Friday, May 29, 2009

US Senators introduce bill to grant duty free import of apparels from least-developed countries, incl. Cambodia

US bill tailors duty-free textile access to LDCS
Saturday, May 30, 2009
APP (Pakistan)

Karachi—Two US Senators Dianne Feinstein, and Kit Bond have introduced a bill that would grant duty-free access (upto a limit) for textile and apparel goods, to 14 least-developed countries (LDCS) that are not currently beneficiaries under any U.S. preference program.
According to information reaching Pakistan, they are Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, Kiribati, Laos, Maldives, Nepal, Samoa, Solomon Islands, East Timor, Tuvalu, Vanuatu and Yemen. The same benefits would be made available to Sri Lanka as well.
A large number of textile exporters and industrialists, while expressing concern over this development, have said that this move will further shrink Pakistan’s share in US textile market.
Chairman F B Area Association of Trade and Industry M Idress Gigi said that this is alarming. Pakistan is an important ally of USA in war on terror and we have been trying to get duty free access in American market. But we did not get the access and our competitors Bangladesh and Sri Lanka got it, he said.
Former chairman Towel Manufacturers Association of Pakistan S M Obaid said that the government must take up this matter with US government and get a market access for Pakistani exporters. Pakistan has sustained huge losses on account of terrorism. We are the strong ally of USA and we have a valid case for this access, he noted.
If this bill is passed it will be a disaster for our textile exports, he added.
Chairman North Karachi Association of Trade and Industry Muhammad Younus Khamisani said that the cost of Pakistani textile is already high due to high mark up and utilities rates. Duty free access to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh will shunt out Pakistani textile products from USA, he observed.
The goal of the legislation is to help promote democracy while sustaining vital export industries and creating employment opportunities in LDCs.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

រដ្ឋាភិបាល​ច្រានចោល​ព័ត៌មាន​អំពី​ការដាប់​ថ្ម​អង្គរ​ដើម្បី​ដាក់​អំពូល

ដោយ សាវយុត
2009-05-28

មន្ត្រី ​រដ្ឋាភិបាល​កម្ពុជា​បាន​ប្រកាន់​ជំហរ​ជា​ថ្មី​ម្តង​ទៀត​ច្រាន​ចោល​ព័ត៌មាន​ ដែល​និយាយ​ថា មាន​ការដាប់​ថ្ម​ថែវ​ប្រាសាទ​អង្គរវត្ត​ដើម្បី​ដាក់​អំពូល​ភ្លើង​ហ្វា​ អគ្គិសនី​បំភ្លឺ​រូប​ចម្លាក់​នា​ពេល​យប់​នោះ​គឺ​ជា​ការអះអាង​មួយ​គ្មាន​ការ​ ពិត​ទេ។

 

   លោក ង៉ោ ហុងលី គណៈប្រតិភូ​ទីស្តីការ​គណៈរដ្ឋមន្ត្រី​ទទួល​បន្ទុក​អាជ្ញាធរ​អប្សរា​បាន​ ថ្លែង​ទៅ​កាន់​ក្រុម​អ្នក​កាសែត​ដែល​នៅតែ​បន្ត​តាមដាន​បញ្ហា​នេះ​កាលពី​ ព្រឹក​ថ្ងៃ​ព្រហស្បតិ៍ ទី​២៨ ខែ​ឧសភា នៅ​ក្នុង​ប្រាសាទ​អង្គរវត្ត​ថា មិន​មាន​ការដាប់​ថ្ម​ជញ្ជាំង​ប្រាសាទ​អង្គរវត្ត​នៅ​ត្រង់​ឆាក​រាមកេរ្តិ៍​ នោះ​ដើម្បី​វាយ​ឈើ​បញ្ចូល​ចាប់​ជើង​អំពូល​ហ្វា​ទេ ហើយ​ក៏​មិន​មាន​ប្រើប្រាស់​ស៊ីម៉ង់ត៍​ដើម្បី​បិទ​ផ្ជិត​រន្ធ​ថ្ម​ប្រាសាទ​ណា ​មួយ​ទេ។

លោក ង៉ោ ហុងលី បាន​ឲ្យ​ដឹង​ថា ៖ «អត់​មាន​ធ្វើ​រន្ធ​ថែម​ទេ ហើយ​ក៏​អត់​មាន​បិទ​ស៊ីម៉ង់ត៍​ដែរ។ ទៅ​សួរ​មគ្គុទ្ទេសក៍ យក​សម្ដី​មគ្គុទេ្ទសក៍ សំខាន់​ជាង​សម្ដី​អ្នក​ដែល​ទទួល​ខុស​ត្រូវ។ អ្នក​មគ្គុទ្ទេសក៍​ចេះតែ​ថា​ហើយ​ដើរ​ទៅ​បាត់ ចចាម​អារ៉ាម​ក៏​ចេះតែ​ថា​ដែរ»

អ្នកស្រី ម៉ៅ ល្អ ប្រធាន​នាយកដ្ឋាន​អភិរក្ស​ប្រាសាទ​ក្នុង​ឧទ្យាន​អង្គរ​និង​បូរាណ​វិទ្យា​ បង្ការ​បាន​ថ្លែង​ដោយ​បង្ហាញ​ជា​ផ្ទាំង​រូបថត​ថា យោង​តាម​ឯកសារ​របស់​សាលា​បារាំង​ចុង​បូព៌ា​បាន​ឲ្យ​ដឹង​ថា ប្រហោង​ថ្ម​ជា​ច្រើន​នៅ​អង្គរវត្ត​ត្រូវ​បាន​គេ​ដាប់​កាលពី​អំឡុង​ឆ្នាំ​ ១៩៤៧​-​១៩៤៨ នៅ​ពេល​ដែល​មាន​ការចាប់ផ្តើម​ជួសជុល​អង្គរ​និង​សម្ភារៈ​ជាង​មិន​សូវ​ទំនើប ដែល​ការដាប់​ប្រហោង​នោះ​សម្រាប់​ដាក់​ឈើ​រន្ទា​សម្រាប់​ជាន់​ធ្វើការ។

អ្នកស្រី ម៉ៅ ល្អ បាន​មាន​ប្រសាសន៍​ថា ៖ «ជំនាន់​នៅ​ឆ្នាំ​១៩៤៧​ហ្នឹង ការជួសជុល​ប្រាសាទ សម្ភារៈ​ដែល​គេ​ប្រើប្រាស់​ហ្នឹង​មិន​ទាន់​មាន​ការរីក​ចម្រើន។ ដូច្នេះ​នៅ​ក្នុង​រូបភាព​ហ្នឹង​យើង​ឃើញ​ហើយ គឺ​យើង​ប្រើ​កំណាត់​ឈើ»

មន្ត្រី​ដដែល​បាន​អះអាង​ថា ប្រហោង​ដាប់​ថ្ម​ចាប់​ពី​ជំនាន់​នោះ​បាន​បន្សល់​ទុក​មក​ដល់​បច្ចុប្បន្ន​ ប្រមាណ​២០០០​នៅ​តាម​ប្រាសាទ​អង្គរវត្ត​ដោយ​ពុំ​មាន​ការដាប់​ថ្មីៗ​ទេ។ ការព្យាយាម​ថ្លែង​អះអាង​របស់​មន្ត្រី​រដ្ឋាភិបាល​នេះ​ធ្វើ​ឡើង​ជំទាស់​ទៅ​ នឹង​ក្រុម​មគ្គុទ្ទេសក៍​អង្គរ​ខ្លះ​ដែល​នៅតែ​ជឿ​ថា ពិត​ជា​មាន​ការដាប់​ថ្ម​ប្រាសាទ​ដើម្បី​ដាក់​ស្នៀត​ឈើ​ត​បណ្តាញ​ភ្លើង​ អគ្គិសនី​នោះ។

ប្រធាន​អង្គការ​មូលនិធិ​ទ្រទ្រង់​អរិយធម៌​ខ្មែរ លោក មឿង សុន ដែល​បាន​មក​ពិនិត្យ​ផ្ទាល់​ភ្នែក​បាន​ទទួល​ស្គាល់​ថា ពុំ​មាន​ការដាប់​ថ្ម​ប្រាសាទ​ដើម្បី​ត​បណ្តាញ​ភ្លើង​ហ្វា​អគ្គិសនី​នោះ​ទេ ប៉ុន្តែ​លោក​នៅតែ​រិះគន់​ការត​បណ្តាញ​ភ្លើង​នោះ​មាន​ការដាក់​រាយ​ខ្សែ​ភ្លើង ​គ្មាន​សណ្តាប់ធ្នាប់​និង​សម្ភារៈ​ដែល​គ្មាន​គុណភាព​ត្រូវ​បាន​គេ​យក​មក​ ដាក់​លើ​អច្ឆរិយវត្ថុ​ដ៏​មាន​តម្លៃ​នោះ ហើយ​លោក​ក៏​មិន​ទាន់​ប្រាកដ​ទេ​ថា តើ​អំពូល​ភ្លើង​ទាំង​នោះ​អាច​ធ្វើ​ឲ្យ​ប៉ះពាល់​ដល់​ប្រាសាទ​បូរាណ​ឬ​យ៉ាង​ ណា?

លោក មឿង សុន បាន​បញ្ជាក់​ថា ៖ «ខ្ញុំ​ឡើង​ទៅ​វាស់​អំពូល​ដែល​គេ​បើក​ ពន្លឺ​មក​ហើយ​វា​មាន​កម្ដៅ តែ​ខ្ញុំ​មិន​អាច​ឲ្យ​ជា​បច្ចេកទេស​បាន​ទេ គឺ​ខ្ញុំ​ទុក​ឲ្យ​អង្គការ​យូណេស្កូ​ដែល​លោក​មាន​អ្នក​បច្ចេកទេស​ចុះ»

សូម​រំឭក​ថា ប្រតិកម្ម​ពី​ក្រុម​មគ្គុទ្ទេសក៏​និង​អ្នក​ទេសចរណ៍​បរទេស​មួយចំនួន​បាន​ ផ្ទុះ​ឡើង​កាលពី​ថ្ងៃ​ទី​២៣ ខែ​ឧសភា​កន្លង​មក ខណៈ​ដែល​គេ​បាន​ប្រទះ​ឃើញ​មាន​អំពូល​ភ្លើង​ហ្វា​ជា​ច្រើន​ត្រូវ​បាន​គេ​មូល​ ភ្ជាប់​កំណាត់​ឈើ​ដាក់​ក្នុង​ប្រហោង​ជញ្ជាំង​ថ្ម​ប្រាសាទ​អង្គរវត្ត​នៅ​ប៉ែក ​ខាង​លិច​ឆៀង​ខាង​ជើង​ដោយ​គេ​ជឿ​ថា​មាន​ការដាប់​ថ្ម​ប្រាសាទ​ដើម្បី​វាយ​ កំណាត់​ឈើ​បញ្ចូល​ក្នុង​នោះ៕

Angkor lights stir controversy

Lights are recessed into holes that tourism officials maintain were not drilled into the temple structure. (Photo Supplied)

Thursday, 28 May 2009
Written by Ros Dina
The Phnom Penh Post

A heritage specialist has requested intervention from the prime minister in a disagreement over light fixtures on temples at the Angkor Wat complex.
A HERITAGE advocate has sent a letter to Prime Minister Hun Sen urging him to stop an ongoing light installation project at the Angkor Wat temple, saying equipping the 11-century World Heritage site with lights will have a negative effect on its ambiance.
"The illumination will disturb tourists and badly affect the beauty of the temples. By the law of the Apsara Authority, even villagers are not allowed to build new houses in the Angkor area, but it is regrettable that the area is now equipped with lights," Moeung Son, president of the Khmer Civilisation Foundation Organisation (KCF), said at a press conference Tuesday.
The project, which began late last year, was designed to encourage "night lighting" tours and prolong the stay of tourists in the area.
However, Moeung Son said it would also fail to do that.
"According my experience in the tourism sector, cultural tourists never watch temples at night. They are particularly interested in Khmer ancient building styles."
Ho Vandy, head of the permanent committee of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents, also said that the lights would not increase tourist traffic to the site.
"Only about 20 or 30 tourists come to visit the temple or performances at night," Ho Vandy said.
Details of fixtures vague
Tourism officials have been vague about how the lights have been fixed to structures, saying they were put into "existing" holes in the temples.
The Ministry of Tourism and the Apsara Authority have maintained that the arrangement would help attract more visitors and consequently raise income in the tourism sector.
"I hope that the illumination will increase the number of tourists, and the Angkor Wat temple will become productive, bringing more income for Cambodia's economy. Moreover, the Angkor Wat area will look more active and lively," So Mara, a secretary of state at the Tourism Ministry, said Tuesday.
"Now we always tell visitors to get out when it's dark because we are afraid that they may fall down while walking in the dark. But when there are lights, visitors will have more time to walk around," he added.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Cambodian casinos bankrupts Vietnamese gamblers

The entrance to the Grand Dragon Resort in Cambodia

Gamblers crowd the roulette tables at a casino in the Grand Dragon Resort in Cambodia

Cambodian casino bankrupts Mekong Delta residents
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Thanh Nien News (Hanoi)

Kiem, a Mekong Delta water-lily dealer, just lost all her money at the Grand Dragon Resort casino across the border in Cambodia.
She earns a living buying the plants at the border to resell in An Giang Province and the city of Can Tho. She was waiting to collect her goods at the border when some friends convinced her to visit the casino “just to try it.”
“But I left the casino without any money to continue my business,” she says. “It was terrible.”
The refrain is not uncommon among Vietnamese visitors to the casino just across the river from An Giang’s An Phu District.
Just ask any of the hotel owners or xe om (motorbike taxi) drivers near the Long Binh Border Gate, which leads to Cambodia’s Kandal Province.
A hotel owner in An Phu District says most gamblers come from Ho Chi Minh City and Can Tho. She says they all leave bitterly after losing.
She says she’s used to rich guests driving up in luxury cars only to leave with their heads down and less luggage.
“A woman from a nearby commune committed suicide recently after her husband piled up billions of dong in gambling debts,” she says.
Gamblers with passports can cross the border legally after a few simple procedures at the border gate, while it is also easy to cross the river-border illegally in small boats for just VND3,000 (US$0.17).
The casino at the Grand Dragon Resort is just a few meters from the riverbank while a number of xe om drivers are always ready to take gamblers to a cock-fighting ring two kilometers away.
Nguyen Van Son, a Vietnamese xe om driver operating near the casino, says his customers are always excited when the day begins, and universally disappointed when they return home.
He says five of his colleagues have lost their motorbikes – and thereby their livelihood – to gambling at the casino.
He points to a hawker peddling Vietnamese pancakes on the street. She used to be a rich woman before she lost it all to the casino, he says.
From losing to losing
Many Vietnamese inside and outside the casino appear to be doing nothing but hanging around after losing all their money.
Lap, a fish dealer from Vietnam, is reluctant to leave. She says she wants to watch other people play after losing more than VND1 million ($56.20) earlier in the day.
She says she knows the right time to stop and usually wins several million dong on visits to the casino.
So, what’s she doing now with no money?
She admits that she’s become addicted and that she lost more than she won on this particular day.
Outside the casino, pawnbrokers lay in wait, always willing to grant loans to gamblers who want to bet their luck on their belongings after losing all their money.
Vietnamese law prohibits Vietnamese citizens from gambling but allows hotels rated four-stars and above to operate casinos for people holding foreign passports.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Plantation highlights struggle of development and preservation

Khaou Pallaboth, former son-in-law of Chea Xim, brother-in-law of CPP minister Sun Chanthol and son of tycoon Khaou Chuly. Khoau Chuly is a businessman who has been wheeling and dealing with several regimes: Sihanouk's Sangkum Reastr Niyum, Lon Nol's Khmer republic, Hun Sen's regime.

Ethnic Phnong houses sit on recently cleared rubber plantation land in Mondulkiri's Bou Sra commune. (Photo by: SEBASTIAN STRANGIO)

Monday, 25 May 2009
Written by Christopher Shay and Sebastian Strangio
The Phnom Penh Post

Ethnic minority community says a giant rubber conglomerate is destroying its traditional culture, as plantation officials insist that the company is bringing much-needed work to the area.
Mondulkiri Province
FIVE months after an angry mob smashed and burned machinery belonging to a local rubber company in Mondulkiri province's Bou Sra village, ethnic minority residents in the area say their culture and livelihoods remain in danger from new plantations that have displaced them from their ancestral farmlands.
"They've lost hope," said Bill Herod, an adviser for Village Focus Cambodia who works with Phnong youth in the provincial capital Sen Monorom.
"We in the West talk negatively about slash-and-burn, but this is slash-and-burn by the company."
According to an article in Science, the expansion of rubber plantations in Southeast Asia could double or triple by 2050, doing far more damage than traditional farming methods.
And while the Bou Sra plantation owners say they seek to balance their interests with those of the local communities, residents and advocates say the situation is symptomatic of the unrestrained development that is harming other indigenous populations.
Residents in Mondulkiri say more than 800 families in seven villages - the majority of them from the Phnong ethnic minority - have had plots of land taken by the rubber plantation, claiming there was no consultation prior to the granting of the concessions.
"They just came and took my land," said Umbarup Sherup, a Bou Sra village resident who said he received no compensation from the company.

"When we came to meet the company [they] said they would take the land whether we agreed to it or not."
Another resident, who declined to be named, said the villagers were not given a choice.
"When we came to meet the company, [they] said they would take the land whether we agreed to it or not," the resident said. "Now we have nothing."
In late 2007, government authorities granted 2,500 hectares in economic land concessions to a joint venture between the local Khaou Chuly Group and the French rubber conglomerate Socfin.
In early April, Khaou Chuly Group President Khaou Phallaboth signed an agreement with Minister of Agriculture Chan Sarun granting his company a further 2,705 hectares in the area.
"We hope to receive a total economic land concession of over 20,000 hectares from the government by 2010 to grow rubber trees," Khaou Phallaboth told the Post at the time.
After clearing began last year, village representatives travelled to Phnom Penh in June to deliver a personal plea to Prime Minister Hun Sen.
The dispute came to a head in December, when a frustrated group of villagers destroyed machinery belonging to Khaou Chuly Group.
"No one is happy with them. They do whatever they want, and they don't care about the people," said one Phnong community representative, who declined to give her name for fear of reprisals. "In the future, the Phnong people will die out because we have no forests."
Chith Sam Ath, executive director of the NGO Forum on Cambodia, said an investigation by his organisation found that the rubber project had led to the loss of traditional agricultural land, water supplies and spirit forests, and had impeded access to schooling for some village children.
"Socfin or Khaou Chuly [should] focus strongly on consultation with the community regarding environmental impacts and impacts on their livelihoods ... and find a solution with the community before they start their project implementation," he said by email.
When contacted by the Post, Kao Phallaboth declined to comment in detail, saying day-to-day management was in the hands of Socfin officials.
Reversing the damage
Socfin sources say that following the burning of the tractors, managerial control was assumed by their company, which says it has adopted a more conciliatory approach.
Socfin General Manager Philippe Monnin said the company was doing all it can to help the community and offset the impact of the plantations.
At Socfin's invitation, Monnin said Medicins du Monde, a French NGO, had helped construct a local hospital, and that the company hoped to bring in the French governmental development agency AFD to revitalise the community.
"Our plan is to get NGOs to work with us to take care of the community and ensure what we are doing is a model," Monnin said during an interview in Bou Sra village. "We want to do something proper, but it will not be easy."
He said that of the 10,000 hectares planned for the rubber plantation, 3,000 hectares would remain as spirit forests for the Phnong. He also added that Socfin was now conducting an environmental and social impact assessment of the plantation as part of its master plan, as well as sending an ethnologist and sociologist to study the situation.
He said the plantation would provide regular employment for Phnong. From May until August, he said, the company would double its daily manpower to 1,000 workers, who would earn 20,000 riels ($5) per day on the plantation.
Mondulkiri Deputy Governor Yim Lux told the Post that Socfin was paying US$15,000 a month in wages for local workers, and said it was providing "fair" compensation to the villagers affected by the plantation.
"The company agreed to compensate the people whose farmland was impacted, either with a plot of land or with cash," he said, but added that negotiations were still in progress.
Monnin said that Socfin, as a French company that needs to maintain a positive global image, was more vulnerable to criticism than other rubber companies in Cambodia.
"It [development] is inevitable.... If we were not here, it would be the Vietnamese, and then for the Phnong it would be the end," he said.
But many of the Phnong villagers said the Vietnamese state-owned Daklak Rubber Co, which has a plot adjacent to Socfin, has treated the Phnong more equitably.
"If people disagree with the Vietnamese company, they don't destroy the land. When the Vietnamese company does [harvest] the land, they give half [the profits] to us," one villager said.
Officials at Daklak's Mondulkiri headquarters declined to comment in detail about their rubber operations.
Too little too late
Critics of Socfin say the company's actions come too late and that irreparable damage has been done.
"Mistakes have been made by all key partners involved, including the Cambodian government and the company. ... Forest was destroyed, a Phnong graveyard was bulldozed, and [these] can't be undone," Herod said.
According to Cambodian environmental law, Herod said, an impact study should have been completed before the concession was awarded. He also noted an increase in drunkenness and other disorders related to social disintegration among the underemployed Phnong.
But despite indigenous land protections existing under the country's 2001 Land Law, villagers insist the Phnong community was not consulted.
While there is intermittent work on the plantations, the Phnong representative said the loss of rotational farmland forests meant that local communities faced an uncertain future.
"Now that the company has come here, they are very strict and will not allow the Phnong to cut wood on company land," she said. "Before they had the freedom to cut the forests and grow crops. Now they say the land is French; the sky is French."

UN report cites Chinese dams as threat to Mekong

Monday, May 25, 2009
GoKunming.com

China's plans to build a series of eight dams on the upper reaches of the Mekong River have come under criticism by the United Nations, which released a report last week stating that the Chinese plan "may pose the single greatest threat to the river".
The Mekong River – known in China as the Lancang River – is a source of food and livelihood for the 65 million people living in the river basin in Yunnan, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia.
The river's water quality has deteriorated in recent years, but according to the UN report, it has not yet reached "alarming levels". However, China's dams would likely lead to "changes in river flow volume and timing, water quality deterioration and loss of biodiversity." The area's wealth of biodiversity recently received global attention with the discovery of 1,000 new species of animals and plants in the region.
Ma Zhouxu, spokesman for China's Foreign Ministry, told reporters last week that the Chinese government is equally focused on the Mekong's development and protection.
China is not the only country with big dam plans for the river – Laos is planning 23 dams on the Mekong and tributaries of the river to be finished before 2011. Vietnam and Cambodia also have plans to build new dams on the river.
The Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS), which includes Yunnan and Guangxi plus the five countries through which the Mekong flows, is experiencing rapid development and economic and industrial expansion.
This dynamism will increase pressure on the river, but according to Mukand S Babel, one of the authors of the UN report, "The Mekong is in good condition at this time and can take more pressure such as irrigation development or industrial development."
The report did note that river basins along the Mekong including Tonle Sap in Cambodia, Nam Khan in Laos and Sekong-Sesan Srepok in Vietnam and Cambodia are in danger from increasing water demand and development and called for coordinated planning by the region's governments to deal with existing and future problems before they get out of hand.

Noppadon Pattama urges Abhisit to take back Preah Vihear temple: Noppadon poli-sicks?

Noppadon Pattama (Photo: Reuters)

Thaksin's Ex-Lawyer Urges PM to Bring back Preah Vihear
25 May 2009
Thai Asian News Network

The former lawyer of the fugitive former PM Thaksin Shinawatra is urging the prime minister to take back Preah Vihear Temple, and says that failing to do so would constitute negligence. He also said that foreign countries are waiting in line to issue visas for Thaksin. Meanwhile, he claimed that Hong Kong has already responded to Thailand and have indicated that they can't extradite the former PM since it is a free country and there is no extradition treaty.
Former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's ex-lawyer Noppadon Pattama said he will submit a letter to Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. When Abhisit was still the opposition leader, he submitted a no-confidence motion concerning Preah Vihear temple. As Abhisit is now head of the government, Noppadon said he should take back the Preah Vihear Temple and use the watershed to delineate the border between Thailand and Cambodia. He said that if the prime minister does not move forward in this effort, he will be considered to have failed in his duties.
Noppadon also revealed that Thaksin is currently living in Dubai, and says that he is in the process of buying an island in Montenegro.
Noppadon confirmed that Thaksin holds many passports, but does not have a Cambodian or German passport as reports have claimed. The lawyer admitted that many countries are ready to issue passports to Thaksin, including a European country which is allegedly issuing Thaksin a residence visa that will allow him to live in the country for many years, since they believe that Thaksin has not received political justice.
However, concerning Thailand's request to Hong Kong to help capture Thaksin and extradite him here, Noppadon indicated that from his understanding, Hong Kong has already sent a letter back to Thailand saying that they cannot proceed with the request, since Hong Kong is a free country and the two countries do not have an extradition treaty.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Tribunal Corruption Still a ‘Concern’: US Envoy

By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
22 May 2009

US Ambassador-At-Large for War Crimes Issues Clint Williamson on Friday urged the Khmer Rouge tribunal to address nagging corruption allegations, following discussions with the donors and UN and government officials.
Williamson told reporters that corruption “remained a concern” for the US, but that progress was being made on the issue.
The UN-backed tribunal, known officially as the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, has struggled under allegations of corruption, even as it tries its first suspect, prison chief Duch.
“Along with other donors to the ECCC we are working hard to ensure that the court improves its management and addresses the issue of corruption,” Williamson said Friday. “The US decision to fund the court last year reflects our commitment to ensure the tribunal is capable of meeting international standards of justice and to work with Cambodians to strengthen the structure of the rule of law in thecountry.”
A tribunal spokesman said both the UN and national sides of the hybrid court were working to improve the handling of corruption allegations and other complaints.

Tribunal Corruption Still a ‘Concern’: US Envoy

By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
22 May 2009

US Ambassador-At-Large for War Crimes Issues Clint Williamson on Friday urged the Khmer Rouge tribunal to address nagging corruption allegations, following discussions with the donors and UN and government officials.
Williamson told reporters that corruption “remained a concern” for the US, but that progress was being made on the issue.
The UN-backed tribunal, known officially as the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, has struggled under allegations of corruption, even as it tries its first suspect, prison chief Duch.
“Along with other donors to the ECCC we are working hard to ensure that the court improves its management and addresses the issue of corruption,” Williamson said Friday. “The US decision to fund the court last year reflects our commitment to ensure the tribunal is capable of meeting international standards of justice and to work with Cambodians to strengthen the structure of the rule of law in thecountry.”
A tribunal spokesman said both the UN and national sides of the hybrid court were working to improve the handling of corruption allegations and other complaints.

Aung San Suu Kyi Must Be Released: Opposition MPs

Phnom Penh May 20, 2009

"AUNG SAN SUU KYI MUST BE RELEASED"

We, the Cambodian Members of Parliament are calling for the immediate release of Aung San Suu Kyi who was due to be released from house detention on Wednesday the 27th May, 2009 and is now being indefinitely held on the ruse of an American who recently swam to her lakeside home to put her on a sham trial so as to extend her unlawful incarceration.
The junta pledged to free political detainees and hold elections next year as part of a much-discussed "roadmap" to restore democracy to the country, which has been ruled by the military since 1962.
Aung San Suu Kyi has been charged with violating the terms of her house arrest, and if convicted would likely be in prison when the elections take place. This is no coincidence.
We therefore call on ASEAN to demonstrate to the global community that we respect our Charter to protect and promote human rights and to uphold democratic principles in the region and will no longer tolerate Myanmar’s abusive regime.
We therefore call for the immediate release of Aung San Suu Kyi or for Myanmar to face the consequences of being ousted from ASEAN.
Myanmar’s military junta have been allowed too many discretions by ASEAN and this last action indicates that they have are not sincere to stop their repeated violation of promises to release Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest.
Aung San Suu Kyi and thousands of fellow monks and students have been imprisoned for bravely challenging the brutal military regime with peaceful calls for democracy. This has led to a refugee situation that is only worsening and how can we lay any foundations for these people to return under such circumstances?
We call on our Prime Minister, Hun Sen, in particular, to exercise leadership on this issue and condemn this latest threat imposed by Myanmar’s military junta that again threatens the overall security and stability of our region.
There is an added sense of urgency as the situation is clearly deteriorating with the trials being conducted behind closed doors irrespective of outcrys from the international community.
We must exercise strong positive leadership for our region and particularly demonstrate to the International community that the ASEAN Charter has ‘teeth’ and can be used effectively to promote peace and stability in the region by first and foremost ensuring Aung San Suu Kyi’s immediate release!

Signed
MP Son Chhay ; MP Sam Rainsy ; MP Mu Sochua ; MP Tioulong Saumura
MP Mao Munyvann ; MP Cheam Channy ; MP Kimsour Phirith; MP Yim Sovann
MP Eng Chhai Eang; MP Chiv Cata ; MP Thak Lany ; MP Ho Van
MP Ly Srey Vyna ; MP Yont Tharo ; MP Chan Cheng ; MP Khim Laky
MP Pot Pov ; MP Nuth Rumduol ; MP Men Sothavarin ; MP Khy Vandeth
MP Long Ry ; MP Chea Poch ; MP Kong Bora ; MP Kuoy Bunroeun
MP Tok Vanchan ; MP Ke Sovannaroth; MP Kem Sokha ; MP OU Chanrith
MP Yem Ponhearith
For further information, please contact :
MP Son Chhay : 012 858 857

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Day of Anger' in Cambodia

Cambodian students (left) take part in a performance to mark the annual 'Day of Anger' at the Choeung Ek killing fields memorial near Phnom Penh. Thousands of people gathered to commemorate the millions of people who died from starvation, overwork or execution during the 1975-79 rule of the Khmer Rouge. -- PHOTO: AFP

May 20, 2009
AFP

CHOEUNG EK (Cambodia) - CAMBODIANS marked the annual 'Day of Anger' Wednesday to remember victims of the Khmer Rouge terror as the regime's top torturer was tried by a UN-backed genocide tribunal.
About 2,000 Cambodians, including hundreds of Buddhist monks, gathered at Choeung Ek, a former Khmer Rouge 'killing field' dotted with mass graves about nine miles (15 kilometres) south of Phnom Penh.
Some 40 students re-enacted the torture and executions inflicted by the ultra-communists under whose mid-1970s rule about 1.7 million people perished.
Performers wore black uniforms, the standard attire of the Maoist-inspired movement. Some acted as executioners, swinging bamboo sticks at the heads of victims whose arms were bound behind their backs.
The performance was staged just yards (meters) away from a memorial filled with victims' skulls and mass graves where thousands of the executed were buried.
Relatives of the victims expressed hope that some of the surviving Khmer Rouge leaders would finally be punished by the ongoing tribunal.
Now being tried is Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch, who commanded the notorious S-21 prison in Phnom Penh from where as many as 16,000 men, women and children are believed to have been tortured before being sent to Choeung Ek for execution.
Duch (pronounced Doik) is the first senior Khmer Rouge figure to face trial, and the only one to acknowledge responsibility for his actions. Senior leaders Khieu Samphan, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and Ieng Sary's wife, who are all detained, are likely to be tried in the next year or two.
'Why is the court taking so long to prosecute these leaders?' asked Tat Seang Lay, 47, whose two brothers were killed by the Khmer Rouge. 'I want to see justice. I wish the court could end up its trial process within the next few months.' A 50-year-old man, Chhiv Neth, who lost three brothers and his father during Khmer Rouge rule, said the leaders must be heavily punished.
'They are more cruel than tigers. They killed their own people like butchers kill animals,' he said, looking at the mass graves he believes holds one of his brothers executed at Choeung Ek.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Cambodian farmers urged not to cut down palm tree

 

PHNOM PENH, May 19 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia's palm wine producer urged farmers not to cut down palm trees, saying the trees could earn much money for them, the official Agency Kampuchea Press (AKP)reported on Tuesday.
Cambodian farmers could earn an income of 500 million U.S. dollars per year if the exploitation of the palm trees was made as fully as possible, AKP quoted Confirel Company, the palm wine "Jaya" producer, as saying.
The company launched its palm wine named "Jaya" in early May.
An income being earned by each palm tree could vary from 101 U.S. dollars to 224 U.S. dollars per year, the company said, urging that the Cambodian farmers not to cut down such trees.
According to the company, its palm wine named "Jaya" available for exporting to Asian countries, mainly Vietnam. The company also presented the quality of the palm drinks, and its taste could be as competitive as imported wines, it said. While the palm juice supply was provided by as many as 500 families of the Cambodian farmers in the provinces.
Besides palm wine, the company made other products from the palm juice including vinegar, sugar and jam, which had a success in the country and abroad.
As estimated, Cambodia has 2.5 million palm trees, but at least one million trees were tapped by the Cambodian farmers.

SRP MP Mu Sochua's message on the 2009 Council Election

May 17, 2009

Dear friends and colleagues,
The Sam Rainsy Party is about to enter another layer of power-sharing in the administration of districts and provinces in Cambodia. According to unofficial results last night, we came from 0 to 60 elected councilors at provincial level and from 0 to 573 elected councilors at district level. We are very proud of our councilors as every single seat SRP received is a seat of value, of pride and of dignity.They are the real founders of SRP at the base level and they speak with so much pride about the past 15 years of struggle at the base level. They fight for justice with their conscience despite threat and intimidation of all forms from the ruling party.
Another pride of SRP out of this election is the youth who were mobilized just in 2008 for the national elections and are now given the chance to lead with their elders. It is a very powerful image of trans-generational movement of a force for change for rural Cambodia.
What does this mean in terms of SRP forces at the base level? It means that of the 2,660 elected commune councilors who were elected in 2007, around 10% sold out to CPP(because of the seat allocation formula, this percentage seems higher). I do mean SOLD OUT because each vote was bought for around US$1,500. You can imagine what this sum means to someone at the commune level who makes US$20 per month. The vote buying campaign was nation wide and very wide spread and very open. Just 3 days before election, SRP showed over 30 commune councilors who declared on tapes how they were offered money to vote for CPP and even FUNCINPEC that received money from CPP to destroy SRP. They were just 30 among several hundred cases.
But let me share with you stories of those who refused to sell their conscience: A councilor in Prey Knang, Teuk Chou district, Kampot province was willing to divorce his wife when he found out that CPP gave her US$ 250 to pursuade him to vote CPP. He maintained his vote for SRP and the family returned the money. Now we need to convince him to return home and forgive his wife. He is a Cham minority.
A councilor in Takaen commune, Chouk district, Kampot province disowned his son who forced him to vote CPP. His son was pressured by CPP because he is a policeman.
The district/province Election
What does it mean in terms of power-sharing at sub-national level? It means that there will be a voice of the opposition in pratically all of the 24 provinces and 178 districts thoughout Cambodia. CPP used to rule alone for 30 years at that level! SRP newly elected councilors at district and provincial levels are the best, the most outspoken and courageous and very aware of local issues. It will be more difficult for CPP to continue with corruption as we will object and will report it, the same way our MPs at national level have been functioning.
The newly elected councilors will greatly assist SRP elected MPs as we can be more vigilant, we can exert pressure on the provincial and district governors who receive orders directly from CPP. In constituencies where we have no elected MPs, these newly councilors will be our representatives.
What does it mean in terms of impacting the lives of people? It means that we can be right there when there is abuse of power, of human rights as we are now closer to the people. Our councilors live with the people in the same district, same province.
Now we move on towards the 2012 commune election and 2013 national election.
One last word I have to say:the fight for justice is a never-ending story.
On behalf of SRP Cambodia.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Vietnam forgot to thank a Cambodian who allowed Uncle Ho to build the Ho Chi Minh trail through Cambodia?


Legendary Trail’s 50th anniversary celebrated
18/05/2009
VietNamNet/VOV (Hanoi)

VietNamNet Bridge - A ceremony was solemnly held in the central province of Quang Binh on May 16 to mark the 50th anniversary of the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Fifty years ago Army Corps 559 (now Truong Son Civil Engineering Corporation) was assigned to open a strategic artery through the Truong Son Mountain Range to transport troops and cargo to the southern front during the resistance war against the US imperialists.
With a total length of nearly 20,000km encompassing Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, the Ho Chi Minh Trail formed a strategic transport artery, comprising 26 land routes on the eastern and western parts of the Truong Son Mountain Range, more than 1,400km of oil pipelines and a system of 6,000km long waterway transport routes.
The historic and legendary Ho Chi Minh Trail symbolised the Vietnamese people’s will and aspiration for independence, freedom and national unification, as well as the revolutionary heroism of the Ho Chi Minh Era, said Phan Lam Phuong, chairman of the Quang Binh provincial People’s Committee at the ceremony.
Truong Tan Sang, Politburo member and permanent member of the Party Secretariat, presented the title of the Hero of People’s Armed Forces posthumously to the collective of 8 volunteer soldiers of Company 217, Construction Board 67 of Army Corps 559, recognising their exploits in opening the artery.
Participants were treated to a special art programme “The Legend of a Road” performed by more than 300 professional and amateur artists.
The performance depicted a glorious period for the Vietnamese people and army in opening the strategic artery through the Truong Son Maintain range, the great support by the north to the south, and the victory of the historic Ho Chi Minh campaign, culminating in the total liberation of the south and national unification in 1975.

CBA = (Hun Sen's) Controlled (Monkey) Bar Association?

Ky Tech, Hun Sen's lawyer and former controversial president of the CPP-controlled (Monkey) Bar Association

Bar panel to begin review of SRP lawyer
Monday, 18 May 2009
Written by Cheang Sokha The Phnom Penh Post

THE Cambodian Bar Association will decide this week whether to suspend or disbar Sam Rainsy Party lawyer Kong Sam Onn, accused of violating the organisation's professional code of ethics, the Bar's president said Sunday.
Kong Sam Onn, who is representing opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua in her defamation lawsuit against Prime Minister Hun Sen, was himself accused of defamation by one of Hun Sen's lawyers after making comments about the case at a press conference April 23.
Bar Association President Chiv Song Hak said a special inspection team would convene today to investigate the allegations against Kong Sam Onn.
At that point, the panel would send its report to the Bar and then the organisation would call its 19 council members to meet before making a decision on the case, which has been criticised by legal experts who say it is an example of government interference in the courts.
When contacted Sunday, Kong Sam Onn said that the inspection team has not yet contacted him for questioning. But he argued that the complaint against him is groundless.
"In general, the inspection team is independent, but I am concerned about the individuals involved in the case," he said.
"According to the law, I committed no misconduct with the code of ethics and there is no specific accusation."
Hun Sen's lawyer Ky Tech, a former president of the Bar who brought the complaint against Kong Sam Onn, said he was interested in the outcome of the investigation, adding that he expected the inspection panel to report its findings to the Bar council by Thursday.

Friday, May 15, 2009

Cambodia's rats welcomed by Vietnamese gourmets

Live rats are stored awaiting transport to Vietnam at Chrey Thom district in Kandal province, 65km (40 miles) south of Phnom Penh near the Cambodia-Vietnam border, May 15, 2009. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
A boy shows off a rat he caught at Khos Thom district in Kandal province, 65km (40 miles) south of Phnom Penh near the Cambodia-Vietnam border, May 15 ,2009. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea

2009-05-15
Xinhua

PHNOM PENH - Vietnam has become the main importer of Cambodia's rats with 50 tons of rats being imported through the checkpoints along the border everyday, local media reported on Friday.
"We are working in the rice fields during the day and catching the rat at night. We can catch about 10 kg to 20 kg rats every night, " the Chinese language newspaper Cambodia Sin Chew Daily quoted a young rat trader as saying. The rat traders could sell them at border for about 3,000 riel (about 75 cents) to 4,000 riel (about $1.00) per kilo.
At the Chrey Thom border checkpoint, immigration police officer Roeun Narin said there was regular stream of middlemen in the rat-meat trade crossing the border, and he knew of more rat-trading at other checkpoints along the border.
Leh, the rat trader in the town of Chrey Thom, by the Vietnamese border, said she buys about one ton of rats per day during April and May from middlemen who bring the rodents from Cambodia's Kandal, Kompong Cham and Takeo provinces. From November to March the haul usually drops to between 300 and 400 kg per day, she said.
Every day there are more than 30 Vietnamese middlemen waiting at the border checkpoints to purchase the rat from Cambodia, an online Vietnamese media outlet reported. The rat sales at the checkpoint of Vietnam's An Giang province alone has reached to about 50 tons in recent days, the officials of Vietnam were quoted as saying.
"Most Cambodians only know a few ways to cook it, but in Vietnam they know many dishes, such as soups, curries and fried rat," Chhoeun, another middleman said. Vietnamese enjoy the small rice-field rats, as they think they are natural.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Fears of Sri Lanka 'catastrophe'

 

The army claims rebels fired on the civilians as they crossed the lagoon

The Red Cross says its staff in Sri Lanka are witnessing an "unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe" in the area where troops have trapped Tamil Tigers.

The agency says a ferry loaded with aid has been unable to reach the battered north-eastern coastal strip for three days because of fighting.

The Red Cross says its staff in Sri Lanka are witnessing an "unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe" in the area where troops have trapped Tamil Tigers.

The agency says a ferry loaded with aid has been unable to reach the battered north-eastern coastal strip for three days because of fighting.

There are also reports that staff have quit the last hospital in the war zone.

A senior UN envoy is on his way to Sri Lanka to try "to help resolve the humanitarian situation", the UN says.

Vijay Nambiar, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's chief of staff, is expected to arrive on Friday.

Last month Mr Nambiar met Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa but failed to secure access to the war zone for humanitarian teams.

See a map of the conflict region

The UN says about 50,000 civilians are trapped in the war zone, although Colombo disputes this figure.

The government has rejected international calls to stop its offensive against the Tamil Tiger rebels, saying it would give them time to recover. Now that it has trapped the Tamil Tigers, it hopes to soon end the 25-year-old civil war.

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Sri Lanka images 'prove damage'

Sri Lanka warned on war crimes

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said its chartered ferry, the Green Ocean, had been unable to deliver aid or evacuate the wounded for three days.

"Our staff are witnessing an unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe," said ICRC director of operations Pierre Krahenbuhl, based in Geneva.

"Despite high-level assurances, the lack of security on the ground means that our sea operations continue to be stalled, and this is unacceptable," he said.

"People are left to their own devices."

The ICRC says it requires security and unimpeded access to the area immediately.

In a statement, it said another aid ship, from the World Food Programme, was also waiting to deliver supplies to the war zone.

Hospital abandoned

The BBC's Charles Haviland in Sri Lanka says there are also unverified reports that medical staff have abandoned the main hospital in the rebel-held area because of persistent shelling.

One report said that about 400 badly wounded patients had been left behind, along with more than 100 bodies awaiting burial.

Burning ambulance in Mullivaikal, Sri Lanka

The government and the rebels blame each other for civilian casualties

Dozens of civilians have been reported killed in artillery attacks on the facility in recent days.

Earlier on Thursday, a military spokesman told the BBC that unmanned aircraft had filmed more than 2,000 people wading across the lagoon which borders the fighting zone on the non-seaward side.

Brig Udaya Nanayakkara said the civilians had braved rebel fire to reach government-held areas.

"There is a large number of people crossing, and the (rebels) fired at them. Four people were killed, 14 were wounded," he said.

The Sri Lankan army's version of events cannot be independently verified and there has been no comment from the rebels.

The authorities and the rebels blame each other for civilian deaths.

'Shock'

As the fighting continued, Britain said on Thursday that it supported an early inquiry into whether war crimes have been committed in Sri Lanka.

"We would support an early investigation into all incidents that may have resulted in civilian casualties," said junior foreign minister Bill Rammell.

He said the UN's estimate of more than 6,500 civilian deaths since January was - if accurate - "truly shocking and appalling".

The UK-based charity Save the Children said on Thursday that a growing number of children were becoming separated from their families as they fled the war zone and entered government-controlled camps.

"The camps are chaotic," said spokesman Branko Golubovic.

"These children are coming out of combat areas where they have been severely traumatised only to find themselves in yet another harsh environment in the camps."

Nearly 200,000 civilians are believed to be living in the government's overcrowded displacement camps.

Map

Freed Saberi 'flying out of Iran'

 

Roxana Saberi was freed on Monday after four months in prison

BBC News:

US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi has left Iran following her release from jail earlier this week, a family friend told AFP news agency.

The unnamed friend says Ms Saberi and her parents had taken a flight out of Tehran. Their destination is unclear.

Ms Saberi, 32, was freed on Monday, after spending four months in prison on spying charges, which she denied.

She was originally sentenced to eight years, but the term was cut on appeal to a two-year suspended sentence.

Her case had attracted international attention. The US administration said Iran's decision to free her was a "humanitarian gesture".

She originally faced a less serious accusation of buying alcohol, and later of working as a reporter without a valid press card.

The spying charge was introduced later, and she was tried and sentenced behind closed doors.

Ms Saberi worked as a freelance journalist for news organisations, including the BBC and the US-based National Public Radio.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Thai soldiers arrested 135 Cambodians at the border areas

Top and Bottom: Pictures of Cambodian workers being checked and deported to back to Cambodia.
Reported by Khmerization
135 Cambodians had been arrested by 30 Thai soldiers on the Banteay Meanchey-Sakeo border areas, reports Deum Ampil newspaper.
Deum Ampil quoted Thai Asean News Network as saying that the 56 men, 50 women, 12 boys and 12 girls had been arrested on 12th May in an area on the Banteay Meanchey-Sakeo borders.
The arrests took place when the Thai villagers reported to the Thai authority that those Cambodians had illegally entered Thailand and had damaged their rice and potato crops.


The arrested Cambodians said that because of poverty, they had entered Thailand to work in the Thai rice-fields and potato farms to earn a living, says Deum Ampil.
Deum Ampil reported that, after the arrests, the Thai authority contacted the Cambodian authority to take back those illegal workers through mutual agreements between the two countries.

Alleged ingenious Cambodian fortuneteller took 3 Thai bar women for a ride


Three Pattaya Bar Girls Victims Of Cambodian Fortune Teller Scam
May 14, 2009
Pattaya Daily News (Thailand)

On 12th May 2009 three Thai ladies claimed they had been poisoned and robbed by a female fortune teller whom they had invited back to their Pattaya apartment, in a similar fashion to a previous case reported by PDN on 9th February 2009.
As soon as Police Lieutenant Colonel Was received a report of the incident at 9.00 pm a police and rescue team rushed to room no. 11, on the third floor of Wanpen Apartment, located in Soi Gor Pai, Moo. 10, Nongprue, Banglamung.
There, the police found two ladies lying on the bed and one in the toilet. Miss Junsri Rakmitr [23] from Surin, the room owner, together with Miss Oil and Miss Porn [alias], all employees of a bar in Soi 7, Central Pattaya, were all unconscious. Two of them had been hit on the forehead with a hard object.
Police found paraphernalia connected with a religious ritual including a tray with incense, candles, flowers and a small amount of money, placed on the bed headboard. On the Buddha shelf, there was a golden baby image and three cups of a beverage which had been consumed. The room was in disarray as if someone had carried out a search.
Initially, the rescue team gave the three ladies first aid. When Miss Junsri, the room owner, woke up in a confused state, she told police that at 4.00 am, on the same day, she and her two friends were on their way home when they met a woman aged around 45 – 50, who claimed to be a Cambodian fortune teller. As the woman began to tell their fortune, they started to show interest and the woman said, if they wanted to have good luck, they would have to carry out a ritual with her in their room.
Their interest became stronger when the woman promised if they decided to go through the ritual, they would be able to find foreign husbands like many other ladies she had helped before.
Back at their room, as part of the ritual, they had to drink a cup of dark coffee each and not too long after that they felt very sleepy. They woke up again on the next day and found out that they had been robbed. The Cambodian fortune teller had made off with their property consisting of 3 mobile phones and 3 wallets containing tens of thousands of baht.
They asked for help from neighbours to report the incident to the police. They had never seen the robber before and had no idea what her name was.
The police took them to Banglamung hospital and viewed CCTV footage from the apartment which showed that the robber had spent more than one hour to carry out her crime. She took two big bags out of the victims’ room and rushed to a motor bike taxi and sped away.
Police believe that this female thief has carried out this kind of crime several times before due to the preparations and precautions she had made, such as the wearing of a face cover. However, they will continue their investigations once the three victims have recovered from their ordeal.
Whether the victims will eventually be fortunate to find the foreign husbands of their dreams remains to be seen.

04 Chris Brown - With You - Chris Brown

Love Story (Official Music Video) by Taylor Swift


Love Story (Official Music Video) - Taylor Swift

Sna-MinrersVey(hot khmer girl in video)

sra muy keol remix

Sexy Karaoke

Touch Sreyleach(remix)

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Campaign finance law urged

Tuesday, 12 May 2009
Written by VONG SOKHENG AND KHOUTH SOPHAK CHAKRYA
The Phnom Penh Post

Election-monitoring NGOs propose legal caps to campaign contributions ahead of Sunday’s already contentious commune council elections
ELECTION monitoring groups have begun promoting a draft law which, if introduced, would restrict the amount of campaign financing permitted by each party.
Koul Panha, the executive director of election-monitoring NGO Comfrel, said the concept was discussed by civil society groups and individual politicians after last year's general election.
"For now, we are raising public awareness and then we will urge the government to introduce the law," Koul Panha said on Sunday. "[The proposed law would] control the amount of finances [donated to] political parties during campaign time. We are pushing for this law to be introduced before the national elections in 2013."
However Hang Puthea, the executive director of Nicfec, another election-monitoring NGO, warned that the draft would require the support of the main political parties before it could become law.
"Some are still hesitant and lack the political will to submit a financial report for the election period," he said.
Comfrel issued a report last week that detailed how large amounts of funds and materials had been donated by high-ranking government officials, investors and business people to powerful politicians and the ruling Cambodian People's Party.

"SOME ARE HESITANT AND LACK THE POLITICAL WILL TO SUBMIT A FINANCIAL REPORT."
"The influence of funds in politics and in elections is a major problem, which might relate specifically to illegal business, to contributions including the use of national funds to buy votes and politicians," the report said.
But government spokesman Khieu Kanharith rejected the need for a campaign finance law, saying it would "tie up" the parties.
"While we are not able to control all of our finances, it is not necessary to have this law as many countries don't have it," he said.
Yim Sovann, a spokesman for the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, said the opposition supported the proposed law "100 percent", provided it clarified the sources of financing. But he predicted the CPP would reject a law that required transparency of its financial resources.
Pre-poll controversy
The National Election Committee said Monday that the SRP had filed four complaints against the CPP protesting alleged violations of the electoral rules relating to the impending provincial, district and municipal council elections on Sunday.
"The complaints were received by our provincial election staff in Phnom Penh and Stung Treng," NEC member Som Chandyna said. "Three complaints involve allegations of vote-buying. One [in Stung Treng] refers to the use of a government building for promoting the party during the campaign."
The head of the NEC's provincial body in Phnom Penh, Lun Chheng Kay, told the Post he had investigated the vote-buying allegations and summoned both parties to a Thursday meeting to resolve the matter.
Meanwhile, the head of Stung Treng's provincial NEC body, Buoy Chan Thallas, said after his investigation both sides agreed the building was not in fact government property.
Indelibility issues
Always a contentious matter in previous elections has been the use of so-called indelible ink used to prevent voters from casting more than one ballot.
Heu Rong, head of the NEC's Operations Department, said ink for the vote had been purchased from India at a cost of US$5,000 for 550 bottles.
Lim Kim Ly, executive director of the Family Agriculture Development Community (FADC), demonstrated to journalists on Monday that nail polish remover could not be used to remove the ink and pronounced it of good quality.
FADC is one of eight NGOs asked by the NEC to observe the council elections following the refusal of election watchdog groups Comfrel and Nicfec to participate, citing the fact that councillors would be elected by party officials and not the general public.
A Comfrel report issued in February blasted the council elections for being relevant only to the political parties that won council seats in the 2007 commune council elections, adding that the cost per voter would likely exceed that of the 2008 general election.

Cambodia oxen shun rice, worry farmers, in ritual


Cambodia's royal oxen eat corn and beans during the annual ploughing ceremony in Phnom Penh May 12, 2009. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea

Tuesday May 12, 2009

PHNOM PENH (Reuters Life!) - Cambodia's royal oxen dismayed farmers on Tuesday by turning up their noses at a traditional offering of rice, an omen the royal astrologer said boded ill for the harvest of the country's biggest crop.
The annual ritual, in which oxen plough a field near the royal palace before being given offerings, is taken seriously by many of Cambodia's superstitious, and largely poor, farmers if not by most of the politicians and diplomats who attend it.
This year, the oxen ate corn, green beans and soy beans, but avoided the other grains they were offered.
"This means we will have plenty of the corn and beans, but a poor rice harvest," astrologer Kang Ken announced after the ceremony which was presided over by King Norodom Sihamoni.
"This worries me a lot," said 27-year-old rice farmer Chan Thy as she heard the prediction.
The main harvest season is in November, and many farmers only harvest once a year because of lack of water.
The government is seeking to boost rice exports and cut poverty among its 14 million people, 85 percent of whom are farmers or members of farming families.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Cambodia was the world's ninth-biggest rice exporter in 2007 with 450,000 tonnes and the agriculture ministry says the country could export 8 million tonnes by 2015.
Prime Minister Hun Sen, who is spearheading the agricultural reform in Cambodia, did not attend the ceremony.
Cambodia's rice production has increased to 7.2 million tonnes for the 2008/09 season from 6.7 million in 2007/08.

Vanessa Hudgens Say Ok Music Video (Official with Zac Efron)

Vanessa Hudgens - Sneakernight - Official Music Video (HQ)

Miley Cyrus - 7 Things - Official Music Video (HQ)

Monday, May 11, 2009

Opposition calls for purging of long-stalled investments

Construction continues at Bokor Mountain. Many large projects failed to materialise this year due to the downturn in Cambodia's property market. (Photo by: Tom Hunter)

Monday, 11 May 2009
Written by May Kunmakara
The Phnom Penh Post

Call from Sam Rainsy Party comes after Prime Minister Hun Sen previously threatened withdrawal of business licences for inactive projects.
OPPOSITION lawmakers have urged the government to erase inactive investment projects from government books, saying that potentially hundreds of companies registered in the country are no longer operating.
According to a 2008 report by the Council for the Development of Cambodia (CDC), 101 projects worth US$10.89 billion were approved last year.
Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker Yim Sovann said that since the global economy began shrinking, around 50 percent of companies have suspended or stopped operations, especially in the garment and construction industries.
"The government should pass the anti-corruption law, which will help keep away bad investors and build confidence," he said. "The government should also change our economic policy by encouraging both local and foreign investors to produce good quality items to compete with neighbouring countries and investigate whether these companies are actually operating after they receive approval from the government," he added, saying that some firms have used the economic crisis as a pretext to alter their business operations.
CDC figures said that last year $106 million was invested in agriculture, $715 million in the industrial sector, more than $1 billion in services and over $8 billion in tourism. Of this money, 68 percent came from overseas.
China was the top investor providing 40 percent of capital, followed by South Korea with 11.39 percent and the United States at 6.32 percent.
Yuon Heng, director of the Evaluation and Incentive Department at the Cambodian Investment Board, said last week that most of the projects approved last year were small-scale, adding that bigger investments always require a longer process.
"The reason that large capital investment companies have not started projects is because they are preparing a master plan and dealing with land disputes - it takes time," he said.
On a smaller scale
The difference last year, he said, was mainly due to a small number of large projects, such as the $100 million Bokor Mountain development, which boosted the level of investment. Such investments have been unaffected by the downturn, he added.
"I don't think those companies were impacted by the global financial crisis because I have not received any information that they are facing fund shortages," he said.
"However, I think those companies will be impacted by the challenges, and Chinese companies seem to be doing better than others," he added.
Prime Minister Hun Sen last month threatened to take back the development sites of inactive companies, urging Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh and the CDC to review the proposals of companies investing in golf courses that had not started construction.

Cambodia demands compensation from Thailand for losses caused by Thai troops in Preah Vihear

PHNOM PENH, May 11 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian government presents its complaints to Thailand on Monday, demanding compensation for the damage and losses caused by Thai troops' attack early April on its market located in front of the Temple of Preah Vihear.
"The attack with heavy weapons by Thai troops against Cambodian territory in the area close to the Temple of Preah Vihear on April 3 caused numerous damages and set a blaze the Cambodian market located in front of the temple," a note from Cambodian foreign ministry to Thailand foreign ministry said.
"A total number of 264 stands within this market were completely destroyed, causing great hardship and misery to 319 Cambodian families who have lost their livelihood," it said, adding that "the material loss incurred on these families amounts to 2,150,500 U.S. dollars."
"The Royal Government of Cambodia demands that the Royal Thai Government take full responsibility for these damages caused by Thai soldiers and to appropriately compensate the above losses," the ministry statement said.
The Preah Vihear temple became a World Heritage Site of UNESCO in July 2008. Although the International Court in Hague decided in 1962 that the temple and its surrounding area should belong to Cambodia, Thailand has been claiming its archeological value and sovereignty.
Both troops built up within the border area since July 2008, and brief military encounters in October 2008 and April 2009 have sparked concern of possible war between these two countries. Gunfire exchange during the armed clashes also led to bullet pits and other slight wound of the temple.

Chavez extends state oil industry

 

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

It is not the first time President Chavez has clashed with oil companies

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez has announced plans to nationalise companies that provide services for the country's oil industry.

The state oil company has recently clashed with foreign and local service providers over the prices they charge.

The state firm says a falling oil price means the service providers are being paid too much for their work.

President Chavez has re-invigorated his nationalisation programme since his victory in a referendum in February.

He made the announcement of the imminent take over of the oil contractors shortly after the national assembly passed legislation extending the state's control to all activities related to the oil industry.

Grip tightening

The move will place 300 boats, several ports and an estimated 8,000 oil workers under state control.

Most of the nationalisations are expected to take place in region of Lake Maracaibo, in the oil-rich state of Zulia - the centre of Venezuela's oil production.

This is not the first time Mr Chavez has taken over private oil assets, he pushed through a series of nationalisations of foreign energy companies in 2007.

But until now, state control of the oil industry has been limited to production and exploration.

This latest extension of the state into the oil sector will allow the Venezuelan leader to further tighten his grip on the oil industry at a crucial time for the global economy, the BBC's Will Grant in Caracas says.

Venezuela has one of the biggest oil reserves in the world and is the largest oil exporter in the Americas.

Doubts remain as Sharia bill signed

By M Ilyas Khan
BBC News, Islamabad

Rally in Mingora

A mass rally in Swat last Friday demanded the president sign the bill

After months of wavering, the Pakistani government has finally approved a law that will enforce the Sharia justice system in its troubled north-western district of Swat.

But the contours of that law are still not clear, sparking fears that differences over the details may yet again derail peace in this once popular tourist resort.

The government seems to think that as the Taleban's demand of Sharia law has been met, the militants will lay down their arms and go home.

The Taleban, on the contrary, seem to believe that they have a peace time job of guiding society along the "right path", if not to conquer new frontiers.

Maulana Sufi Mohammad, the local cleric who helped negotiate peace between the government and the militants, apparently has little leverage with either party and has kept his own understanding of what form the law should take largely to himself.

Call to disarm

Many in Pakistan and in the West are generally sceptical about the Taleban's intentions of respecting human rights.

Sufi Mohammad's supporters

Sufi Mohammad and his supporters were angry at the president's delay

Moreover, these circles believe the Taleban have negotiated peace from a position of strength, and would be reluctant to give up their military advantage in the area.

Since the middle of 2007, the militants have gradually consolidated their hold over Swat, located in the northern parts of North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

An on-off military operation ordered in the autumn of 2007 stumbled to a halt in February 2009 after conceding nearly the entire district to the militants.

The fighting was brought to an end when Sufi Mohammad agreed to negotiate peace.

In line with that agreement, the ruling party in NWFP, the Awami National Party (ANP), drafted a law to enforce the Islamic justice system in Swat, and sent the draft to President Asif Ali Zardari for final approval.

But the president sat on it for nearly two months, saying the bill would be signed once "the writ of the government has been established" in Swat. That is still not the case.

Tribal areas map

Now the bill is signed, Sufi Mohammad has called on the militants to lay down their arms.

The head of the interior ministry, Rehman Malik, also expressed "hope that the Taleban would disarm".

A senior ANP leader, Senator Haji Adeel, said if the Taleban wanted to continue to influence public life in Swat, they should organise themselves into a political party.

"Dictating how people should live their lives by holding a gun to their heads is not the right course," he said.

But those who oppose the deal say this is easier said than done.

Over the past few months, the militants have established their organisational chapters in all the sub-districts of Swat, complete with Islamic courts to settle criminal and civil disputes and also to punish lax morality.

Since the ceasefire in February, they have also prevented the army from establishing positions anywhere except at their designated garrisons and camps.

But they have so far refused to submit to any curbs on their own movement, as was evident last week when they raided the nearby district of Buner, occupied a police station and locked up a popular local shrine.

The opponents of the peace deal say this does not augur well for a job that remains unfinished.

Timeframe

Minister for Religious Affairs Hamid Saeed Kazmi pointed out in a press conference on Tuesday that matters concerning the qualification of judges, the mechanism of their appointment and legal procedures for a proper court trial were yet to be settled.

Sharia court in Swat

Many in Swat have welcomed the new Sharia courts

The NWFP government has indicated that selection and appointment of judges will remain its prerogative, but the militants have been seeking a role for themselves as well as Sufi Mohammad in this.

Questions about a timeframe for the exit of the army from Swat, and the role of the police and local administration, also remain largely unexplained.

The ANP-led government decided to negotiate peace with the Taleban because its top leaders were convinced the army did not want to evict them from Swat.

They are confident that after the introduction of Sharia, the Taleban will be under growing pressure from the people as well as leaders like Sufi Mohammad to back off.

Aftab Sherpao, a former chief minister of NWFP who first introduced Islamic courts in Swat in 1994, says success will take time.

"It will take a year for things in Swat to get back to normal," he told the media on Tuesday.

How the year unfolds will become clear over the next few weeks.

Pakistan steps up Swat offensive

The operation is expected to be long and difficult

Pakistan's military is stepping up an offensive against the Taleban, after a weekend in which it said it killed 200 militants in and near the Swat valley.

It has begun an artillery bombardment of militant positions.

The UN refugee agency has meanwhile warned of an increase in the number of civilians being displaced as tens of thousands flee the fighting.

The medical director of one district told the BBC the provincial government was coping well with the displaced.

Meanwhile at least six people were killed and several wounded in a suicide car bomb attack on a checkpoint near the city of Peshawar.

See a map of the region

Call for help

The BBC's Barbara Plett in Islamabad says the military has been using heavy artillery to soften up the Taleban, which is currently in control of large parts of Swat valley.

Fighting is continuing throughout Malakand region, which includes Swat, Dir and Buner.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said about 200 militants were killed over the weekend, bringing the total killed in fighting in the region to 700, but it is impossible to independently confirm these figures.

The government has vowed to eliminate the militants, but our correspondent says this could be a long and difficult battle.

Civilians have been taking advantage of the lifting of a curfew to leave violence-hit areas, but our correspondent says security forces are no longer allowing them though.

Arshad Ahmed Khan, the medical director of Mardan district, called for help from international aid agencies to deal with the problem.

"The provincial government is ... providing a very great job to these IDPs [internally displaced persons], including free medicine, free food, even the clothes are provided by the government," he told the BBC.

"We are doing our level best and we are catering for the IDPs, but still we feel that now is the prime time that the NGOs, they should come forward and they should take part in this activity."

The government says it expects a million internally displaced people.

Killian Kleinschmidt, deputy head of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees in Pakistan, said more than 300,000 people had been registered as displaced at camps or registration centres.

Pakistan's government signed a peace agreement with the Swat Taleban in February, allowing Sharia law there, a move sharply criticised by Washington.

The militants then moved towards the capital, Islamabad, causing further alarm.

Up to 15,000 troops have now been deployed in the Swat valley and neighbouring areas to take on up to 5,000 militants.

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani has called the conflict a "fight for the survival of the country".

Khmer Krom make themselves heard on the United Nations doorstep [-Good job, KK Brothers and Sisters!]

Place des Nations (Geneva, Switzerland). Vien Thach, president of the Khmer Kampuchea-Krom Federation in Europe, co-organiser of the demonstration attended by Khmer Krom who came from all over the world to make themselves heard (Photo: Laurent Le Gouanvic)

09-05-2009
By Laurent le Gouanvic
Ka-set

Coming from Switzerland, France, Italy, Germany, the Netherlands, the United States, Canada, New Zealand or Australia, among others, over 200 natives of Kampuchea Krom, a region located in the Mekong delta, in Southern Vietnam, and once Cambodian territory, gathered on Friday May 8th in front of the United Nations Palace, in Geneva, Switzerland. The exceptional event was organised by the Khmer Kampuchea-Krom Federation (KKF) on the occasion of the very first hearing of the Vietnamese government by the United Nations Human Rights Council, under the Universal Periodic Review, a new mechanism meant to assess the human rights situation in each of the 192 member states of the United Nations. Interview, at the heart of the demonstration, with one of the main organisers, the president of the KKF in Europe, Vien Thach, who rejoices at a “historic day”.
On the morning of May 8th, the sky was favourable to the Khmer Krom cause, with an exceptionally sunny day in Geneva, Switzerland, and just enough wind for the blue-yellow-red flags of Kampuchea Krom to flap, along with the banners demanding the “right to self-determination”, “freedom of religion, expression and the press”, and the end of persecutions by Vietnam against “the indigenous Khmer Krom people”. The weather was also ideal to lay out mats on the Place des Nations, just in front of the eponymous palace, and make the demonstration a friendly gathering, with noum pang (sandwiches) being distributed and traditional dance shows. If some bemoaned having had to share the enormous square with another group of demonstrators, Vietnamese also calling for the respect of human rights and freedom of religion in Vietnam, the co-organisers – U.S. president of the Khmer Kampuchea-Krom Federation (KKF) Thach Thach, his counterpart for the European representation of the KKF Vien Tach, and representatives of NGO UNPO (Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization) rejoiced that they were able to bring their message to this international stage. Before going to the Palace of Nations, to attend Vietnam's hearing before the Human Rights Council, Vien Thach explained to Ka-set his expectations and the goal of the demonstration.
Ka-set: What are the violations of Khmer Krom's human rights you want to denounce with the United Nations?
Vien Thach: To give you the gist: First, the persecutions against Khmer Theravada Buddhism [practised by Khmer Krom as well as in Cambodia, Thailand and Laos most notably]; secondly, the grabbing of land belonging to Khmer Krom farmers; and thirdly, the falsification of Khmer Krom history by Vietnam. Our goal is to raise awareness in the international public on these issues and support the NGOs who support us, such as Human Rights Watch, whose [January 2009 report http://cambodia.ka-set.info/powers/news-hrw-human-rights-watch-khmer-krom-vietnam-090122.html Ka-set: Vietnam: Human Rights Watch analysts denounce violations of Khmer Krom rights] on Vietnam focuses largely on this issue.
K7: What do you mean by “falsification of history”?
VT: The Vietnamese government refuses to acknowledge that we are an indigenous people in this territory. They write in official documents and manuals that we are refugees who came from Cambodia and settled in Vietnam, whereas we have been there and occupied these lands for a long time, even before the Vietnamese. The Khmer Krom are indigenous people. You must not forget that 21 provinces in Southern Vietnam actually used to be Khmer territory. But in 1949, France gave our territory to Vietnam instead of returning it to Cambodia. From then on, we have been persecuted because Vietnam has a culture that is very different from ours, different religious practices... We have a lot of trouble living with the Vietnamese.
K7: The demonstrators gathered today live in Europe, North America, Australia or New Zealand... Where does the information you report on persecutions and human rights violations against Khmer Krom come from?
VT: Our correspondents, compatriots who live there [Editor's note: in the Mekong delta], communicate information to us. That is one of the reasons why Vietnam does not dare to do us as much harm now. They have signed international human rights conventions, but that was first to receive money from donors... Until 2001, the Vietnamese government was not concerned in the least about Khmer Krom's fate. But the community of Khmer Krom throughout the world asked the international community to react and help these poor populations.
K7: Then, are you hoping to attract the attention of Vietnam's donors by demonstrating on the Place des Nations?
VT: Yes. Governments giving aid to Vietnam as well as international institutions, like the World Bank, must pressure the government of Hanoi. We are pursuing our efforts in that direction. The European Parliament, for instance, knows the situation quite well now. The deputies have even voted with a very large majority to condemn human rights violations in Vietnam.
K7: You have mentioned the period when Kampuchea Krom was officially part of Cambodia. This historic reference features heavily on the banners and signs brandished during this demonstration. Does that mean you are hoping for this region to be integrated back to Cambodia?
VT: No, that is not really the issue today. Cambodia has never supported us. So, we want to manage by ourselves. Khmer Krom monk Tim Sakhorn, although he was the head of a pagoda, had taken refuge in Cambodia... And the Cambodian government defrocked him and sent him back to Vietnam, while it is absolutely contrary to the Cambodian Constitution to extradite a compatriot. We do not count on Cambodia. Our fellow citizens cannot take refuge in Cambodia without fearing to be sent back to Vietnam, to the police, in the conditions you can imagine...
K7: Would you be ready to call for the independence of Kampuchea Krom?
VT: It is a very important question. But there are still many things to do before thinking about it. We do not want to get ahead of ourselves. Our compatriots are poor and most of them live in the countryside. First, we have to give them education, improve their living conditions, ensure that they know human rights.
-----------------------------
The Universal Periodic Review
The Universal Periodic Review (UPR) is a new mechanism established in 2006 with the creation of the United Nations Human Rights Council. The UPR is meant to review the human rights situation in the 192 member states of the United Nations every four years. The ongoing process, under which Vietnam is currently being reviewed, is scheduled for completion by 2011. Ultimately, the goal is to equip the Human Rights Council with a universal mechanism recognised by member states, which will give it extra weight to enforce respect for human rights.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

A Buddhist Supreme Patriarch who is still filled with HIMSA (anger)

Supreme Patriarch angered by questions on the decision to demolish the crematorium

Thursday, May 07, 2009
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy
The 54-year-old crematorium at the Wat Unalom Pagoda was ordered demolished by Supreme Patriarch Tep Vong after the City Hall issued its goal of eliminating all crematoriums within the city limit. Tep Vong clarified that the demolition of this crematorium was done to follow the City Hall directive which indicated that all crematoriums must be relocated outside the city limit. Tep Vong said that Wat Unalom Pagoda is an exemplary pagoda, therefore, it must takes the lead to set the example for other pagodas in the city. At the same time, Tep Vong also reacted angrily to the questions asked by journalists. The Supreme Patriarch [who being a former Communist Party member, most likely, forgot that he is currently a Buddhist monk practicing AHIMSA, non-violence] proceeded to call the journalists: “puppets [a-yorng], ghosts [bey-sach]”. His reaction came about when the journalists were asking him about the decision to demolish this crematorium at Wat Unalom Pagoda. According to the City Hall plan, the crematorium must be moved to the Wat Russey Sanh Pagoda, located in Prey Sar commune, Dangkao district, Phnom Penh city, located about 15 kilometers from the city center. The new crematorium is modern and uses electricity.

Terry backs Drogba after ref rant

John Terry is prepared to back Didier Drogba even though the striker is under-fire for his post-match comments.

Drogba confronted controversial referee Tom Henning Ovrebo and let loose a foul-mouthed TV rant in front of millions following Chelsea's heartbreaking Champions League exit at the hands of Barcelona.

The England and Chelsea captain slammed Ovrebo and accused UEFA making a mistake by appointing Ovrebo to the semi-final second leg.

Chelsea looked to have set-up a repeat of last year's Champions League final against Manchester United when Michael Essien put them in front with a 20-yard volley in the ninth minute.

The Blues were on the brink of celebrating their second successive final until Andres Iniesta lashed a 93rd minute equaliser beyond Petr Cech with Barcelona's first shot on target.

The vital away goal put the Catalans in the final in Rome on May 27 but Ovrebo's performance left Terry and his Chelsea team-mates fuming.

The Norwegian had refused to award Chelsea two spot-kicks in the first half when Florent Malouda and Drogba were brought down.

Ovrebo carried on in the second half by rejecting two handball penalty appeals after Gerard Pique handled as Nicolas Anelka tried to go past him and in the final seconds, after Iniesta's leveller, Michael Ballack's shot hit Samuel Eto'o's arm.

Ballack was so incensed he protested alongside the referee for 40 yards before getting a yellow card.

Drogba, who had been substituted in the second half, then confronted the official after the game and received a yellow card for his protest before yelling "It's a f****** disgrace" straight at the TV cameras.

"I am fully behind Didier Drogba for the way he reacted," declared Terry. "The man wants to win. You can see the passion that he played with during the game and the passion afterwards.

"It is difficult when players are so high on emotions after the game and people were saying in the Sky TV studios that we shouldn't be reacting the way we did.

"That's impossible after having six or seven decisions go against you at home in front of your own fans. I've seen them all and two were clear penalties and you don't get one. How are you supposed to feel?

"It's a shambles really. Players dream of playing in these finals but we can't through bad refereeing.

"We get a referee who has refereed 10 Champions League games in his career and for him to be given the semi-final at Stamford Bridge is not good enough.

"If a referee makes bad decisions, he should face the consequences.

"If a player makes mistakes time after time, he will be dropped from the team, but referees just keep getting the big games at big stadiums.

"It is down to UEFA to be strong enough and say these are our four best referees and they are going to referee the home and away legs.

"Both sides had experienced players but we just didn't have the referee to go with a big game.

"If we had been given one of those penalties we would have been cruising at 2-0. We did exactly what the manager asked of us but we are not going through because of a bad refereeing decision.

"Not one player made a mistake over the two legs but we come away with a referee making four or five big errors and now we are out of the competition.

"Maybe that referee would have been good enough in the group stages of the Champions League but on a big stage, with a big game and big players, he simply wasn't good enough."

Chelsea still have the FA Cup final against Everton to look forward to on May 30 at Wembley but Terry says the build-up will be tarnished by Champions League showdown three days earlier.

"We will be watching that final three days before and thinking we should have been there," added Terry.

"We are delighted to be in the FA Cup final and want to make sure we secure third place in the league."

end

Hiddink: I will back Drogba

uus Hiddink will support Didier Drogba if UEFA decide to punish the Ivorian striker over his post-match misdemeanors.

Drogba confronted referee Tom Henning Ovrebo and he also let loose a foul-mouthed TV rant following yesterday's Champions League semi-final exit

Ovrebo was criticised by both Hiddink and Chelsea captain John Terry after the Norwegian official turned down four penalty appeals by the Blues.

The under-fire referee rejected two in the first half when Florent Malouda and Drogba were hauled down and then he then missed two clear handball offences in the second half.

First Gerard Pique handled as Nicolas Anelka tried to beat him and in the dying seconds, after Andres Iniesta's 93rd minute equaliser, Michael Ballack's shot hit the raised arm of Samuel Eto'o.

Chelsea had gone ahead in the ninth minute when Michael Essien scored with a ferocious 20-yard volley.

But as Chelsea prepared to celebrate a repeat of last year's final against Manchester United, Iniesta scored the vital away goal that takes them to Rome on May 27 instead.

Ballack protested so angrily that he was booked by the Norwegian referee while Drogba, who had been substituted in the second half, appeared from the tunnel to confront Ovrebo after the game.

He was kept away by Chelsea stewards but the Ivorian then yelled "It's a f****** disgrace" straight down a live TV camera as pandemonium descended on Stamford Bridge.

But with UEFA set to investigate Drogba's behaviour and possibly Terry's comments, Hiddink insists he will stand by the Ivorian.

"Of course I can fully understand his reaction - full of adrenaline and emotion," said Hiddink. "People say he should be in control. The moment a player starts hitting then he is going beyond where he should go.

"I can understand his emotion and his behaviour after the game. I will protect that."

But Hiddink admitted he found it hard to remember when he had seen such a poor refereeing performance.

"In big games like this you need top-notch referees who have had big experience in leagues like Spain, Italy, England and Germany," he added.

"There is an overall feeling of being robbed, injustice. That's why they were so hot and angry and I could understand the emotion of the players.

"Of course the players make mistakes, coaches make mistakes and referees can make mistakes, that's why we talk about giving the benefit of the doubt.

"But if you have seen three or four situations waved away, then it's the worst I have seen.

"In the first half you see Malouda was clearly pulled over in the penalty area and the referee had a perfect view on the vertical of the line. You see handball situations and the arms are up not down.

"With Anelka, the hand was lifted by Pique and when the shot came from Ballack, Eto'o lifted his upper arm but they were all waved away."