Korn with questionable quality, thereby more or less impairing the reputation of the book.

He said that when the copyrighted book was being published a photocopied version of the book was already put on the market. This photocopied book was of smaller size, had paper of lower quality, and its print was blurred. He appealed to those who were behind this illegal act of plagiarism to end this shameful transgression.

Vigil in front of the Burmese Embassy Phnom Penh

All photos by Lux Mean posted on Flickr

Buddhism: The festival of the dead (Kan Ben) started on Thursday 27 September

28-09-2007
By Ung Chamroeun
Cambodge Soir

Translated from French by Luc Sâr

This important Buddhist celebration for the religious life of Cambodian people will end during the next full moon, in two weeks.

The festival of the dead: Since Thursday 28 September, the Kan Ben period started. This is an occasion for faithful Cambodian Buddhists to pay tribute to their departing ancestors (Pret) in the pagodas, through the help of monks. This sacred period will end in two weeks, in October. During this time, the sky is supposed to become more and more obscure as it is darkened by the harvest sky of Lord Yama (Yumreach), the king of the netherworld, who releases the soul of the dead so they can visit the people alive for a short period of time. The fifteenth day (11 October), on the full moon, is called Pchum Ben or the “gathering of the Ben” (the Ben designates the foods offered to the spirit, they consist of rice cakes and other foods).

For Miech Ponn, the advisor for the Khmer custom committee at the Buddhist Institute, this ceremony is very important, and it is necessary for Cambodian people to go to the pagoda to bring offerings. “The participation of the people is necessary for the monks, and for themselves. This is an occasion that allows people to dedicate themselves to religion, and to support monks who are not allowed to leave their pagodas to beg for their alms, according to the tradition,” Sophoan, a 42-year-old Phnom Penh woman, said.

At 4:00 AM, before sunrise, the faithful, mainly the youths, travel to pagodas to throw the “Bay Ben” (rice thrown along the stupas and viharas), accompanied by monks’ prayers. However, most of the time, old people tend to criticize the adolescents for taking advantage of this religious ceremony and turning it into a rendez-vous location between girls and boys.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Son Chhay: Defrocking of Monk Tim Sakhorn was done based on Vietnam’s order

28 September 2007
By Kim Pov Sottan
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Socheata

An opposition MP accused that the defrocking of former Monk Tim Sakhorn was done based on an order issued by the Vietnamese authority to the Cambodian government, following numerous revealing documents sent by the Ministry of Interior (MoI) to the National Assembly this Friday.

MP Son Chhay, Chairman of Committee No. 5 of the National Assembly, declared that he was very surprised to learn that the defrocking (of Monk Tim Sakhorn) was done to please Vietnam. He said that he will demand for an official explanation about this issue on Monday.

Son Chhay said: “Therefore, we can see that the action which took place was done to serve Vietnam’s interest altogether. We demand that there is an explanation, and there must be official answer from the Ministry of Interior, and from Vietnam about this issue also.”

The clarification document from the MoI confirms that the defrocking of former Monk Tim Sakhorn was done based on a direct order from Tep Vong, the Buddhist supreme patriarch.

During the defrocking, a Khmer Kampuchea-Krom Federation (KKF) and Khmer Monk Movement magazine was found. The magazine contains articles attacking the Vietnamese authority, this was (considered as) the undermining (activity) of the solidarity between Cambodia and Vietnam.

Son Chhay indicated that this is no cause to defrock Monk Tim Sakhorn on such issue. However, Khieu Sopheak, MoI spokesman, claimed that Monk Tim Sakhorn used Cambodian territories to oppose Vietnam.

Khieu Sopheak indicated: “The Constitution of our kingdom does not allow anyone, any individual, any organization, or any political party to use Cambodian territories to oppose another legal government in the world…”

The former abbot of the Phnom Den Pagoda was defrocked by force by the Cambodian authority on 30 June 2007, he was subsequently jailed in Kampuchea Krom (South Vietnam). Even thought the MoI claimed that Monk Tim Sakhorn volunteered to return to live in Kampuchea Krom, civil society organizations have accused the Phnom Penh regime of deporting its own citizen to Vietnam to be jailed there.

A few days ago, the Vietnamese TV station in Motr Chrouk (An Giang in Vietnamese) province, indicated that Monk Tim Sakhorn will be released, however, up until now, nobody has seen him released yet.

Khieu Sopheak welcomes the eventual return of Monk Tim Sakhorn back to Cambodia, but he rejects any intervention to help secure the release of the monk, claiming that this case is beyond the Phnom Penh regime’s governance inside Cambodia.

$3 million of heroin smuggled into Taiwan in a hollowed-out Buddha statue shipped from Cambodia

Old heroin smuggling case closed

09/29/2007
By Sofia Wu

Taipei, Sept. 28 (CNA) Keelung customs officials announced the closure of a drug smuggling case Friday in which a large amount of heroin was concealed in the hollowed-out base of a Buddha statue.

The statue was shipped from Cambodia to Keelung in northern Taiwan in March and after a lengthy investigation, two suspects were arrested in August, although the mastermind had already fled to China, customs officials said.

The 15 heroin bricks hidden in the hollowed-out Buddha statue are worth an estimated NT$100 million (US$3.03 million) in street value, market sources said.

The floating village of Tonle Sap river

Sept 29th, 2007
By Usha Raja
Chennai Online (Tamil Nadu, India)


Cambodian Kaleidoscope - 7 Places of Interest

The Tonle Sap river, which is in Siem Reap, resembles a sea. The nation’s lake is one of the geographical wonders of the world. It is an ecological marvel with its extraordinary biodiversity and hydrology.

During the rains, the lake swells and inundates the neighbouring forests and makes the soil fertile for cultivation. The silt deposits increases the agricultural produce by leaps and bounds. It is also South East Asia’s largest fresh water fishing ground. The fishermen are able to catch 10 tonnes of fish which is their livelihood. During the three months of spawning, fishermen do not venture into the sea.

Fish species thriving in Tonle Sap are carp, catfish, herring and others.

It is a bird watchers’ paradise and ornithologists will have a visual treat watching the birds flocking there.

My cruise on Tonle Sap will be etched in my memory forever. A small area with boats and ship moving at snail’s pace resemble a floating village.

For many of the natives, it is life on water. Their houseboat is a self-contained vessel and has everything under the sun. Most of the villagers thrive only on fishing. This area has prospered and has had water transportation since ancient times.

Despite its natural splendour and architectural marvels, the Pol Pot regime is an unpleasant part of the nation’s history. Pol Pot was an autocrat who ruled Cambodia from 1975-79.He mercilessly killed thousands of his fellow countrymen whom he suspected of treachery. It is important to note that killer fields are spread throughout the country. It is in the killer fields that he gruesomely murdered many innocent men, women and children. It is believed he killed several intelligent men and women who were of great use to the country. The bones of the dead are kept in a museum and kept for public viewing.

His memory still haunts the people of Cambodia and the rest of the world. My guide had a horrid tale to narrate. His grandparents were mercilessly dragged to the killer fields and thrown into the fire pit. No one knows the reason for this gruesome act.

Cambodia is slowly limping back to normalcy and its citizens are slowly getting over the fear of the Pol Pot regime.

Great rivers have spawned the Cambodian civilisation which is engraved in the annals of history. Angkor Wat temples showcase the ethos of the region. Cambodia boasts of antiquity that dates back to the Chola period. Its world heritage sites attract people who flock in thousands to marvel at its splendour.

Alleged Housing Discrimination Against Cambodian-Americans in Lowell, Massachusetts

Operation Home Sweet Home Results in Filing of Housing Lawsuit Alleging Discrimination Against Asian-Americans in Lowell, Massachusetts

Friday, September 28, 2007
WEBWIRE

WASHINGTON - The Civil Rights Division today announced the first lawsuit ever filed by the Department alleging discrimination against Asian-Americans based upon its fair housing tests–an example of the Division’s successful efforts in Operation Home Sweet Home. The complaint alleges that Pine Properties Inc. and six affiliated entities violated the Fair Housing Act by discriminating based on national origin against Cambodian-Americans seeking to rent apartments. The defendants own and operate 14 rental properties in Lowell, Mass.

The lawsuit, filed in federal district court in Boston, alleges that the defendants subjected Cambodian-American apartment seekers to requirements not imposed on white apartment seekers. It further alleges that the defendants’ actions included refusing to show available apartments to Cambodian-American apartment seekers because they did not have a separate appointment, while at the same time taking white persons to see available dwellings immediately, with no prior appointment.

The lawsuit seeks a court order prohibiting future discrimination and requiring the defendants to pay monetary damages to compensate victims and a civil penalty.

“Operation Home Sweet Home uncovered discrimination against Cambodian-Americans–a protected class,” said Rena J. Comisac, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division. “Applying more stringent standards to Cambodian-American apartment seekers is just as discriminatory as a blatant policy of refusing to rent to them.”

The Department of Justice conducted its investigation in this case through the use of fair-housing testers – individuals who pose as renters to gather information about possible discriminatory practices in the rental of apartments. This is the first lawsuit alleging discrimination against Asian-American that the Department has filed based on such testing evidence.

Operation Home Sweet Home is a concentrated initiative of the Department of Justice to expose and eliminate housing discrimination in America. This initiative was inspired by the plight of displaced victims of Hurricane Katrina who were suddenly forced to find new places to live. Operation Home Sweet Home is not limited to the areas hit by Hurricane Katrina and targets housing discrimination across the country. More information about Operation Home Sweet Home is available at the Justice Department Web site at:
http://www.usdoj.gov/fairhousing

The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in housing on the basis of race, color, sex, familial status, national origin and disability. Since Jan. 1, 2001, the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division has filed 237 cases to enforce the Fair Housing Act. For more information about the Civil Rights Division and the laws it enforces, visit http://www.usdoj.gov/crt. Individuals who believe they may have been injured by the defendants’ discrimination should call the Department at 1-800-896-7743, ext. 95.

Rebuilding lives, reviving arts

To purchase Cambodian arts and crafts and to help Cambodian artists, please visit Artisans d'Angkor online shop at www.artisansdangkor.com

After years of war and genocide, a Cambodian company helps to rebuild the lives of rural villagers and restore Khmer arts to its once glorious state.

Saturday September 29, 2007
BY LEONG SIOK HUI
The Star (Malaysia)


With a chisel and mallet, Cambodian Dy Narong can wield magic.

Chipping off a block of pre-cut stone, Dy can effortlessly sculpt the enigmatic, smiling face of Avalokiteshvara (Buddha of Compassion) or the meditative face of King Jayavarman VII. Had he lived at the height of the Angkorian period (between 802 AD to 1432 AD), Dy would have been one of the master artisans who crafted the glorious temples of Angkor.

But this is 2007 and Dy is one of the many craftsmen behind Artisans d’Angkor (AA), a home-grown Cambodian company that churns out top-quality stone and wood reproductions of Angkorian statues and bas-reliefs, Khmer lacquerware, local crafts and silk products.

Siem Reap-based AA has stores in Phnom Penh, in Siem Reap airport, opposite Angkor Wat, and at a Silk Farm in Puok district, 16km from Siem Reap.

A decade ago, Dy was just one of the many uneducated, unemployed youths in his village, Wat Svay, in Siem Reap Province. Through a friend, Dy found out about Chantiers-Écoles de Formation Professionnelle (CEFP), a training school that teaches craft-making skills to rural youths to enable them to make a living.

How it began

Initiated by the National Cambodian Institutions, the French Foreign Ministry and the European Union in 1992, CEFP selects youths between the age of 18-25 from villages in Siem Reap Province to undergo a six-month, free training in techniques like stone or wood carving, lacquering, gilding and silk-weaving.

Trainees receive living allowances, clothing and tools.

“CEFP’s objective is to create a kind of network so that after training, you’re guaranteed a job,” explains AA’s art-design director Lim Muy Theam. “This is where Artisans d’Angkor, created in 1998, comes in.”

Initially funded by the European Union, AA serves as a marketing and retail arm for the artisans’ work. Since 2003, AA has become autonomous and is self-financed. Today, the private limited company invests in training workshops, provides tools and materials to trainees while CEFP conducts the courses.

AA also helps develop rural areas and curb rural depopulation. To date, there are 10 rural workshops in Siem Reap Province with 40% of AA’s artisans based in these villages and the rest based either in Siem Reap or the Silk Farm in Puok district. Five percent of AA’s craftsmen comprise the physically disabled.

In a country where the per capita income is US$448 (1/10 of Malaysia’s), AA’s 686 artisans earn between US$80 to over US$100 per month per person, depending on skills and experience. On top of the fixed salary, they earn extras from sales of each product. For example, a woodcarver earns US$15 for one Jayavarman VII bust that retails at US$79.

In a month, he could make five “heads” and take home an income of US$175, which is equivalent to what a Cambodian rural farmer can earn in a year.To prevent any exploitation, the artisans have employment contracts and the company’s social fund provides medical care and social welfare to employees.

“We don't have a boss,” explains Lim. “Our artisans formed an association called Artisanat Khmer and owns 20% stake in the company and take part in decision-making.”

The Cambodian government owns 30% share in AA, the board of directors cum management team holds a 10% while private shareholders make up 40% of AA’s ownership.

“The government audits us, checks on how much money is put back into investments, training and to the artisans,” adds Lim.

The artisan’s life

For Dy, who joined AA in 1996, the company did more than just put bread on his table.

“At first, I was just motivated to learn a trade that would provide me with a regular income,” admits Dy, 36, married with two children. “Then I met Cambodian natives (like Lim) who left the country during the war and returned to be part of CEFP and Artisans d’Angkor.”

Giving back: Dy Narong was trained as a stone carver at Chantiers-Ecoles 11 years ago. Today, he works with Artisans d’Angkor’s design department to produce prototype products. — Pictures by ARTISANS D’ANGKOR.

Dy was perplexed as to why these Cambodians who live a cushy life abroad would return to rebuild the country from scratch.

“After talking with them, I realised how rich our national heritage was and the importance of preserving it,” says Dy who takes immense pride in his work. “I understand that I play an important role in passing on and preserving our traditional skills.”

With 11 years of experience, Dy now works in the design department where he creates prototypes for potential products.

“I’m also involved in research work to design new products that convey our traditions,” says Dy who wishes to be part of AA for as long as he can. “We conduct studies to find the patterns, motifs, colours or materials we can use for our products.”

Dy's job took him abroad for the first time when AA opened their shop in Hong Kong. It was journey of many firsts for him – to step out of his motherland, and to leave his family and culture for a while.

“At home, I don't have satellite cable TV so I didn't know how other countries look like,” says Dy. “Hong Kong is so different and such an amazing and prosperous place! I sadly realised how far Cambodia has to go?”

Golden silk threads are produced at the company’s silk farm in Puok district, a 20-minute drive away from Siem Reap.

The long haul

But as for putting Khmer arts on the world map, AA is on the right track.

AA’s wares are displayed at Gallery Jayavarman VII in Paris. The company boasts a shop in Hong Kong International Airport (Terminal 2) and will launch another store in Singapore’s Changi Airport (Terminal 3) this November. At home, AA is opening a shop in the new Angkor National Museum.

Well-heeled foreigners who demand first-rate craftsmanship and unique pieces are among AA’s valuable clients.

In 2007 alone, 107 new artisans are undergoing training at CEFP. AA’s commercial department studies the market and predicts the increase (or decrease) in product demands at least two years in advance.

Not one to sit on their laurels, AA is charting its next course.

“To survive in this industry, we need to move beyond Cambodia’s tourist market,” admits Lim. For its first decade, AA responded to the tourist market by designing its collection based on the Angkor heritage theme, Lim explains.

“Our earlier objectives were to find an easier way to train apprentices and to revive traditional craft techniques that were lost because of the war,” says Lim. “And reproducing existing artworks was the best way to give these apprentices a better understanding of their own culture.”

But to stay ahead of the game, AA had to stay creative.

Starting 2003, the company started tweaking its silk collection by creating fashionable items that target younger customers.

Above and below: Crafts for sale at the Artisans d’Angkor flagship store in Siem Reap.

“We used to get comments that our silk collection is boring (with subdued colours like black, brown),” chuckles Lim. “So this season, I try to push brighter and fun colours inspired by popular traditions from the countryside.”

The tanned villagers love to don something cheery and colourful during festivals, Lim adds. This season’s silk products showcase cosmetic pouches, coin purses and scarves in lime green, orange and blood-red hues.

“As for the artisans, we have to think about how to give them a second step in training, not only to do reproductions but to master technically perfect skills,” says Lim.

“We understand that design is the key factor to identity and differentiation,” he adds. “But we have to be aware and grasp the fundamentals of Khmer culture and heritage and then transform the spirit of traditional crafts into new designs.”

Over the years, AA has been striving to change the lowly perception of Cambodian products.

“The key to our success is to preserve AA’s originality, its product quality and savoir-faire, and to forecast the trend of arts and crafts in the region,” sums up Lim.

As for Dy, his aspiration is simple.

“I hope to gain a deeper understanding of Khmer arts and make my knowledge accessible to the younger generation so that I can be sure of the preservation of Khmer’s cultural heritage,” he says.

If artisans like Dy are a measure of Artisan d’Angkor’s success, the company has certainly made it.

For more info on Artisans d’Angkor, click on www.artisansdangkor.com

An artist’s calling

A passion for art and history led Lim Muy Thean to becoming a respected artisan in Cambodia.

Saturday September 29, 2007
By LEONG SIOK HUI
The Star (Malaysia)


If you studied art at one of the most prestigious fine arts schools in the world – the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts (National School of Fine Arts) in Paris – and your fellow alumni included artists like Claude Monet and Edgar Degas and fashion designers, Valentino and Hubert de Givenchy, what would you do?

You could become a celebrity painter and command a six-figure price tag for each piece of your artwork.

Or, you could be like Lim Muy Theam.

Master at work: Artisans d’Angkor’s art design director Lim Muy Theam (right) returned to the country he fled from to help revive Khmer arts and take part in rebuilding Cambodians’ lives.

Lim set aside his dreams and journeyed to a place he once fled from 15 years ago to take part in the rebuilding of a country ravaged by three decades of war.

Lim is one of the few overseas-educated Cambodians who are helping to revive the Khmer craft industry and manage the successful Artisans d’Angkor (AA).

As the art-design director, Lim’s job is to create new products and introduce new collections for AA.

He also designs the chic AA stores with simple lines to showcase the elaborate craftwork.

“We are not simply just producing artefacts of Angkor temples,” says the genial Lim during an interview in his Siem Reap office.

“My job is to come up with the right colour, proportions, shapes and designs that people can appreciate and want to put in their homes.”

But how did Lim, who speaks fluent French, English and Khmer, end up with AA?

The journey home

Born in Takeo Province, south of Cambodia, Lim was nine when the Khmer Rouge regime fell and Vietnam invaded Cambodia in 1978. Amidst the widespread famine and the trauma caused by the genocide, hundreds of thousands of Cambodians fled the country.

Lim’s family was among the refugees who arrived in France in 1980. Lim was separated from his family and adopted by a French family.

“I was exposed to arts and culture since young,” says Lim, who visited his Cambodian family during summer holidays when he was growing up. Traditionally, Cambodian parents raise their children to pursue practical careers like in business or computers.

“But my French family saw my artistic talents and passion for art and history. They pushed me to follow my dream,” says Lim.

At that time, the Cambodian community in France only talked about politics, the rebuilding of Cambodia after the war, and not arts or culture, Lim adds.

After high school, Lim enrolled in the École Bulle, Paris (one of the largest trade schools in France) to study interior design and graphics. In 1992, he gained admission into the tough and prestigious École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts.

In 1994, he made the life-changing decicison to return to Cambodia.

“With my arts knowledge, I wanted to see how I can share and give what I had learned in France to my people,” says the idealistic artist. Growing up in France, Lim used to hear about the sublime Angkorian Empire and the glory of Khmer arts. But when he finally returned to Cambodia, he was shocked.

“There was no presence of any art or style, people didn’t even speak very well. They were just trying to feed themselves,” says Lim, who initally worked as a painter and did a few exhibitions in an art gallery.

Creating art: A silk weaver at Artisans d’Angkor’s silk farm in Puok district, Siem Reap.
So he set out on a mission to learn about Khmer art and style.


For three years, he devoted himself to learning about his country. He trawled through temples and pagodas around the country, visited people’s homes, and studied whatever artwork and artefacts he could lay his hands on. The Khmer Rouge regime had tried to wipe out any reminder of Cambodia’s past – its artisans, cultural artefacts, statues and books.

“I'm interested in how Cambodians live their everyday lives and use things like spoons and pots, the house they live in – the equilibrium of the designs,” says Lim, 39. “And I try to find the relationship between the aesthetics of the Angkor temples and present-day Cambodians' lives.

Inevitably, Chantiers-Écoles (whose programme was still in its infancy) roped in the designer to help them set up a modular training and look into the technical and artistic aspects of the programme.

Daunting tasks

At Chantiers-Écoles, one of Lim’s roles was to reintroduce the traditional method to the trainees. But there were no precedents and virtually all the information on arts and crafts had to be researched, compiled or rediscovered.

Lim was lucky to track down some of the old master craftsmen who were still alive and based in Phnom Penh. Most of these artisans are from Battambang, a once dynamic city that sits between the Thai/Cambodian bordertown of Poipet and Phnom Penh.

At the beginning of the 20th century under French rule, Battambang experienced a rebirth of craft traditions with French and Siamese stylistics influences. The city produced skilled craftsmen, artists and musicians who later moved to Phnom Penh.

Over three years, Lim studied how the masters worked and took notes and pictures. He then taught the traditional process to youths who have zero background or knowledge in arts and crafts.

“These youths have never been to school and they had no concept of time and discipline,” explains Lim. “We had to figure out what language and method to use to make them understand without using technical jargons. We could only use visual tools to teach and motivate them.”

It was a learn-as-you-go process for both the teachers and trainees.

He spurs his trainees to look at links to their cultural past. Ancient temples dot the country and even in the boondocks, there is a presence of style and aesthetics. Cambodians also grew up with folktales told by their ancestors.

“We’re not a fine arts school, we give basic skills to the artisans so they can work as a team within our network. In this modern economy, our artisans can’t work on his own out there because he doesn’t hail from a traditional craftsman’s family.

Precision: Artisans d’Angkor is the retail front for the training school, Chantiers-Ecoles de Formation Professionnelle, which was set up to train rural Cambodians in traditional craft-making.

“But people will give value to quality, aesthetic beauty and detail,” says Lim.

“Even when we do reproductions, we respect the material, the process of creating the craft and try to understand what our ancestors have done, the years they spent to carve a masterpiece and try to feel their spirits in our work.

“One of the most challenging things for me is, though I can come up with excellent designs that meet international standards, we still have to figure out how to transmit that message to our artisans about something so refined and with the right colour or shapes. It takes time.”

What delights Lim is that over time, the artisans have become sensitive to aesthetics.

“Even on weekends after work, when they're eating or lazing in their hammocks, they chat about proportions, what is good, what colour mixes well with another. They love to work on special orders, as they are freer to express their individual creativity.”

A pat in the back

After 10 years with AA, Lim can look back and be proud of one thing: He started working with 50 artisans and now AA has more than 600 artisans.

He walks alongside the artisans as they journey through life, from their apprenticeship to securing a stable job and starting a family.

“Now they have their own houses, and in the weekends, they can ride their motorbikes with their families to Angkor Wat, have a drink in front of the temple and spend a leisurely time,” says Lim, smiling.

“To most people, this may sound simple, but it is a big success to have this stable and ‘normal’ life in Cambodia.”

Today, one in three Cambodians still live on less than 2000 riels (RM1.70) a day (UNDP Cambodia). And most villagers from rural Cambodia have never stepped foot in Siem Reap.

But AA has created over 1000 jobs for its artisans and staff involved in marketing, retail, design and logistics.

“We have affected maybe a total of 4,000 to 5,000 Cambodians' lives, plus the children who are the future of Cambodia,” says Lim.

“I think I've been part of this good work.”

Noah Novogrodsky: Cambodian justice a long time coming

Photo: Khmer Rouge leader Nuon Chea (centre), is escorted by Cambodian police officials to the Extraordinary Chambers in the Court of Cambodia (ECCC) in Phnom Penh, September 19, 2007. STR/AFP/Getty Images.

Friday, September 28, 2007
National Post (Canada)
Full Comment

"A day late and a dollar short, the tribunal is long overdue"
Two weeks ago, in Pailin, a town on the Thai-Cambodia border, Cambodian special forces and western security personnel arrested 82-year-old Nuon Chea, the Khmer Rouge’s “Brother Number 2.” Nuon Chea was Pol Pot’s trusted lieutenant and the highest ranking survivor of the Khmer Rouge inner circle. During the three years and eight months of Pol Pot and Nuon Chea’s rule, an estimated 1.7-million Cambodians were killed, almost 20% of the population.
Nuon Chea was flown to Phnom Penh to stand trial before the recently convened Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), a hybrid tribunal that mixes domestic and foreign law as well as local and international prosecutors and judges. The $56-million court was built with foreign funds to try those most responsible for the “Killing Fields.”

The fact that a court exists to try any of the Khmer Rouge leaders is a minor miracle. It has been 30 years since the crimes were committed and more than 10 years since Cambodia’s then co-Prime Ministers requested United Nations assistance in organizing a tribunal to try the Khmer Rouge. Since that time, Pol Pot has died and the UN has engaged in a decade-long dance with Cambodian officials, many of whom are adamantly opposed to a tribunal. Hun Sen, Cambodia’s strongman Prime Minister, has parlayed the international community’s interest in a trial into endless negotiations about the structure of the Court, the financing of the effort and the scope of prosecution. In the end, Hun Sen made certain that the international community foots the bill for proceedings and that neither he nor his cronies will be prosecuted; the court can only prosecute crimes committed during the 1975-1979 period of Khmer Rouge terror and will almost certainly limit itself to Pol Pot’s senior deputies. In the meantime, the notorious Ta Mok, one of Heder and Tittemore’s seven candidates, died awaiting trial.

How will the Extraordinary Chambers fare against this backdrop? The mistakes and achievements of previous international tribunals suggest there are three interrelated keys to success. The first is to move quickly and fairly. Kang Guek Eav, also known as Duch, the commandant of Tuel Sleng prison in Phnom Penh, has been under arrest for years but was only recently charged. Nuon Chea and other future defendants must be charged promptly, they should be permitted to select the counsel of their choice and those lawyers ought to have access to their clients and adequate resources to mount a credible defense. But in view of the defendants’ age, there is no time for a Slobodon Milosevic-style defence that drags on indefinitely. As it is, the ECCC is occurring far too late to try most defendants and the question is how to salvage a process before the living victims, witnesses and suspects are gone.

The second feature to remember is that the ECCC is for Cambodians. Although the tribunal has the opportunity to make new law on the crime of cultural genocide, the effect of domestic amnesties and starvation as a war crime, the Court’s value will ultimately be measured by the effect it has internally. By training judges and prosecutors and collaborating with experienced foreign lawyers, the trials might offer a new definition of justice in a country where the judiciary is marked by corruption and incompetence. It may be that no single tribunal can create the rule of law, but the resources pouring into Phnom Penh should ensure that the process is transparent, that survivors receive appropriate psychological support and that the defendants are treated with the dignity they denied their victims. Better still, if the Extraordinary Chambers is embedded into the local justice system and international standards are adopted domestically, the tribunal may stimulate law reform or become the touchstone for future criminal trials.

The third lesson is that how the tribunal is perceived matters as much as developments inside the courtroom. The Extraordinary Chambers represent more than an exercise in guilt-determination. It is international recognition of the suffering Cambodians endured and their principled determination to face past horrors. Until recently, Cambodian text books made no mention of the Khmer Rouge era. It has been left to an NGO, the Documentation Center of Cambodia, to gather testimonials, assemble records and exhume bodies buried in the killing fields. The tribunal has the opportunity to create an authoritative record that amplifies the work of the Documentation Center, assigns blame to individuals and works to de-stigmatize the rest of Cambodian society. Without demonstrable results, the skepticism of Cambodians who trust neither their own government nor the international community and are wondering why the millions aren’t being spent on roads, will only increase.

A day late and a dollar short, the tribunal is long overdue. Pol Pot’s death in 1998 deprived Cambodians of the opportunity to hold one of the worst abusers in modern history responsible for his crimes. The arrest of Brother Number 2 offers another chance to seek a measure of justice, this time from the second in command.

Noah Novogrodsky, the Director of the International Human Rights Program at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law and a Visiting Scholar at Georgetown University Law Center, has been a legal trainer with the Documentation Center of Cambodia.

4 years after forming his 3rd mandate gov't, Hun Sen just remembers to define the roles of his vice-prime ministers

September 29, 2007
Cambodian PM defines roles of deputy prime ministers

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has officially defines the roles of the government's eight deputy prime ministers and several senior ministers, the Cambodia Daily reported Saturday.

Among the eight prime ministers, five are from the Cambodian People's Party (CPP) and three are from Funcinpec.

Interior Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Sar Kheng has been put in charge of decentralization, national security and other police work, and will coordinate the ministries of land management, planning, environment and justice, it said, adding that he will also serve as acting prime minister in the absence of Hun Sen.

Meanwhile, Cabinet Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Sok An has been given by far the most duties according to the decision, being charged to assist the prime minister with administrative reform, the tribunal for former Democratic Kampuchea (DK) leaders, de-mining, landmine victims, information technology and answering queries from the National Assembly, it said.

Sok An is also to assist with the management of the ministries of industry, posts and telecommunications, information, education and labor, as well as the civil aviation, public secretariats, and the national petroleum and land dispute authorities, it added.

Source: Xinhua

"Junta, go to hell!": Burmese demonstrators

DEFIANCE: A crowd chanting anti-government slogans lifts a Buddhist monk during continuing protests in Myanmar's capital. (Reuters)

Crowds taunted and cursed security forces barricading central Yangon in order to prevent more mass protests against Myanmar's 45 years of military rule and deepening economic hardship.

Potentially deadly games of cat and mouse went on for hours around the barbed-wire barriers in a city terrified of a repeat of 1988, when the army killed an estimated 3,000 people in crushing an uprising in the former Burma.

Few Buddhist monks were among the crowds, unlike in previous days, after soldiers ransacked 10 monasteries on Thursday and carted off hundreds inside.

When the troops charged, the protesters vanished into narrow side streets, only to emerge elsewhere to renew their abuse until darkness fell and an overnight curfew took effect.

"F--- you, army. We only want democracy," some yelled in English. "May the people who beat monks be struck down by lightning," others chanted in Burmese.

Despite the visceral anger in their voices, far fewer protesters turned out in Yangon than earlier in the week, when they had walked alongside thousands of maroon-robed monks.

Shots were fired on Friday but there was no word of more casualties a day after troops swept protesters from the center of Yangon, giving them 10 minutes to leave or be shot.

Troops fired on several crowds on Thursday and state-run television said nine people were killed.

"I am afraid we believe the loss of life is far greater than is being reported," British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said after talking by telephone with US President George W Bush and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao.

There has been no word on the fate of the monks, who turned what began as small protests against shock fuel price rises last month into a mass uprising when they lent their moral weight to demonstrations against the ruling generals.

SMALL CONCESSION

The junta faced a torrent of international condemnation but usually ignores outside pressure and appeared to have cut off public access to the Internet, through which much of the news about their crackdown reached the rest of the world.

But in one small concession, the junta agreed to admit UN special envoy Ibrahim Gambari.

Some monks told foreign Burmese-language broadcasters they were not going to give up. Speaking anonymously, they said a "united front" of clergy, students and activists had been formed to continue the struggle.

Bush and Brown discussed the need to maintain international pressure on Myanmar's rulers and the White House condemned the crackdown as "barbaric."

Asked whether Bush and Brown talked about the possibility of encouraging Myanmar's people to overthrow their government if protests grew into a full-scale uprising, White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said that would be "a hypothetical."

"We certainly support the people who are marching for democracy and peace," he said.

Bush has authorized new sanctions against the Myanmar government, which has been operating under similar restrictions for years.

The European Union summoned Myanmar's senior diplomat in Brussels and warned him of tighter sanctions.

EU experts looked into possible restrictions on exports from Myanmar of timber, precious metals and stones but did not reach any decisions, one diplomat said. Investments by specific Europeans in the country were not raised, he said.

Activist Mark Farmaner of the Burma Campaign U.K., calling the EU sanctions "pathetic," and said a freeze on assets had netted less than 7,000 euros in all 27 EU member states and many countries allowed companies to do business in Myanmar.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said sanctions were premature but that he was sorry to hear about civilian deaths.

"As far as sanctions are concerned, this is a topic to be especially considered in the United Nations," said Putin.

Russia is, like China, a veto-wielding U.N. Security Council member and has shown growing interest in energy cooperation with Myanmar. China, the main backer of Myanmar's military government, has flatly ruled out backing sanctions.

The junta told diplomats summoned to its new jungle capital of Naypyidaw that it was "committed to showing restraint in its response to the provocations," one of those present said.

INTERNATIONAL FURY

One man killed on Thursday was Japanese video journalist Kenji Nagai, 50. He was shot point-blank, according to video footage, when soldiers charged crowds near Sule Pagoda in Yangon, the focus of more than a week of protests now deep inside the sealed-off area.

Japan said it would send an envoy to Myanmar to investigate. A man believed to be Singaporean was injured by a rubber bullet, Singapore's Foreign Ministry said.

Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda also said he spoke with the Chinese premier by phone. He said Wen had assured him Beijing would seek to exercise its influence over the junta.

The Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), one of the few international groupings to have Myanmar as a member, went further. ASEAN, which hardly ever criticizes a member directly, expressed "revulsion" at the crackdown.

There were protests across Asia, with many people wearing red to symbolize the blood spilled in Myanmar.

"Junta, go to hell!" yelled some of the 2,000 protesters in Kuala Lumpur. In Canberra, about 100 tried to charge the Myanmar embassy.

In Jakarta, 50 Foreign Ministry officials in red shirts observed a period of silence. There were also protests in the Philippines, Cambodia and Thailand, home to 1 million refugees and migrant workers from Myanmar.

SRP-France: Let's Not Allow The Burmese People To Be Crushed

SRP-France Communiqué

LET'S NOT ALLOW THE BURMESE PEOPLE TO BE CRUSHED

La version française de ce communiqué se trouve à la fin du texte en anglais

SRP France unreservedly gives total support to Buddhist monks and to the Burmese people who bravely fight against the military junta, and SRP France condemns the repression initiated by the Burmese army to destroy the protest movement for the democracy in Rangoon.

We also ask for the release of all the officials of the Aung San Suu Kyi opposition party.

We are siding with the European Union, in particular with France and the United States, to ask the UN Security Council to plan sanctions against the Burmese military junta and to put an end to the totalitarian regime and to give hope for democracy for the Burmese people.

Paris, September 27, 2007

MEN Sothavarin
President of SRP France
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Communiqué du PSR France

NE LAISSONS PAS ECRASER LE PEUPLE BIRMAN

Le PSR France tient à apporter le soutien total et sans réserve aux moines bouddhistes et au peuple birman qui luttent courageusement contre la junte militaire et condamne la répression entamée par l'armée birmane pour anéantir le mouvement de protestation pour la démocratie à Rangoun.

Nous demandons également la libération de tous les responsables du parti de l'opposante Aung San Suu Kyi.

Nous sommes avec l'Union Européenne, en particulier la France et les Etats-Unis pour demander au Conseil de Sécurité de l'ONU d'envisager des sanctions contre la junte militaire birmane pour mettre fin au régime totalitaire et donner au peuple birman l'espoir de démocratie.

Fait à Paris, le 27 septembre 2007

Le Président du PSR France

MEN Sothavarin

The great demonstrations in Burma and the situation in Cambodia

September 25th, 2007
Op-Ed by Khemara Jati
Montreal, Quebec


La version française de cet article se trouve à la fin de la version anglaise

A group calls Mon-Khmer is still living in Burma as minority, the same as those who are living in the North of Thailand and in Cambodia. For a week thousands of monks demonstrate peacefully in the streets of Rangoon, then dozens thousands with the population and now they demonstrate by hundred of thousands. Nevertheless Burma is considered by certain major powers as "dictatorial" country.

In Cambodia, country over-helped, with a multitude of the NGO ruling to defense the “Human Rights”, country qualified as of “democratic” by the same major powers, the recent demonstration of some rare monks ends by bastonnades and by the arrest of the monk Tim Sakhorn, defrocked and was handed back docilely to the vietnamese authorities.

In Cambodia the demonstrations always end by massacres.
  • In December, 1991, the Vietnamese police fires at point-blank range on the crowd, under the eyes of the diplomats and the western journalists. The power settled by the Vietnamese invaders since January, 1979 removes the bodies of the victims and forbids the families of the victims to keep silent. No inquiry was ever led until this day to determine the real number of the victims.
  • March 30th, 1997, demonstration of some hundreds of workers men and women, with Rainsy in front of the parliament, four grenades were launched. The number of persons killed and wounded is half of demonstrators. During this last massacre, an American citizen, Ron Abney was injured. The FBI inquiries are still not published for the public yet.
  • In July 1997, regular units of the Popular Army of Vietnam (PAV) intervene openly in Cambodia to destroy the Funcinpec army. But the best special units of shock of the PAV come to assault at O Smach front, a fortress was hastily taken up by Cambodians. The Vietnamese send even Cambodian children to be rolled on minefields, after making them drink of alcohol. The soldiers and the vietnamese officers killed at O Smach front are transporting in bags of salt to Vietnam by trucks. In front of the Cambodian defenders determination, the PAV is obliged to raise the seat, after more than a month of hot fights. The Cambodians saved their honor. One day our children will honor the memory and the heroism of the defenders of O Smach. It is this victory at O Smach which obliged the UN to impose of news “elections” even forged in July 1997.
Also let us remind that one month after this murder, Vietnam considering themselves the real boss of Cambodia, then signs in August 1997, a treaty with Thailand, dividing two thirds of our continental shelf. So, according to this treaty, the Vietnamese and Thai have the same continental shelf. Cambodia would have no access to the open sea without crossing territorial waters of one of our neighbor! Is this leonine treaty valid, with a regime which is not recognized by the UN in this time? Always, while basing on this treaty Thailand and Vietnam dispute the membership of our wealth being on and under our continental shelf. We wish to inform our fellow countrymen that in 2009, there will be negotiations at the UN to bound again the limits of the continental shelf of all countries of the world. Is Cambodia prepared for these negotiations?
  • August, 1978, after more than two weeks of demonstrations, with the presence of two American citizens, at the beginning of September the vietnamese police massacres the demonstrators, the others are obliged to dump into the trucks and disappear. Some are thrown alive to feed the crocodiles breeding. To date there is still no any investigations and nobody know the number of victims, among them for the first time monks.
We quote only the most important demonstrations, we leave aside the multiple political murders as that of the respectable Sam Bounthoeun and Chea Vichea, without mentionning that of Piseth Pilika of whom the French weakly review L'Express of October 7th 1999, quoted in a long article, with evidences, accusing in particular Hun Sen's wife of being a sleeping partner. The regime in Phnom Penh did not dare to bring L'Express to the court, accepting then implicitly the charges of the weekly. Until now no killer or murderer was worried. So the "Culture of the Impunity" can continue infinitely with the helps and supports from major powers and the UN.

In Burma, no power dares to dispute either its land borders, or its maritime borders. No power comes to plunder its wealth. In Cambodia, the World Bank finances the construction of the electric lines with high tension of Laos and Vietnam to supply the electricity in our provinces in the northeastern and eastern. Now Vietnam is going to build hydroelectric power plants in our provinces of the Northeastern part. The electricity will is be forwarded to feed Phnom Penh. So Cambodia will be dependent in 100 % of the Vietnamese electricity. We are already dependent on our supply and gas by running the Vietnamese company Sokimex monopoly. Can a country be independent, if it depends in 100 % from Vietnam in energy, in particular in electrical energy? Does not Cambodia already move towards a vassal of Vietnam? A colony settling of populating ? Before becoming a Vietnamese province? That is with the complicity of major powers and the UN ?

Although in the light of the events in Burma, we can measure the essential differences between the events of this country with Cambodia. Burma is an independent country and the demonstrations are an affair between Burmese. In Cambodia the power set up by Hanoi since 1979, is transforming Cambodia into Vietnamese province with the helps and the support of the international community.

During the colloquium on Cambodia and The Khmer Rouge, organized one month ago by France Culture, which lasted one week, there is a Cambodian intellectual coming from Cambodia. He is the only one to evoke the heavy misery of the Cambodian people after about 17 years of the Paris Agreements, that suppose to bring to our people: the "Democracy", the "Respect for the Human Rights", the institution of the "State of Law", the "Economic development" and the National Independence in our Territorial and maritime Integrity". Evoking the future, this intellectual coming from Cambodia is the only one who says that the unique solution leads to an “Explosion”. The truth comes out of the mouth of a Cambodian from Cambodia.

September 25th, 2007

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Les grandes manifestations en Birmanie et la situation au Cambodge

Le 25 septembre 2007
Khemara Jati
Montréal, Québec

La Birmanie est aussi habitée par des minorités Mon-Khmer, comme au Nord de la Thaïlande et au Cambodge. Depuis une semaine des milliers de bonzes manifestent paisiblement dans les rues de Rangoon, puis des dizaines de milliers avec la population et maintenant ils manifestent par centaine de milliers. Pourtant la Birmanie est considérée par certaines grandes puissances comme pays "dictatorial".

Au Cambodge, pays sur-aidé, avec une multitude d’ONG de défense des "Droits de l’Homme", pays qualifié de "démocratique" par les mêmes grandes puissances, la récente manifestation de quelques rares bonzes se termine par des bastonnades et par l’arrestation du bonze Tim Sakhorn, défroqué et remis, docilement, aux autorités vietnamiennes.

Au Cambodge les manifestations se terminent toujours par des massacres.
  • En décembre 1991, la police vietnamienne tire à bout portant sur la foule, sous les yeux des diplomates et des journalistes occidentaux. Le pouvoir installé par les envahisseurs vietnamiens depuis janvier 1979 fait disparaître les corps des victimes et interdit aux familles des victimes de se taire. Aucune enquête n’a jamais été menée jusqu’à ce jour pour déterminer le nombre réel des victimes.
  • Le 30 mars 1997, manifestation de quelques centaines d’ouvrières et ouvriers avec Rainsy devant le parlement, quatre grenades ont été lancées. Le nombre de tués et de blessé atteint la moitié des manifestants. Lors de ce dernier massacre, un citoyen américain, Ron Abney a été blessé. Les résultats de l’enquête du FBI ne sont pas encore rendus public.
  • Juillet 1997, des unités régulières de l’Armée Populaire du Vietnam (APV) interviennent ouvertement au Cambodge pour détruire l’armée du Funcinpec. Mais les meilleures unités spéciales de choc de l’APV, montent à l’assaut d’O Smach, une forteresse montée à la hâte par les Cambodgiens. Les Vietnamiens envoient même des enfants cambodgiens se faire tuer sur les champs de mines, après les avoir fait boire de l’alcool. Les soldats et officiers vietnamiens tués sont emportés dans des sacs de sel au Vietnam par camion. Devant la détermination des défenseurs cambodgiens, l’APV est obligé de lever le siège, après plus d’un mois de combats. Les Cambodgiens ont sauvé leur honneur. Nos enfants un jour honoreront la mémoire et l’héroïsme des défenseurs d’O Smach. C’est cette victoire à O Smach oblige l’ONU à imposer de nouvelles "élections" même truquées en juillet 1997.
Rappelons aussi qu’un mois après ce carnage, le Vietnam se croyant seul maître du Cambodge, signe, en août 1997, un traité avec la Thaïlande, se partageant les deux tiers de notre plateau continental. Ainsi, d'après ce traité, les plateaux continentaux vietnamiens et thaïlandais se rejoigneraient. Le Cambodge n’aurait pas accès à la haute mer sans traverser les eaux territoriales d’un de nos voisins ! Ce traité léonin est-il valable, avec un gouvernement cambodgien non reconnu par l’ONU à cette époque ? Toujours est-il, c’est en se basant sur ce traité que la Thaïlande et le Vietnam contestent l’appartenance de nos richesses se trouvant sur et sous notre plateau continental. Nous désirons informer nos compatriotes qu’en 2009, il y aura des négociations à l’ONU pour délimiter de nouveau les limites des plateaux continentaux de tous les pays. Le Cambodge est-il préparé pour ces négociations ?
  • Août 1978, après plus deux semaines de manifestations, avec la présence de deux citoyens américains, début septembre la police vietnamienne massacre les manifestants, d’autres sont obligés de montrer dans des camions et disparaissent. Certains sont jetés vivants pour nourrir les crocodiles d’élevage. A ce jour aucune enquête et on ignore le nombre de victimes, parmi eux pour la première fois des bonzes.
Nous ne citons que les plus importantes manifestations, nous laissons de côté les multiples assassinats politiques comme celui du vénérable Sam Bounthoeun et Chea Vichea, sans compter celui de Piseth Pilika dont la revue hebdomadaire française L’Express du 7 octobre 1999, dans un long article, avec des preuves à l’appui, accuse nommément la femme de Hun Sen d’en être la commanditaire. Le pouvoir à Phnom Penh n’a pas osé intenter L’Express en justice, acceptant ainsi implicitement les accusations de l’hebdomadaire. Jusqu’à présent aucun massacreur ou tueur n’a été inquiété. Ainsi la "Culture de l’Impunité" peut continuer indéfiniment avec les aides et le soutient des grandes puissances et de l’ONU.

En Birmanie, aucune puissance n’ose contester ni ses frontières terrestres, ni ses frontières maritimes. Aucune puissance ne vient piller ses richesses. Au Cambodge, la Banque Mondiale finance la construction des lignes électriques à haute tension du Laos et du Vietnam pour fournir l’électricité à nos provinces du Nord-Est et de l’Est. Maintenant le Vietnam va construire des centrales hydroélectriques dans nos provinces du Nord-Est. L’électricité obtenue va être acheminée pour alimenter Phnom Penh. Ainsi le Cambodge sera dépendant à 100 % de l’électricité vietnamienne. Nous sommes déjà dépendant de notre approvisionnement en carburant et en gaz du monopole de la société vietnamienne Sokimex. Un pays peut-il être indépendant, s’il dépend à 100 % du Vietnam en énergie, en particulier en énergie électrique ? Le Cambodge ne s’achemine-t- il pas déjà vers un vassal du Vietnam ? Une colonie de peuplement ? Avant de devenir une province vietnamienne ? Cela avec la complicité des grandes puissances et de l’ONU ?

Ainsi à la lumière des événements en Birmanie, nous pouvons mesurer les différences essentielles entre les évènements de ce pays avec Cambodge. La Birmanie est un pays indépendant et les manifestations sont une affaire entre Birmans. Au Cambodge le pouvoir mis en place par Hanoi depuis 1979, est en train de transformer le Cambodge en province vietnamienne avec les aides et le soutien de la communauté internationale.

Lors du colloque sur le Cambodge et les Khmer Rouge, organisé, il y a un mois, par France Culture, qui a duré une semaine, il y a un intellectuel cambodgien venant du Cambodge. Il est le seul à évoquer la grande misère du peuple cambodgien après près de 17 ans des Accords de Paris, sensés apporter à notre peuple : la "Démocratie", le "Respect des Droits de l’Homme", l’instauration du "Etat de Droit", le "Développement Economique" et l’Indépendance Nationale dans notre Intégrité Territoriale et Maritime". Evoquant l’avenir, cet intellectuel venant du Cambodge est le seul à dire que la seule solution risque d’être une "Explosion". La vérité sort de la bouche d’un Cambodgien du Cambodge.

Le mardi 25 septembre 2007