Showing posts with label Barack Obama's inauguration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barack Obama's inauguration. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

US-Cambodians Watch as Obama Takes Office

By Taing Sarada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
26 January 2009


Americans watched Barrack Obama become the 44th president of the United States last week, and some of them said they had new hopes for the US economy, as well as national and global security.

Jeffrey Sdoeung, a Cambodian-American from the state of Rhode Island, said he traveled for 10 hours in the bitter cold to watch the Jan. 20 inauguration.

"Our country is facing difficulty now, including money and jobs," he said. "It is all very difficult, but after I heard Obama's speech, I have a lot of hope, because now we have one wonderful president, who can help people and other countries around the world."

Sdoeung said he was attending his first inauguration and was surprised to find millions of people from across America gathered on the National Mall in front of the US Capitol building.

"I have never seen as many people as this," he said. "On the morning of Inauguration Day, I traveled from my friend's house in DC by Metro train to the National Mall…and I saw so many people filling the train, it was amazing."

Grant Quinn, another Cambodian-American, from Washington, had not traveled as far as Sdoeung, but he said he too had more confidence in the US economy after hearing Obama's speech.

"Now the American people have lost a lot of jobs, but I think that Obama has his own program to provide more jobs to people," he said.

He had not attended the inaugurations of former president George W. Bush, he said.

"When I was young, I went to see the inaugurations of Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Sr., and Bill Clinton," he said. "But I did not go to see George W. Bush's inauguration, because I didn't like him."

Vutha Chinn, who lives in Philadelphia, said he felt happy on behalf of Khmer refugees who had come to a land of opportunity and were now able to participate in events such as the inauguration.

"I am very grateful to be able to participate in and applaud Obama's inauguration and support his success in becoming American's president," he said.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

A Noble Tradition

President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama walk the inaugural parade route in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Op-Ed By Jayakhmer
On the web at http://www.modernprogressivekhmer.blogspot.com


On this sunny but chilly Tuesday morning, up to 2 million people converged at the country’s capitol to take part in history. Barack H. Obama became the president of the United States at noon as required by the 20th amendment of the Constitution.

As the President Obama solemnly took the oath “to faithfully execute the office of President of the United States and will” to the best of his ability to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States,” the people and the world, for that matter, welcomed the 44th president of the United States.

As a Cambodian American, I found this auspicious occasion very gratifying. A peaceful transition of power from one government to the next is a tradition I am very much hoping that Cambodia will someday adopt.

Cambodia’s past governmental transitions were any but peaceful. March 18, 1970 was a coupe, April 17, 1975 Khmer Communists usurped the power by force, and January 7, 1979 was an invasion.

This noble tradition went back to the first president of the United States. After serving two terms as president, George Washington retired from politics in 1796. The notion for a leader holds on to power for life simply does not exist. I am sure that some may have attempted, but the elections, the rule of law, and the tradition always dictated. After Franking D. Roosevelt who served as president for three terms, the country rectified the issue by adopting the 22nd amendment in 1951 allowing a president to serve only up to two four-year terms.

President Obama know all too well of the challenges the country and the world will face.

“…That we are in the midst of crisis is now well understood. Our nation is at war, against a far-reaching network of violence and hatred. Our economy is badly weakened, a consequence of greed and irresponsibility on the part of some, but also our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age. Homes have been lost; jobs shed; businesses shuttered. Our health care is too costly; our schools fail too many; and each day brings further evidence that the ways we use energy strengthen our adversaries and threaten our planet…”

I am very hopeful, however.

What so great about America is that the fact that it has a political structure to renew itself through term limits and through elections.

President Bush also shared this sense of optimism as he leaves his office. In his farewell address, Mr. Bush said, “America is a young country, full of vitality, constantly growing and renewing itself. And even in the toughest times, we lift our eyes to the broad horizon ahead.”

What truly captured my attention was when President Obama said this in his inaugural speech.

“To the Muslim world, we seek a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect. To those leaders around the globe who seek to sow conflict, or blame their society's ills on the West: Know that your people will judge you on what you can build, not what you destroy. To those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know that you are on the wrong side of history; but that we will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist.”

I am looking forward to seeing the changing world. I also hope that Cambodia and its leaders will take this opportunity to work with the new administration to renew their commitments to promoting democracy so that every Cambodian can enjoy freedom, liberty, justice, dignity, and decency.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Khmer Intelligence News 20 January 2009

President-elect Barack Obama and his wife Michelle depart a service at St John's Episcopal Church before the inauguration in Washington January 20, 2009. (REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

20 January 2009
From America's first black Ambassador (to Cambodia) to America's first black President (1)

Today is the inauguration day in Washington DC for President Barack Obama, America 's first black President. But in Cambodia , many people remember Mr. Charles A. Ray as America 's first black Ambassador in this country, more than five years ago. They also remember what he said at an important donor meeting in 2004, urging the Hun Sen government to combat corruption, to no avail as evidenced by subsequent developments and the current situation in 2009.

Ambassador Ray said: « According to the August 2004 USAID-funded corruption assessment, "ordinary Cambodians are subject to a daunting array of small and medium exaction, some paid virtually on a daily basis." That same report highlighted the significant loss in legal revenue due to smuggling, bribes and other illegal practices, which possibly totals as much as all donor assistance.

In light of these statements, it is no exaggeration to view corruption as a cancer that threatens this country's economic, political and social development.

Cambodia should pass an effective anti-corruption law that is based on international standards, as embodied in the United Nations Convention against Corruption.

We must move beyond simple acknowledgement of the problems to demand concrete, verifiable actions to combat the epidemic of corruption directly. »

Read Ambassador's Ray entire speech at
http://www.cdc-crdb.gov.kh/cdc/7cg_meeting/7cg_document/fighting_corrupton_usa_eng.htm

Government spokesman Khieu Kanharith to be removed (3)

Government spokesman Khieu Kanharith who is also Information Minister and the official mouthpiece for the CPP, and who has a reputation of being a drunkard, is causing more and more embarrassment to the Government and the CPP with his often thoughtless remarks. In The Phnom Penh Post, front page January 19 article titled "SRP calls for government bailout, Rainsy claims thousands of jobs lost in financial crisis", Khieu Kanharith again shows he doesn't know what he is talking about. While opposition leader and former Finance Minister Sam Rainsy suggests that the Government prepare a "$500-million stimulus package to cope with the world economic crisis", he is quoted as saying there is no need for such a package because "the government reserves funds in every annual budget for unforeseen circumstances, " before specifying "We have a reserve budget, not only for the global economic crisis but also for other disasters such as floods, and so forth." But he added he could not remember the exact amount set aside in 2009 [actually $144 million versus $132 million in 2008]. Khieu Kanharith's comment shows he doesn't understand a word about what Sam Rainsy was referring to: world financial crisis, macroeconomics, fiscal policy, monetary policy, full-employment equilibrium, aggregate demand, deficit spending and Keynesian economic theory.

On the same topic, in the January 18 edition of Rasmei Kampuchea, another CPP official, National Assembly Vice-President Nguon Nhel is quoted as saying the Government doesn't need to follow Sam Rainsy's recommendation related to the world economic crisis because it has already taken "measures against inflation". Apparently, Nguon Nhel is mixing up inflation with deflation…

See details of Sam Rainsy's proposal at http://tinyurl.com/7urlzy
Read The Phnom Penh Post article at http://tinyurl.com/a564fg
Read Rasmei Kampuchea article at http://tinyurl.com/8fbfbs


Farm products prices have plummeted (1)

Farm products prices have recently plummeted in Cambodia as a result of the world economic crisis.

Prices paid to farmers in January 2009 (versus in January 2008):
  • Paddy (unhusked rice): 700 riels per kilogram (1,100 riels per kilogram, - 36%)
  • Corn (maize): 350 riels per kilogram (600 riels per kilogram, - 42%)
  • Cassava (dry): 280 riels per kilogram (750 riels per kilogram, - 62%)
  • Cassava (fresh): 125 riels per kilogram (350 riels per kilogram, - 64%)
  • Pepper: 8,500 riels per kilogram (16,000 riels per kilogram, - 47%)
  • Latex (liquid rubber, dry equivalent): 2,500 riels per kilogram (6,000 riels per kilogram, - 58%).
Farmers, who represent some 80 percent of Cambodia 's workforce, are intensely suffering from the fall in agricultural prices which determine their revenues and living conditions.

Information from black box from Hok Lundy's helicopter not available (2)

National Police Chief Hok Lundy died in a helicopter crash on November 9, 2008 . Not all questions have been answered regarding the circumstance surrounding his death. Information from the black box (flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder) from the French-built Ecureuil helicopter which he traveled on that day, has not been made public. There are indications that there will be attempts to put all the blame on Hok Lundy for many not-yet-elucidated crimes that have plagued Cambodian politics: the deadly grenade attack in front of the National Assembly in 1997, the assassination of union leader Chea Vichea in 2004, the murder of opposition journalist Khim Sambo in 2008, and other political killings.

The ploy/plot is very similar to the one aimed at putting all the blame on Pol Pot and only five or six surviving Khmer Rouge leaders for all the crimes against humanity perpetrated under the Khmer Rouge regime (1975-1979).

KI-Media: Most popular Cambodian Web site (1)

KI-Media which was launched in July 2005, has become by far the most popular Cambodia-related Web site, having welcomed 5,000,000 visitors over only 3½ years.

It is an anti-CPP and pro-democracy media managed by overseas Cambodians in North America but with contributors from all over the world. It is being targeted by the Phnom Penh government which is currently drafting a law that will extend current print media rules to other media platforms, including the internet.

Visit KI-Media by clicking at http://www.ki-media.blogspot. com/

[End]

Huge Crowds Gather for Obama's Swearing In

On the eve of his inauguration as the 44th president, Barack Obama visited Monday with children at a Washington school in observance of the National Day of Service Project. (Landov)

JANUARY 20, 2009

By LAURA MECKLER and JONATHAN WEISMAN
The Wall Street Journal


The 44th U.S. President Is Expected to Call on Americans to Embrace a New Culture of Responsibility

WASHINGTON -- The National Mall swelled into a vast scene of expectation Tuesday as excited crowds clogged mass transit lines and security checkpoints to witness the swearing-in of President-elect Barack Obama.

Energized by the historic moment, hundreds of thousands of people turned this city's orderly grid of streets into a festive party scene. Ready to endure below-freezing temperatures, they streamed up from subway stations and thronged past parked buses, emergency vehicles and street vendors, bound for Pennsylvania Avenue and the National Mall for the inauguration.

The crowd could reach two million people, one of the largest gatherings in Washington's history. Millions more will be watching across the U.S. and around the world, with outdoor video screens planned for public squares.

Early Tuesday, Mr. Obama and his family attended a private service at St. John's Episcopal Church, a tradition for those about to become president. The family of Vice President-elect Joe Biden also attended. The Obamas waved to bystanders, then entered the church to applause from about 200 people. The choir and congregation began singing the hymn, "O God Our Help in Ages Past.''

Bishop Charles E. Blake Sr., of Los Angeles, drew murmurs and chuckles when he blessed the Obamas and asked that "they may finish these two terms in office" stronger than they are now.

The Obamas and Joe and Jill Biden went for coffee at the White House with President George W. Bush, Vice President Richard Cheney and their wives. Then they plan to travel the short distance to the Capitol for Mr. Obama's history-making moment.

Just beyond the White House fence, huge crowds braved freezing temperatures and jostled for positions to see -- with the naked eye or on Jumbotron screens -- Mr. Obama take the oath of office at noon with his hand on the Bible that once belonged to the last president to hail from Illinois, Abraham Lincoln.

The 44th president will stand opposite the Lincoln Memorial, two miles away, where 45 years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. called upon the nation to judge people by the content of their character, not the color of their skin. Mr. Obama spent Monday celebrating Dr. King's birthday as a day of service, while street vendors sold memorabilia juxtaposing the images of the two black leaders.

Little official business is expected Tuesday in Washington. The real work of the new president will begin Wednesday, Mr. Obama's first full day in office. Aides said one of the new president's first actions will be summoning his national security team to begin preparing for a 16-month withdrawal of combat forces from Iraq, one of the main promises of his two-year-long campaign for the presidency.

That's just one of the new policies symbolizing the change to come as Washington shifts from eight years of Republican rule under George W. Bush. Within days, Mr. Obama also is expected to issue executive orders to begin closing the prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, one of the most controversial symbols of the Bush administration's war on terror; reversing Mr. Bush's restrictions on federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research, and restoring funding for family-planning programs overseas.

On the economic front, Mr. Obama's administration is likely to soon issue new regulations forcing recipients of Wall Street bailout funds to be more transparent with the money, an aide said. The most-ailing financial institutions won't be forced to lend immediately, but healthier banks will be under pressure to move money from their vaults into the economy. "Transparency is going to make a big difference," the aide said.

The inauguration caps a weekend of events and pageantry, and officials predict as many as two million people will seek a spot on the National Mall. The inauguration will join Washington's biggest events, ranking with Dr. King's 1963 March on Washington, Lyndon Johnson's 1965 inauguration, and protests against the Vietnam War in the late 1960s.

Stuck in Traffic

By 4 a.m., lines of riders had already formed in suburban parking lots for the Metro transit system, which opened early and put on extra trains for the expected rush. Many parking lots filled up and had to be closed.

Warming tents and other facilities on the Mall were late opening because traffic and crowds delayed staffers from reaching them. Ticket holders approaching the Inaugural site on Capitol Hill awaited security sweeps in a line estimated at thousands.

"If you are black in America right now, that's all the inspiration you need -- a black president!" said David Reed, 39 years old, an African-American from Lexington, Ky., who was selling the comics Monday.

Britt Loudd of Charlotte, N.C., said that as a precinct organizer she made more than 2,200 calls for the campaign. Her three children, who joined her in Washington, also volunteered. "There was no choice," said Mrs. Loudd. "We had to be here."

Visitors made their way through a maze of crowd-control barriers and past dozens of sellers hawking wrist bands, T-shirts and a Spider-Man comic featuring Mr. Obama on the cover.

At the Capitol, a plexiglass shield extended about two feet up from the balustrade around the speaker's platform. Near the lectern, were seats reserved for Muhammad Ali, Elie Wiesel and Martin Luther King III.

Other groups of seats were saved for past presidents, vice presidents and their spouses -- the Clintons, the Gores, the Bushes and the Quayles. Each seat was furnished with a dark blue fleece blanket.

At the swearing-in ceremony, seated behind Mr. Obama, will be his chosen cabinet, including Hillary Clinton, expected to be confirmed as secretary of state later Tuesday. Also behind him will be his defeated election opponent, Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain.

Chief Justice John Roberts will administer the oath of office to Mr. Obama following the swearing in of his vice president, Joe Biden, by Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.

President Bush will be there, too, departing immediately after the ceremony on a Marine chopper en route to Texas, where he will begin the next chapter of his life as an ex-president.

Before Mr. Obama speaks, the evangelical Rev. Rick Warren will deliver the invocation, a choice that infuriated gay-rights activists but signaled the new president's interest in reaching out to Americans who are not part of his political base.

The swearing-in will be followed by a luncheon at the Capitol and a parade featuring high-school marching bands, drill teams and floats. The evening will conclude with 10 official inaugural balls and countless unofficial parties.

Pitching In

Mr. Obama on Monday spoke the message he will deliver at his swearing-in: The time has come for a new culture of public service, as well as a new national unity after years of bitter partisan political division.

"Given the crisis that we're in and the hardships that so many people are going through, we can't allow any idle hands," Mr. Obama said, taking a break from painting a dormitory at Sasha Bruce House, a shelter for homeless teens. "Everybody's got to be involved. Everybody's going to have to pitch in, and I think the American people are ready for that."

Throughout his campaign, Mr. Obama stressed that a nation that should have been rallied to service after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, instead drifted to complacency and consumerism. One of his first political promises was a $3.5 billion-a-year service plan to expand the AmeriCorps program established by President Bill Clinton by 250,000 slots, double the size of the Peace Corps by 2011, expand the Foreign Service, and create an Energy Corps to conduct renewable-energy and environmental-cleanup projects.

During appearances on Monday, Mr. Obama returned to the themes of unity and self-reliance.

"I am making a commitment to you as the next president, that we are going to make government work," he told volunteers at Coolidge High. "But I can't do it by myself. Michelle can't do it by herself. Government can only do so much....If we're waiting for someone else to do something, it never gets done."

T.W. Farnam contributed to this article
.

Only in America

Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Op-Ed by Chanda Chhay

“The Land of Opportunity.” This phrase is synonymous with the United States of America. It conjures up an image of happiness and instills hope in the human spirits. When I was living in a refugee camp in Thailand in the 1980s, most of us refugees, regardless whether we had any knowledge of what America looked like, unanimously gave only one answer to the question: “Where would you want to be resettled?” “I want to go to America” was our answers then. Surprisingly, it appears that not only desperate refugees in need of new places to rebuild their shattered lives wanted to go to America, many other people, too, wanted to go to America. I must embarrassingly admit that I had not a clue what America was like or how I would be treated as a stranger coming from the other corner of the globe when I proclaimed that I wanted to go to America. But, my anxiety was put to rest the minute I set foot in America, for it was perfectly clear to me that America was and is the land of opportunity and redemption for the oppressed and desperate people yearning to breathe free from their misfortunes of being born in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Another phrase which was popularized after the ascendancy of the 16th US President, Abraham Lincoln (1861-1865), is that “Life could rise from a log cabin to the White House.” As a boy, Lincoln grew up in a log cabin, used a block of wood as blackboard, charcoal as chalk, and an axe as eraser to teach himself arithmetic and literature. Undoubtedly, it is this humble history of people like Abraham Lincoln that inspired Mr. Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States, to pursue what appears to be an impossible dream.

Mr. Barack Obama was born in 1961 in the state of Hawaii. His parents were of different races. His father was a black African student from Kenya. His mother was a white woman from the state of Kansas. The couple met during their study at the East-West Center in the University of Hawaii. When Obama was 2 years old, his parents divorced, and, by the time he was 6, his mother remarried another fellow student from Indonesia. The new couple, along with young Obama, soon moved to live in Indonesia in 1967. Thus, Obama began his schooling in Indonesia, which was conducted in the Indonesian language. His mother tongue, English, had not been formally taught to him until he was 10 years old when he moved back to live with his grand parents and attended school in Hawaii.

From the very beginning, Mr. Obama’s life situation could probably be described as “disadvantageous”. But, thanks in part to the land of opportunity, to which he was connected, and the audacity of his will, Mr. Obama was able to overcome myriads of obstacles and challenges in his life to become the 44th President of the United States of America within a span of only 12 years, starting from the time when he entered politics and became an Illinois State senator in 1996.

As America prepares to present her 44th President to the rest of the world, the image of a black leader standing amid a predominantly white crowd of politicians and well wishers will once again reaffirm what it means to be a land of opportunity. There is no doubt about it; that only in America that we, the people, regardless of our social classes, could rise from the dustbin of societal garbage to become a leader of one of the greatest country on earth. As a US citizen and a former destitute refugee, I realize how fortunate I am to be able to come and live in this land of opportunity where human capability reigns supreme.

Chanda Chhay

Sacrava's Politiktoons No. 62: The 44th President of the United States of America

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

More Groups Ready for Inauguration

By Taing Sarada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
19 January 2009


Cambodian embassy officials in Washington say they won’t hold a special event for the inauguration of president-elect Barack Obama, but they have been invited to Tuesday’s event.

“The Cambodian Embassy, like the representatives all of the countries’ embassies based in the US, has been invited by the US State Department to join president Obama’s inauguration,” said Nay Meng Eang, deputy chief of mission at the Cambodian Embassy.

Cambodia is currently without an ambassador in Washington, following the exit of Ek Sereywath in late 2008. Hem Heng, the incoming ambassador, has yet to be recognized.

“We haven’t seen any confirmation yet,” Nay Meng Eang said.

Cambodian Embassy officials have also requested the establishment of a military attaché with the US, as well as a consulate office in Lowell, Mass., where many Cambodians live, but they have not received responses, he said.

Meanwhile, the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation, an advocacy group based in New Jersey, said it had sent a letter of congratulations to the incoming president.

Attached to the letter was an eight-page report on restrictions by the Vietnamese government against members of the Khmer Krom minority there, including the persecution of liberty, human rights and religion, said Thach Ngoc Thach, president of the group, who met with State Department officials last week.

“I think the new government will be able to continue the cooperation from [George W. Bush] administration’s work,” he said. “We strongly hope that the relationship between the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation and Obama’s administration will comprehensively continue.”

Sunday, January 18, 2009

CACJE's letter to President Barack Obama for his inauguration


Cambodian Action Committee for Justice & Equity (CACJE)
"CACJE is an Alliance for People Power, Promote Social Justice and Support Human Equity"

17 January, 2009

The Honorable Barack Obama, President
The United States of America
White House. Washington, D.C.

Inauguration Day, January 20, 2009

Dear President Obama,

I am pleased to send you my warmest congratulations on your inauguration as President of the United States. You face a formidable task of leadership at a dangerous time. But your inauguration is a symbol of hope.

It is said that all politics is local -- and, in a sense, that is true. But in this day and age, all politics is also global. Whether you are, your work at the local level both affects, and is affected by, developments at the global level — in ways that our forebear could not have imagined.

Your presidency is historic not only because you are this country's first African-American president, but because of the enormous, critical tasks before you. You are the President Abraham Lincoln of the modern times. Lincoln had freed the slaves and you will protect and render justice to the have-not, the poor, and the weak.

Cambodian people believe that the United States of America will become a guarantor of security, peace and democratic development throughout the world. Cambodia people had suffered for more than three decades the extreme abuses of Human Rights by its authoritarian leaders, the puppets installed by Vietnam. The sovereignty and territorial integrity of Cambodia were flagrantly violated by its neighboring counties. The Republic Socialist of Vietnam, the Kingdom of Thailand and the People Republic of Laos violated the Peace Agreement of October 23, 1991 on Cambodia, that one they have well signed and ratified, even while the ink was not dried yet.
Mr. President, we urge you to take all means to protect Cambodian sovereignty against the flagrant violation of Vietnam, Thailand and Laos and defend Cambodian people against the extreme Human Rights abuses by its own leaders.

We look forward to your inauguration and tenure of office with great hope and we have no doubt that your presidency will stand out as one that gives the world the leadership for which we all look up to America. Not for its might or resources but for its ideals and direction, for a better world.

Please accept Mr. President, the assurances of my highest consideration and esteem.

Sincerely,

(Signed) SOURN SEREYRATHA, Chief Mission of
Cambodian Action Committee for Justice & Equity (CACJE)