Showing posts with label Development in Cambodia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Development in Cambodia. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2012

Cambodia’s new Tourism frontier

20/08/2012
Bangkok Post

A year ago, getting to Sihanoukville required perseverance and a certain degree of bravery. There had been no flights to Cambodia’s premier beach resort for years — at least no scheduled services — and cruise ships docking here were few and far between.

Buses from Cambodia’s star attraction, Angkor Wat, take 10 hours and the first section of the road from Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville sees so many accidents that Cambodians usually insist on praying en route at a cliffside temple.

“A seaside getaway is not what most travellers think of when they book a holiday to Cambodia,” said Sibylle Rotzler, sales manager of Bangkok-based Backyard Travel, which recently launched a tour taking in the south-coast resorts of Sihanoukville, Kep, a sleepy French-colonial town, and Koh Kong, a new destination on the eco-tourism trail.

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

Should Cambodia build more pagodas or should she build more research centers?



កម្ពុជា​ត្រូវ​សង់​វត្ត​បន្ថែម ឬ​មជ្ឈ​មណ្ឌល​ស្រាវ​ជ្រាវ​-មន្ទីរ​ពិសោធន៍?

Tuesday, 31 July 2012
ប៉ែន មីរ៉ាន់ដា
The Phnom Penh Post

វត្ត​អារាម ជា​ទី​សក្ការ​របស់​ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​ខ្មែរ​ប្រមាណ ៩០ % ដែល​កាន់​សាស​នា​ព្រះ​ពុទ្ធ ដែល​ជា​សាសនា​របស់​រដ្ឋ។ យើង​កត់​សម្គាល់​ឃើញ​ថា ចំនួន​ព្រះ​សង្ឃ និង​វត្ត​អារាម កំពុង​តែ​កើន​ឡើង ហើយ​ការ​សាង​សង់ ត្រូវ​បាន​យក​ចិត្ត​ទុក​ដាក់ ដោយ​រាជ​រដ្ឋា​ភិបាល និង​សប្បុរស​ជន​នានា។

តែ​បើ​ក្រឡេក​មើល​ចំនួន និង​ទំនើប​កម្ម​មជ្ឈ​មណ្ឌល​ស្រាវ​ជ្រាវ និង​មន្ទីរ​ពិសោធន៍​វិញ មិន​មាន​ការ​កើន​ឡើង​គួរ​ឲ្យ​កត់​សម្គាល់​សោះឡើយ

ឈរ​លើ​គោល​ការណ៍​អា​ស៊ាន​ដែល​នឹង​បង្កើត​សមា​គមសេដ្ឋ​កិច្ច​អាស៊ាន (ASEAN Economic Community, AEC) ត្រឹម​ឆ្នាំ ២០១៥ និង​គោល​ការណ៍​សកល​ភា​វូប​នីយ​កម្ម កម្ពុជា​នឹង​ប្រឈម​ការ​ប្រកួត​ប្រជែង​ផលិត​ផល​ទាំង​បរិមាណ​និង​គុណភាព​នៅ​លើ ទីផ្សារ​តំបន់ និង​ពិភព​លោក។ តើ​កម្ពុជា ត្រូវ​ត្រៀម​លក្ខណៈ​បែប​ណា​ខ្លះ ដើម្បី​កែប្រែ​ការ​ប្រឈម​ឲ្យ​ទៅ​ជា​ឱកាស ពាណិជ្ជ​កម្ម និង​សេដ្ឋកិច្ច? តើ​រដ្ឋាភិ​បាល ឬ​សប្បុរស​ជន ពាណិជ្ជ​ករ គួរ​ប្រើ​ថវិកា​ខ្លះ ដើម្បី​ការ​សាង​សង់​មជ្ឈ​មណ្ឌល​ស្រាវ​ជ្រាវ និងមន្ទីរ​ពិសោធន៍​វិទ្យា​សាស្ត្រ​ដែរ​ឬ​ទេ?

ជា​ដំបូង តួនា​ទី​វត្ត​អារាម​ពិត​ជា​សំខាន់​ណាស់ សម្រាប់​ពលរដ្ឋ​ខ្មែរ​ដូច​ជា ការ​ផ្តល់​ពុទ្ធ​ដីកា និង​ដំបូន្មាន របស់​ព្រះ​សង្ឃ ដល់​ពុទ្ធ​សាស​និក និង​ជា​កន្លែង​ផ្ដល់​ចំណេះ​ដឹង។ វត្ត​អារាម​ក៏​ជា​ទី​ស្នាក់​អា​ស្រ័យ របស់​និស្សិត​បុរស ដែល​មក​ពី​ទី​ជន​បទ​ដើម្បី​បន្ត​ការ​សិក្សា​ថ្នាក់​ឧត្តម​នៅ​ទី​ក្រុង។ អត្ថបទ​មួយ​របស់ Arnaldo Pellini (2004) ក៏​បាន​បង្ហាញ​ឧទាហរណ៍ របស់​សមាគម​វត្ត​អារាម​ក្នុង​ស្រុក​ស្ទោង ខេត្ត​កំពង់​ធំ ដែល​ដើរ​តួនាទី​ជា​សមាគម ថវិកា និង​ស្រូវ​សម្រាប់​ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ។ បើ​តាម​ស្ថិតិ​របស់​ក្រសួង​ធម្ម​ការ និង​សាស​នា ដែល​ដក​ស្រង់​ដោយសារ​ព័ត៌​មាន Xinhua គិត​មក​ត្រឹម​ខែ​មេសា​ឆ្នាំ​២០១០ មាន​វត្ត​អា​រាម​ចំនួន ៤៣៩២ និង​ព្រះ​សង្ឃ​ច្រើន​ជាង ៥ ម៉ឺន​អង្គ ក្នុង​ប្រទេស​កម្ពុជា។ បើ​យើង​គិត​ពី​សមាមាត្រ​ភាគ​រយ​ព្រះ​សង្ឃ និងប្រជា​ជន​សរុប ១៣,៣៩៥,៦៨២ (NIS, 2008) គឺ​ស្មើ ០.៤ %។

ម្យ៉ាង​វិញ​ទៀត ថវិកា ដែល​ត្រូវ​សាង​សង់​វិហារ និង​កុដិ ក្នុង​វត្ត នីមួយៗ​យ៉ាង​ហោច​ក៏​ត្រូវ​ចំណាយ​ពី ២០ ទៅ ៣០ ម៉ឺន​ដុល្លារ​អាមេរិក​ដែរ ហើយ​បើ​យើង​មាន​មហិច្ឆ​តា​ដើម្បី​ធ្វើ​ទំនើប​កម្ម​វត្ត​ទាំង​អស់​ដែល​មាន ស្រាប់ យ៉ាង​ហោច​ណាស់​ក៏​ត្រូវ​ការ​ថវិកា​ជិត​មួយ​កោដិ​ដុល្លារ​អាមេរិក​ដែរ។ ការ​សាង​សង់​ទៀត​សោត ពពាក់​ពពូន​គ្នា​នៅ​តែ​តំបន់​ជិតៗ ហើយ​តំបន់​ឆ្ងាយៗ ជា​ពិសេស​តំបន់​ព្រំដែន​ដែលត្រូវ​ការ​ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​រស់​នៅ​ឲ្យ​បាន​ច្រើន​ នោះ បែជាមិន​សូវ​ មាន​ទៅវិញ

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Not Enough Cambodians Pitching In for Development: Volunteers

Diep Sovannaroth, left, a program assistant for UN Volunteers, and Chhuon Thavrith, right, a former volunteer at UN Volunteers who now works for UNDP, were our guests on 'Hello VOA' on Monday. (Photo: by Heng Reaksmey)

Wednesday, 14 September 2011
Say Mony, VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh
“Only when we Cambodians ourselves contribute to the solutions to existing challenges or problems will the country develop.”

If more Cambodians do not start pitching in and volunteering, the country risks missing key development goals in coming years, a youth advocate said Monday.

Cambodia is trying to meet a series of UN Millennium Development Goals by 2015, but it is lagging behind in key sectors. And while there are a number of foreign volunteers working in the country, there is not enough local help, Diep Sovannaroth, a program assistant for UN Volunteers, told “Hello VOA.”

“Only when we Cambodians ourselves contribute to the solutions to existing challenges or problems will the country develop,” she said. “So volunteerism plays a very important role here.”

Cambodia marked the 10th anniversary of the International Year of Volunteers last week, as development officials called on more volunteer activities to push the country towards its 2015 goals.

Friday, August 05, 2011

Cambodian Capital Modernizing Fast [-How many have to suffer from this?]

This July 2010 photo shows construction of high-rise buildings along Preah Monivong Boulevard, Phnom Penh's main thoroughfare. (Photo: Soeung Sophat, VOA Khmer)
The Cambodia Securities Exchange building is seen in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on the day of its launch, Monday, July 11, 2011. (AP)
The CEO of ANZ Royal, Stephen Higgins, who says the newly-launched stock exchange will benefit Cambodia, but is for the long-term. (Robert Carmichael)
Thursday, 04 August 2011
Robert Carmichael | Phnom Penh
“The people like me they have jobs, they have money. They save money to buy expensive brands like Apple, iPhone. Some of the girls they try to buy the clothes from internet, from Facebook.”
Ten years ago, the infrastructure in Cambodia's capital, Phnom Penh, was in poor condition. Power outages were frequent. Heavy rains and poor telecommunications slowed commerce and limited outside contacts.

But in the past decade, new roads and high-rise buildings have changed the landscape. And in July, the nation's first stock exchange and a multiplex cinema opened.

Phnom Penh has several active cinemas dating from the 1950s, but they mainly screen the small number of domestically produced films or translated Thai imports. Pirated DVDs have cut into their business, keeping people at home.

Until July, the only way to see the latest Hollywood blockbuster in a theater was to catch a plane to Thailand or Vietnam.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Cambodia means serious business [... if only the author knows the price Cambodia has to pay for!!!]

Jun 14, 2011
By reddotrevolver
AsianCorrespondent.com

A recent post by The Economist turned the spotlight on Cambodia. The focus was not on the sublime beauty of its historical sites nor was it on its notorious child-sex industry. The attention was on how fast Cambodia is industrializing and building up its infrastructure. According to the post, Phnom Penh is in the process of building a new container terminal, and plans to build two new ports. Mekong is described to be a potential “commercial highway.”

Two major players, or rather rivals, are said to be fighting for a larger slice of the pie in Cambodia: China and Vietnam. Half of Cambodia’s foreign investment comes from China.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Cambodia’s Bumpy Road to Development

CAMBODIA’S BUMPY ROAD TO DEVELOPMENT

BY DONALD JAMESON
KI-Media would like to thank Mr. Donald Jameson for providing us with an early copy of his talk to be given at the University of Ohio on Saturday April 30, 2011.
When US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Cambodia in late 2010 she told senior government leaders there “this does not look like the country I have been reading about in the press”. Most casual visitors to Phnom Penh would likely react similarly. They would see a vibrant society, with traffic-clogged streets, a proliferation of stylish restaurants and boutiques and numerous buildings under construction, many of them high rise apartments or office blocks, and including upscale satellite towns with names like “The Grand Phnom Penh International City”. Outside Phnom Penh, the visitor would observe large-scale development of infrastructure, including new roads and bridges, with work underway on many additional projects. If they ventured further afield the visitors would see land being cleared for plantations to grow rubber, palm oil, coffee and other tropical products as well as new industrial sites springing up along main transportation arteries. In short, they would find a country clearly on the move economically.

Having prepared for the trip by reading recent media coverage of Cambodia, much of it carrying headlines such as “The Beleaguered Cambodians”, “Cambodia’s Curse” and “Country for Sale” our visitor would probably, like Mrs. Clinton, be a bit confused, Much media coverage would have described Cambodia as a country plagued by rampant corruption benefiting a wealthy ruling oligarchy and their crony capitalist friends while a large segment of the population lives in abject poverty. It would have reported widespread human rights abuses, including confiscation of land from smallholder owners for investment projects, often without adequate compensation and sometimes resulting in forced evictions by the police or military forces. Beyond this the media would have described a culture of impunity that protects the rich and powerful while victimizing the poor and powerless. Also highlighted would have been the strict limits on freedom of expression and assembly as well as frequent intimidation of politicians, journalists, labor leaders, human rights advocates and other critics of Prime Minister Hun Sen and his ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP).

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Educated are Cambodia's 'critical mass'

April 20, 2011
A. Gaffar Peang-Meth
PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
Even if the Hun Sen regime returned all the dollars from theft of national resources to the education pot, it would take a long, long time before young Cambodians' secondary school net enrollment would move from the current dismal 34 percent of eligible students to even 80 percent, which might be the percentage that would create the catalyst to foment meaningful change.
My email box has been flooded with messages. Some made me smile. Two hard-hitting messages from Cambodia made me look for some spiritual balance. A friend from a different continent who used to discuss with me the value of education wrote, after reading my columns, about the necessary "critical mass" needed to catalyze change.

I combined all three messages to writing this column.

It's no revelation that if we want to look for something in a person or a regime, negative or positive, we can find it. And we can be sure that there are supporters and critics of any position: A thesis is followed by antithesis. Opposites are a fact of life -- the yin and the yang

I have written about alleged bribes demanded by instructors at Cambodia's universities, but an email from a reader in Cambodia, most likely from a teaching circle, reported also on corrupt practices among primary and secondary school teachers in his area. The writer reported that teachers extort money from students in return for one thing or another. The reader was livid, saying the "authorities concerned" know but do nothing: "I fear if these practices are ingrained in the culture of corruption, the young Cambodian generation will be severely affected in thoughts and behaviors."

Monday, April 18, 2011

Phnom Penh's Economic Progress ... But a step backward on political freedom could imperil growth

Growth is at risk from political backsteps. (Agence France-Presse/Getty Images)

APRIL 18, 2011
The Wall Street Journal
Greater political accountability of Mr. Hun Sen will guarantee not only civil liberties for Cambodians, but also a better business environment. The lack of political checks is breeding fears of cronyism, especially regarding land. The worse corruption gets—Cambodia ranked 154 on Transparency International's 2010 corruption perception index of 178 nations—the more businesses, especially foreign ones, will be wary of investing. Growth could slow down, interrupting the country's momentum, and also depriving the newfound freedoms Cambodians have begun to enjoy.
A decade ago, Cambodia was practically a ward of the international community, relying on international donors and nongovernmental organizations to get by. But its economy has since grown at an annual average rate of 10%, creating a $10 billion economy today, to which exports contribute more than $4 billion a year. Phnom Penh deserves credit for its low, flat tax and minimal regulations that have allowed the private sector to flourish.

The stain on this record of economic freedom is Phnom Penh's backtracking on political freedom. Prime Minister Hun Sen, in and out of power for 26 years, has never taken kindly to criticism and dissent. He is now proposing a law that would give him tight control over NGOs. A draft of this law was released last month.


This law is one more in a series of measures to curb civil society. In 2006, Mr. Hun Sen did away with a rule that required a two-thirds legislative majority to form a government and pass laws, making it easier to consolidate his power. In 2009, the parliament banned protests comprising more than 200 persons and stiffened the country's defamation laws. Mr. Hun Sen has sued his political opponents on defamation charges and intimidated them by other means. In December, he put into effect a criminal code that charges someone for incitement if he merely shared articles from the Internet. He's also contemplating a law that would curb trade unions.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The constructive Cambodian

A man gathers lumber to rebuild his house in Boeung Kak disctrict in Phnom Penh. Photo by: Will Baxter

Wednesday, 13 October 2010
Kounila Keo
The Phnom Penh Post

Young people under the age of 30 make up 70 percent of Cambodia’s population of more than 14 million, according to a survey conducted by the Human Rights Center at the University of California at Berkeley.

Today’s trend towards issues affecting young people is the result of the baby boom that followed in the wake of civil wars that consumed Cambodian society in the 1970s and in the decade that followed.

But the question remains: How much have young Cambodians benefited from the ensuing changes to their still-impoverished nation?

Looking at recent unemployment figures might seem heartening, but everyone knows that these figures don’t represent the reality facing most of the Kingdom’s youth. Outside of the bustling capital, you will notice that when it comes to official unemployment reports, what you see is not what you get.


According to the study “Situation Analysis of Youth in Cambodia” released by the United Nations in 2009, much of the nearly 35 percent of the country’s population between the ages of 10 and 23 are migrating to urban areas and crossing borders legally or illegally. They are looking for a brighter future away from the destitution of rural Cambodia.

Yet what they find is insecure employment at best and oftentimes exploitation and slavery.

The truth that gross unemployment figures fail to expose is that there is a critical shortage of job opportunities for Cambodian youth in the provinces who, as they take on responsibility of caring for their families, are being forced into a fierce competition for whatever work is available.

To compound the problem, Cambodia’s rising youth workforce is the least-educated in the region, making their struggle against inflation even more difficult as better-skilled foreign workers are given preference for job openings all along the economic ladder.

The economic situation for Phnom Penh’s 2 million residents is so good that it can mask these alarming trends elsewhere in the country, but look beyond the development of the capital city and you can see that, although more provincial families are sending their kids to school, it is still an all-out struggle to keep kids in the classroom until they finish 9th grade, often counted as “completing high school” in the countryside, where expectations of students are only slightly higher than the dirt floors under their desks.

While moving about rural Cambodia, I have seen too many youth hanging out in gangs and resorting to violence to get their way. But I don’t see cruelty inside of them; I see wasted talent. I see minds that are waiting to be cultivated so they can help in the betterment of their country and I ask myself: What opportunities should they be given to allow them to show their full potential as students and workers? I want to know what paths are available for them to become the productive youth that are envisioned in the Millennium Development Goals, the optimistic plan for improving developing countries like Cambodia presented to the UN 15 years ago.

For those who care, reports of the alarming poverty in Cambodia are unavoidable. At least 30 percent of Cambodians fall below the poverty line, meaning they are unable to meet even the most basic needs for stable human existence. It makes you wonder if things can really be turned around by an idea, even if it is produced by some of the world’s best thinkers.

I can still remember Sambo Manara, the professor of my freshman-year history class, jumping to his feet during a lecture and urging every young person capable of working to create their own source of income. According to him, the poorest of the poor in Cambodia “are not farmers, but students who sit idle in class without doing anything significant”.

I agreed completely, and went out and earned my first US$70 as an employee. I wondered how much money could the 70 percent of us above the poverty line save over a full year if we spent only $2 a day. A childish thought perhaps, since there is a job market for a reason, but it seemed to illustrate the impact we could have if we pooled our resources.

It still comes as a shock to me that many Cambodian students choose to study management, hoping to become a manager or somebody important, while programs teaching critical skills such as engineering and technology are still in low demand. It is no wonder that investors often turn away from the domestic labour force to fill highly skilled positions. In many sectors, there are no experts here.

What’s worse is that most of the 300,000 young Cambodian graduates who are entering the workforce every year decided to treat school like a challenge instead of an opportunity. They tuned out in the classroom and cheated on tests, and in the end their parents paid for useless degrees.

Fortunately, youth-related organisations and associations have been sprouting up to teach young people the value of socially minded work and provide trainings that give them the skills and experience that my wise history professor called “invisible money good in our economy”.

A project in Kampong Thom comes to mind, where UNICEF worked with local governments to transform communities of failing youth into socially active leaders with love for their country and the skills to start socially minded small businesses to improve the lives of their neighbors.

The project has expanded to 12 communes, and if it is successful there the project will likely be expanded throughout Cambodia. But the program is time-consuming and, at best, will only reach a small portion of the youth who need this kind of outreach.

But it is not up to development organisations to fill the outstretched hands of Cambodia’s vulnerable people. Cambodian youth need to pull pack their hands and put them to work. If 30 percent of Cambodians are making less than $2 a day, the 70 percent of us who are youth can surely make an extra dollar a day to lift everyone above poverty.

It is also high time that youth left their hometown to find how different life is from the books they read. The true heroes among us are the blue-collar workers who endure backbreaking labor every day rather than waiting for humanitarian organisations to help them.

The tasks facing young Cambodians might seem overwhelming. It won’t be easy to give everyone access to a basic education, good health, proper employment and a voice in our society, but we must not aim for anything less. Cambodians younger than 30 account for a third of the work force today and will soon make up a majority.

For those of us lucky enough to go to university and understand the importance of personal freedoms and human rights, it is our calling to make real change in Cambodia. Many of our brothers and sisters are still stuck in the same mess our parents struggled to escape from nearly 40 years ago. It is urgent that we find a way to pull them out.

What is the best way for Cambodian youth to help alleviate poverty in the Kingdom? Share your constructive ideas with your peers on angkorone.com/lift and become part of the answer.

Friday, July 09, 2010

Cambodia Behind Region in Investment

Cambodians cross the Tonle Sap river by ferry along a Chinese-funded bridge under construction at Prek Kdam village. (Photo: AP)

Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Thursday, 08 July 2010

Cambodia has improved its investment environment, “but we have to fix other problems.”
While Cambodia has adopted a competitive investment strategy, it lags behind Asia-Pacific countries in terms of investment facilities and other factors, the World Bank reported Wednesday.

Cambodia is one of the more open countries to foreign investment, but its roads, ports and other infrastructure are not developed, according to the “Investing Across Borders” annual report.

“It’s a showcase to attract more foreign direct investment,” said Ngoun Meng Tech, secretary general of Chamber of Commerce of Cambodia.

Cambodia’s economy has struggled since the 2009 recession, and foreign investment has fallen from $1.2 billion in the first six months of 2009 to $1.1 billion for the same period this year. Experts say the country must now find ways to compete in a different global economy.

In Cambodia, it takes 86 days and 10 procedures to open a business, compared to other East Asia-Pacific countries, where the average is 68 days and 11 procedures, the World Bank reported.

Cambodia has improved its investment environment, “but we have to fix other problems,” said Ros Khemara, a member of the Cambodian Economic Association.

The World Bank also noted that Cambodia does well in the time it takes to lease land, but lags behind the region in the availability of land information.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

No opportunity for bright young Cambodians?

David Jonathan Gross

Nobel Laureate: Human Resource is the Major Problem Facing Cambodia

By Im Sothearith, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
19 January 2010


As other developing countries in the world, the major problem facing Cambodia is the serious lack of human resources for the country’s development, according to Professor David Jonathan Gross, a Nobel Laureate for Physics.

Prof. Gross said through his lecture and dialogue with some participants and people he met, he observes that there are quite a lot of brilliant young people in Cambodia, which will be important for Cambodia’s future development, but the most important thing is whether they are given opportunity to develop their skills.

“It’s a major problem - human resources,” Gross said in a phone interview with VOA Khmer during his visit to Cambodia’s Siem Reap province. “I’ve met a lot of very hopeful people. You know that’s the most important thing. People are very optimistic about the future. Cambodia has a lot of great resources. I have a lot of faith in young people, very brilliant young minds that could do great things just given the opportunity. I have tried to tell them that they should dream big. I have talked to people about giving young people opportunity.”

Prof. Gross is a Nobel Laureate for Physics in 2004. He has discovered and explored the force that binds particles inside an atomic nucleus. This phenomenon led to a whole new physical theory and enabled scientists to complete the standard model of particle physics, which describes the fundamental particles in nature, and how they interact with one another.

Gross said there are two kinds of human resources. While the majority of people are just working forces, others have special talents and great minds, who make great contributions to the country’s development. This kind of people should be given special opportunity.

"And then, very gifted people, whose minds you really don’t want to waste and who will contribute very important contributions to the society,’’ Prof. Gross said. ‘’And it’s important to make sure you don’t lose those really special people, and you give them opportunities. You will have to enable them to go abroad. It’s also important to identify very brilliant people and give them special opportunities because those people can make important contributions.”

Chek Chan Oeun, a physics lecturer at Royal University of Phnom Penh, who participated in the Professor Gross’s lecture, said the lecture paves the way for participants, especially for students to a broader scientific research and open their minds to how science can help social development.

“Through this lecture, we have acquired some knowledge related to universe, dark energy, dark materials, and the evolution of the universe,” Chek Chan Oeun said. “In addition, it encourages students to find out what has been discovered by scientists, what is still unknown, and what they are doing to help the world.”

“In the future I want to be like him and discover new things to meet the needs of the world,” said Sun Limhour, a 4th year student in physics department of Royal University of Phnom Penh. “I have loved electronics since I was young. It is a true science.”

The visit by Prof. David Jonathan Gross intends to strengthen the relationship among nations in Southeast Asia and ASEAN with the rest of the world, according to the organizer.

“It’s our aim really to build these bridges not only with Nobel laureates from the United States or Europe and the societies here in Southeast Asia, but between the societies in ASEAN to reach more cooperation on the level of education because education as we think is basic for peace and that’s why we are doing this program at the universities and at schools here in Cambodia and also in other countries in the region,” said Morawetz, director of International Peace Foundation.

Born in Washington, D.C., Professor David Jonathan Gross, received his undergraduate degree from Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1962 and then continued his education at University of California, Berkley, from where he received his Ph.D. in physics in 1966. He then served as a junior fellow at Harvard University. Professor Gross is now a director and holder of the Frederick W. Gluck Chair in Theoretical Physics at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics of the University of California in Santa Barbara and a member of the Advisory Board of the Intentional Peace Foundation.

As part of the “Bridges” program by the International Peace Foundation, the next Nobel Laureate who will pay a visit to Cambodia on January 20 is Professor Eric Stark Maskin, a 2007 Nobel Laureate for Economics.

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Cambodia's development benefits whom?

April 01, 2009
By Chak Sopheap
Guest Commentary
UPI Asia Online


Niigata, Japan — Eighteen years after the Paris Peace Agreement that brought relative stability to Cambodia, the country is still suffering from the effects of two decades of the Khmer Rouge dictatorship, civil wars and political conflicts. The Constitution of 1993 allowed the country to strive toward democratic governance, providing a framework for multiparty democracy, a liberal market economy and social development.

Yet, while parts of the economy are making considerable progress, more than 30 percent of the population is still living in extreme poverty. Together with corruption and continued human rights violations – especially the increasing forced evictions and land grabbing under the so-called development claims – there is little hope that Cambodia can move out of poverty. Thus the question arises: For whom is the Cambodian government attempting to achieve its development goals?

The current pursuit of development by the Royal Government of Cambodia has often brought legal abuses and violations of peoples’ rights to housing and development. While the judicial system is corrupt and the state is the main violator of the law, the poor communities are voiceless and powerless.

One example was the eviction of residents of Sambok Chab village on June 6, 2006, which threatened to turn into a serious humanitarian crisis. According to the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, an estimated 6,000 people at a relocation site close to Trapeang Andong village in the Dangkao district were denied the basic rights to food, housing, clean water, public health services and schooling.

More than 1,200 families from Sambok Chab were forcibly relocated to idle rice fields under the supervision of hundreds of armed police and soldiers. Located more than 20 kilometers from their former homes, these people lost their meager means of making a living and many were starving. There was no administration over this site and no security; people dared not leave their small huts for fear that others would take their few belongings.

According to human rights and media observers, on Jan. 24 this year residents of the village of Dey Krahorm were evicted at 2:00 a.m. by over 400 workers from the 7NG Company, a property developer, together with over 300 heavily armed police officers. During this operation, tear gas and heavy machinery including bulldozers were used. Eighteen community members were injured and private property was systematically destroyed.

More than 400 families were reportedly forcibly evicted. Most of them were market stall holders and renters. They were relocated to Damnak Trayeung, 20 kilometers from Phnom Penh, where they set up a makeshift camp on 7NG land beside a road. Some house owners also went to Damnak Trayeung, but others were able to stay temporarily with friends, family or NGOs in Phnom Penh.

The Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights, or LICADHO, reported a lack of facilities at the relocation site including food, water, shelter, mosquito nets and medical facilities. There are no toilets, forcing people to use open fields or unfinished apartment buildings. These unhygienic conditions are obviously harmful to health.

Despite appeals from local and international organizations, as well as pleas from affected residents, evictions have not stopped. Other communities fear it will soon be their turn. In addition to these evictions in urban areas, there have been many cases of land grabbing in the provinces.

The evictions generally follow a pattern with four characteristics: They are violent, using armed forces, tear gas and heavy machinery to drive people out. They follow
illegal procedures, without public consultation, prior announcement or justification. They ignore peoples’ right to private property, taking their homes without providing proper compensation or adequate social infrastructure. They are not in the public interest, as most evictions occur on land contracted to private companies in the name of “development projects,” which often turn out to be shopping malls or multistoried apartment buildings.

The relocated people are not benefitting from such development. Hence, the so-called development projects are merely an excuse to hide the government’s violations of peoples’ rights. This must be stopped.

In fact, there are legal guarantees to housing and development. The right to housing is entrenched in a number of international human rights instruments, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 25), the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (Article 11), the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Article 3), the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (Article 14) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (Article 27).

Furthermore, the right to development is an inalienable human right. Equal opportunity for development is a privilege of both nations and of individuals who make up nations.

The Cambodian Constitution (Article 31) states that the government shall recognize and respect human rights as stipulated in the United Nations Charter and other declarations, covenants and conventions related to human, women's and children's rights. In addition, the 2001 Cambodian Land Law ensures the right to private ownership of land and prohibits violent, forceful eviction.

The government must abide by its own Constitution and laws.

In principle, people strongly support the government’s development plans and recognize its right to sell land to private companies that can develop it according to the public interest. Yet the government also has the obligation to protect its citizens and their fundamental rights to adequate housing and the means to make a living.

To protect these rights, the government should propose onsite development plans rather than opting to evict poor villagers in the name of city development. If evictions are necessary, the residents should be informed and consulted beforehand. They should be fairly compensated for their property, and relocation sites should include sufficient infrastructure for the people to live in dignity and earn income for themselves and their families.

Most importantly, the government’s master plan must be presented to the public. It is a crucial part of a democratic system for the people to be aware of their country’s development plans.
--
(Chak Sopheap is a graduate student of peace studies at the International University of Japan. She runs a blog, www.sopheapfocus.com, on which she shares her impressions of both Japan and her homeland, Cambodia. She was previously advocacy officer of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights. )

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Development leaves Cambodians homeless

June 25, 2008
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth Pacific Daily News (Guam)

My June 11 column referenced The Guardian's Adrian Levy and Cathy Scott-Clark's "Country for Sale," which stated that "almost half of Cambodia has been sold to foreign speculators in the past 18 months." It also referred to Business Week's Susan Postlewaite's "Real Estate Boom in Cambodia's capital," in which she observed this boom "has led to widespread evictions of people" from their homes and land to accommodate development projects.

If you Google "land-grabbing in Cambodia" you'll see volumes written on the topic, from newspaper articles to columns and reports by human rights groups. Watch videos and listen to the voices of Cambodian evictees, even on YouTube.

They reveal how the poor, the underprivileged in Cambodia suffer unspeakable pain and hardship. After all, what's life anywhere when a person's home and land are dismantled and bulldozed without discussion, and one is beaten and kicked and faces jail for not moving out?

Radio Free Asia's "China's Growing Presence in Cambodia," published on its Web site May 28, takes the issue of land-grabbing to a higher level, alleging high officials' involvement. The Web site also recorded 29 land-grabbing cases in January and February alone.

Amnesty International's "Forced Evictions in Cambodia: Homes Razed, Lives in Ruins," published Feb. 11, states "forced evictions are one of the most widespread human rights violations affecting Cambodians in both rural and urban areas." It asserts, "At least 150,000 Cambodians across the country are known to live at risk of being forcibly evicted in the wake of land disputes, land grabbing and development projects."

"In sharp contrast to the rhetoric of the (Cambodian) government's pro-poor policies and in breach of international human rights laws and standards," the Amnesty International article states, "thousands of people, particularly those living in poverty, have been forcibly evicted from their homes and lands."

On June 12, a Hong Kong-based regional non-governmental organization that monitors and lobbies human rights issues in Asia, The Asian Human Rights Commission, posted an online petition, "End Land Grabbing in Cambodia," and urges "the public to join" the petition, which can be read at http://campaigns.ahrchk.net/landgrabbing.

The online petition is addressed to Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen. It expresses signers' deep concerns "about the suffering of the hundreds of thousands of Cambodian people who have been, and who are known to live in fear of being evicted as a result of development projects, land disputes and land-grabbing." It asks the premier to "immediately end the suffering and fears ... by halting all evictions, ... and by suspending all land concessions for development projects that affect people's homes and lands."

I don't know if the petition will move the 55-year-old Cambodian ruler to comply, nor do I know if it will incite the world community to help the Cambodian poor and end the land-grabbing.

Action needed

I used to recite to my students at the University of Guam Edmund Burke's words: "All that is needed for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." And I write often in this space that unless one takes action, one cannot expect anything to happen the way one wishes. I have discussed the problem of "free riders" who expected "others" to act for the common good.

So I added my name on the AHRC petition, and my computer screen showed that it was sent electronically to the prime minister's cabinet.

Six days before the AHRC's petition, the Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (Licadho) put online, complete with photos, "Two Years After their Eviction from the Center of Phnom Penh, Villagers are Still Living in Squalor." It was about the June 6, 2006, eviction of more than 1,000 families from their homes in Sambok Chap village in inner-city Phnom Penh by "police and military police armed with guns, tear gas, batons and riot shields."

"The residents were forced onto trucks and taken to be dumped in an open field at Andong, 22 kilometers from central Phnom Penh -- their new 'home'," reads the text. "There was no shelter, electricity, running water, schools, health services or readily available employment nearby."

June 6, 2008, marked the two-year anniversary of the eviction.

"The site of their former homes in Sambok Chap -- slated for commercial development by a private company -- remains bare and unused, while the evictees continue to live in squalor at the Andong relocation site," Licadho stated.

Licadho refers to Sambok Chap as "just one case in a wider pattern of rapid, unregulated and often illegal development across Cambodia. ... It is exacerbated by a culture of corruption and impunity and, all too often, by an international donor community which turns a blind eye to such abuses."

Yet, in less than four weeks this international donor community can be expected to congratulate the region's longest-serving premier for his forthcoming July 27 election victory, to continue his reign, which Agence France Presse says he vowed publicly to keep until he turns 90.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, where he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at peangmeth@yahoo.com.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Can Emerging Market Growth Continue to Reshape the Global Economy? [-Who's really benefitting for all these developments in Cambodia?]

‘We've only begun to see the impact they will have in the financial markets’

By Jeffrey D. Voudrie, CFP
Posted at SeniorJournal.com


Feb. 11, 2008 - We've all heard about the amazing growth taking place in developing countries and how the global economy will never be the same again. But countries like China, India and Vietnam seem so far away. It can be hard to understand how those marketplaces can affect the individual investor here in the U.S.A. After my recent trip to Cambodia, I'm here to tell you that emerging markets aren't some short-lived fad. We've only begun to see the impact they will have in the financial markets.

My wife and I had visited Cambodia last March, but this time was different. Besides having our four children along for the experience, the signs of a growing economy were everywhere.

Construction was taking place all around Phnom Penh, the nation's capital. A new 42 story office building had broken ground, the country's first skyscraper. It's being financed by a South Korean company. A huge new complex of shops and office buildings were coming up on old rice fields north of town in a special economic zone.

Masses of new apartment buildings were being constructed. The prices of these condo/apartments continue to increase. Those that were $40,000 when construction started are now $100,000.

Land values continue to soar exponentially. More people can afford cars. Everyone has a cell phone. Universities and schools teaching everything from nursing to English classes to management and computer skills are popping up on every corner. And the schools are packed.

The city continues to improve its infrastructure with the paving of roads and improvement of their drainage system, which is important during the monsoon season. Internet access is growing as is the availability of cable television.

But there's much work to be done. Power outages occur almost daily. The municipal water isn't potable. The sewer system has a very limited reach. There is no mass public transportation service in a city of well over 1 million. There's little garbage collection.

Just outside of town, the picture is even starker.

When you travel out to the provinces, it's like stepping back in time. Once you get off the main highway, there are no paved roads. Many homes are simple wooden shacks with thatch roofs. Naked children play with sticks in the road next to ditches that are little more than open sewers.

Electricity comes from generators that operate a few hours a day. Health care is almost non-existent. The rice grown in the fields hardly supplies enough grain for each family's yearly needs.

Not all provincial families live in dire poverty. But the majority do.

The young people don't want the same life their parents have. They want more. And they're willing to work for it. Many of them turn to the garment factories, where by working six to seven days a week, ten to twelve hours a day, they can make $100 a month. In country where unemployment can reach 50%, that's a nice sum of money. But it's not much of a life.

Others realize that education is their ticket to a better future. The church we visited and were working with offers free English and computer classes. Over 200 students jam every available room of the building four nights a week.

In addition, all of these kids attend either high school or university during the day. Many of them came from the provinces and plan to send money they earn back home to help support their families.

So if you think the emerging markets‚ is just the latest financial talk point, think again. The story in Cambodia is the same story all over Asia.

These people want a better life. They want a higher standard of living. They are becoming educated. Their countries are only beginning to improve their infrastructure. Astute companies from around the world are investing big bucks into these economies. And the growth is only going to increase.

This isn't a five year fad. It will take decades for these countries to grow into modern nations. But there's no going back. The young people we met are determined and focused. This generation will do what it takes to succeed.

Your generation worked very hard to achieve financial security. In today's changing global marketplace, you'll have to invest smarter in order to maintain it. In next week's article, I'll give you practical steps to take advantage of the opportunities these emerging markets provide.

If you have a specific question or would like more information, give me a call toll-free at 1-877-827-1463 or you can also reach me by email at jeff@guardingyourwealth.com. I will answer your financial question FREE.