Showing posts with label Kampot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kampot. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Life still slow in Cambodian beach towns

July 25, 2012
Neda Vanovac
AAP

A ninja delivers a high kick to a cow before punching it in the udder, and the cow, on its hind legs, squirts him with milk. The Cambodians on the bus around us roar with laughter.

We're trundling along a two-lane highway in Cambodia's south, heading for the coast. It's sweltering in here, and the American kung-fu pastiche is the only entertainment on board.

Outside, we pass statue after statue crowning highway roundabouts, all points of regional pride: a crab, a salt-panning couple, a Khmer princess standing atop a crocodile - and a rhinoceros, whose significance I can't decipher.

This wasn't quite how I expected to find Cambodian history, in a country known more for the tragedy of its past than the quirks of its present.

While the vast majority of visitors to the country flock to the magnificent temples of Angkor Wat in the West, smaller, quieter beach towns provide just as much of an insight to the Cambodian psyche.

Kampot and Kep are two coastal spots that visitors are slowly discovering - with an emphasis on the slow. Life here is not to be rushed.

Monday, March 05, 2012

Monday, February 13, 2012

Barging in uninvited

A capsized barge that had been used for transporting sand lies rusting in the Kampong Bay estuary on Saturday. Three barges lie partly submerged in the estuary. WILL BAXTER
Workers use a crane to dredge sand from the bottom of the Kampong Bay estuary, in Kampot province, on Friday. Will Baxter
Fishermen Ham Math (centre) and Y Seu (right), from Kampong Kreng commune in Teuk Chhou district, say dredging is affecting the local environment. will baxter
Monday, 13 February 2012
David Boyle and Phak Seangly
The Phnom Penh Post

A sorry sight pierces the pristine waters of the Kampong Bay estuary, in Kampot province: the rusty hull of a sand-dredging barge that has capsized and been abandoned in the middle of the waterway.

The rusting hulk is one of three upside-down, partly submerged barges that Kampot residents will not be adding to the area’s long list of tourist attractions.

The barges that remain upright are busy plundering the estuary of sand in yet another dredging operation being recklessly conducted on one of Cambodia’s picturesque waterways.

Now, yet another segment of the country’s population find themselves dismayed as the fish stocks they rely on dwindle, seafood prices rise and tourists gaze uncomfortably at the giant eyesores spoiling the serenity.

Ham Math, 60, from Kampong Kreng commune’s Mak Brang fishing village, says most people in his community wouldn’t dare raise their concerns about the dredging because the company is too politically connected.

Our villagers are afraid of Yuon [a derogatory term for Vietnamese people] and do not dare to blame them. Their boss has power,” he says.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Monday, July 18, 2011

Measures needed to curb gambling in Cambodian casinos [... for Viet gamblers; Will Hanoi punish Hun Xen?]

July, 18 2011
VNS

HCM CITY — Viet Nam needs to develop strict regulations to forbid Vietnamese gambling abroad and create severe sanctions for people who organise or influence others who do so, said an official.

"Many families have gone bankrupt or sold their property to cover gambling losses in Cambodia," said Mai Van Huynh, chairman of Ha Tien People's Committee.

The number of robbery and swindling cases has grown rapidly.

Local authorities know that Vietnamese people gamble in Cambodian casinos but Vietnamese law cannot be applied to those citizens who gamble or organise gambling outside of Viet Nam's territory, Huynh said.

Saturday, July 09, 2011

More than 120 poisoned

Friday, 08 July 2011
Thet Sambath
The Phnom Penh Post

MORE than 120 villagers have now been poisoned after drinking water contaminated with herbicides which flowed into a fresh water creek in Kampot, a doctor said yesterday.

Nob Neb, chief of the disease and emergency building at Chhouk district referral hospital said yesterday another 37 villagers from Trapaing Phlaing commune had been admitted, with symptoms of diarrhoea, vomiting and dizziness.

Around 90 patients were admitted on Tuesday and Wednesday this week.

“Their [condition] is not serious. They just got tired and dizzy”, Nob Neb said. “We have given them medicine tablets and injections”.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Cambodia’s up-and-coming seaside towns


Friday, May 20, 2011
By Dustin Roasa
The Washington Post

As the sun sank over the tree-lined Kampong Bay River, Kampot, a town on Cambodia’s southern coast, stirred to life. The locals, who’d spent much of the day hiding from the heat in their homes and shaded alleys, emerged into the atmospheric streets, where sun-stained, mustard-colored French colonial shop houses provide the backdrop to the rhythms of daily life.

Old men with fedoras and graying sideburns gathered at a corner cafe to play chess, triumphantly thwacking hand-carved pieces against thick wooden boards. Small groups of boys fished on the banks of the river with homemade bamboo poles, while groups of teenagers with mussed and shaggy haircuts and wearing glittery T-shirts yelled “Hello!” and giggled at strolling tourists, who are a small but growing presence in this largely unexplored corner of Southeast Asia.

My wife and I had come here to escape the grit and bustle of Phnom Penh, where we live, and to show my visiting mother-in-law a slice of authentic provincial life. With crumbling historic architecture, largely unspoiled countryside and specialty regional cuisine, Kampot and Kep, seaside towns separated by a 30-minute car ride, are unlike anyplace else in Cambodia.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Dozens injured as Cambodian casino ceiling collapses

May 10, 2011
DPA

Phnom Penh - Thirty gamblers and staff at a Cambodian casino were injured over the weekend when a ceiling collapsed on them while workers were installing security cameras, national media reported Tuesday.

The accident took place Saturday evening at the Sunday Casino in the south-eastern province of Kampot near the border with Vietnam.

The Cambodia Daily newspaper said six Vietnamese gamblers and a Cambodian card dealer were critically injured.

The head of the border crossing, Phan Sophal, told the newspaper that around 100 customers and staff were on the casino floor at the time.

Friday, January 14, 2011

S Korean Court Orders Cambodian Airline To Compensate Families Of Crash Victims

PMT airplane wreckage (Photo: AP)
SEOUL, Jan 14 (Bernama) -- A Seoul court Friday ordered a Cambodian airline to pay 3.2 billion won (US$2.8 million) in compensation to the families of passengers who died in a 2007 plane crash, Yonhap news agency reported.

PMT Air's Antonov An-24 crashed in southern Cambodia in June 2007 on its way to the beach resort town of Sihanoukville from Angkor International Airport in Siem Reap.

All 44 passengers aboard were killed in the accident, including 13 tourists from South Korea.

Eleven family members of the deceased had filed a suit in 2008 seeking 4.5 billion won in compensation, claiming the accident was caused by defects in the small passenger plane as well mistakes by pilots and the local control tower.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Viet fishing boat arrested and turned over to cops by fed up Cambodian fishermen?

The 3 illegal Viet fishermen arrested by Cambodian fishermen (Photo: CEN)

The illegal Viet fishing boat arrested (Photo: CEN)

13 Dec 2010
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Soch

A report from Kampot province indicated that Cambodian fishermen have surrounded one Vietnamese fishing boat which entered Cambodian waters illegally and they turned this boat to the cops for them to take legal measures. This Viet boat was arrested by Cambodian fishermen at 9:30PM on 12 Dec 2010 near the Traloc Moy area, at Treuy Koh village, Kampot province. Three Viet citizens who came illegally to fish in Cambodian waters and one boat were turned to the cops for legal prosecution.

Monday, May 17, 2010

A Day on the SRP Campaign Trail: Kampot Province

Mu Sochua rainsing SRP party sign in Tani commune, Kampot province (All photos: SRP)
Mu Sochua talking to villagers who have gathered for the occasion
Mu Sochua talking to villagers
Dialogue between Mu Sochua and villagers

16-May-2010
Cambodia

At the Tani commune in the Kontrong village, Mu Sochua, deputy Kosal Chin, and commune supporters engaged in putting up an SRP sign. The gathering brought many people from other parties, a product of the SRP's ability to create and restore a democratic and transparent leadership, even at the grassroots level. The new SRP sign is an important symbolic change within the community, signifying that the area is now a place which puts its trust into the Sam Rainsy Party

Kosal Chin, Mu Sochua, and others had a conversation with the commune. Here they spoke about the relationship between the government and the people, stressing that it is the role of the government to listen to the needs of the people and the role of the people is to report problems as well as commentate on progress made within the community.

After the Tani commune, we moved to the Trapaing Rou village for a women's work shop. Here, Mu Sochua talked about important issues concerning the lives of Cambodian women today. She discussed three issues which are themes among Mu Sochua's speeches. She talked about health care and gender, especially concerning reproductive rights and the dangers of pregnancy during delivery. She also brought up matters of education and women while encouraging the women to be a part of the change they wish to see, calling the newly trained women diffuse their ideas to those unable to go to the work shop.

In the Sboundet village, Mu Sochua again had a dialogue expressing the role she has as a representative, stressing that development and freedom is their right, that she is working on their behalf. Here, youth voters discussed how they wanted to vote because they want to have an education and a future. Farmers also discussed corruption in government, as well as poverty and land rights, expressing that farmers have been stuck with the same life inside the village.

Although all of the settings were different in nature, there was one thread pulling them together- a dedication and passion to establishing a just and fair democratic society through a dialogue relationship between and among the people.
-----
By Nicholas Walker-Craig.

About the author: I am currently a Sophomore at the University of Michigan studying Sociology in Ann Arbor, Michigan. I am interning under Mu Sochua and will be mostly working with the Youth Wing of the SRP, and will be in Cambodia until August. I'm very excited and honored to be working with the SRP and Mu Sochua!

Saturday, April 03, 2010

From California to Cambodia, Fighting for Women

“When I hit San Francisco I knew that was my city. I began to shine. I let my hair grow. I looked like a hippie.” Mu Sochua
(Photo: Justin Mott for The New York Times)

April 2, 2010

By SETH MYDANS
The New York Times
MAK PRAING, Cambodia


IT was at Berkeley in the 1970s that Mu Sochua, a shy teenager fleeing a war in Cambodia, learned the thrill of speaking her mind.

The daughter of a well-to-do merchant in Phnom Penh, she had been sent to the West at the age of 18 to study and to be safe from the fighting that later brought the brutal Khmer Rouge regime to power.

“When I hit San Francisco I knew that was my city,” said Ms. Mu Sochua, who is now 55. “I began to shine. I let my hair grow. I looked like a hippie.” She learned English, she said, by listening to the Beatles.

She earned a master’s degree in social work from Berkeley and transformed herself enthusiastically from a demure traditional Cambodian woman to one who knew her rights and was not shy about demanding them.

That is her problem today as the most prominent female member of Parliament, a leader of the country’s struggling political opposition and a campaigner for women’s rights in a society where women are still expected to walk and speak with a becoming deference.

“I have to be careful not to push things too far,” she said in a recent interview on the campaign trail here in southern Cambodia. “I have to be very, very careful about what I bring from the West, to promote women’s rights within the context of a society that is led by men,” she said.

“In the Cambodian context, it’s women’s lib. It’s feminism. It’s challenging the culture, challenging the men.”

She has this in mind as she campaigns through the villages of Kandal Province, a woman with power but a woman nonetheless. “I walk into a cafe and I have to think twice, how to be polite to the men,” she said. “I have to ask if I can enter. This is their turf.”

Ms. Mu Sochua is a member of a new generation of female leaders who are working their way into the political systems of countries across Asia and elsewhere, from local councils to national assemblies and cabinet positions.

A former minister of women’s affairs, she did as much as anybody to put women’s issues on the agenda of a nation emerging in the 1990s from decades of war and mass killings.

During six years as minister, Ms. Mu Sochua campaigned against child abuse, marital rape, violence against women, human trafficking and the exploitation of female workers. She helped draft the country’s Prevention of Domestic Violence law.

In part because of her work, she said, “People are aware about gender. It’s a new Cambodian word: ‘gen-de.’ People are aware that women have rights.”

But she lost her public platform in 2004 when she broke with the government and joined the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, and she is finding it as difficult now to promote her ideas as to gain attention as a candidate.

LIKE dissidents and opposition figures in many countries, she has found herself with a new burden, battling for her own rights. As she has risen in prominence, her political stands have become more of a political liability than her gender.

Most recently, she has been caught in a bizarre tit-for-tat exchange of defamation suits with the country’s domineering prime minister, Hun Sen, in which, to nobody’s surprise, she was the loser.

It started last April here in Kampot Province when Mr. Hun Sen referred to her with the phrase “cheung klang,” or “strong legs,” an insulting term for a woman in Cambodia.

She sued him for defamation; he stripped her of her parliamentary immunity and sued her back. Her suit was dismissed in the politically docile courts. On Aug. 4 she was convicted of defaming the prime minister and fined about $4,000, which she has refused to pay.

“Now I live with the uncertainty about whether I’m going to go to jail,” she said. “I’m not going to pay the fine. Paying the fine is saying to all Cambodian women, ‘What are you worth? A man can call you anything he wants and there is nothing you can do.’ ”

Ms. Mu Sochua was still in California when the Khmer Rouge seized power in Cambodia in 1975 and began mass killings that would take 1.7 million lives over the next four years.

“We were waiting, waiting, waiting to hear from our parents,” she said. “They told us they were on the last plane to Paris. They never made it.”

She headed for the Thai border, where refugees were fleeing by the tens of thousands, and it was there that she met her future husband, an American, when both were working in the refugee camps. They have lived together in Cambodia since 1989, where he works for the United Nations, and have three grown children living in the United States and Britain.

Ms. Mu Sochua makes frequent trips into the countryside around their villa, introducing herself to constituents who may never have seen her face. The next parliamentary election is still three years away, but she is already campaigning because she is almost entirely excluded from government-controlled newspapers and television.

She paused politely the other day at the stoop of a small open-fronted noodle shop in this riverside village, where men sat in the midday heat on red plastic chairs. She let her male assistants enter first.

She had succeeded in halting a sand-dredging project that was eroding riverbanks here, and she wanted the men to know that she had been working on their behalf. “I came here to inform you that you got a result from the government,” she told the men, showing them a legal document. “I want to inform you that you have a voice. If you see something wrong, you can stand up and speak about it.”

Asked afterward what it was like to have a woman fighting his battles, Mol Sa, 37, a fisherman, said, “She speaks up for us, so I don’t think she’s any different from a man. Maybe a different lady couldn’t do it, but she can do it because she is strong and not afraid.”

FEAR was a theme as Ms. Mu Sochua moved through the countryside here.

At another village where cracks were appearing in the sandy embankment, a widow named Pal Nas, 78, said the big dredging boats had scared her.

“I’m afraid that if I speak out they will come after me,” she said. “In the Khmer Rouge time they killed all the men. When night comes I don’t have a man to protect me. It’s more difficult if you are a woman alone.”

Mr. Hun Sen’s ruling party holds power through most of rural Cambodia, and Ms. Mu Sochua said party agents kept an eye on her as she campaigned. At one point a man on a motorbike took photographs of her and her companions with a mobile telephone, then drove away.

Later, as the sun began to set, a farmer greeted her warmly, calling out to his wife and climbing a tree to pick ripe guavas for her.

“I voted for you,” he said as he handed her the fruit. “But don’t tell anyone.”

Monday, February 22, 2010

A Woman's Face in Opposition

Mu Sochua of Cambodia is a member of a new generation of women working their way into the political systems of countries across Asia and elsewhere. As an incumbent, she is already campaigning for the 2013 parliamentary elections. Ms. Mu Sochua in Kampot meeting with constituents. (All photos: Justin Mott for The New York Times)
Ms. Mu Sochua, 55, is the most prominent woman in Cambodia's struggling political opposition. She toured the countryside by foot along the river in Kampot.
A former minister of women's affairs, she did as much as anyone to put women's issues on the agenda of Cambodia as it emerged in the 1990s from decades of war and mass killings. But she lost her public platform when she broke with the government in 2004.
Her signal achievement was leading the way for women into thousands of government positions; however, she says it has done little to advance women's issues in a stubbornly male-dominated society. Ms. Mu Sochua toured a salt mine in Kampot.
As she has risen in prominence, the political stands she has taken have become a greater liability to her than gender bias has been. A Cham village in Kampot was one of Ms. Mu Sochua's stops.
As an outspoken opponent of the prime minister, she has found, her participation taints any group, action or demonstration with the stigma of political opposition. "My voice kills the movement," she said. "Now I am the face of the opposition, a woman's face in opposition." Ms. Mu Sochua handed out campaign pamphlets in Kampot.
During her six years as minister of women's affairs, she campaigned against child abuse, marital rape, violence against women, human trafficking and the exploitation of female workers. A taxi driver held a pamphlet about Ms. Mu Sochua while listening to her speak about local politics.
Over the years, Ms. Mu Sochua has worked with nongovernmental groups to field thousands of candidates in local elections. Largely because of her activism, there are now 27 women in a National Assembly of 123 seats.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Cambodia's Sand for Sale

Vietnamese boats used by a local company to dredge sand from a 42 hectare area in Teuk Chhou district.

Amid villagers' protests, MP Mu Sochua's requested clarification from the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy which authorized a local company to dredge sand to be sold outside of Cambodia, Kampot local authorities ordered a temporary suspension of the dredging operations. The company which used Vietnamese boats for its operations along the Kampot river, was allowed to dredge in a 42-hectare area despite the 2009 ban of exportation of sand by the Prime Minister.

The heavy dredging operations have caused visible collapse of the river bank and a threat to the villagers' live hoods and the growth of the famous chak or water palms of Kampot.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Public Forum of CCHR in Kampot Province on May 8, 2009 (Part 4)


CCHR's latest public forum (Chi Kreng) as well as other previous forums are available on Youtube. Please click this following link to watch them online:

Friday, December 18, 2009

Battered Border Road Looks for a Revamp

By Ros Sothea, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
17 December 2009


An old motorbike with two large baskets affixed bounces slowly down a bumpy road in Kampot province. The poor condition of the road, which runs to the Prek Chak checkpoint on the Vietnam border, makes it nearly impossible to use, and this driver is one of the few people trying it these days.

Locals, government officials and economists say the ill repair of Kampot’s Road 33 does more than slow motorcycles: it slows trade and economic growth.

“There is no betterment in my business, because the road is too bad, where I have to spend more time and money both for traveling,” said Hun Tan, 51, whose entire business is the transporting of cow collars and plastic sacks from Vietnam for sale in Kampot’s market.

Every two or three days, Hun Tan drives Road 33 to Vietnam and back, netting around 30,000, or $7, per trip. The bad roads, he said recently, mean “no progress in trade activities or tourism.”

The Prek Chak border crossing, which links Kampot to Vietnam’s An Giang province, is a potential economic route for what analysts call the Mekong’s Southern Economic Corridor.

“Business remains the same, and people are still poor, because nothing has been improved these past few years,” said Chiv Sothea, deputy chief of CamControl’s Prek Chak operation.

Tun Chanty, who works in the customs office, said only 10 to 20 people cross the border for business purposes each day, putting the trade value at only $6 million a year.

Cambodia exports about $1 million worth of goods each year, including seafood, mangoes and vegetables, he said. It imports around $5 million in beans, oil and spices.

To boost trade, Prek Chak was made an international border point in 2008, but it remains one of the quietest of crossings, thanks to 15 kilometers of Road 33.

The quiet border benefits only around 18,000 of the province’s 600,000 people, said Ouk Sarath, secretary-general of Kampot municipality. That number will rise if Road 33 is fixed, he said.

Construction on the road is expected to begin next year, with $15 million from the Asian Development Bank and the Australian government, matched with $3.7 million from the government.

A portion of the funds will be used to build new checkpoints, including at Prek Chak.

Within five years, said Eric Sidgwick, a senior economist for the ADB, people will benefit from increased trade activities, which will help the government be less reliant on the garment industry.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Kampot fishermen protest Vietnamese fishing boats in Cambodian waters

Vietnamese boat sellers in Pursat province (Photo: Ouk Savborey, RFA)

21 October 2009

By Ouk Savborey
Radio Free Asia
Translated from Khmer by Socheata
Click here to read the article in Khmer


On 20 October, more than 200 Cambodian fishermen showed up at the Kampot provincial office to demand that the authority stop illegal Vietnamese fishing boats that came in large number into the Cambodian sea waters. The presence of these Vietnamese boats disrupts and affects the livelihood of Cambodian fishermen.

El Nget, a representative of the fishermen who were protesting in front of the Kampot provincial office, claimed: “The Viets came to drag [fish] in shallow water, the same area that our people are living in currently. It’s difficult to make a living, we can’t find fish.”

Prom Dul Kraim, a fisherman from Daun Toak village, Treuy Koh commune, said that his group does not own rice field land, and it only depends on fishing. If the Vietnamese fishing boats are allowed to come in freely, his group will lose its livelihood and nobody will have the money to pay more than 400,000 riels ($100) [in fishing license fee] to the state coffer.

Prom Dul Karim said: “They come to take away our job, they brought in large dragging boats inside our Cambodian territories. Our Cambodian people cannot earn a living, everything went down.”

El Soeu indicated that he couldn’t catch fish, however, the Vietnamese boats equipped with modern equipments use nets to comb out all the baby fishes, crabs, shrimps, snails. Furthermore, the Cambodian fishery department did not raid these illegal Vietnamese boats that violated the Cambodian sea waters, but they only came to ask money from the Cambodian fishermen instead, telling the Cambodian fishermen to pay 430,000 riels (~$110) per year.

El Soeu indicated: “Now, it’s time to pay the fishery department. Each year, we have to pay 430,000 riels. But, with the large amount of fishing [from the Vietnamese boats], I couldn’t catch anything. Where do I find the money to pay [the fishery department]?”

Ung Set, another fisherman, said: “We have to pay 430,000 riels to the fishery department every year. We cannot earn the money.”

After the fishermen gathered in front of the Kampot provincial office, three of their representatives were called in for negotiation. Man No, one of the three representatives, claimed that the provincial authority and the fishery department, as well as the police department promise to raid these illegal Viet boats that catch fish inside Cambodian waters and affect the livelihood of the Cambodian people.

RFA attempted to meet with Mr. Sor Sarin, the chief of the Kampot fishery department, and Mr. Khuoy Khun Huor, the Kampot provincial governor, and his deputy to obtain a clarification on their [promised] intervention help as the Cambodian fishermen requested, but all of them declined to comment.

Mrs. Try Chhoon, the official of a human rights group in Kampot province, declared that the fishermen have protested for several years already about the illegal fishing conducted by the Viet boats inside Cambodian waters, but the authority and the fishery department seems to be afraid that problems could arise and they all act as if they never saw these illegal Viet fishing boats.

The protesting fishermen revealed that this is not their first time protesting. They have protested many times already, but nothing came out of them.

The protesters warned that if this time, the authority does not take action to raid these Viet boats that came to destroy Cambodia’s fishery with their modern equipments, they will go to Phnom Penh to protest in front of the National Assembly to seek for a resolution.