Showing posts with label Phnom Penh city. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phnom Penh city. Show all posts

Friday, August 03, 2012

Boeung Tumpun in Phnom Penh - Photos and Video by Theary Seng

Boeung Tumpun-tur​ned sewage system for capital, growing fish and vegetables for the capital -- the heart (center) of Phnom Penh. The smell is so thick and tangible, that it will take a long shower to wash away the poisonous odor.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvt0KYwuCiw

What you see in the video:

Man fishing in poisonous wastes of Boeung Tumpum (All Photos: Theary Seng)
Poisonous wastes of Boeung Tumpum of Phnom Penh--the stink of the sewage enough to make a person faint


Black sewage wastes of Boeung Tumpum where thousands of families live, Phnom Penh
Filling up Boeung Tumpun, the other "Boeung Kak" also in Phnom Penh, and without creating sewage system for the capital--t​his Thursday
Filling up Boeung (lake) Tumpun
Vegetables and fishing in the black sewage lake (or, what is left) of Boeung Tumpun, immediatel​y across the street from other photos where land being filled in the once natural lake-turne​d massive sewage system for the capital
The water is as black and almost as thick as crude oil--the vegetables and fish are feeding the capital

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Phnom Penh By Night 2012

On the left is the Canadia Bank building and on the right the taller one is the Vattanac Bank building (to be completed 2013 but now Tower 1 already open for occupation in August 2012)
----
La tour de gauche c'est Canadian Bank et la tour de droite c'est Vattananc Bank (en cours de construction, complétée 2013 mais leur Tour no 1 est déjà ouverte pour occupation en Août 2012)

Friday, October 21, 2011

ទឹកលិចផ្ទះពលរដ្ឋនៅភ្នំពេញ - Flooded houses in Phnom Penh

2011-10-20

ស្ថានភាពទឹកជំនន់ទន្លេបាសាក់ត្រូវពលរដ្ឋរស់នៅក្នុងខណ្ឌមានជ័យ អះអាងថា ទឹកស្ថិតនៅនឹង គឺមិនស្រក និងមិនឡើង ចាប់តាំងពីរសៀលថ្ងៃទី១៩ មកដល់ថ្ងៃទី២០ ខែតុលា ឆ្នាំ២០១១។

ពលរដ្ឋនៅក្នុងសង្កាត់និរោធ ខណ្ឌមានជ័យ រាជធានីភ្នំពេញ ត្អូញត្អែរ ពីការលំបាក សម្រាប់ ពួកគាត់ អ្នករស់ នៅក្បែរទឹក និងនៅលើទឹកនោះ គឺការធ្វើដំណើរ ការខ្វះខាតអាហារ និងបាត់បង់មុខរបរ។

សូមស្ដាប់សេចក្ដីរាយការណ៍របស់អ្នកស្រី អ៊ុក សាវបូរី៖

រូបថតថ្ងៃទី២០ តុលា ឆ្នាំ២០១១ ដោយវិទ្យុអាស៊ីសេរី/អ៊ុក សាវបូរី

Residents who face flood from the Bassac River claimed that the water level remains unchanged between the afternoon of 19 and 20 October.

Residents of Niroth commune, Meanchey district, Phnom Penh, complained about difficulties faced by residents living near or on flooded areas: they have difficulties traveling, face food shortage and lose their jobs.

The following photos were filed by RFA’s Ouk Savborey on 20 October 2011:

ទឹកលិចផ្ទះពលរដ្ឋនៅសង្កាត់និរោធ ខណ្ឌមានជ័យ។ - Flooded houses in Niroth commune, Meanchey district

កុមារដើរឆ្លងទឹកទៅសាលារៀន។ - A child seen crossing the flooded area to go to school

ទឹកជន់លិចសាលារៀនគថ្លង់របស់អង្គការគ្រួសារថ្មី។ - Flooded school

អ្នកយកព័ត៌មានវិទ្យុអាស៊ីសេរី សម្ភាសពលរដ្ឋដែលធ្វើដំណើរទៅផ្សារដោយជិះពោងកង់ឡាន។ - RFA reporter interviewed a woman who used a tire as her raft

កុមារីចែវពោងកង់ឡានដើម្បីទទួលម្ដាយមកពីផ្សារវិញ។ - A young girl uses her tire-raft to fetch her mom from the market

ពលរដ្ឋយកឈើតធ្វើស្ពានដើម្បីឆ្លងចូលផ្ទះដែលទឹកលិច នៅសង្កាត់និរោធ ខណ្ឌមានជ័យ រាជធានីភ្នំពេញ។ - Makeshift wooden walkway to reach a flooded house

ពលរដ្ឋដែលរងគ្រោះដោយទឹកជន់លិចផ្ទះ ផ្ដល់បទ សម្ភាសន៍ នៅជម្រក បណ្ដោះអាសន្ន របស់គាត់ជិតរបងវត្តសំពោងផលអណ្ដែត រាជធានីភ្នំពេញ។ - Flooded resident talked to RFA reporter from her temporary shelter next to the fence of Sampong Phal Andet Pagoda in Phnom Penh

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Ban to alcohol ad in Phnom Penh

Source: http://www.phnompenh.gov.kh/news-halt-of-all-kinds-of-wine-advertising-at-public-places-1893.html

Kingdom of Cambodia
Nation Religion King

Phnom Penh Capital Hall
No.13

Phnom Penh, 20th September 2011


Instruction
on
Halt of All Kinds of Wine Advertising at Public in Phnom Penh

Having seen that drunk drivers cause traffic accidents and even lose lives as well as damaging public properties, Phnom Penh Capital Hall would like to issue following instruction with an aim to decrease traffic accidents:
  1. From today onward, owners of producing or distributing companies including advertising companies must stop activities of all kinds of wines advertising at the public places in Phnom Penh.
  2. At the end of 2011, Phnom Penh Capital Hall will take actions to remove any wine-related advertising without bearing any responsibility.
Upon receiving this instruction, Phnom Penh Capital Hall hops and believes that owners of wine producing and distributing companies including advertising companies in Phnom Penh will cooperate to effectively implement this instruction.

Phnom Penh Governor
KEP Chuk Tema


Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Cambodia a capital success [... only for the rich and powerful]

Jun 22, 2011
By Julie Masis
Asian Times Online

PHNOM PENH - Cambodia's capital today is unrecognizable compared with five years ago. Then the tallest structure was a seven-story hotel and vast areas of the city would have appeared dark due to a lack of reliable electricity.

Now there are nine buildings of 20 or more stories and 55 structures of between 10 and 19 stories, according to the city's department of construction. More high-rises are on the way: projects have been approved to build at least 200 additional buildings with more than 10 floors, including a 60-story skyscraper.

New apartment blocks are proliferating and land prices are soaring, to as high as US$3,000 a square meter from around $100 five years ago.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Cambodia tries to bring order to its address books

Allowing Cambodians to decide whether to display addresses on their property led to chaotic, incorrect home addresses. Phnom Penh authorities are now trying to instill some order.

May 17, 2011
By Julie Masis, Correspondent
The Christian Science Monitor
Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Everyone will soon have an easier time finding addresses in Cambodia’s capital. For the first time since the civil war in the 1970s, the government of the city announced that it would distribute standardized street-number plates to homeowners starting this month. According to Moeung Sophan, the deputy director of the Department of Public Works and Transport for the Municipality of Phnom Penh, until now it had been up to the city’s residents themselves to display addresses on their properties – which resulted in a lack of consecutive order, odd and even numbers switching sides of the street, and sometimes more than one property on the same street sharing the same address.

“Some houses still have the numbers from before the war,” Mr. Sophan said. “We will take this occasion to correct house numbers.”

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Impossible to Forget: Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Central Market, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (Austin Bush/Lonely Planet Images)
Five New York Times foreign correspondents (past and present) recall the places that they would go back to if they got the chance.

January 7, 2011
By STEVEN ERLANGER
The New York Times

IT was just a single day in Phnom Penh, one of many, but even now I can’t get it out of my head. The genocide was over — Vietnam, the traditional enemy, had ended it by driving out the Khmer Rouge and setting up a collaborationist government. But in 1988, Cambodia was still mourning. So many people had died, and thousands of refugees, including those who had suffered from the Khmer Rouge and those loyal to it, lived in politicized border camps inside Thailand, waiting for a diplomatic settlement that never quite seemed to arrive.

“All the intelligent Cambodians either fled the Khmer Rouge or were killed by them,” my Cambodian friend and fixer, Phin Chanda, once said to me, lightly, as if joking. “We’re the residue.”

Friday, December 24, 2010

The view from outside the city

Thursday, 23 December 2010
Neang Sokchea & Kounila Keo
The Phnom Penh Post

Ever since urban centres were formed in Cambodia, usually around centres of trade and industrythere has been an understanding gap between people living in the rural areas and people who became accustomed to life in the city.

Ethnic groups tended to stay in the rural areas, and because they have been separated from places like Phnom Penh, they are seen, and often see themselves as foreigners in their own country when they come to the capital city.

In order to facilitate a greater sense of understanding and community between rural and urban populations, Khmer Community Development, officially established in 2005, invited 750 youth from 7 minority groups in Cambodia to join each other for a weekend of dialogue, activities and developing relationships.

Ngach Pheaktra, a tenth grader from Mondulkiri province, took part in the camping activity and said that, because this was his first trip to Phnom Penh, he sometimes felt like an outsider.


“I feel strange walking along the buildings and houses here. They are all made of brick, while our houses back in our villages are made of wood,” he said, adding that his home doesn’t have too many mosquitoes and he rarely goes on difficult journeys, but his homeland does have mountains, trees and wild animals.

Ngach Pheaktra says Phnom Penh seems much more dangerous, with all of the vehicles moving around the city. “I do not feel secure at all when I am in Phnom Penh. I heard of robbery and rape,” he said. “Compared to Phnom Penh, my village is much better off and safer,” he added.

For Kham Sopheap, a 17-year-old and twelfth grader from Rattanakiri province who is part of one of the ethic minorities in the area, told Lift that she can hardly breathe in Phnom Penh, unlike here village where there are plenty of trees and therefore lots of fresh ait. As a child, she faced a discrimination from students who asked her why she even came to school when she could not speak any Khmer. By the time she was eight, however, she was able to speak Khmer well enough to converse with her classmates.

“There are some things I like about Phnom Penh and other things I don’t like,” she said. “I like it for its amusement parks and the Royal Palace, but I certainly do not like when Phnom Penh is too crowded.”

Lat Bunart, an eleventh grader from Ratanakiri, said that she feels like Phnom Penh is a place only for wealthy people, whereas her village doesn’t require people to be rich. “People in my village are so friendly and welcome the poor and the rich, but people here seem so busy with their businesses and work,” she said. “In our village we spend the day farming and have much more free time to enjoy life.”

Friday, December 03, 2010

Phnom Penh Buckles Under Megagrowth

Developers "just do whatever they want," says Ching Chhom Mony, dean of architecture and urbanism at Cambodia's Royal University of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh. "Our city development is like a mistake now," he says.


Cambodian people pray with offerings near the Diamond Gate bridge, site of a stampede at the annual water festival late on Nov. 22 which left nearly 350 people dead. (Agence France-Presse/Getty Images)
DECEMBER 2, 2010
By PATRICK BARTA
The Wall Street Journal

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—The deadly stampede in Cambodia's capital last week is drawing new attention to problems arising from the city's dramatic but pell-mell growth.

A real-estate and economic boom is transforming Phnom Penh from one of the least developed major cities in Asia—it began seeing its first skyscrapers over the past several years—into the unlikely site for plans to build Asia's tallest building. Prime Minster Hun Sen said in September that the 1,820-foot skyscraper, if completed, would trail Dubai's 2,717-foot Burj Khalifa, the tallest in the world, but surpass Taiwan's 1,667-foot Taipei 101, currently Asia's tallest.

Although some residents still doubt the tower will be built, developers have started work on other megaprojects, including four satellite cities that could involve billions of dollars in investment. They are also working on plans for a new stock exchange, a downtown marina and new international hotels.



The construction is coming at a time when growth is already outstripping Phnom Penh's ability to provide basic services such as roads and water, repeating a pattern seen in metropolises such as Bangkok and Jakarta that underwent dramatic—and problematic—transformations when they boomed in the 1970s, '80s and '90s.

Traffic is overwhelming broad avenues laid out under French colonial rule. Human-rights groups say developers are forcing thousands of residents off land in the central city with minimal compensation, and failing to conduct adequate environmental and traffic-impact studies in a rush to cash in.

"It is well known that since 1993, there has been no global urban planning, nor any proper study related to new real-estate zones in connection with sanitary feasibility, urban infrastructure, public transportation" or other key services in Phnom Penh, says Pung Chhiv Kek, president of Licadho, a local human-rights organization that has tracked disputes over land developments and displaced families there.

Developers "just do whatever they want," says Ching Chhom Mony, dean of architecture and urbanism at Cambodia's Royal University of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh. "Our city development is like a mistake now," he says.

Government officials dispute that assessment. Although Phnom Penh's growth has been "overwhelming" in recent years, much of the new development "can benefit Cambodia a lot," says Chhay Rithisen, a director-general at the department of urbanization at Cambodia's Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Construction. He said the government has a master plan for the city through 2020 and that some of the new developments, especially the satellite cities, will help ease congestion with new roads and other infrastructure.

Phnom Penh is better off in many ways than the megacities of India and China, with a metropolitan-area population of only about two million residents. The major new property investments create construction jobs and draw foreign cash into an economy that was starved of outside investment while Asia's other cities grew.

Still, some planners including Mr. Ching Chhom Mony and human-rights advocates say planning failures pose a serious problem for Cambodia—and also played a role in last week's disaster, in which an estimated 350 people were trampled to death as they crossed a bridge connecting downtown Phnom Penh to a river island where a series of concerts were being held.

The island is central to one of Phnom Penh's gleaming new developments, with a new exhibition center, homes priced from $250,000 to $1.5 million, a waterfront promenade, and a hall for ice sculptures. The area, known as Diamond Island, is also expected to include the new megatower, a hospital and a shopping mall.

Such developments come at a time when Phnom Penh is still dominated by low-rise buildings, temples and shophouses, with many residents relying on motorbikes or motorized rickshaws instead of cars.

Critics say the two bridges that now serve the island aren't nearly sufficient to handle the tens of thousands of people who gathered on the island on Nove. 29 or large crowds for other potential events. A spokesman for Diamond Island, which built the bridge where the stampede occurred and which is controlled by a Cambodian tycoon, said the developer is paying compensation to victims and planning more bridges in the future.

"Nobody expected" such a disaster, said the spokesman, Charles Vann. Diamond Island will proceed and ultimately help make Phnom Penh a more livable city, he said.

"Phnom Penh has been left behind for a long time and now they're giving Phnom Penh an opportunity to grow," Mr. Vann said. "If you have a good master plan, I don't think it's a problem. It will benefit the city."

In the 1970s, Phnom Penh's population dropped to 50,000 or fewer after a radical Maoist group known as the Khmer Rouge outlawed private property and forced residents out in a disastrous bid to create an agricultural utopia.

Vietnamese forces toppled the regime in 1979, leading to years of civil war that petered out in the 1990s.

By 2004, Cambodia was posting annual economic growth in excess of 10%. Investors from South Korea and elsewhere were pouring money into the property market, giving the city its first skyscrapers, including a recently completed 32-story tower named after a local bank owned by the investors behind Diamond Island.

Although new developments stopped during the global financial crisis, many have restarted, though some were scaled down to smaller sizes.

Among the most controversial is a massive city-within-a-city developed by a local company on more than 100 hectares of land, much of which used to be covered by a giant lake near the center of Phnom Penh. The Boeung Kak lake is now being drained, displacing as many as 4,000 families, and giant trucks are leveling sand for construction of housing and commercial developments, though full details remain unclear.



Long Vin, a 45-year-old resident in the area, says a company named Shukaku Inc. ripped down four houses she owned along the lake, including three she rented to other residents. Now she lives in a wood-and-corrugated-metal shanty on the edge of a rail line nearby.

Shukaku had offered her about $8,500 for the four homes, she says, but she refused because she thought they were worth $100,000.

The company offered to relocate her to a new community about 30 kilometers from Phnom Penh, she said, but she and other residents have refused to move because they fear relocation areas are too far away, without sufficient jobs or health care.

Efforts to locate officials at Shukaku were unsuccessful. In a local newspaper interview in October, a representative of the company said it was difficult to do such a major development without some negative impact, and referred other questions to the government.

Government officials have said efforts to handle displaced residents may not be perfect but that development is necessary for the city's progress and that conditions for relocated people will improve over time as new infrastructure and jobs are added in their new communities.

—Sun Narin contributed to this article.
Write to Patrick Barta at patrick.barta@wsj.com

Monday, September 13, 2010

Phnom Penh night market

Girls perform in front of a big picture showing Cambodian singers during a concert at a night market in Phnom Penh September 10, 2010. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
People browse clothes at a night market in Phnom Penh September 10, 2010. The sign reads,"Women shorts one for $2 and three for only $5". REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Girls browse clothes at a night market in Phnom Penh September 10, 2010. The sign reads,"Women shorts one for $2 and three for only $5". REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
A vendor waits for customers on the street at a night market in Phnom Penh September 10, 2010. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea

Friday, May 28, 2010

"Today, it's not the state who owns the old properties, but the ruling party, the CPP": Vann Molyvann

Independence Monument; Vann Molyvann, architect (All photos: Luke Duggleby for The Wall Street Journal)
A lone figure walks the stands of Vann Molyvann's Olympic Stadium.
The Chaktomuk Conference Hall, one of Mr. Molyvann's earliest designs, was built in 1961.
The library at the Institute for Foreign Languages, now part of the Royal University of Phnom Penh
More of Mr. Molyvann's work at the Institute for Foreign Languages
Yet more of the institute

Modern Masterpieces

MAY 28, 2010
By TOM VATER
The Wall Street Journal


Vann Molyvann, Cambodia's greatest living architect, recalls that the night his Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh was completed, in 1964, "I took my wife to see the work." Sitting in the top tier of the stands, they listened to Dvorák's "New World Symphony" over the stadium's speaker system. "It was one of the great moments of my life."

In the years after Cambodia won independence from France in 1953, Mr. Molyvann—then scarcely in his 30s—set out under the tutelage of King Norodom Sihanouk to transform Phnom Penh from a colonial backwater into a modern city. But in the late 1960s the country was drawn into decades of war and terror, including years under the murderous Khmer Rouge regime, and Mr. Molyvann's vision was virtually forgotten. The architect himself had to flee the country.

And while he returned in triumph after more than 20 years abroad, it was to find that grand titles didn't translate into influence in today's Cambodia. His legacy—structures in a style dubbed New Khmer Architecture—lives on, contributing significantly to the flair of the city, but even that is in danger as Phnom Penh, like other Asian capitals, clears historic buildings to make room for skyscrapers.

Cambodia is best known for its magnificent temple ruins at Angkor, remnants of a great Southeast Asian empire that covered the country's current territory as well as parts of Vietnam, Thailand and Laos. After Angkor fell to the Siamese in the 15th century, a new Cambodian capital was founded on the banks of the Tonlé Sap River. That city, Phnom Penh, remained an unstable settlement, caught up in the geopolitical ambitions of Cambodia's more powerful neighbors, until the French arrived in the 1860s. The colonial administrators drained the neighboring swamps and created a grid street plan, dotted with sumptuous villas, Art Deco markets and impressive government structures.

Even then, Phnom Penh was modest, small-town colonial France—and when Mr. Molyvann received a scholarship from the colonial government and set off for the Sorbonne in Paris, it wasn't with the dream of returning to remake it. He was a law student. But as he pursued his degree, and struggled with the compulsory Greek and Latin, he had an encounter that changed his life.

"I met Henri Marchal, the curator of Angkor for the École Française d'Extrême-Orient [the French School of Asian Studies]," Mr. Molvyann remembers, "and suddenly I knew I wanted to be an architect, so I changed to the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux Arts, where I studied until 1950 under Le Corbusier." He regards that modernist architect and designer as his greatest teacher.

After that, Mr. Molyvann stayed on in Paris for several more years, studying Khmer art. While he looks back fondly on the period, he is also keenly aware that some of Cambodia's later traumas had their origins in the Paris of that time.

"The Khmer Rouge was born in the Latin quarter of Paris," he says. As they debated their country's postcolonial future, Mr. Molyvann says, the city's 400 or so Cambodian students split between nationalists and Marxists. Khieu Samphan, whom he knew as a fellow Sorbonne student, would go on to become head of state in the Khmer Rouge government.

By 1956, Mr. Molyvann was back in Phnom Penh. Independence had broadened Cambodia's horizons, in part thanks to the efforts of King Sihanouk, who at various times officially dropped his title to serve as prime minister, head of state or president, though Cambodians continued to refer to him as king. With tremendous energy and not a little royal eccentricity, the young monarch—also politician, artist, filmmaker, womanizer and host to a series of foreign heads of state and celebrities—worked to create a modern nation with an eye on the past. The leading members of an emerging urban elite, many of whom, like Mr. Molyvann, had returned from Paris, sought to create architecture, music, films, literature and art that married Cambodian tradition with modernist thinking.

Nowhere was this more apparent than in new administrative, public and private building projects that sprang up all over the capital—transforming Phnom Penh, within little more than a decade, into one of Asia's most dynamic cities.

"It was difficult at the beginning, as Cambodians had never heard of architects," Mr. Molyvann remembers. "All they knew were engineers and builders. There was a real dearth of qualified Khmer experts, as the French had used Vietnamese to administer my country. But within 10 years of independence the management of the country and its capital was Khmer. It was incredible."

Mr. Molyvann was made chief architect for state buildings and director for urban planning and habitat in 1956 and given a number of ministerial posts in the following years. "I was designing the Independence Monument and was asked to present the king with a selection of marble," he recalls. "I was too afraid to speak to him personally, but he made some suggestions and we got on perfectly after that." Shaped like a lotus flower, the monument tower, completed in 1960, remains one of Phnom Penh's landmarks.

Mr. Molyvann had part of the floodplain south of the Royal Palace drained and filled, and on this "Front de Bassac" constructed the country's first high-rises, initially for visiting athletes for the 1966 Ganefo Games, a short-lived Asian alternative to the Olympics.

"We built the stadium for 60,000 people and surrounded it with a moat, so that the waters could run off in the rainy season," he says.

Stefanie Irmer, whose KA Tours focuses on New Khmer Architecture, sees the relation between water and city as crucial to the architect's vision for Phnom Penh. "Besides creating the 'Front de Bassac' area from wetlands," she says, "almost every building Vann Molyvann designed was surrounded by water—to keep the termites out, but also to integrate the buildings into the flood plain."

Many of Mr. Molyvann's buildings are traditional in one sense—they are shaped like familiar objects. Chaktomuk Conference Hall, one of his earliest designs, is like an open palm leaf. The library of the Institute of Foreign Languages (now part of the Royal University of Phnom Penh) was inspired by a traditional Khmer straw hat. The lecture halls of the institute rest on sharply angled concrete pillars that give them the appearance of animals, about to jump. They are still in use today, as is the library.

By the early 1960s, for the first time in almost 800 years, Cambodia was blooming. The Angkor ruins were the region's biggest tourist draw, and Phnom Penh had doubled in size and become a city others in the region admired.

But the politics were turning ugly. Norodom Sihanouk, serving as prime minister, began to suppress dissent. By the mid-1960s, the U.S. had combat troops in Vietnam; as American planes began bombing North Vietnamese positions in Cambodia, the country's policy of neutrality became a farce. The former king's repressive policies alienated the political left and some rural Cambodians, who began to join a shadowy communist movement, the Khmer Rouge. Meanwhile, the right and military had become fed up with his capriciousness and nepotism. When he left to visit China in 1970, a coup replaced him with army general Lon Nol. The Swinging '60s, the meteoric rise of a young nation, the building boom in the "Pearl of Asia"—it was all over.

Mr. Molyvann remembers days with hard choices. "Shortly after Lon Nol came to power, the Israeli ambassador advised me to take my family out of the country," he says; the ambassador, a friend of his, warned him about the crumbling security and the increasing persecution of those connected with the previous government. So when Mr. Molyvann left for a conference in Israel, with his wife, Trudy, and their six children, they didn't return. Instead they moved on to Switzerland, his wife's home country.

Five years later, the Khmer Rouge marched victoriously into Phnom Penh. The new rulers immediately emptied the cities, and for almost four years Phnom Penh was a ghost town. At least 1.5 million Cambodians, nearly a quarter of the population—Mr. Molyvann's father among them—lost their lives in the killing fields. The fledgling intellectual elite was snuffed out.

"I had no contact during those years," says Mr. Molyvann. "I had to give my children a new life, so we stayed in Lausanne." He continued to work as an architect in Switzerland, Africa and Laos, for the United Nations and the World Bank. The Vietnamese pushed out the Khmer Rouge in 1979, but Mr. Molyvann "could not think of going back." The new rulers "were still communists."

"It was not until 1993 that I returned—with the U.N.," he says. Initially, his homecoming was triumphant. He was appointed minister of state for culture and fine arts, territorial management and urban planning and contributed to the application for Angkor's successful recognition as a Unesco World Heritage site.

But he soon realized that the Cambodia he had left behind in 1970 no longer existed. Cambodian People's Party leader Hun Sen, who had been installed by the Vietnamese and who continued as prime minister after the U.N.-organized elections, gave Mr. Molyvann back his villa, but the architect's plans for Siem Reap—the province in which Angkor is located—were unappreciated. He had called for a "tourist village" set apart from both the temples and the old town of Siem Reap, integrated into the environment and with water conservation as a key goal.

"The government wanted to use the resources of Angkor to develop Siem Reap without the participation of the local people," Mr. Molyvann says. "In 1998, I became president executive director of Apsara (Authority for the Protection and Safeguard of Angkor), the government body created to look after the temples. Three years later, I was fired." Unchecked development in Siem Reap has led to a dramatic drop in groundwater levels, causing subsidence that has put the Bayon, one of the main temples in the Angkor area, in danger of collapse, according to experts from the Japanese Conservation Team for Safeguarding Angkor. Development has also driven up property prices and the cost of living, a hardship for the locals in a province that remains one of the poorest in the country.

But it was not just the government and developers standing against Mr. Molyvann and his vision. Bill Greaves, director of the Vann Molyvann Project, a nongovernmental organization engaged in recreating the lost plans of the remaining New Khmer Architecture sites, thinks postwar Cambodia is simply not aware of its past.

"Right now, Singapore and Shanghai are models for forward-looking cities, both for the government and the people," he says. "Hence Phnom Penh's different stages of history are likely to be discarded."

In the past decade, as investment has begun to pour into the Cambodian capital once more, colonial and 1960s buildings have been replaced by chrome-and-glass edifices, floodwater lakes have been drained, local media have reported almost daily evictions and ministers have gushed over the need to build skyscrapers in order to keep up with the neighbors.

The government frequently declares that preservation has to go hand in hand with development. In practice, it seems to walk well behind. Beng Khemro, deputy director general at the ministry for land management, urban planning and construction, says his department's hands are tied. "Many historical properties are in terrible condition," he says. "The people who own them don't understand the value of the past and would rather demolish them and build high-rises to make a profit. The past is not appreciated. Without a change in attitude amongst the population, we are fighting a losing battle."

Cambodia has preservation laws, and Dr. Khemro says he is trying to pass a regulation to get them applied in particular instances. He'd like to try a pilot preservation project away from Phnom Penh, he says, noting that Cambodia's second-largest city, Battambang, has many buildings from the French period.

"Also," he adds, "there's less pressure."

Molyvann advocate Mr. Greaves is skeptical about the survival of the architect's legacy. "The old buildings disappear at an alarming rate—even public edifices like the National Theatre, which was knocked down a couple of years ago, are not safe. We try and get there before the demolition crews arrive."

A drive around town with Mr. Molyvann illustrates his curious position in this free-for-all scramble for change. At the Independence Monument, guards at first refuse him entry. Only after his driver reveals the distinguished visitor's identity is the master architect, old and frail, allowed to climb the steps he designed half a century ago.

Passing the stadium, Mr. Molyvann looks at the haphazard development around his favorite creation. Appropriated by developers with government connections, the moat has been partly filled in to make space for shops and an underground car park; the result is annual flooding that threatens the entire sports complex.

With equal shades of sadness and anger in his voice, Mr. Molyvann says, "Today, it's not the state who owns the old properties, but the ruling party, the CPP."

Tom Vater is a writer based in Bangkok.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Chamkarmon Governor to Retain City Position

Chamkarmon District Governor Lo Yuy. (Photo: by Heng Reaksmey)

Manilene Ek, VOA Khmer
Friday, 14 May 2010

"I did not accuse Lo Yuy of taking bribes from karaoke clubs,” the governor said Friday.
Phnom Penh’s governor says he will not investigate a district official who was nearly implicated in two illegal karaoke clubs earlier this month.

Phnom Penh Governor Kep Chuktema told VOA Khmer on Friday there was “no need” to investigate Chamkarmon District Governor Lo Yuy because of the structure of city government.

If he were removed, Kep Chuktema said, it would not be publicly. Kep Chuktema said he had not found bribery among any of the city’s eight district governors.

Kep Chuktema was quoted by the English-language Phnom Penh Post as saying in a meeting last week he wanted to fire Lo Yuy, after police raided two illegal karaoke clubs in his district.

“I did not accuse Lo Yuy of taking bribes from karaoke clubs,” the governor said Friday. “I only said, ‘The drug problem and sex abuse was happening in your area. So what does that mean that it still happens in your area? You don’t know, or you pretend not to know?’”

Kep Chuktema said he had phrased his words this way because residents in the area had complained of illicit drugs, prostitution and child sex crimes in the district, which could lead them to assume bribery by the district’s leader.

Instead, Lo Yuy will remain at his post. He declined to comment Friday.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

200 Families Homeless After Phnom Penh Fire

By Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
09 March 2010


More than 200 families lost their homes to a fire Monday night in Phnom Penh, with many forced to stay on the grounds of a pagoda nearby.

The fire began at 6:30 pm Monday evening and was extinguished by 10 pm, Phnom Penh officials said.

The cause of the fire is under investigation, but residents say it started in one house where a grandson had been fighting with his grandmother, knocking over a kerosene lantern.

No one was killed in the blaze, which brought in 26 fire trucks and destroyed 158 houses and eight units of monk housing from Wat Neak Kavorn, in Tuol Kork district.

Some of the homeless from 217 families were staying under trees and amid the stupas of Wat Neak Kavorn, calling for emergency food, shelter and medical care.

“I lost everything. It caused about more than $300 [in damage], including my house and my assets in the house,” Phat Yeour, 35, as he carried a woven mat through the pagoda. “I need the Cambodian government to help me get my life back.”

Phnom Penh Governor Kep Chutema said the muncipalitiy had not yet decided how to compensate the victims but had already provided some emergency provisions.

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Blaze destroyed homes and monks’ housings in Wat Neakawoan Pagoda

A fire blaze burning down a monks' housing in Wat Neakawoan Pagoda (Photo: Uy Sophea, RFA)

09 March 2010
By Om Oddom
Radio Free Asia
Translated from Khmer by Socheata
Click here to read the article in Khmer


Residents living near Wat Neakawoan Pagoda, located in Boeung Kak 2 commune, Tuol Kok district, Phnom Penh city, were victimized by a major blaze that destroyed their homes and belongings. The blaze also destroyed a number of housings for monks in Wat Neakawoan Pagoda as well.

RFA reporter Om Oddom who traveled to the blaze location last night (on Monday 08 March) has filed a detailed report on the incident below:

Om Oddom: A blaze took place in Boeung Kak 2 commune, Tuol Kok district, Phnom Penh city. According to residents who live in the blaze area, the fire started at about 6PM.

Based on preliminary estimates by group leaders in Boeung Kak 2 commune, more than 200 homes are currently destroyed by the fire which leaped from one house to another. The majority of homes that were burnt were wooden homes and the majority of the residents are poor people scavenging recycled materials or selling boiled corns or salted clams.

According to one of the residents living in the house where the fire started, the fire may have started from carelessness in the kitchen. However, he did not dare make any presumption. The fire also burnt down 10 monks’ housings in Wat Neakawoan Pagoda.

I did not meet with the authority because they were busy putting out the fire. Right now, residents whose houses were burnt down, some are crying, some are trying to salvage their belongings. Some can only stand and watch their houses burnt down to the ground because they were not able to take anything out. In some of the houses, all that remain were the concrete poles.

Residents and observers of the situation indicated that, based on a preliminary assessment, there was no life lost accounted for yet.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Cambodia to crack down young gangsters [-Aren't the majority of these young gangsters sons and daughters of high-ranking CPP officials?]

PHNOM PENH, Aug. 27 (Xinhua) -- With an aim to keep good social order in the Cambodia's capital, Phnom Penh Municipality has advised relevant authorities to crack down and trace both male and female Cambodian gangsters including those are under 16 years of age.

Touch Narouth, chief of Phnom Penh Police said on Thursday that until recently, his authorities had arrested more than 200 young Cambodian gangsters and they were educated before being released.

In a meeting held Wednesday, the Governor Kep Chutema, advised all local competent authorities including the police and the court in Phnom Penh to help curb with gangsters so as to reduce the social disorder and to avoid their disturbance to all residents in the capital.

He said Phnom Penh must be a safe and clean place for both local and foreigners as it is the heart of the Kingdom of Cambodia.

Among the new orders, he also stressed that young girl who is under 16 years old must be banned from entering into night clubs, karoke, bars, guest houses or hotels after 8 p.m., especially to those who are not accompanied by their parents.

According to Kep Chutema, most of the young Cambodian gangsters are the children of the powerful and rich people.

In June this year, Prime Minister Hun Sen issued a directive asking his relevant authorities across the nation to warm up their efforts and prevention against the juvenile groups who are involved in public disturbances and drug use.

Keat Chantharith, spokesman of the National Police said the police has recorded the name list of about 7,000 delinquents around the country and each or in group of the individuals are being targeted.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

10 Parties Discuss Issues at Forum

By Seng Ratana, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
18 July 2008


Adopting anti-corruption legislation, dealing with land conflicts and improving social welfare were discussed by 10 political parties at a forum hosted by a group of organizations Friday.

Representatives of all the national election's competing parties, excluding the ruling Cambodian People's Party, and around 100 voters attended the forum in Phnom Penh.

Representatives of each party promised voters to follow-up on the promises they made for each of the three issues.

Each party explained in six-minute blocks their plans for dealing with each topic.

"There are many things that the CPP has left until now, but the Norodom Ranariddh Party has three priorities," said NRP spokesman Muth Chantha. Those include passing a long-awaited anti-corruption law, resolving the growing problem of land conflicts and addressing rising prices, he said.

Human Rights Party representative Keat Sokhun said the party would adopt anti-corruption legislation, provide property licenses and take better control of the national budget.

Kravang Daron, president of the Khmer Anti-Poverty Party, promised to decrease poverty, adopt the anti-corruption law and provide free medical treatment for the poor.

Friday's was the third forum held with 10 political parties. The first dealt exclusively with anti-corruption legislation, which has been in a draft stage for a decade, and the second dealt with putting more women in politics.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

No political campaign parade along major Phnom Penh streets

Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The Phnom Penh city authority issued a directive to the 11 political parties participating in the election, telling them not to organize campaign parade along major city streets such as the Sihanouk Boulevard, the Monivong Boulevard, the Mao Tse Toung Boulevard, and near the round about of the Monument of Independence. Furthermore, political parties are prevented from entering Phnom Penh markets also, nor are the campaign parades allowed there. These restrictions will take effect starting 26 June, the first day of the election campaign, and it will last until 25 July, i.e. one day prior to the election date. The city explained that these restrictions are imposed in order to preserve public order and prevent traffic jams. The city directives were already sent to the 11 political parties participating in the upcoming 27 July election.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Cambodian mayor threatens to dump rubbish in contractor's office

May 22nd, 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - An errant waste disposal contractor which was failing to keep rubbish off the streets could soon find the uncollected garbage dumped in its office, the capital's governor said Thursday.

Kep Chuktema said he realized that the French-Khmer company Cintri had faced logistical problems and felt sorry for it, but his first duty was to the public so the company had until the end of the week to up its performance.

"Otherwise I will send municipal staff to collect the rubbish and order them to dump it in the Cintri headquarters," he said.

Cintri won a 49-year exclusive waste collection contract for the capital in 2002, but has failed to stop piles of rubbish accumulating across the city.

It has blamed flooded roads to the city's only dump, but Chuktema, known for his outspokenness and sometimes left-of-centre solutions to problems, says that isn't good enough, and says he is not joking.

In 2003, he called on the population to eat more dogs to solve a problem with strays on the streets.