Showing posts with label Sydney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sydney. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Meet SRP MP Mu Sochua in Sydney, Australia on Friday 20 April 2012



Mu Sochua

Mu Sochua, a recent Nobel Peace Prize nominee, is one of the most prominent women in Cambodian politics. For over twenty years, she has been at the forefront of her country’s efforts for democratic reform, free elections, and human rights.

Hailed by The New York Times as a “a member of a new generation of women working their way into the political systems of countries across Asia,” Sochua is combating the tragedies of human trafficking by empowering women to seek political office and fighting for free elections to ensure the voices of Cambodian voters are heard. In 2002, Sochua helped to mobilize 12,000 women candidates to run in the commune elections. Over 900 were elected, ushering in a new generation of female leadership in Cambodia.

Called “Cambodia’s fearless heroine” by The Daily Beast and a “passionate fighter for girls and women” by O Magazine, Mu Sochua has been courageous in her opposition to an oppressive regime that limits democratic freedom and turns a blind eye to human rights abuses. In 2009, she went toe-to-toe with the Prime Minister in a public dispute that risked landing her in jail.

Born and raised in Phnom Penh, at age 18 Sochua was forced to flee to the United States when war and genocide took hold of her native land. Her parents were killed by the Khmer Rouge, along with over two million fellow Cambodians.

In the United States, Sochua excelled in her studies and received a master’s degree from the University of California Berkeley’s School of Social Welfare. After 18 years of exile, she returned to Cambodia and found her country transformed into what Time magazine called "a pervert’s paradise" where women and girls were traded like currency. Accompanying sex workers on their nightly “shifts”, Sochua saw first-hand the dangers that befall these young girls (many below the age of 16) on a nightly basis.

She set out on a career defending the rights of women, laborers and farmers. She has since walked through hundreds of villages, encouraging women to take more active leadership roles in local democracy, and has prompted her government to allow democratic expression in the form of free and fair elections.

In 1993, Sochua succeeded in incorporating strong provisions into the Cambodian Constitution, improving human and women’s rights across the nation. With support from the United Nations Fund for Women, Sochua helped to organize Cambodian women’s participation in the 1995 UN Fourth World Conference for Women. She arranged for over a thousand women to travel to Beijing for the conference, many of them from indigenous populations.

In 1998, Sochua won a parliamentary seat in a northwestern province of Cambodia, one of the nation’s most devastated regions. In the same year, Sochua became Minister of Women and Veterans' Affairs, one of only two women to join the cabinet. As a Cabinet member, Sochua authored the Domestic Violence Law, and negotiated an agreement with Thailand to curtail human trafficking in Southeast Asia and allow Cambodian women trafficked as sex slaves to return home instead of being jailed as criminals. Sochua also launched a campaign to engage NGOs, law enforcement officials, and rural women in a national dialogue on women's development.

Ultimately dissatisfied with the ruling Government's corruption and poor governance, Sochua joined the Sam Rainsy opposition party to fight corruption and focus on democracy and human rights. In 2006, Sochua was elected Secretary General of the Sam Rainsy Party and became the first female Secretary General of a political Party in Cambodia. She is currently the president of the Party’s Women's Wing and has received the party's approval to put at least 450 women on winning positions for the 2012 local elections.

Along with her nomination by the Nobel Committee, Sochua is also the recipient of the Vital Voices' Human Rights Global Leadership Award, presented by then-Senator Hillary Clinton.

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

Khmer M'chas Srok's Conference in Sydney, Australia - 5-6 August 2011


Dr. Chak Sakhonn, President of Khmer Mchas Srok
Mr. Shwe Myint, the representative of the Burmese Association in Australia

Mr. Kat Dittavong, president of the Lao Community in Australia

Profesor Paul Redmond Chair; Diplomacy Training Program.
Former Dean Faculty of Law ,University of New South Wales.

Professor Hon. Gareth Evans

The Cultural  Khmer Music Band welcomes the Conference.

Professor Hon. Gareth Evans & Dr. Chak Sakhonn.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Khmer Super Model Fashion Show again in Sdyney 6 August 2011 (?)

Due to a strong urge of Khmer community in Sydney, the Khmer Community of NSW State Inc., is again organizing the Khmer traditional fashion show on 5 August 2011. Attached is the information Poster.

Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Opposition leader Sam Rainsy at lunch hosted by International Commission of Jurists

H.E Sam Rainsy at lunch hosted by the Executive Committee of the International Commission of Jurists 25 November 2010, Sydney, Australia (http://www.icj-aust.org.au/)
  • Honorable John Dowd, Queen Counsel, President of the International Commission of Jurists, Australian National Chapter, and Chair of the Executive Committee of the International Commission of Jurists, Geneva.
  • Mr. Steve Mark, Lawyer, Chair of the ICJ Council, Australia; (he is also the Commissioner of the Office of the Legal Services, Australia) 
  • Mr. Philip Waroll, Lawyer, Head of the Subcommittee on Cambodia, ICJ Australia
  • Mr. Christopher Roper, Lawyer, Secretary General of the Judicial Conference of the State of New South Wales, Australia.





Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Welcome Dinner for Opposition Leader Sam Rainsy's Visit to Australia

On 27 November 2010, 400 people attended a dinner to welcome the visit of opposition leader Sam Rainsy's visit to Sydney, Australia. Each of the guests paid $35 to attend this welcoming event.




Friday, October 09, 2009

Drink driving stats don't tell the full story

Friday, October 09, 2009
By western Sydney reporter George Roberts
ABC News (Australia)


"She was seven times over the legal blood alcohol limit and had a baby in the back of the car. We don't have a name for her, but it should be pretty easy to find out who she is with a case like that..."

It was my first time reporting from the courts and that was the mission the Chief of Staff sent me on.

Liverpool Local Court in Sydney's west was packed, and it was my job to find one woman whose case was newsworthy for two reasons:

Firstly, driving a car with such an astronomically high level of alcohol in her blood stream was astounding; secondly, the danger to the baby gave the case an added level of interest and raised so many questions.

Who would put a child at such risk? What mother would be so negligent?

I set about trying to find the woman among the many young mothers who lined the lobby of the courthouse.

I asked at the registry, I asked lawyers and security guards and pretty much anyone who looked like they might know what was going on in court that day.

Soon there was a team of journalists from various outlets all clubbing together to find out which woman we were after and which court she would turn up in.

"Just ask the prosecutor," said the chief of staff on duty that day.

"There can't be too many people with seven times the legal alcohol limit and a baby in the back of the car."

I agreed. It should have been easy, but I had already approached the prosecutors in all four court rooms and the conversations were almost exactly the same.

"Excuse me, sir/madam, I'm sorry to bother you but I'm George from the ABC and I'm trying to find this case except I don't have a name...."

I would then explain the details, expecting there could only be one such case.

But prosecutor after prosecutor pointed to piles of files and replied, "See those, they're ALL drink driving offences, it could be any one of those."

I was amazed and so were the other reporters, but we needed to find this case.

It was just after ten in the morning and there was only one option.

We split up and sat through case after case of driving offences of various kinds, apprehended violence orders and domestic violence orders.

Apart from a woman who sold a pony that did not exist, the rest of the day was alarmingly monotonous.

Eventually by about 4pm we had narrowed it down and all the reporters gathered in the one court room to observe the case.

It was not what we had expected.

A Cambodian refugee in her 50's was seen swerving across three lanes on the wrong side of the Hume Highway, as her baby granddaughter sat in the back seat.

The woman's daughter translated, telling the court that her mother had been drinking because she had been recovering from a broken leg and had forgotten her painkillers. She had heard her daughter was in hospital and got in the car after "a small cup of wine."

When Police eventually managed to pull her over, she struggled to blow into the breathalyser to record a reading, either because she was too drunk or because she did not understand.

After multiple attempts she registered the enormous blood alcohol reading of 0.386 per cent.

Back at the station she was unable to give a proper breath test into the official machine so she was charged and later pleaded guilty to refusing to give a breath test.

That charge carries the same penalty as a high range drink driving offence and she was ultimately fined $3,000 and banned from driving for three years.

This case was fascinating to a bunch of young journalists who were expecting a young foolish mother to be standing before the court and not a 52-year-old grandmother who had fled Pol Pot's regime for a better life in Australia.

What really struck me though was just how many drink driving cases were being heard in that court that day.

Across New South Wales last year 23,210 people faced court for drink driving and 5,695 of those were in western Sydney.

I'm in no way advocating drink driving, but consider this: Unless you are swerving across lanes of traffic, then getting caught for drink driving is unlucky.

It is a matter of probability.

I have only been pulled over and breath-tested four times in my life and never blown a reading.

But I drive almost every day, so if I drank and drove every day, then I would only have been caught four times in my 12 years as a driver.

On that basis, it is fair to extrapolate that the 23,210 people caught may only represent a fraction of the people that risk drink driving every year, every week, every day.

Next week, that court and many like it will be packed with cases again. Despite the billboards and the ad campaigns, people continue to risk their lives and the lives of others by getting behind the wheel drunk.

You share the road with them.

Friday, January 02, 2009

Suicide family [from Cambodia] coaxed from bridge

January 02, 2009
By Gemma Jones
The Daily Telegraph (Sydney, Australia)


THE wife and children of a man who jumped to his death off a bridge on the F3 had to be coaxed by police off the outer railing after he leaped.

Police officers following the Cabramatta family's car on the Brooklyn Bridge probably prevented a murder-suicide on New Year's Eve by talking the woman and two children down from the bridge's edge.

Officers were too late to save their husband and father, whose body has still not been found.

It was unclear if the children had been coerced by their father to follow him over the 20m drop to almost certain death about 9.30am on Wednesday.

Police are investigating whether the children may have been drugged before their father drove them - extremely slowly - north along the F3 to the bridge.

"Two officers acted quickly to grab a 39-year-old woman as she also climbed to the outside railing and drag her back to safety,'' a police spokeswoman said yesterday.

"Police also intercepted a girl aged 9 and boy aged 7 as they too climbed the bridge railing.''

Superintendent Peter Marcon praised the officers for preventing a bigger tragedy and for their quick thinking in securing a boat to begin a search for the man.

"The officers acted quickly to avert a far more serious situation on the bridge, then were in a boat searching for the missing man only minutes after he jumped,'' he said.

"The officers involved will be commended for their actions.''

The mother and children, who are believed to be from Cambodia, were treated at Hornsby Hospital.

Police needed interpreters to speak with the mother.

Authorities will resume a search of the Hawkesbury River today.

An underwater search was called off at 10.30am yesterday because of strong currents, while Polair and State Emergency Service personnel continued searching for an hour.

"We do not hold out much chance for his survival,'' Inspector Steve Martlew said.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Report of Sam Rainsy's visit to Sydney, Australia

Thu, 21 Feb 2008
By Khema
Sydney, Australia


Opposition leader Sam Rainsy, President of the Sam Rainsy Party, arrived in Sydney, Australia, at 1 PM, on 15 February 2008. He was accompanied by Mr. Khy Vandeth, Sam Rainsy Party chief for Kampong Chhnang province.

After a warm welcome by many party members in Australia, Mr. Sam Rainsy gave a lengthy interview to SBS Radio station Khmer program.

Following a brief rest, Mr. Sam Rainsy visited Mrs. Kim Lang Thoeung, a long time and committed party member and supporter, who is terminally ill at Braeside Hospital, Fairfield, Eastern Sydney Suburb. Holding her hand at her bedside Mr. Sam Rainsy paid his deep respect and thanked her for all the hard work and contributions she had made toward the party and her country for many years. He prayed for her soul and at the same time offered sympathetic encouragement to the grieving family members gathering around her. Mr. Sam Rainsy also firmly assured her that the Party will win the July national elections and that her efforts to date will not be in vain.

At this public hospital Mr. Sam Rainsy was very impressed with the high standard of health care service provided free of charge and human dignity and respect accorded to their sick citizens by the Australian Government.


At 6 PM on that same day, Messrs. Sam Rainsy and Khy Vandeth visited a group of Khmer farmers and supporters and enjoyed a Barbeque party with them at Wetherill Park, Eastern Sydney suburb. The pair exchanged views and information about Australian farming, they were also impressed with the high standard of living of farmers in Australia . They went on to update our compatriots on the latest situation in Cambodia.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

$35 million ice shipment from Cambodia seized in Sydney

$35 million Sydney ice bust

December 20, 2007
Paul Bibby
The Sydney Morning Herald


One man was arrested in a federal police operation in south-west Sydney last night over the importation of an $35 million ice shipment from Cambodia.

The man was charged with importing 105kg of ephedrine, a substance used to make crystal methylamphetamine.

He was arrested during a police operation at a residential address in Greenacre last night.

The 23-year-old man has appeared in Sydney Central Local Court today and faces a maximum penalty of two years in jail or a $44,000 fine.

An Australian Federal Police spokeswoman said the ephedrine was packed into 122 coffee sample bags in three containers.

"The drugs were discovered by customs officials when checking air cargo at Mascot earlier this week" she said.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

[Cambodian] Woman arrested 'with heroin package in her body'

July 31, 2007
The Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)

A 42-year-old Cambodian woman, who allegedly had a package of heroin concealed in her body on arrival in Sydney, has been charged with heroin trafficking.

Customs and Australian Federal Police officers alleged that she swallowed a package of the drug before she arrived at Sydney International Airport on a flight from Bangkok last night.

A joint Customs-AFP statement said the women had been stopped for a baggage search, during which customs officers became suspicious that she was concealing drugs internally.

The AFP took her to a hospital and an internal examination found a package 15 centimetres long and five centimetres wide.

The total weight was 175 grams.

She was expected to face Sydney Local Central Court later today.

Monday, May 28, 2007

Woman charged with drug trafficking at Sydney airport

Monday, May 28, 2007
ABC News (Australia)

A Cambodian woman has been charged with importing illegal drugs into Australia after being detained at Sydney airport.

The 36-year-old woman arrived on a flight from Bangkok on Saturday.

Customs officers questioned her and suspected she may have been concealing drugs.

Australian Federal Police then allegedly found a small package of heroin in her possession.

She was charged with importing a marketable quantity of a proscribed drug.