Thursday, October 22, 2009

S. Korean president begins visit to Cambodia

By Byun Duk-kun
"An agreement will also be signed later Thursday on Cambodia's provision of 200,000 hectares of land, over 10 times the size of Washington D.C., for forest plantation by South Korea."

KI-Media Note: Such land agreement is against the Cambodian constitution as it exceeds the 10,000 hectares maximum
PHNOM PENH, Oct. 22 (Yonhap) -- South Korean President Lee Myung-bak began a two-day trip to Cambodia with a visit to Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni shortly after his arrival here Thursday.

Lee was set for a bilateral summit with Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen later in the day.

"President Lee and King Sihamoni discussed ways to expand cooperation between their countries in various areas, including the agricultural and cultural sectors, while the president noted the development of their relationship since the normalization of their ties in 1997," Lee's presidential office Cheong Wa Dae said in a press release.

Lee's trip here comes as part of a three-nation tour that earlier took him to Vietnam. He will head to Thailand on Friday for a regional summit hosted by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) that will also involve the leaders of Japan and China.

The trip was expected to help significantly improve Seoul's relations with Phnom Penh as the sides were set to sign an extradition treaty and a revision to the basic agreement on South Korea's Economic Development Cooperation Fund (EDCF).

Seoul agreed in June to provide US$60 million in loans from its development fund in a summit between Lee and the Cambodian prime minister held in Seoul.

The revision to the EDCF agreement, to be signed on the sidelines of the Lee-Hun Sen summit, will lead to the provision of an additional $140 million by 2012, according to Cheong Wa Dae spokeswoman Kim Eun-hye.

"As we face a great opportunity to further improve our countries' relationship this year through an exchange of visits with Prime Minister Hun Sen, I hope the countries will hold discussions on various measures for their joint development during my visit this time," Lee said in an interview with Cambodia's largest-circulation daily Rasmei Campuchea published Thursday.

South Korean investment in Cambodia increased 75 times to nearly $2.5 billion last year since their diplomatic normalization in 1997. Seoul had severed its ties with Cambodia in 1975 when the communist Khmer Rouge government took control.

Seoul has agreed to launch a joint development project for Phnom Penh, through which it will help set up "master plans" for the development of Cambodia while sharing its own development experience with the country, according to the Cheong Wa Dae spokeswoman.

An agreement will also be signed later Thursday on Cambodia's provision of 200,000 hectares of land, over 10 times the size of Washington D.C., for forest plantation by South Korea.

"Considering the complementary nature of their economies and the enactment of a free trade agreement between South Korea and ASEAN, as well as Cambodia's rapid economic growth, the cooperation between the countries will continue to show remarkable growth," Lee said in the interview with Rasmei Campuchea, held in Seoul before starting his trip.

The signing of the extradition treaty, to apply to those suspected of crimes punishable by two or more years of imprisonment, will help improve South Korea's image here, spokeswoman Kim said.

"It will also help protect the citizens and South Korean residents in Cambodia by making sure that Southeast Asia will no longer be the safe haven of criminals," she said.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's better to lease the land to Koreans then to the yuons, don't you agree?

Anonymous said...

Agree, Korea (both north and south) are too far from us and not able to swallow Cambodia. The South Korean government is also civilized and always have good relationship to Cambodia since 1960.

Anonymous said...

I quest we can ignore the constitution if it inconvenience us and apply it differently to friends and enemy.

Anonymous said...

Independent feasibility study should be carried out prior to granting such large-scale landlease treaties. Not sufficient attention is being paid to long term impact on the increasingly degraded environment and rural dwellers living in abject poverty and are either being threatened with eviction or have already been evicted.

Whilst not opposed to development consideration per se, I cannot applaud any investment scheme that rides roughshot over basic human rights, one of which is the right to a plot of land for shelter and cultivation.

There is, a measure of 'lawlessness', perhaps, in the manner in which some people choose to erect their huts or create settlements throughout the country, but this is not unusual for rural people whose ancestors moved from place to place in search of productive, cultivable farmlands. They are, afterall, the true indigenous owners/inheritors of the land: in time of war they provided the state with soldiers and fund through taxation, in time of peace with construction of ornamental palaces and temples which are still incurring revenue from tourism.

With this in mind, is there a way to combine 'development' with practical, immediate human needs?

Has one ever come across a salesman that fails to forecast only optimism for his ideas and proposals?

It is a trite, but peace and development must go together at an even, tempered pace. For there to be peace, this must be rooted in social justice. For there to be development, this must eradicate human misery and nurture well-being for all.

We have seen enough tears for Cambodians.

MP

Anonymous said...

I agree with you MP. No one would ever say no to development but development carry out badly is worse than no development. We all must remember that the Khmer Rouge too did everything in the name of development and we know what happened.

Anonymous said...

"It will also help protect the citizens and South Korean residents in Cambodia by making sure that Southeast Asia will no longer be the safe haven of criminals," she said.

What a joke? South Koreans maybe more civilize than the Vietnamese, but they still rape Khmer girls. Can't blame alcohol for everything. They are only concern about their image.

Wow 60 million dollars loan. We are know where that money will go; right into Hun Sen's bank account. Our National debt grows each day. I wonder how many generations will it take to pay it off?

We dislike our king, but we treat foreigners like king and our own people like dirt. Most countries don't respect us because we let ourselves get taken advantage so easily. If Cambodia were a girl, we would be known as a slut because we are so easy to hook up with.

Anonymous said...

god bless cambodia and korea.