130627-The Post English

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all you need to know about property in cambodia

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Issue NUMBER 1656

16 pages

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THURSDAY, june 27, 2013

4000 RIEL

Rudd ousts Gillard in Australia James Grubel

KEVIN Rudd returned as Australian prime minister yesterday, executing a stunning party room coup on Julia Gillard almost three years to the day after being ousted by his former deputy and less than three months away from a general election. The reinstatement of Rudd as leader was a last-ditch effort to shore up support by the governing Labor Party, which opinion polls show faces a battering at the election scheduled for September 14. The Mandarin-speaking former diplomat draws strong popular support but has divided and destabilised his party after launching two failed bids for the leadership of the party in the past 18 months. Analysts, however, predicted the move could backfire. “I don’t think it will help Labor. I think they’ve dug themselves a deeper grave,” John Wanna, professor of politics at the Australian National University, said. The return of Rudd could now see Australia go to an election in August rather than the set date of September 14 to cash in on his greater popularity with voters and an expected honeymoon period with the electorate. The leadership change followed a series of opinion polls showing Gillard’s minority government could lose up to 35 seats, giving the conservative opposition a massive majority in the 150-member parliament. Gillard, Australia’s first female prime Continues on page 12

Hazy days A worker pours water to extinguish a blaze that is burning through his pineapple plantation in Indonesia’s fire-affected Riau province yesterday.

REUTERS

Drug use on rise in Kingdom M Justine Drennan

ETHAMPHETAMINE use and trafficking is a growing concern in Cambodia, where seizures of meth pills nearly tripled in a single year, the United Nations

Office on Drug and Crime announced yesterday. The UNODC’s 2013 World Drug Report, released on the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking yesterday, shows that increasing methamphetamine use in Cambodia is part of a broader trend in the region.

However, no country saw a greater increase than Cambodia’s 189 per cent jump in meth pill seizures between 2010 and 2011, the report says, noting that the number of pills seized nevertheless was small when compared with numbers from countries like Thailand and China.

“In the East and Southeast Asia Region in general, the manufacture, trafficking and consumption of amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) is increasing and a worsening problem,” said Olivier Lermet, country manager Continues on page 2

Campaign forces, merchandise deployed en masse Vong Sokheng, Sean Teehan and Phak Seangly

CHHAY Rachana remained in constant motion at Daiy Ek Silk Screen in Phnom Penh yesterday morning as a stream of customers filtered in to pick up T-shirts, hats and car decals emblazoned with the Cambodian People’s Party logo in preparation for today’s kick-off of the month-long campaign period.

In just 10 days, the shop has sold 10,000 CPP T-shirts, said Rachana, who, like many merchants selling CPP products, has seen business skyrocket. Outside the shop, 18-year-old Mon Keo Ravy used soap and water to paste CPP window decals onto each window of a silver Toyota 4-Runner as Hem, a 49-year-old employee with the government’s anti-terror-

ism department, watched his handiwork. A CPP member, Hem said he spent about $100 on party merchandise of his own volition. The logos turn his car into a rolling advertisement that familiarises people with the party’s logo, he said. Plenty of campaign gear will likely be on display today, as parties launch scores of rallies across the country. The CPP is hold-

ing nine separate events in nine different districts in Phnom Penh, said Ork Kimhan, CPP cabinet chief in charge of Statistic Central Department. Cambodia National Rescue Party spokesman Yim Sovann expects about 10,000 CNRP supporters to gather at Freedom Park, for a rally Continues on page 6


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

National

Bandith eludes authorities May Titthara Svay Rieng

F

ORMER Bavet town Governor Chhouk Bandith, who was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment two days ago for shooting three garment workers, remained free as of yesterday evening despite outcry from observers that a verdict without enforcement was a hollow measure. Svay Rieng provincial police chief Hem Saban said yesterday that he was taking action to implement the provincial court’s verdict, but that even after dividing his forces to search for the disgraced governor, Bandith’s whereabouts were still unknown. “What is important now is that we do not know where he is because he has many houses. But our forces are looking for him,” he said. Bandith was convicted on Tuesday on charges of unintentional violence after he shot and injured three workers who were protesting for better working conditions in February 2012. His case had been delayed for more than a year, and the charges against him were dropped once before, much to the consternation of rights groups.

Former Bavet town governor Chhouk Bandith’s house in Svay Rieng province yesterday. vireak mai

According to an unnamed police officer, Bandith has three homes in Svay Rieng province – a villa in Bavet town, a home in Chantrea district and another in his home district of Romeas Hek – in addition to a home in Phnom Penh. “What we suspect is that he may be living in Phnom Penh, because after the problems he did not often stay in Svay Rieng,” the officer said. Bandith’s fenced-off Bavet town villa appeared empty yesterday, and a woman living nearby who asked not

to be identified said that, apart from occasional visits, his family hadn’t lived in the house since word of the shooting spread. Deputy Provincial Governor Men Vibol said Bandith has also been a no-show at work. According to Vibol, Bandith never once showed up for his job in the Provincial Hall, where he was transferred after being removed as Bavet town governor. “I do not know the reason why, for more than one year, he never came to work in the

hall,” Vibol said. Washing dishes in her home, victim Keo Near – who received eight million riel (about $2,000) in compensation – said that though the court’s verdict had delivered justice in principle, it would mean little without Bandith’s imprisonment. “I insist the authorities arrest him and put him in jail soon as possible,” Near said. “If Chhouk Bandith is not jailed, it means the court’s verdict is useless and this is still an injustice for me.” Fellow victim Nuth Sakhorn, who was awarded 10 million riel, said she too was happy to see him convicted, but would not “lose [her] fear unless Chhouk Bandith is handcuffed and put in jail so [she] can sleep well”. Svay Rieng resident Om Korng – who has followed the case’s twists and turns – echoed civil society’s criticisms that Bandith’s sentence had been too light but said that it was still better than nothing. “Although he is imprisoned for that short period, it is good for victims; better than if the victims stayed with their sufferings and their injuries. But the perpetrator still gets to go have coffee and eat noodles with no problem,” he said.

Dr.Beat Richner, Kantha Bopha Children’s Hospitals Phnom Penh / Siem Reap Angkor, 27. June 2013

Semi Annual Report Of The Kantha Bopha Hospitals (1 January -24 June 2013) Admissions for hospitalization of severely sick children: 52053 Severe cases of the Hemorrhagic Dengue Fever: 4127 Surgical operations: 7849 Head Trauma: 1847 !!! (12,5% to be operated by our surgery)

Government officials light a fire to dispose of more than a tonne of confiscated drugs near Phnom Penh last year. meng kimlong

Drug use on the rise Continued from page 1

for the UNODC in Cambodia. “Cambodia continues to serve as a transit country for drugs produced in Myanmar, most of which enter Cambodia from its northeastern border with Laos. Drug traffickers, in particular those from China and West Africa, traffic drugs out of Cambodia via international airports in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap.” ATS, which include meth and ecstasy, are “by far the most trafficked and consumed” drugs in Cambodia, he added. “There is also some evidence of methamphetamine production in Cambodia, shown by the seizure of labs in Cambodia, throughout the last year,” he said. Indeed, Cambodia numbered sixth in the world among “most frequently mentioned countries of provenance for individual drug seizure cases” for ATS between 2001 and 2012, after the Netherlands, Laos, Germany, the UK and Myanmar, according to the report. Cambodia was also one of several countries in 2011 to seize a record amount of crystal meth, though again, the 19 kilogram bust was small compared with other countries’ records, the report says. While meth pills are still the most common ATS in the re-

gion, the report warns that in 2011 “seizures of crystalline methamphetamine, however, increased to 8.8 tonnes, the highest level in the past five years, indicating that the substance is an imminent threat”. The report also singles out Cambodia and China as key sources of safrole oil, a precursor for ecstasy. During a speech to mark the International Day Against Drugs, Prime Minister Hun Sen said yesterday that Cambodia increasingly faced drug threats from across its borders. “Some people in northwestern Cambodia, migrants, street children, workers and youths use and are addicted to drugs because they are not aware of the influence and danger of drugs,” he said, adding that the majority of users are between the ages of 15 and 35. In response to the threat, the government was actively educating and rehabilitating addicts, and authorities had been arresting and punishing traffickers and dealers, he said. Lermet stressed that in addressing addiction, the government should continue to develop evidence-based community treatment centres as an alternative to compulsory treatment centres, which have been repeatedly condemned by human rights groups. ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY CHEANG SOKHA

Deliveries: 8259

Kantha Bopha Children s Hospital

During the speech of President Barack Obama in Berlin I think having heard the following words being shouted to the cheering crowds waiting 3 hours in the heat: We should think on the poor too! No more children should suffer and pass away from diseases, which could be healed. We should find other and new models in the global health sector not depending on charity.

Siem Reap Angkor ( Jayavarman VII )

Kantha Bopha is a world model functioning the day and the night without corruption. It is a model of justice and medical committement. All treatment is free for all. But although its correlation between costs and healing rate is worldwide the best, still 80% of the budget are depending on charity.

Every Saturday, 7.15 pm

Why the states who have caused whole the misery in Cambodia bringing and supporting the war, supporting the following civil war, supporting the Khmer Rouges, do not contribute a single Dollar to the budget of Kantha Bopha which is actually preventing a passive genocide of Cambodian children by the hard and highly professional work in the heat by 2450 Cambodian staff, the day and the night? Maybe President Barack Obama is questioning this too and is aware on the Model Kantha Bopha –unique in the world- from the article in November 2012 “What President Barack Obama could have learned in Cambodia”. This article you can find in Google (putting in its title) or on our home page.

BEATOCELLO in CONCERT Cello Music and information about the five Kantha Bopha Children s Hospitals by Dr. Beat Richner

The Model Kantha Bopha is no dream, it is reality. But it depends still today, after 21 years, on charity by 80%. We thank you for all your financial contributions. Dr. Beat Richner, Head and Founder of the Kantha Bopha Hospitals www.beatocello.com

Free admission www.beatocello.com


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

National

New bird species discovered Justine Drennan

THOUGH it’s long been chirping away mere kilometres from Phnom Penh, a type of small songbird with a rust-colored head has only just been discovered to be a new species. Researchers announced yesterday that in the past year they had found more than 100 birds belonging to the species they are calling the Cambodian tailorbird, or Orthotomus chaktomuk – including one male within the capital’s city limits at Choeung Ek. “It’s special to find a new species of bird,” Simon Mahood of the Wildlife Conservation Society, the paper’s lead author, said. “It’s especially interesting to find one that lives so close to people, not in some remote area.” Mahood began to suspect researchers were dealing with an entirely unique species in 2012, when he was unable to identify the species of a tailorbird in a photo that his colleague and coauthor, Ashish John, took at a partially flooded construction site outside Phnom Penh. After further investigation, the team of WCS, BirdLife International and others determined that slight differences in these birds’ colouration and song patterns, and the fact that they did not mix with similar birds in the

Weak laws stymie the fight against torture Stuart White

W The Cambodian tailorbird, a newly discovered species, in Phnom Penh in 2012. Ashish John/WCS

same area, demonstrated they were a new species. Probably one reason the birds had not been classed as a separate species before is that they “usually stay within dense vegetation”, the researchers write in their paper. “The habitat and the species’ skulking habits would more often than not render it invisible to the casual would-be observer.”

While similar species are found elsewhere in the region, the chaktomuk so far only has been found in Cambodia’s southeast. But researchers warn this habitat may be shrinking due to the impact of agriculture and hydrodams on areas of “floodplain scrub”, and have recommended the International Union for Conservation of Nature class the species as “Near Threatened”.

HEN authorities discovered 27year-old Mom Rithy chained to a wall in a Preah Sihanouk province rental house, gagged, badly beaten and missing a finger, they took swift action. They arrested three suspects – two Russians and a Ukrainian – for having allegedly bound and mutilated Rithy as punishment for attempting to steal a cheap cell phone. The next day the provincial court charged the trio for the illegal detention and torture. Though the charges in Rithy’s case may have seemed like a no-brainer, many torture cases go unreported every year. Even those that are reported often go unresolved, said the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee and a handful of other rights groups at a conference on torture issues yesterday. “In many cases, for us to convict a person, they use violence to make them confess,” said CHRAC Chairman

Sok Sam Oeun at the event. “The mandate of the investigating judge is to look into the evidence – both exculpatory and inculpatory evidence,” Sam Oeun, who is also executive director of the Cambodian Defenders Project, added. “But if he does not do so, they will still use the confession. So we must strengthen the capacity of judges.” Many torture cases, he continued, go unpunished simply because torture is so ill-defined under Cambodian law. “Many [civil society organisations] focus on how to lobby on law reform, but in the last few years, many donors focus more on the grassroots,” Sam Oeun said, noting that demonstrating to affect change can’t be effective unless the legislation is reformed as well. “But if the definition of torture is not clear, do we think there is less torture? If the law is not clear, then no one will be prosecuted.” The poor definition of torture is especially troublesome when victims are intimidated

psychologically, instead of physically, said Ny Chakrya, head of the human rights and legal aid section of the rights group Adhoc. “Sometimes police don’t have to beat them. They may do a cruel act to a person in the room next to them to make them scared,” he said. Adhoc has observed at least 141 cases of torture since 2010, a figure Chakrya said was almost certainly incomplete. The rights group Licadho reported 135 torture complaints in 2011 alone, a nearly 30 per cent rise over 2010. “We need more participation from the state agents,” Chakrya said. “NGOs should not be seen as the opponent.” Police spokesman Khieu Sopheak denied that torture was commonplace in Cambodia, but said that in any country “they could not say that there is no torture of suspects – even in America”. Even so, he added, police don’t get too cosy with suspects. “In Cambodia, we never sampeah (a traditional greeting) the suspects,” he said.


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

National

Campaign no-no

Kem Sokha beefs up security for election

M

Cheang Sokha

RCAF car is impounded for CPP logo

ILITARY Police in Phnom Penh’s Chamkarmon district impounded a state vehicle last night and detained its owner for questioning over using state property for campaigning. Adorned with two large Cambodian People’s Party stickers – one bearing a lifesize face of Prime Minister Hun Sen – the Toyota Camry was brought to the district military police station at around 8pm after opposition legislator Mu Sochua reported it to police. District military police officials declined to comment and refused to provide the name of the owner, but an officer speaking on the condition of anonymity confirmed that the car had been impounded “because it has military plates and uses party stickers”. National Election Committee officials and even the premier have warned against such appropriation of state resources, which is in direct violation of the election law, but several instances have been recorded. DAVID BOYLE

AFTER landing at Phnom Penh International Airport on Tuesday morning, opposition leader Kem Sokha greeted scores of his supporters before moving on to a different entourage – a dozen bodyguards. As the beleaguered Cambodia National Rescue Party acting head made his way out of the gate and into a waiting car, the guards jogged alongside before jumping into a vehicle of their own. At the front of the small convoy, a third car, one bearing the plates of a foreign embassy, led the way. Normally accompanied by just two or three bodyguards, Sokha has seen his retinue balloon in recent weeks amid fears for his safety, party officials said. “It’s for security reasons,” explained Ho Vann, one of the opposition lawmakers who met Sokha at the airport. Earlier this month, the Ministry of Interior met with Sokha and offered him protection if desired. He declined, ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak said yesterday. “We agreed to provide him with special protection if he

needed. But after he did not write any special proposal,” said Sopheak. Instead, Sokha – perhaps unsurprisingly – has favoured private guards. Cambodia National Rescue Party spokeswoman Kem Monovithya told the Post yesterday that security had been upped for Sokha following the fallout over his alleged comments concerning S-21, and a series of protests and forum disruptions that came in its wake. “Since the whole drama unfolded a few weeks ago” bodyguards had been added, she said. “There’s intimidation, as you’re well aware of, but there haven’t been any direct threats, except for at the forums. People have been coming to disrupt the forums and trying to create disruptions,” she said. Neither she nor spokesman Yim Sovann knew which embassy had sent an escort, but both said they had received an overwhelming amount of support from foreign diplomats. “Some diplomats [met him], I cannot recognise them all. But I appreciate their help. They fear for the safety of all opposition leaders,” he said. ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY ABBY SEIFF

Lao dam unapproved yet under way: NGO Melissa McMorran

T

HE construction of Don Sahong Dam, the second of 11 potential and controversial Mekong mainstream dams, is moving ahead without approval from Mekong River Commission members, according to a conservationist group report. Located less than two kilometres from the CambodianLao border, the dam has been slammed for its likely impact on Cambodian fisheries – as well as those of Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. The 240MW dam is being developed by Malaysian engineering and construction company Mega First Corporation Bhd (MFCB), with most of the electricity expected to be sold to Thailand and Cambodia. Ame Trandem, Southeast Asia program director for International Rivers, an environmental and human rights organisation, said when the group visited the site last week villagers told them they were recruited by MFCB to place markers around the area that would need to be cleared

for the dam’s access roads and bridges to be constructed. “It is clear the Don Sahong Dam is following the same trajectory that the Xayaburi Dam took, in which secrecy and illicit project implementation topples regional cooperation,” Trandem said yesterday. The much larger, 1,285MW Xayaburi Dam – the first of the mainstream Mekong projects – was also rumoured to have been preliminarily constructed without prior consultation with other Mekong River Commission (MRC) member states. Te Navuth, secretary-general of the Cambodia National Mekong Committee, said they have yet to be notified of any preliminary construction of the Don Sahong Dam. “They should send a request to the four member countries [of the MRC],” Navuth said. “We did not receive any documentation for prior consultation on this project yet.” Under the 1995 Mekong Agreement, in order to proceed with the construction of such a dam, all member countries must be consulted. Although the Don Sahong

Dam’s 2012 Environmental Impact Assessment report has not yet been released to the public, many are already conscious of the potential threat to fish migration and the vocation of fishermen who depend on the Mekong River. “The Don Sahong Dam would be an environmental calamity,” said Pianporn Deetes, International Rivers’ Thailand campaign coordinator. “If built, the dam will inevitably and irreversibly block the only channel in the Khone Falls that fish can migrate upstream and downstream in the dry season, leading to serious impacts on fish catches, species and the livelihoods of millions in the region.” According to the MRC’s Strategic Environmental Assessment, the excavation process, which would require explosives to clear 1.9 million cubic metres of sediment from the riverbed, would devastate the river’s ecosystem, and 60 per cent of the waterflow into the branches of the Mekong River and 10-12 million tonnes of sediment would be diverted into the dam’s head.


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

B Kak land holders arrested Sen David

T

HREE villagers including a teenager were arrested yesterday on allegations that they destroyed the fence of a company they accuse of trying to steal their land in Phnom Penh. The families of the trio from Tuol Kork district’s Boeung Kak 1 commune – Ly Srey Kheng, 70; his daughter Ly Bun Heang, 16; and Hing Chan, 24 - have denied the accusations they destroyed Khun Sea Development Group Ltd’s property. Srey Kheng’s daughter, 21-year-old Ly Siv Ming, ac-

cused the firm of initiating an almost daily campaign of intimidation against three families, including lighting metal drums on fire outside their houses, after they rejected offers of $15,000 for their homes earlier this month. “In fact we did not destroy the company‘s property. It is not true. The company is the one that ordered a group of men to disturb our lives, to [try to] force us to sell our house. Right now my sister and father have been arrested,” she said. Police officials declined to comment on the arrests yesterday and calls to the company went unanswered.

Hing Chan’s mother Sok Khouch, 48, said her family had lived in their house since 1982, yet her son had been sent to court simply because they refused to leave. “We did not agree to sell our house because [the amount offered] is little. We would not be able to buy another house. I am worried about my son who was arrested,” she said. Khun Sea is listed by the Ministry of Commerce as the chairman of the firm and a raft of other companies including Khun Sea Co, Ltd, Khun Sea Import Export Co, Ltd, Victerny Sea Import Export, Victory Days Co, Ltd

(VD) and Pingu BV Korea Entertainment Co, Ltd. Khun Sea Import Export was granted an 8,200 hectare economic land concession in Oddar Meanchey province’s Kulen Promtep Wildlife Sanctuary in June last year. When the Post called Khun Sea’s number listed by the Ministry of Commerce yesterday, a man who picked up the phone said it was the wrong number. On Ly, a legal official at the Housing Rights Task Force, said the villagers were sent to court after police arrested them over the company’s complaint but were yet to be charged.

Ten sentenced over drug precursors Buth Reaksmey Kongkea

TEN people were found guilty of drug production, storage and trafficking by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday and given sentences ranging from 16 months to 30 years following their arrests in May 2012, while two others received life sentences in

absentia for the same crime. Presiding judge Kim Dany released three Cambodians – Heng Vandy, 37, Ho Chen, 58, and Vong Davin, 29, who were previous suspects in this case – due to lack of evidence that they were involved with the crime. Canadian-Vietnamese citizens Chov Vanleuy, 49, and

Chov Vanchov, 45, were sentenced in absentia to life in prison. Dany said that the convicted persons were charged by court with the production, storage and trafficking of illegal drug precursors. When anti-drug police raided six rental warehouses across Phnom Penh in May 2012,

they seized more than 3,000 litres of saffrole oil and powdered methamphetamines, along with other chemicals and drug paraphernalia. Exonerated suspect Vandy said the court’s decision to release him was just, but declined to comment on his year-long pre-trial imprisonment.

National Party lines, knowledge probed at KRT hearing Kevin Ponniah

THE 200th trial day of Case 002 kicked off yesterday with prosecutors continuing to present documents allegedly linking Khmer Rouge leaders Khieu Samphan and Nuon Chea to a senior party line that would make them prosecutable for crimes committed under a “common purpose”. A September 1977 telegram from the north zone secretary to committee 870 – widely understood to include the uppermost leaders of the regime – hints at the purge of former officials of the Lon Nol republic. “We have uncovered many enemies who are burrowing from within, either from the spying of their antirevolutionary activities or through implication.” A March 1978 telegram is more blunt: “In the dry season the remaining enemies reemerged . . . we systematically purged them.” The issue of forced marriage was also examined, with Democratic Kampuchea era publications read out by the

prosecution. “Revolutionary youth must be really vigilant in selecting our spouses . . . it is imperative to be vigilant in regard to sexual morals . . . do not choose recklessly all over the place,” one article said. With the trial chamber earlier this week allowing defence teams to raise objections on the admissibility of documentary evidence for the first time, both counsels voiced concerns that civil party documents were moving beyond the sub-trial’s scope. “We are in a very subtle manner sliding towards another case,” said Khieu Samphan co-lawyer Anta Guisse, who claimed that by discussing policy implementation on the ground, the scope of the case was inevitably widening. “For us there is no fair trial if we are going to stray from the context of case 002/01 and talk about what should come under the subsequent trial segments,” she said. Chamber president Nil Nonn dismissed her continued objections.


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National

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Campaign forces, merchandise deployed police blotter Continued from page 1

Fowl business Ducks huddle together at a farm in Siem Reap province’s Angkor Chum district yesterday. HENG CHIVOAN

beginning at 8am. Rallies will take place throughout the capital’s main streets until about 6 pm, Sovann said. Meanwhile, some 70,000 police, military police and soldiers will be deployed to maintain security and public order during the month long campaign period, the National Police announced yesterday. Lieutenant General Kirth Chantharith, spokesman for the National Police, told reporters that a heightened police presence will help curb politically motivated crime. A set of instructions signed by Minister of Interior Sar Kheng ordered authorities from national to village level to focus on election-related crime ranging from vandalism to voter intimidation. “[All levels of authority] have to pay strong attention to providing equal service of security to all political parties during the election campaign,” the instructions read. “Focus on dividing forces to ensure security … of the election campaign in order to make sure it is free of violence, intimidation and threats.” Alluding to recent instances where CNRP signs were defaced or torn down in Prey

Gaggle of gangsters grabbed during brawl

A Cambodia National Rescue Party supporter affixes a party sticker his vehicle in Phnom Penh yesterday. pha lina

Veng and Svay Rieng provinces, Chantharith specifically mentioned destroying campaign signs as a crime police will thoroughly investigate. Soldiers from the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces will be sent to remote areas that are lacking police resources, Chantharith said. Security forces will earn an extra 8,000 riels ($2) per day from today until the election. The local European Union delegation released their own set of instructions yesterday, asking Cambodia’s National Election Committee to implement outstanding recommendations the EU Election Observation Mission made in 2008. “A transparent and credible election is a major opportunity to consolidate democracy and secure Cambodia’s future development,” the EU statement said. “[The EU] wishes to underline the importance of the NEC in implementing … equitable media access and to prevent use of state resources in the campaign.” Stores selling political merchandise have been ramping up their workforce for the influx of customers they’ve served in the past couple of weeks. Purchases typically surge by 60 to 70 per cent during national elections, said Ve Savath, 61, who works at Piseth T-Shirt Printing and Computerized Embroidery. A bead of sweat clung to the tip of Savath’s nose as he folded banner after banner of metre-long CPP banners. The store began printing CPP shirts and banners ahead of time so employees would not be too overwhelmed when orders began rolling in, Savath said. They have not sold merchandise for any other party. The store holds no specific

party affiliation but has received no orders for merchandise for any of the other seven parties vying for assembly seats, Savath said. Merchandise for the opposition party were conspicuously absent from storefronts near the Independence Monument yesterday. But the party has produced about 200,000 T-shirts and 250,000 banners sporting the sunrise logo, said the CNRP’s Sovann, who is also a Phnom Penh candidate for the National Assembly. More people than ever are buying them from their headquarters in Phnom Penh, he added. “It’s important to … make people aware of the party logo,” Sovann said. CNRP members also saw a bright spot yesterday when Rong Chhun, president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions appealed to his more than 50,000 members, teachers, workers and civil servants to vote for the CNRP. As Chhun spoke to the press yesterday morning, outlining his ambitious plans to print 30,000 opposition appeals for his members – workers for whom the CNRP’s promised minimum wage increases would likely appeal – others scrambled for a quieter campaign. In a T-shirt shop across town, a 52-year-old civil servant who declined to give his name unfolded extra-large and XXL white polo shirts bearing the CPP logo, eyeing out which would better fit him. The party suggests, and in some cases requires, members to outwardly display their party loyalty through clothing and banners during election season, he said. “I’m CPP. I need to show that I am participating.” ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY MEAS SOKCHEA

WEST Side Story-style gang fights, usually without the dancing, are a Blotter staple. Two Battambang crews kept up that tradition on Sunday when they attacked each other with knives, rocks and bare fists in a street-side brawl. Witnesses said the men seemed blissfully unaware that bystanders were calling police, though when Phnom Penh’s finiest finally arrived, the bloodstained gangsters fled in all directions. Police made 20 arrests. kampuchea thmey

Farm boy forgets nature’s call, calls police instead A PLEASANT environment is all a young farm boy wishes for when nature calls. A Battambang kid was denied that on Saturday when he went into a rice field for a BM and found an unconscious, bloodied man. The frightened boy abandoned his project and went to police who sent the man to hospital. It appeared that he had been attacked and stabbed by someone for unknown reasons. Police are investigating. Deum Ampil

Selling of stolen moto hits too close to home

A 21-YEAR-OLD was arrested after stealing and subsequently trying to sell a motorbike in the capital’s Daun Penh district on Sunday. The man had tried to sell the moto at a local market – never a good move – and police caught him after receiving a complaint from the bike’s original owner. The petrol head admitted that he had stolen the bike the previous day, and was packed off to court. Koh Santepheap

Man scores trifecta of dysfunction, is arrested A TENDENCY towards both alcoholism and arson can be a deadly combination. Mix that with a history of domestic abuse and you are likely to have a very serious situation. A 29-year-old was arrested in Kandal’s Sa’ang district on Monday after coming home drunk, beating his wife and kids, and then setting fire to the home after discovering no food had been left for him. The home was reduced to ashes and the man later told police he was angry at his wife for neglecting their kids in favour of gambling. Kampuchea Thmey

Grudge gets nasty for stabbed Kratie man THREE men were arrested by Kratie police on Sunday after allegedly stabbing a local man and leaving him for dead. According to police, the victim was sitting outside his house when the trio, with whom he had some sort of ongoing tiff, arrived. A clearly nasty argument broke out, which abruptly ended when the lone victim was stabbed in the stomach. Luckily a neighbour called police, who caught the fleeing suspects and sent the victim to hospital for emergency treatment. Kampuchea Thmey

Cambodian People’s Party supporters adorn trucks with party flags and banners in Phnom Penh yesterday. pha lina

Translated by Sen David


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

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EUR / USD

AUD / USD

NZD / USD

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0.774

1.542

6.1446

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97.94

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7.7575

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USD / THB

1.2691

31.08

Main Thai bank not worried by China turn A CREDIT squeeze in China is unlikely to affect Thailand’s financial markets, thanks to plentiful liquidity despite recent capital outflows, says Prasarn Trairatvorakul, governor of the Bank of Thailand. Global markets have seen volatility spike in recent weeks over concerns whether the economic slowdown in China could result in a credit crisis. But Prasarn said the central bank has implemented a defensive strategy in absorbing excessive liquidity, while local financial institutions continue parking their money at the central bank, implying they still have surplus liquidity to finance their operations. He acknowledged that outstanding deposits at the central bank had reduced to 4.7 trillion baht ($128 billion) from 4.9 trillion. But he said the central bank has been monitoring the current accounts, balance of payments and asset liability of commercial banks in order to mitigate financial risks to the Thai economy. China’s credit crunch is attributed to tightening by the An Air China Airlines Airbus sits in final stages of assembly line production in Tianjin, China, last year. Air China is slated to schedule direct flights from Phnom Penh and Siem Reap to country’s central bank, to secure credit and enhance fisBeijing as early as November and February, respectively. reuters cal discipline, controlling nonfinancial institutional lenders, he said. The move is not likely to spillover to financial markets in Southeast Asia, Prasarn said. The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China’s operations in Thailand will not be affected as its financial activities remain robust, he said Prasarn said rising local household debt and internaMak Lawrence Li between two countries need approv- who declined to be named because Perhaps the most surprising idea tional market turbulence are and May Kunmakara al from the aviation authorities on he was not authorised to speak to of them all came from Minister of the Bank of Thailand’s key both sides. the media, two of Air China’s Boeing Tourism Kong Thon’s announcement concerns. In contrast to Brazil HINESE flag carrier Air ChiCambodian passengers intent on B737-800s were in the line-up to take on June 19 that talks were under way and Indonesia, Thailand has na is expected to launch the going to Beijing, a city of about 20 off once a day to both Phnom Penh to create a ministry-approved “Chi- no problems managing foreign first non-stop flights from million, normally have a stopover in and Siem Reap. natown” in Phnom Penh as a way of debt as its foreign reserves are Beijing to Cambodia as a regional city or Chinese metropolis About 334,000 Chinese tourists vis- attracting spending from the world’s at nearly $200 billion, while early as November this year, officials like Shanghai. foreign debt is estimated at ited Cambodia last year, a 35 per cent second-biggest economy. said yesterday. China Southern Airlines operates leap from 2011, and tourism officials “We need to do advertisements in $100 billion, most of it short The stated-owned, Beijing-based 10 flights per week from Phnom Penh are intent on luring even more. Chinese language, websites in Chi- term, he said. airline has applied to the Civil Avia- to the mainland province of GuangThe Bank of Thailand earlier Cambodia hopes to nearly double nese language,” he said, explaining tion Administration of China (CAAC) zhou. Shanghai-based China Eastern its Chinese visitors by the end of 2015, the idea. this month said it is set to lowto fly to Siem Reap in November and Airlines serves flights from Shanghai and reach 1.8 million by 2018. Cambodia attracted $9.17 billion er its 2013 GDP growth forecast Phnom Penh in February, according to Phnom Penh and to Siem Reap. Air China’s plan comes amid a flur- investment from China in the last from 5.1 per cent after China’s to a release on Monday posted on the Prices hover in the $600 range. But ry of activity in recent weeks aimed 18 years, making China the largest disappointing economic data. CAAC’s website. normally, Chanty said, direct flights at better connecting tourists and of- investor in the country, according to However, it will need to conDirector of the Air Transport De- mean cheaper flights. ficials in both countries. the data from Council for the Devel- sider information from the partment of Cambodia’s State Secre“We’re welcome to have direct July 10 policy rate call of the A new exemption that took effect on opment of Cambodia. tariat of Civil Aviation, Vann Chanty, flights from Beijing to our country June 1 allows Cambodian diplomats Ho Vandy, co-chair of the govern- Monetary Policy Committee said that officials from both Cambo- because it can attract more investors and high-ranking government offi- ment-private sector working group, before it does. The figure will dia and China had a meeting in Bei- and tourists from China to the coun- cials to travel to Hong Kong without said most of the tourists will come be announced on July 19 if the jing in May to discuss establishing try – especially, it is easily for officials a visa and stay for 14 days, in an ef- from China to Cambodia, not the forecast is revised. the new routes. of both countries to exchange visits,” fort to boost ties with the commercial other way around. China’s industrial output “They informed us that Air China he said. Chinese city. Chinese tourists “bring in a lot of rose by 9.2 per cent year-onwill start the direct flights from BeiBased on regulations, he said the Private Chinese carrier Juneyao Air- money to the people and the coun- year last month, weaker than jing to Siem Reap and Phnom Penh. application process for a Cambodian lines said earlier this month that it try” he said, adding that Cambodians expected, while exports But, so far, we have not received any Air Operator Certificate (a licence was planning to launch direct flights visiting Beijing will likely make the increased at their slowest pace official application to us yet,” he to fly and land here) takes at least from Shanghai to Cambodia over the trip for the express purpose of taking in 10 months. China’s econosaid. three months. summer, although the routes have yet in the Great Wall, sections of which my is Thailand's biggest forAirlines establishing new routes According to a CAAC spokesperson to materialise. eign market. BANGKOK POST run near the city.

Flights planned from Beijing to Siem Reap, Phnom Penh C


8

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Business

farmers rally Thailand sued over smokes Rice against Thai officials

J

APAN Tobacco is suing the Thai government over plans to introduce bigger and more prominent antismoking warnings on cigarette packets, the company said yesterday, as rival Philip Morris vows similar action. The Tokyo-based firm, one of the world’s biggest cigarette companies, with brands including Winston and Benson & Hedges, said the planned changes from Thailand’s public health ministry would interfere with its operations in the kingdom. Thailand has decided to extend health warnings from 50 to 85 per cent on both sides of every cigarette packet sold in the country. The new rule is to come into effect in October, but Japan Tobacco said the change would have a “disproportionate impact on legitimate competition, intellectual property rights and freedom of expression”. “In order to protect its ability to continue to use its brands and key trademarks in Thailand, JTI (Japan Tobacco International) has initiated a legal challenge against this notification,” the company said in a statement, referring to a lawsuit filed in Thailand on June 19.

A woman holds two cigarette cases with pictures depicting the dangers of smoking in Bangkok. reuters

The company added that adult smokers should be “appropriately informed” before deciding to smoke and smokers “should continue to be reminded” about the health risks. “JTI however does not believe that increasing the size of graphic health warnings to cover 85 per cent of cigarette packaging is effective or proportionate,” it added. Philip Morris, which makes the Marlboro brand, and hundreds of Thai retailers on Tuesday warned they would sue Thai health authorities and

claimed the industry was not consulted on the changes from Thailand’s health ministry. “Given the negative impact this policy will have on our trademarks and the fact the Ministry ignored our voice and the voices of thousands of retailers enacting this rule, we have no choice but to ask the court to intervene,” company spokesman Onanong Pratakphiriya said in a statement, adding the lawsuit will be brought before July 4. Philip Morris has fought bitter legal battles with governments before, most famously

losing an action against a pioneering Australian government policy to introduce entirely plain cigarette packaging with the same typeface and graphic images of diseased smokers. Thailand’s Deputy Health Minister Cholnan Srikaew dismissed the threat from Philip Morris. “We have the authority to do it . . . the law allows the ministry to do it,” he said, adding that he hoped the enlarged pictures “will make new smokers rethink before they decide to smoke”. Thailand bans smoking in public places but figures from its Office of Tobacco Control said smoking rates among those 15 years and older remained roughly unchanged from 27.2 per cent in 2009 to 26.9 in 2011. The tobacco lobby has systematically tried to block laws curbing their ability to advertise their products or raise taxes on cigarettes, but more and more countries are adopting the approach as the health costs of smoking mount. Last week European Union member states agreed to cover 65 per cent of packaging with health warnings, but the new rule needs approval from the European Parliament to come into force. AFP

THE Thai government temporarily defused a potential time bomb on Tuesday, promising angry farmers the National Rice Policy Committee will this week consider their demand to maintain the paddy pledging price at 15,000 baht ($482) until the end of the current harvest. About 500 farmers from around the country, mainly from central provinces, held a brief rally in front of Government House Tuesday and dispersed after representatives submitted their written demand that the government maintain the pledging price for ordinary rice at 15,000 baht per tonne until at least the end of September. The letter outlining their demand was received by the Thai Commerce Minister Boonsong Teriyapirom and PM’s Office Minister Varathep Rattanakorn. It was submitted by Phuti Srisamutnak, president of the Thai Farmers Promotion Association, Prasit Boonchoey, president of the Thai Rice Farmers Association, and Wichean Puanglamchiak, president of the Thai Farmers and Planters Association. Earlier that day, farmers affiliated to the three farmers

associations travelled by bus from various provinces and converged at the Royal Plaza before moving to Government House. They demanded that the government review its decision to lower the pledging price for ordinary rice from 15,000 baht to 12,000 baht per tonne after June 30 and instead retain the 15,000 baht per tonne pledge price until the end of September. They have given the government one week to respond to their demand, saying they would then take their case to the Administrative Court or the Constitution Court. Farmers’ spokesmanWichean rejected the reduced price. He said it would not cover rising production costs that followed after the government launched its policy of a fixed price for their paddy at 15,000 baht. The government must give an answer in seven days from yesterday, or face the consequences, he added. Farmer leaders said they also had other ways to pressure the government if the deadline passes without a result from their demand. They refused to unveil other planned tactics. BANGKOK POST


9

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Markets Business

K-pop a boon for cosmetics shops K Mak Lawrence Li

IM Hyun-joong is looking at you. From a poster outside of a hair salon, from a shop window, in a TV commercial or on local social media sites, the South Korean singer and actor decorates various advertisements in Phnom Penh. But it isn’t just about his music – it’s about a popular lifestyle and the art of making business out of it. Hyun-joong serves as a figurehead for shops that are swimming with the “Hallyu”, or “Korean Wave”: the popularity of the country’s culture that is spreading all over Asia. Boosted by the attractiveness of Hallyu, South Korean-made cosmetics products – hair, skin and face care – have become top-sellers on the continent, and it seems like the Cambodian market is the next to be conquered. “Cambodia is presently being hit by the Korean Wave, which has been very favourable for our beauty products to enter the market,” says Row Sopheavy, marketing manager of The Face Shop Cambodia on Sihanouk Boulevard. “People here are obsessed with the Korean dramas and K-pop. Many of them yearn for the lifestyle of the popular stars, including intensive skincare and make-up every day.” Data by the Korea Pharmaceuti-

of Hyun-joong and fellow stars portrayed as role models of beauty in Phnom Penh and elsewhere in Asia, where advertisements with singers and TV shows glamorise the life of a South Korean idol. Sopheavy says the culture is penetrating Cambodia’s society, and the so-called ‘beautiful determines everything’ perception of South Koreans has crept into the minds of locals, especially young women. This, she says, opens the door for a cosmetics coup. Following the same marketing

Cambodia is presently being hit by the Korean Wave, which [is] favourable for our beauty products

Popular Korean cosmetics such as whitening creams and body lotions are stocked at The Face Shop in Phnom Penh. Scott howes

cal Traders Association shows that exports of Korean-made cosmetics accounted for $1.067 billion in 2012, up 30.3 per cent from a year earlier. In the first quarter of this year, Cambodia imported cosmetics products worth $9.9 million, an increase of 130 per cent compared with the same period last year, data by the Cambodian Ministry of Commerce show

Seoul-based The Face Shop opened their first store in City Mall in August 2010. Now they have four locations in Phnom Penh, and one in Battambang that opened earlier this year, making them the largest South Korean cosmetics brand in Cambodia. In total, they count more than 2,100 stores in 23 countries. It’s not uncommon to see images

formula as The Face Shop, South Korean-owned Nature Republic also has a growing overseas presence, with one store in Phnom Penh’s night market and products on shelves in the city’s department stores and malls. The shops are joined by three branches of the South Korea chain Missha, and one Tony Moly shop. Cambodia’s beauty business is gradually growing as incomes are rising and the country’s middleclass increases. On a recent afternoon, Chan Naysim, a 20-year-old university student in the Sihanouk Boule-

vard branch of The Face shop, uses testers of moisturisers and toners displayed in the skincare section. She said she’s attracted by the natural and organic formula of the products. “I love their Mango Seed Facial butter. I love the smell and I feel like my skin is getting smoother.” While the price for skincare and cleansing products are high for students (they range from $8 to $15 a bottle), she says she can stretch one product to last her for than a month Sim Sovanratana, director of EL Skin & Wellness Center in Phnom Penh, said Cambodians are willing to pay more for beauty care and make-up styling, assured by the fancy packaging and standout images of South Korean brands. Sopheavy, however, says she doesn’t want to talk up Hallyu too much, in case customers who haven’t been lured into the craze think that’s all there is to buy. “The Korean wave is only a supportive factor for our development,” she said. “We offer healthy and [high] quality products at a reasonable price range that suits the Asian skin type, which is our main selling point.” But the Korean Wave must count for something – she said she will opening five more branches by the end of 2014.


10

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Business

Taiwan’s companies return Yu-Huay Sun and Sharon Chen

F

OR eight years, the former Taroko Textile Corp factory in Taiwan’s Hsinchu county has been empty, a victim of the migration of manufacturing to the mainland. Now, as China’s supply of cheap labour wanes, work is returning. ITEQ Corp, which makes materials electronics companies need to build circuit boards, is installing equipment as part of a NT$2 billion (US$66 million) refurbishment to begin production by the end of 2014, said Eric Liu, head of investor relations. It will be the company’s first new factory in Taiwan since 1998. ITEQ began moving work to Guangdong in southern China in 2002. “People went to China because the costs were lower,” said Liu. “But labour costs there have been rising over the past few years. We’re returning to Taiwan also because of the good supply of skilled workers.” ITEQ, bicycle maker Giant Manufacturing Co and contact-lens maker Ginko International Co are among companies tapping Taiwan’s pool of engineering talent as

Residential and commercial buildings stand in Taipei on Monday. bloomberg

China’s labour supply tightens and rising costs force manufacturers to make more sophisticated products. They are being encouraged by Taiwanese President Ma Yingjeou, who has introduced tax cuts and other incentives in an effort to boost wages as his popularity slumps. “The move to make it easier and attractive for overseas Taiwan companies, especially those with higher value added, is a positive step that will ensure the economy stays on a sustainable growth path,” said Tony Phoo, a Taipei-based

economist at Standard Chartered Plc. Bringing factories home is “one way to kick-start the economy,” he said. Private investment will reach a record NT$2.3 trillion this year, up from NT$1.6 trillion in 2009, even as a global slowdown hurts exports, the Statistics Bureau estimates. Taiwan expects to lure about US$5 billion in 2013 from companies moving back. Last year, Taiwanese governmentapproved investment in China fell to US$12.8 billion, from US$14.4 billion in 2011. Ma has simplified invest-

ment procedures, pursued trade agreements with the US and Asia and relaxed immigration rules. He has also boosted ties with the mainland by allowing domestic banks to conduct business in yuan and agreeing to lower tariffs on items from auto parts to textiles. An agreement signed June 21 on services has been questioned by opposition lawmakers, who on Tuesday won a parliamentary review of the pact, the island’s Central News Agency said. The president is trying to stem a slump in popular support to 14 per cent in May, a year into his second and final term. Growth slowed in 2012 to 1.32 per cent, while average wages adjusted for inflation fell in the first four months of this year to a four-year low. In the seven months since the president’s tax and labour measures took effect, at least 34 companies including camera-lens maker Largan Precision Co, and tire producer Kenda Rubber Industrial Co have filed proposals to invest NT$182.6 billion on the island. That’s more than triple the amount for 2011, the Economic Affairs Ministry said. The shift shows how rela-

tions between Taiwan and China have changed. During Taiwan’s era of martial law from 1949 to 1987, executives could be tried for treason for investing in China. The island, once the source of Mattel Inc’s Barbie dolls and Nike Inc sports shoes, has been ruled separately since Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang nationalists fled in 1949 after a civil war against Mao Zedong’s Communist Party, which still considers Taiwan a breakaway province. Since 1991, Taiwanese companies including Foxconn Technology Group and Want Want China Holdings Ltd built factories on the mainland and hired at least seven million workers there, according to Taiwan’s Investment Commission. Taroko Textile makes synthetic fabric in Shandong province, according to the company’s website. “Times have changed from 20-30 years ago when manufacturers left Taiwan,” said Wang Wen Yuen, deputy chairman of Taipei-based Chinese National Federation of Industries. “With the worsening global economy, we want the competitive companies to come back.” BLOOMBERG

Sharp seeks cutting-edge LCD panels TROUBLED Japanese electronics giant Sharp Corp is to produce cutting-edge LCD panels for smartphones in a Chinese joint venture from as early as 2015, a report said yesterday. Sharp will provide its prized IGZO panel technology to a new Nanjing factory being built by local giant Nanjing China Electronics Panda Group, the Nikkei newspaper said. Sharp will receive hundreds of millions of dollars in licensing fees for sharing its energy-efficient and high-quality IGZO, the newspaper said. Some of the funds would go towards acquiring a nearly 10 per cent stake in the plant operator, it said. The factory will be able to churn out the equivalent of five million panels for 10-inch tablet computers per month, the Nikkei said. Sharp will obtain the right to purchase up to half the output, it said. The deal marks a shift from closely guarding its technologies by handling everything from development to production in-house, the Nikkei said. Sharp declined to comment on the report. AFP


11

the phnom penh post june 27, 2013

Markets Business

Murdoch rebrands UK arm

The British newspaper unit of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire said yesterday it was changing its name from News International to News UK as it seeks to rebuild the brand following the phone-hacking scandal. The renaming of News International, which owns The Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times, comes ahead of the completion on Friday of a major reorganisation of Murdoch’s global News Corp. Shareholders this month gave the go-ahead to a plan to split the media group into two distinct firms in a bid to insulate its profitable entertainment assets from slumping newspaper revenues. London-based News International said its new name and logo, which take effect immediately, reflected the company’s “ongoing commitment” to the British market. “The change follows the fundamental changes of governance and personnel that have taken place to address the problems of the recent past,” it added. Murdoch abruptly shut down the 168-year-old News of the World tabloid in July 2011 after it emerged that it had accessed the voicemails of high-profile figures including a murdered schoolgirl. AFP

Scalpel in hand, Chinese Premier Li hints at change

Markets Thailand

Vietnam

Thai Set 50 Index, Jun 25 1100

Ho Chi Minh Stock Index, Jun 25 550

1025

500

950

450

875

400

800

350

957.39

Koh Gui Qing

South Korea

I

NVESTORS getting stung by China’s worst financial market rout in years should find solace in the fact that the government, in particular Premier Li Keqiang, is willing to play hardball to force through much-needed policy change. The central bank’s refusal to intervene last week to ease an unprecedented cash crunch, where interest rates in the interbank market shot as high as 30 per cent, was the clearest sign yet that China’s new leaders are willing to stomach economic pain for the long-term good. The People’s Bank of China takes its cue from the government under China’s communist system. It has allowed interest rates to stay high to slow runaway credit growth and to punish banks for reckless practices that include using short-term funding for long-term lending. In a country where 30 years of double-digit economic expansion has created a culture of prizing growth above all else, Beijing’s decision to let the money market seize up even at the risk of choking China’s slowing economy is a milestone. “Clearly we are now in a different ball game,” said Louis Kuijs, an economist with RBS in Hong Kong. “Even though people are reducing their [economic] forecasts, the government is comfortable with a policy stance that emphasises reform.” Accustomed to China’s previous

KOSPI Index, Jun 25 2100

473.53

Philippines

PSEI - Philippine Se Idx, Jun 25 7000

1975

6625

1850

6250

1725

5875

1600

5500

1,783.45

6,118.94

Singapore

Malaysia

FTSE Straits Times Index, Jun 25 4000

FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI, Jun 25 1800

3500

1700

3000

1600

2500

1500

2000

1400

3,102.99

Hong Kong

China

Hang Seng Index, Jun 25 25000

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang poses for photographers at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing last week. reuters

government where leaders bent over backwards to produce stellar rates of growth, Beijing’s new stance has shocked investors. China’s stock market dived to four and a half year lows on Tuesday as investors worried that steep money market rates, by raising the cost of borrowing, might be a de facto tightening of monetary policy that could stifle investment and consumption. Some investors said the central bank’s brinkmanship could backfire if it triggered a banking crisis. Others lauded Premier Li’s tactics

as tough love that could prepare China for other challenging economic reforms such as further slimming down giant state firms to make them more efficient. Li took office in March, along with President Xi Jinping. As premier, Li is responsible for managing the economy. His grit is reminiscent of former premier Zhu Rongji, credited for leading China’s previous round of major economic reforms in the late 1990s when he sacked more than 50 million workers at state firms to trim the bloated sector. REUTERS

1,740.73 CSI 300 Index, Jun 25 3000

23250

2750

21500

2500

19750

2250

18000

2000

20,338.55

Japan

Nikkei 225, Jun 25 14000

2,168.30

Taiwan

Taiwan Taiex Index, Jun 25 8500

13500

8000

13000

7500

12500

7000

12000

6500

7,784.80

12,834.01

Laos

Laos Composite Index, Jun 25 1500

Indonesia

Jakarta Composite Index, Jun 25 6000

1350

5500

1200

5000

1050

4500

900

4000

1,338.82

International commodities

Cambodian commodities

Energy

(Base rate taken on January 1, 2012)

Commodity

Units

Crude Oil (WTI)

USD/bbl.

Crude Oil (Brent)

India

USD/bbl.

NYMEX Natural Gas USD/MMBtu

Price

94.8 101.05

Change % Change Time(ET)

-0.52 -0.21

-0.55% -0.21%

4:02:22 4:01:54

3.65

0.01

0.14%

4:00:53

RBOB Gasoline

USd/gal.

272.42

-1.32

-0.48%

4:01:53

NYMEX Heating Oil

USd/gal.

284.89

-0.95

-0.33%

4:01:53

ICE Gasoil

USD/MT

861.5

-6.25

-0.72%

4:01:46

Agriculture Commodity

Units

Price

Change

% Change

Time(ET)

CBOT Rough Rice

USD/cwt

15.66

0.03

0.16%

21:58:42

CME Lumber

USD/tbf

290.4

-2.4

-0.82%

2:44:37

Item Rice 1 Rice 2 Paddy Peanuts Maize 2 Cashew nut Pepper Beef Pork Mud Fish Chicken Duck

Unit

Base

R/Kg

2800

R/Kg

2200

R/Kg

1800

R/Kg

8000

R/Kg

2000

R/Kg

4000

R/Kg

40000

R/Kg

33000

R/Kg

17000

R/Kg

12000

R/Kg

18000

R/Kg

13000

BSE Sensex 30 Index, Jun 25 21000

Karachi 100 Index, Jun 25 23000

20000

22250

19000

21500

18000

20750

17000

20000

Construction equipment

Food -Cereals -Vegetables - Fruits Average 2760 2280 1860 8100 2080 4220 24000 33600 18200 12400 20800 13100

(%) -1.43 % 3.64 % 3.33 % 1.25 % 4.00 % 5.50 % -40.00 % 1.82 % 7.06 % 3.33 % 15.56 % 0.77 %

Item

Unit

Base

Average

(%)

Steel 12

R/Kg

3000

3100

3.33 %

Cement

R/Sac

19000

19500

2.63 %

Energy Item

Unit

Base

Average

(%)

Gasoline

R

5250

5300

0.95 %

Diesel

R

5100

5050

-0.98 %

Petroleum

R

5500

5500

0.00 %

Chi

86000

77000

-10.47 %

Baht

1200

1300

8.33 %

Gas Charcoal

4,583.56

Pakistan

18,664.83

Australia

21,195.18

New Zealand

S&P/ASX 200 Index, Jun 25 5500

NZX 50 Index, Jun 25 5000

5250

4750

5000

4500

4750

4250

4500

4,731.72

4000

4,393.61


12

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

World Myanmar, Thailand incinerate drugs haul

A Thai official puts methamphetamine into a bin before destroying it marking the UN’s International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking in Ayutthaya province yesterday.

AFP

Snowden ‘stuck’ in Moscow Anna Malpas

U

S INTELLIGENCE leaker Edward Snowden yesterday spent a fourth day at a Moscow airport with his onward travel plans still a mystery after Russian President Vladimir Putin rejected calls for his extradition to the United States. The United States told Russia it has a “clear legal basis” to expel Snowden, but antisecrecy website WikiLeaks, which helped organise his flight from Hong Kong, said he risks being stuck in Russia “permanently”. Meanwhile, Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, who by coincidence is expect-

ed in Moscow next week for an energy summit, said Caracas would consider any asylum request from Snowden just as Ecuador is doing. In his first comments on the chase for the former contractor that has captivated world attention, Putin on Tuesday confirmed that Snowden had arrived in Moscow, but said he had never left the airport’s transit zone. “He arrived as a transit passenger . . . He did not cross the state border,” Putin said at a news conference in Finland late on Tuesday. “For us, this was completely unexpected,” he added. “Mr Snowden is a free man, the sooner he selects his final destination point, the better

for us and for himself,” he said. Snowden who leaked revelations of massive US surveillance programs to the media, had been expected to board a flight for Cuba on Monday, reportedly on his way to seek asylum in Ecuador. But he never did and Putin hinted that his onward travel plans were still unknown. His US passport has been cancelled but WikiLeaks says he left Hong Kong with a refugee document supplied by Ecuador. Snowden’s extended stay in Moscow has prompted comparisons with the Tom Hanks hit film The Terminal about a man living in an airport, while British gambling

website William Hill has opened betting on his final destination. “Cancelling Snowden’s passport and bullying intermediary countries may keep Snowden permanently in Russia,” WikiLeaks said in a statement on Twitter. The US urged Russia to use all means to expel Snowden, who arrived at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport on a flight from Hong Kong on Sunday despite the US issuing a request for his arrest in China. “While we do not have an extradition treaty with Russia, there is nonetheless a clear legal basis to expel Mr Snowden,” National Security spokeswoman Caitlin

Hayden told AFP. Hayden said that Snowden could be expelled on the basis of his travel documents and the pending charges against him. However, Putin insisted that Russia could not extradite Snowden as it has no extradition agreement with the United States. Putin said he would prefer not to deal with cases such as those of Snowden and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who is holed up in Ecuador’s embassy in London to avoid allegations of sexual assault in Sweden. “It’s the same as shearing a piglet: there’s a lot of squealing and not much wool,” he said. AFP

Rudd ousts Gillard in leadership election Continued from page 1

minister stuck to her promise to quit parliament if she lost the ballot. “I am very proud of what this government has achieved which will endure for the long term,” a gracious but business-like Gillard told reporters, congratulating Rudd on his victory. Senior ministers including Treasurer and Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan, Education Minister Peter Garrett, Trade Minister Craig Emerson and Climate Minister Greg Combet

announced their ministerial resignations in the wake of the coup. Transport Minister Anthony Albanese was named deputy leader. Gillard struggled to win public support despite economic growth, low unemployment and low interest rates at a time when other developed countries are struggling to keep out of recession. Gillard has also pushed social reforms that pour money into schools, and which help disabled people gain access to much-needed free care, but the changes have done little to shift her

dwindling support in opinion polls. Voters have also remained angry that her government, which holds a oneseat majority with support from the Greens and a clutch of independents, introduced a controversial carbon tax in a backflip from her 2010 election promise not to do so. Two independent lawmakers and the Greens said they would continue to support a Rudd government in the hung parliament. Nick Economou, from Melbourne’s Monash University, said the only

potential policy change would be on the carbon tax, and Rudd could move quickly to shift to a floating carbon price. But the change won’t help Labor survive the election. “Australian voters don’t like disunited parties, and these guys are nothing if not disunited,” he said. Like Gillard, Rudd is a strong supporter of both Australia’s military alliance with the United States and of growing ties with top trading partner China. REUTERS

MYANMAR and Thai authorities incinerated $400 million worth of narcotics yesterday in a bid to tackle their reputations as hubs for illicit substances and mark World Drug Day. Some 31 million methamphetamine tablets, nearly 300 kilogrammes of crystal methamphetamine – known as ice – and 125 kilograms of heroin were destroyed in an industrial park in the Thai city of Ayutthaya, according to the kingdom’s Public Health Ministry. The haul was worth around $320 million, the ministry said, adding it was accumulated through more than 2,500 drug seizures by Thai authorities. In neighbouring Myanmar, where experts say increasing amounts of amphetamines are being manufactured in jungle laboratories, authorities burned $76 million worth of drugs including more than 800,000 pills and half a tonne of opium and heroin. Myanmar remains the world’s second largest producer of opium – the raw ingredient for heroin – after Afghanistan, accounting for 10 per cent of global production, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). “Drug seizures increased this year,” said Lieutenant Colonel Tin Aung from Myanmar police force’s drug control team. “We seized the most in Shan State,” he said of the province bordering Thailand which has long been a hotbed of drug production, the proceeds of which are believed to have fuelled conflict between ethnic rebels and Myanmar’s army. The two sides are currently observing a tentative ceasefire agreement. “The main challenge is combating poverty. We need to reduce poverty of the people who cultivate opium,” the officer added. The burning ceremonies were held to mark the UNODC’s World Drug Day. “Increases in seizures and use of opiates and methamphetamine throughout Southeast Asia – and the diversification of smuggling routes – indicate the drug economy is growing,” said the UNODC’s Jeremy Douglas in Bangkok. Myanmar also destroyed more than 1.2 tonnes of speciosa – known as kratom in Thailand where it is also popular – a mildly narcotic naturally occurring leaf that is chewed and can prove addictive or cause mental health problems among frequent users. AFP


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

World Four dead in PNG attack on Chinese FOUR Chinese nationals have been hacked to death in Port Moresby, with one reportedly beheaded and the others dismembered in an attack condemned as “brutal and cowardly” yesterday by Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O’Neill. O’Neill called for calm after the grisly murders, believed to have been committed with knives or swords in the Koki area of the Pacific nation’s capital on Monday night. “I condemn this brutal and cowardly attack on the four Chinese nationals,” O’Neill said in a statement. “I want to assure the government of China and relatives of those killed that police will get all the help necessary to track down and bring the perpetrators to justice.” The four – three men and a woman – were hacked and stabbed repeatedly by attackers who jumped a high fence outside the bakery they ran near the popular Koki market, according to media reports. Radio New Zealand cited police as saying one was beheaded and the others were “chopped up”. AFP

‘Knife-wielding mobs’ kill 27

R

IOTS in China’s ethnically divided Xinjiang region yesterday left 27 people dead, according to state media, which said police opened fire on “knife-wielding mobs”. It was the latest spasm of violence to hit the troubled western region, which is about twice the size of Turkey and home to about 10 million members of the mostly Muslim Uighur ethnic minority. Police shot at “mobs” who had attacked police stations, a local government building and a construction site, the

[The mobs were] stabbing at people and setting fire to police cars Xinhua news agency said, citing local officials. “Seventeen people had been killed . . . before police opened fire and shot dead 10 rioters,” it said. The mobs were also “stabbing at people and setting fire to police cars”, the report said. Nine police or security guards and eight civilians were killed before police opened fire, the report said, adding that three other peo-

Violence in China’s troubled far-west

RUSSIA MONGOLIA BEIJING

At least 27 people killed in a riot in Xinjiang, state media said

CHINA INDIA 600 km

Police opened fire on “knife-wielding mobs” that attacked a police station and a local government building, according to state media

250 km

Urumqi Korla Lukqun

Aksu

Hami

Kashgar XINJIANG Population: 20 million Ethnic groups: 47 Uighurs: approx. 9 million

ple were taken to hospital with injuries. The clashes occurred early Wednesday in the Lukqun township of Shanshan County, Xinhua said, about 100 kilometres from the desert city of Turpan and about 250 kilometres from the regional capital, Urumqi. The reason for the violence was not immediately

clear, and police in Turpan refused to comment when contacted. Many of Xinjiang’s Uighur community complain of religious and cultural repression by Chinese authorities, and the region is regularly hit by unrest. Chinese authorities have often blamed clashes in the region on “terrorists”, but ini-

tial state-media reports did not mention terrorism. A verified Twitter account run by state-broadcaster CCTV called the violence a “riot”, saying it was correcting an earlier message which described it as an “insurgent attack”. Dilshat Rexit, a spokesman for the World Uyghur Congress, an exile group branded by Beijing as “separatist”, said “continued repression and provocation is the cause of conflict”. His comment came in a statement after news of the violence emerged. China reported that 21 people died in clashes between police and locals in the region in April, which the government said were caused by “terrorists”, and a court in Xinjiang recently jailed nine people for “religious extremism”. China said clashes in 2011 that killed 19 were organised by terrorists who trained in Pakistan and were part of a separatist movement seeking an independent state in Xinjiang. Uighur rights groups have dismissed the claims of terrorism, citing economic inequality and religious repression as causes of unrest. AFP

In brief American factory boss still being held hostage

AN American factory boss remained hostage to staff at his own work site outside Beijing for a sixth day yesterday. Chip Starnes, who arrived from the US-based Specialty Medical Supplies to lay off 30 workers, was barred last Friday by the remaining 100 from leaving the premises until a resolution is reached. AFP

Malaysia smog blamed for death of asthmatic

SMOG from fires in Indonesia has been blamed for killing an asthmatic woman in southern Malaysia, the first reported death attributed to the crisis, a media report said yesterday. The Sun newspaper said Li Cai Ling, a resident of the southern town of Muar – which saw intense air pollution at the weekend – died on Sunday with a medical report blaming the polluted air. afp

North Korea working at nuclear testing site

SATELLITE imagery has revealed new tunnelling work at North Korea’s nuclear test site, but nothing that points to an imminent detonation, a US research institute said. yesterday The activity appears to have begun in late April. AFP


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

World

UN warns on rise of ‘legal highs’ NEW drugs marketed as “legal highs” and “designer drugs” are emerging fast and in greater numbers, and authorities are struggling to keep up, a new UN report warned yesterday. So-called new psychoactive substances (NPS), often sold under harmless names like spice, bath salts or herbal incense, posed a serious health risk although they were legal, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in its annual World Drug Report. “Sold openly, including via the internet, NPS, which have not been tested for safety, can be far more dangerous than traditional drugs,” it warned. From 166 known NPS in 2009, the number rose to 251 in 2012, according to the UN body. These drugs, which could be synthetic or plant-based and could be easily altered to create new ones, were now outpacing efforts to control or ban them, it said. “The international drug control system is floundering for the first time under the speed and creativity of the phenomenon,” the UN added. AFP

Police chief liable over death A

MALAYSIAN court yesterday found the country’s police chief liable for the 2009 death in custody of a young ethnic Indian, the victim’s lawyer said, in a closely watched case that has highlighted the issue of police brutality. The decision by the High Court was a major blow to a police force already under fire over more than 200 such deaths since 2000 and one that could raise the spectre of further civil suits in similar cases. The family of the deceased, Ananthan Kugan, sued Inspector General of Police Khalid Abu Bakar, who was a state-level police chief at the time of the death, accusing him of a cover-up. News portal The Malaysian Insider said that judge VT Singham found “glaring” contradictions between the statements of Khalid and those of other witnesses, and ordered the defendants to pay 851,700 ringgit ($267,500) in damages. Four others were defendants in the case, including Khalid’s predecessor as national police chief, Ismail Omar.

N Surendran, the lawyer for Kugan’s family and a litigator in a number of similar cases, said that the ruling was the first time in a civil suit that a judge had ruled that police had failed in their duties, leading to a death. Plaintiffs have won some civil suits on other grounds in the past, Surendran said, but lost on appeal. The courts last year imposed a three-year jail term on a police officer held responsible for Kugan’s death. Kugan, 22 at the time, died at a police station near the capital Kuala Lumpur after being detained on suspicion of vehicle theft, sparking an uproar among minority ethnic Indians and activists who allege frequent police corruption and abuse. More than 1,000 ethnic Indians attended his funeral, which turned into a street protest. Indians, who make up about eight per cent of Muslim Malay-majority Malaysia’s 28 million people, complain of discrimination and economic marginalisation. Home Minister Zahid Hamidi said on Wednesday that 231 people had died in

police custody since 2000 but insisted only two were due to police brutality. Media reports said that a disproportionately high number of the victims were ethnic Indian. The long-running scandal over such deaths was revived last month when three fatalities in police custody occurred in a span of 11 days. They included ethnic Indian truck driver N Dhamendran, who died on May 11. Dhamendran was under detention over a fight and died in detention 10 days later. A post mortem report showed multiple wounds caused by a blunt object all over his body. His body was bruised and battered with staple wounds in his ears, his family said. Police said that he had died of sudden cardiac arrest, but the government eventually brought murder charges in early June against three police officers in the case after a public outcry. Activists said that it was the first time since the 1990s that murder charges were brought in a death in custody case. AFP

Family members mourn over the body of ethnic Indian Ananthan Kugan in Puchong, outside Kuala Lumpur, on January 28, 2009. REUTERS

Coming up on Thursday, July 4, The Phnom Penh Post proudly presents

On Friday, July 12, The Phnom Penh Post proudly presents

FRANCE’S NATIONAL DAY /Ŷ ƚŚŝƐ ƐƉĞĐŝĂů ƌĞƉŽƌƚ ǁĞ ůŽŽŬ Ăƚ ƚŚĞ &ƌĞŶĐŚ ĐŽŶƚƌŝďƵƟŽŶ ƚŽ ĂŵďŽĚŝĂ ĚĂƟŶŐ Ăůů ƚŚĞ ǁĂLJ ďĂĐŬ ƚŽ ƚŚĞ &ƌĞŶĐŚ WƌŽƚĞĐƚŽƌĂƚĞ͗ ĐŽŶƚƌŝďƵƟŽŶƐ ŝŶ ĂƌĐŚŝƚĞĐƚƵƌĞ͕ ĨŽŽĚ ĂŶĚ ĐƵůƚƵƌĞ͘ tĞ ĂůƐŽ ůŽŽŬ Ăƚ ƚŚĞ ĐŽŶƚƌŝďƵƟŽŶ ŽĨ &ƌĂŶĐĞ ŝŶ ĂŵďŽĚŝĂ ƚŽĚĂLJ͕ ŝŶĐůƵĚŝŶŐ E'KƐ͕ ƌĞƐƚĂƵƌĂŶƚƐ͕ ďƵƐŝŶĞƐƐĞƐ ĂŶĚ ŝŶƚĞƌǀŝĞǁƐ ǁŝƚŚ &ƌĞŶĐŚ ƉĞƌƐŽŶĂůŝƟĞƐ ĂƌŽƵŶĚ ĂŵďŽĚŝĂ͘ ^ŚŽǁ LJŽƵƌ ĐŽŶŶĞĐƟǀŝƚLJ ǁŝƚŚ &ƌĂŶĐĞ ĂŶĚ ƚŚĞ &ƌĞŶĐŚ ƉĞŽƉůĞ ďLJ ƉůĂĐŝŶŐ LJŽƵƌ ĂĚ ŝŶ ƚŚŝƐ ǀĞƌLJ ƐƉĞĐŝĂů ƌĞƉŽƌƚ ƚŚĂƚ ƐĂLJƐ s/s > &Z E ͘

The Fourth of July ͻ American companies doing business in Cambodia including motor vehicles, ͻ A look at what’s happening for the United States of America in Cambodia: ͻ The American Chamber of Commerce in Cambodia: what’s happening. Story ideas? Email stuart.becker@gmail.com borom.chea@phnompenhpost.com or call 012 763 481 / 011 743 998

Phnom Penh dŽ ĂĚǀĞƌƟƐĞ ĐŽŶƚĂĐƚ͗ borom.chea@phnompenhpost.com or call 012 763 481 / 011 743 998 SƚorLJ ŝĚĞĂƐ͍ Email stuart.becker@gmail.com ŽŽŬŝŶŐ ĚĞĂĚůŝŶĞ͗ Friday July 5. ƌƚǁŽƌŬ ĚĞĂĚůŝŶĞ͗ Wednesday July 10; WƵďůŝĐĂƟŽŶ ĚĂƚĞ͗ Friday July 12. Siem Reap Sophearith Blondeel - call 092 752 801 | 063 964 151 | Email:^ŽƉŚĞĂƌŝƚŚ͘ ůŽŶĚĞĞůΛƉŚŶŽŵƉĞŶŚƉŽƐƚ͘ĐŽŵ

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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Science Satellites to increase the speed of internet THE first four of 12 satellites in a new constellation to provide affordable, high-speed internet to people in nearly 180 “under-connected” countries were blasted into space on Tuesday. The orbiters, part of a project dubbed O3b, for the “other three billion” people with restricted internet access, were lifted by a Russian Soyuz rocket from Kourou in French Guiana, according to a live broadcast on the website of launch company Arianespace. The project was born from the frustrations of US internet pioneer Greg Wyler with the inadequacy of Rwanda’s telecommunications network while travelling there in 2007. He came up with a plan to bypass costly ground-based infrastructure like fibre-optics or cables by deploying a constellation of small satellites around the equator to serve as a spatial relay between users and the worldwide web using only satellite dishes. Such a system would cover a region between the latitudes of 45 degrees North and 45 degrees South – the entire African continent, most of Latin America, the Middle East, southeast Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands. “Today, a life-changing journey has begun for many of the remaining unconnected and

Mission a success for China C

HINA completed its longest manned space mission as its Shenzhou-10 space-craft and three crew members safely returned to Earth yesterday, in a major step for Beijing’s goal of building a permanent space station by 2020. The return capsule touched down at 8:07 am, live state TV footage showed, kicking up a cloud of dust on the grasslands of north China’s Inner Mongolia region. Technicians quickly gathered to open the craft’s hatch and crawled inside to check the crew’s safety. Applause erupted at China’s mission control centre when word came they were in good condition. A smiling mission commander Nie Haisheng was the first to emerge from the capsule at 9:31am. He was led to a chair and sat down nearby to wait for his fellow crew members to come out. He was followed later in succession by female astronaut Wang Yaping, who also smiled and waved, and Zhang Xiaoguang. The 15-day Shenzhou-10 (“Divine Vessel”) mission is seen as another step in Bei-

Ground crew talks to astronaut Nie Haisheng before helping him out of the re-entry capsule of China’s Shenzhou-10 spacecraft after it alit at its main landing site in north China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in this still image taken from a video yesterday. REUTERS

jing’s ambitious objective of building a space station. Highlights of the mission included dockings with China’s orbiting space module Tiangong-1 in tests

intended to prepare for the building of the country’s own space station. Wang delivered a video class to children across the country from space last week,

showing how a variety of objects – from a bubble of water to a spinning toy – behave in zero gravity. The crew also conducted medical experiments during the mission.

China first sent a human into space only in 2003 and its capabilities still lag behind the US and Russia. But its program is highly ambitious and includes plans to land a man on the moon. Beijing sees its multibillion-dollar space program as a symbol of its rising global stature, growing technical expertise, and the Communist Party’s success in turning around the fortunes of the once povertystricken nation. The space program is heavily promoted on Chinese media. On Monday, President Xi Jinping, who had travelled to the Jiuquan space centre in the Gobi desert to witness the blast-off on June 11, spoke to the crew via video call. “The space dream is part of the dream to make China stronger,” Xi told them, the state Xinhua news agency reported, referencing his signature “Chinese dream” concept. “With the development of space programs, the Chinese people will take bigger strides to explore further into the space,” he said from the Beijing Aerospace Control Center. AFP

The World Bank SELECTION OF CONSULTANT FIRM REQUEST FOR EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST Electronic Submissions through World Bank Group eConsultant2 https://wbgeconsult2.worldbank.org/wbgec/index.html

O3b will open up a new and exciting world to billions of people

ASSIGNMENT OVERVIEW Assignment Title: 1112278 - Cambodia National Single Window Preparation technical assistance team

underserved regions of the world,” O3b chairman John Dick said in a statement. “Working with our customers, O3b will open up a new and exciting world to billions of people who, up to now, have not experienced the benefits of fast internet connectivity and who, as a result, are not on a level playing field,” he added. There are already geostationary satellites providing this type of services, but at a prohibitive cost for many endusers in this region. Existing satellites generally obit at an altitude of some 36,000 kilometres above Earth, weigh in at a hefty four to six tonnes each, and take much longer to bounce a signal back to Earth, according to a background document compiled by O3b Networks. The new satellites, built by the Franco-Italian company Thales Alenia Space, will orbit at 8,062 kilometres and will weigh only 650 kilograms each. Crucially, they will communicate with Earth four times faster, said the company, and six would be enough to assure permanent coverage. The company added that a country like the Democratic Republic of Congo could move from being one of the most poorly connected on Earth to one of the best. AFP

A museum worker assisting on the packing case being used to transfer the body of famous race horse Phar Lap from the Museum Victoria to its new home at the Melbourne Museum. reuters

Racing legend to get DNA mapped SCIENTISTS will map the genome of Australia’s greatest racehorse, Phar Lap, hoping to unlock the DNA secrets behind the champion’s legendary pace and staying power, a research team said yesterday. The giant New Zealand-born chestnut became an icon in Australia during the Great Depression, winning 37 of his 51 races, including one Melbourne Cup in 1930 and two Cox Plates in 1930 and 1931. Australian scientists were in 2008 able to prove with hightech testing of Phar Lap’s hair that the legendary gelding was poisoned with arsenic in the United States in 1932. And researchers are again looking to dissect the champion’s genetic material, with a University of Sydney team announcing plans to sequence Phar Lap’s genome from a tooth fragment. “We are doing this out of scientific curiosity and all our data will be made publicly available,” said lead research-

er Natasha Hamilton. “The DNA sequence will tell us if Phar Lap’s genetic make-up looks like star racehorses of today, including whether he is a sprinter or a stayer – genetically better suited to running long distances.” Hamilton said it was believed to be the first time a Southern Hemisphere thoroughbred’s entire genome had been sequenced, in contrast to Europe where such research was popular. “DNA analysis has been performed on notable horses such as Eclipse, racing’s first superstar and an ancestor of 95 per cent of today’s thoroughbreds, and Hyperion, a popular sire from the 193050s who is found in numerous pedigrees,” she said of the European studies. The DNA will be extracted from a 60 milligram tooth fragment from Phar Lap’s skeleton, which is housed at Te Papa Tongarewa, the Museum of New Zealand. AFP

ASSIGNMENT DESCRIPTION With financing from the multi-donor financed Trade Facilitation Facility, the World Bank intends to finance consulting services to support the Cambodian National Single Window (CNSW) team in the design of a National Single Window for trade facilitation including the development of a clear conceptual design and practical implementation blueprint or roadmap for the CNSW. This assignment will focus on the CNSW’s main business functions and underlying processes, ICT Architecture, functional and technical requirements, and the development of options for a sustainable governance and operational model including appropriate cost recovery mechanisms.The duration of this assignment is estimated to be five calendar months to commence on or about August 2013. SUBMISSION OF EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST The World Bank now invites eligible consultant firms to indicate their interest in providing the services. Interested consultant firms should make available of a team of mixed full-time, part-time, international and national professionals, with multi-year proven track records of successful delivery of similar assignments. Interested

consultant firms must submit their expressions of interest and clearly indicate that they are qualified to perform the services (with supporting documents such as brochures, description of similar assignments, experience in similar conditions, availability of appropriate key professional staff, etc.) and meet all the following criteria. Consultant firms may associate to enhance their qualifications. Key qualification and experience requirements:          

International experience in the governance, systems and technologies related to Single Windows for Trade. Extensive knowledge and/or experience in developing governance frameworks, operational models and organizational structures for the operation of a National Single Window for Trade would be highly desirable; Extensive experience in business process analysis particularly as it relates to the processing of import, export and transit of cargo; Extensive experience in developing strategic information systems plans for trade facilitation, complex enterprise software systems implementation, extensive knowledge in informatics management and current technology trends; Extensive international experience in trade related legal and regulatory issues. Knowledge of legal and regulatory impacts on ICT systems for trade and trade facilitation highly desirable; Extensive experience in the development of functional and technical specifications of scalable complex ICT systems; Extensive experience in the development and implementation of change management strategies in the public sector of developing countries; Extensive experience in public sector procurement including in the competitive acquisition of large scale complex ICT systems as well as the competitive procurement of service providers or operators is desirable; Knowledge of development and trade issues facing Cambodia or other developing countries particularly related to implementation of National Single Windows for tradefacilitation; International experience with complex projects of similar nature in low-income developing countries; and Relevant experience of Single Window development in ASEAN countries would be highly regarded;

Expressions of Interest should be submitted, in English, electronically through the World Bank Groupe Consultant2 (https://wbgeconsult2.worldbank.org/wbgec/index.html) no later than July 11th, 2013. Please refer to assignment title and number above. Please note that the total size of all attachments should be less than 5MB.For further information, please contact Mr. Julian Latimer Clarke, World Bank Phnom Penh Office, Cambodia. Tel: + 855 23 861 300 ext. 1321 and Fax: + 855 23 861 301 E-mail: jclarke1@worldbank.org. Following this invitation for Expressions of Interest, a short-list of qualified firms will be formally invited to submit proposals.


16

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

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A passenger waits for his flight at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport yesterday. Edward Snowden has been in the transit section of the airport, deciding where to go.

REUTERS

An easy choice for Snowden Opinion

Stephen Kinzer

N

O offence to Iceland, but Latin America is where the fugitive leaker Edward Snowden should settle. He apparently has the same idea. News reports suggest that he is in Moscow awaiting transport to Cuba, Venezuela and/or Ecuador. A Facebook post suggests Bolivia may have granted Snowden asylum. Nothing has been heard from Nicaragua, Peru, Brazil or Argentina, but any or all might also welcome him. Any country that grants asylum to Snowden risks retaliation from the United States, including diplomatic isolation and costly trade sanctions. Several don’t seem to care. The fact that Latin America has become the favoured refuge for a United States citizen accused of treason and espionage is an eye-popping reminder of how fully the continent has emerged from Washington’s shadow. “Latin America is not gone,

and we want to keep it,” President Richard Nixon told aides as he was pressing the covert operation that brought down the Chilean government in 1973. A decade later, the Reagan administration was fighting proxy wars in Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala. In the 1980s the US Army invaded two Caribbean countries, Grenada and Panama, to depose leaders who had defied Washington. During the 1990s the United States sought to impose the “Washington Consensus” on Latin American governments. It embodied what Latin Americans call “neo-liberal” principles: budget cuts, privatisation, deregulation of business and incentives for foreign companies. This campaign sparked bitter resistance and ultimately collapsed. In spite of these military, political and economic assaults – or perhaps because of them – much of Latin America has become profoundly dissatisfied with the

made-in-USA model. Some of the continent’s most popular leaders rose to power by denouncing the “Washington Consensus” and pledging to pull their countries out of the United States orbit. Because President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela was the most flamboyant of these defiant leaders, some outsiders may have expected that following his death, the region would return to its traditional state of submission. In fact, not just a handful of leaders but huge populations in Latin America have decided that they wish for more independence from Washington. This is vital for Snowden because it reduces the chances that a sudden change of government could mean his extradition. If he can make it to Latin America, he will never lack for friends or supporters. One would be the American-educated President Rafael Correa of Ecuador, an avowed socialist and admirer of Fidel Castro. In 2009 Correa forced the

United States to abandon its military base in his country, despite repeated protests from Washington. He has already granted a form of asylum to Wiki-leaks founder Julian Assange, who is living inside the Ecuadorian embassy in London. Having publicly welcomed Assange to “the club of the persecuted”, he would presumably embrace Snowden as another member. Ecuador, with its long coastline, majestic mountains and lush rain forest, is an ideal place for such a club to assemble. It is more than twice the size of Iceland and considerably warmer. Its people, not just its president, are known for gentle hospitality. From Ecuador, Snowden could travel widely. Everything from the splendor of Bolivia’s Lake Titicaca to the vibrancy of teeming Caracas awaits him. With luck, he might even be able to visit Guatemala in September to attend the grand festival being planned for the

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100th anniversary of the birth of Jacobo Arbenz, the reformist president who the United States deposed in 1954. Snowden would have much to celebrate upon landing in Latin America, and much to anticipate. He might not be truly free, however. Some in Washington have raised his case, like those of Assange and Corporal Bradley Manning, into major national security tests. They might press for a “rendition” in which Snowden would be snatched and brought home for trial. Two breathtakingly different possible lives await Snowden. If the United States has its way, he will probably end up with something like the long prison sentence that is being prepared for Corporal Manning. If not, he could spend years in an Ecuadorian beach town like Playas, where the lobster is cheap, the sunsets are spectacular, and internet connections could keep him on the front line of the information war for years. THE GUARDIAN


17

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Lifestyle KeoK’jay: Green, fair, fashion

W

HEN Rachel Faller came to Cambodia on a US Fulbright scholarship nearly 5 years ago, she never thought she would make an impact on the country, yet alone the environment. As the founder and designer of KeoK’jay, a fair trade social enterprise, Faller has designs made from hand woven recycled cotton and second-hand fabrics. About 70 per cent of the fabrics are recycled, and some are locally and sustainably made. The hand-made beads and buttons are made from Cambodian dirt, and grass reed mats, which are naturally grown, harvested and hand-woven. “I wanted to design fashion that was trendy, fun, easy to wear, and casual. Various perception of eco-fashion is changing, and more designers are pushing that mold, showing you can be fashionable, while treating the people well and the environment well,” Faller said. Once or twice a month, Faller goes to the garment recycler to purchase scraps of material, (about 200 kilograms of fabrics). In addition, she works with the Samaki Sewing Network to create the eco-friendly couture. “Through Samaki, all staff members are paid good wages, and offered benefits and op-

In brief

Tupac Shakur musical bound for Broadway

The songs of Tupac Shakur will be used as material for a new Broadway musical, scheduled to debut in the 2013-2014 season. Holler If Ya Hear Me will be co-produced by the late rapper’s mother, Afeni Shakur. “Tupac was a prophet and I want everyone to see that,” director Kenny Leon told Broadway.com. Although Shakur “is not a character” in the production, his music will be used to tell a “present day” story, written by Todd Kreidler. the guardian Rachel Faller at the launch party for KeoK’jay’s new store.soma norodom

portunities for job growth and further training,” said Faller. “So we are building a positive alternative to conventional garment manufacturing jobs.” Faller added: “We try to put the value into the people who make the clothes than the cost of the material.” Formerly on Street 240, the new location of KeoK’jay is on the riverfront on Sisowath Quay and Street 110. “There were some problems with the building that we were in, and at the same time a great opportunity came up with the

space on the riverside,” Faller said. “The owners of Amara Spa upstairs were looking for a business that would go along well with their spa and they really liked what we were doing. So we made the decision to take that step and take on a new challenge.” Taking on challenges is nothing new to Faller, who has an art degree, but no business or finance experience. But she gives credit to her staff, (42 employees in Siem Reap and Phnom Penh) as she refers to them as her mentors.

“They are constantly challenging me, inspiring me, and keeping me going. I wouldn’t have been able to start or run this business without them,” said Faller. Last month, Faller and her team participated in the ultraglitzy fashion show, Glamazon 2.0, and Faller and her team were put to the test. “We had to prepare both our new menswear collection, and also the avant-garde outfits for the final section, which were both new challenges for us and out of the range of

what we normally do,” said Faller. “All of the outfits in the avant-garde section each took numerous days and hours to make, and I was proud of my team for what we were able to put together.” With the launch of their new store location last week, and the Phnom Penh Designer’s Week under their belt, look for KeoK’jay to release their new collection in the fall, and make a bigger splash in the international market next year. For more information visit www.keokjay.com.

Tech tombstones let family live on, virtually Brigitte Dusseau

RICK Miller kneels in front of a grave and uses his cell phone to scan a small barcode on a tombstone. Within seconds, he’s looking at photos and videos of a lost loved one. But that’s not all. Without leaving this vast cemetery in a suburb of Philadelphia, he can listen to the deceased’s favorite music, read

remembrances, write in a guest book and even share pictures and feelings on Twitter or Facebook. Here at Sunset Memorial Park, everyone equipped with a smartphone or tablet can do the same, provided they download the proper app. All it takes is a simple scan of a QR code – a square, black barcode stuck to the tombstone – to learn about Lance Clinton Erb, laid to rest beneath a bronze plaque

A cross and tombstone mark the gravesite of Senator Robert F Kennedy. New technology has made it possible for loved ones to assemble a virtual tribute. bloomberg

engraved with the years of his birth and death – “1947-1990” – and a picture of his beloved pet Labrador. For almost a year now, Miller and his wife, Lorie – Erb’s stepdaughter – have specialised in the sale of QR memorials through their “Digital Legacys” business – one of just a few to offer such a service in the United States. Giving a grave that high-tech edge doesn’t take much. All one has to do is email the couple photos, videos, documents and music linked to the departed, which they then assemble into a tribute on a secure website. Surviving family members then get a tag with the QR code in the mail. The installation takes a mere 30 seconds. “It’s very simple,” Miller told AFP. “It is a great idea for a lot of reasons, particularly for young children who have had family members that they never got to know.” Using this technology, their young daughter can become familiar with her grandfather who passed away several years ago, he said. “She can be at the cemetery and scan and remember somebody that she never met, and be able to see that person and learn about that person.” If loved ones want to update their online

memorial, the Millers can take care of that, too. “People love the idea,” Miller said in the grassy, peaceful setting marked by dozens of miniature US flags fluttering near the final resting places. “It is such a great way to mix technology with the legacy of somebody, and have the ability to remember them and see them up close.” And the price tag for this digital legacy? A lifetime subscription sells for $149.99 and encompasses the QR code and the online memorial. A year is $99.99. Buyers can add a password so that only family members have access. The Millers started the project to memorialise their loved ones in a different way, but don’t plan to stop there. Since starting their business, they have received inquiries from around the United States and as far as Australia. Some older cemeteries have an interest in the technology because they can display tags on historic graves, enabling visitors to learn about events long ago associated with those laid to rest there, according to Rick Miller. Lorie Miller is also considering using QR codes to tell the stories of celebrities. “People give us ideas, ask us about different possibilities,” she said. afp

Michael Jackson son to testify after anniversary

Michael Jackson’s son Prince is set to testify at his family’s trial against tour promoter AEG Live, reports said Tuesday, as relatives and fans marked the fourth anniversary of his death. The 16-year-old, the eldest of the singer’s three children, could take the stand this week at the trial, in which the Jackson family is suing AEG Live for hiring the doctor convicted of killing him in 2009. afp

Next from Stevie Wonder: Arabic gospel

Soul music legend Stevie Wonder says he’s toying with the idea of including a gospel song in Arabic on an upcoming album dedicated to his mother. Gospel Inspired by Lula” is among several projects that Wonder, 63, has going right now, he told Rolling Stone in an interview posted Tuesday on the pop culture magazine’s website.“We’re going to do some traditional gospel stuff, but I’m thinking about doing a gospel song in Arabic,” he revealed. afp

US singer Chris Brown charged: hit-and-run

US singer Chris Brown has been charged over an alleged hit-and-run car accident, police said Tuesday, but the star claimed the other driver involved was trying to get a “payday” from him. Brown, who is still on probation for his notorious 2009 assault on then girlfriend Rihanna, took to Twitter to proclaim his innocence over the accident in May, saying he had exchanged insurance details with the female driver. apf


18

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Motoring

Track is Viper’s perfect habitat Jason Harper

N

O, no, no, slow down. Slow down. Slow down!” I cast my eyes over to my passenger. We’re only in first gear, but I let off the gas pedal and the gnash of the V10 motor quickly winds down. The 2013 SRT Viper is an intimidating machine, capable of hitting 60 miles per hour in 3.4 sizzling seconds. Still, we are only doing about 35mph when my companion’s panic kicks in. My friend grins weakly. “That was just like a rollercoaster.” Pause. “I hate rollercoasters.” I’ve been giving Viper rides all afternoon to an assortment of supplicants, but this is the first one who didn’t begin giggling when the 600 pound-feet of torque kicked in, mashing them into the thin sport seat. Meekly motoring, I head to another pal’s house in the hills of San Clemente, about an hour south of LA where three others will get turns. I too, have been waiting a long time to get my hands on the new Viper, which is arguably one of only two supercars on the market from a major American manufacturer. (The other is the Corvette ZR1.) The coupe certainly looks exotic enough to qualify as a supercar, and it boasts a top speed of more than 200mph. Mine is a gorgeous red GTS model. The Viper was first released by Dodge in the early 1990s, but got the axe during Chrysler’s financial crisis in the late 2000s. None were produced in 2011 or 2012. So the 2013 model, now under the SRT brand and not Dodge, was not a foregone conclusion. It was never a sophisticated car. It offered two seats, a manual transmission and an engine so gargantuan that it was known for superheating

The bite is back: The 2013 Viper, with an 8.4 litre V10 engine and 640 horsepower, still looks mean, with design flourishes that hint at an Italian sensuousness.

the cabin. It lacked common safety features like traction and stability control, thereby earning a reputation as a car that bit back. The Viper has always been a handful. The new model offers the same basic configuration as the previous iteration: sixspeed manual, two seats and an enormous engine, a 8.4 litre V10. The interior and exterior have both been reworked and this time the car has all of the requisite safety features required by US law. The base price is just over $100,000, and there’s a GTS version with a more up-market interior that’s more than

$120,000, including a hefty $1,995 delivery charge and $2,600 gas-guzzler tax. My test model cost more than $151,000, including a ludicrous $14,600 charge for a special “Stryker” red paint. (The metallic colour is quite cool but not worth the price of an economy car.) The new Viper was designed under the helm of SRT chief executive Ralph Gilles, and it still looks mean, with design flourishes that hint at an Italian sensuousness. The cabin located in the extreme rear of the car. The clamshell-shaped bonnet is extra-long and festooned

with a series of functional vents; side scoops along the doors suck in the sides severely, making the car seem as if it were wearing a corset. While you can dress up the Viper with leather, automatically adjusting seats and a GPS navigation system, it will never be a car you want to commute in. This became abundantly clear driving in Los Angeles rush-hour traffic, where the Viper’s massive horsepower propelled me forward tens of feet per minute, and the heat from the powertrain boiled the interior. The leather is cheesy, the rear hatch doesn’t close se-

curely and details like the overhead light feel like an afterthought. This is a car best served on the racetrack or on the open roads of Nevada or Utah. Or, surprisingly, on narrow roads bounded by cliffs, where I would never have had the gumption to take the older Vipers. The latest model turns with wicked finesse, has firm, well-aimed steering and clings resiliently to the road. Leaving all of the safety controls on (it has four modes, including full-on, sport, track and full-off ), I arced down an extremely long and cambered C turn as elegantly as in

bloomberg

any European sports car. It’s nice to have a six-speed stick at your right hand. This one’s gears are close together, and along with the easy-touse clutch, shifts are snappy. The sound of the engine is impossible to escape, which is great in short bursts but onerous on the freeway, where the sixth gear produces a tinnitus-inducing drone. Neither Viper lovers nor I wanted a practical or neutered version of Dodge’s legend. And this one isn’t. It looks outrageous, drives better than ever and is just as raucous as the driver wants it to be. bloomberg

Bentley Flying Spur is a gift for Chinese chauffeurs Martin Love

Oriental express: Bentley’s impressive new Flying Spur.

bloomberg

THERE’S one easy way to cope with life’s scarier moments: close your eyes and jump. I had just taken the wheel of the dizzyingly luxurious Bentley Flying Spur and my first task was to ease the craft out into four lanes of Beijing’s anarchic rush-hour traffic. Surely only a swivel-eyed loon would be so reckless. There probably are rules governing the relentless, bumpertight flow, but I had no idea what they were. Finally my gung-ho passenger shouted: “Go, go, go!” I didn’t look – I just hit the gas and swooshed out into the cavalcade, which absorbed us without a ripple. The Bentley dealership in Beijing sells more of the historic marque’s four-door super-sport sedans than any

other in the world. A salesman explained why: “We Chinese love old world. We love history. We love these cars because the Queen drives a Bentley.” The feeling is mutual – over the next two years Bentley will open 45 dealerships across China, and it explains why the British firm chose to launch the car in Beijing. But there are a couple of idiosyncrasies about this brave new market that Bentley has to cope with. The first is that the average age of a Bentley buyer here is mid-30s – more than a decade younger than the rest of the world. The second is that none of these new owners has any intention of driving their car. They will be quite happy to sit in the back, thank you. With its six litre twin-turbocharged W12 engine, this Flying Spur is faster than ever

before. The power from the colossal engine is 616bhp – enough to hurtle the twotonne dame from a standstill to 60mph in a fraction over four seconds. The sense of potential, unquestioning oomph at your disposal is delicious. Virtually every exterior panel has been redesigned to give a lower, longer, sleeker shape – and you’ll struggle to keep your hands to yourself when you see the distinct creases on its muscular haunches. There’s a cooler for not one but two bottles of champagne, and an underfloor acoustic shield to eliminate road noise. Tech-wise it’s state of the art, a wi-fi hotspot. So sit back and sip French fizz in your German-owned, British-built car, and get on with languishing – Chinese style. the guardian


19

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Travel PREAH SIHANOUK - SIEM REAP Flighs Days Dep Arrival K6 130 1-3-5 12:55 13:55

INTERNATIONAL FLIGHT SCHEDULE FROM PHNOM PENH Flighs

Days

Dep

TO PHNOM PENH Arrival

PHNOM PENH - BANGKOK

Flighs

Days

Dep

Arrival

BANGKOK - PHNOM PENH

K6 720

Daily

12:05

01:10

K6 721

Daily

02:25

03:30

PG 938

Daily

06:40

08:15

PG 931

Daily

07:55

09:05

PG 932

Daily

09:55

11:10

TG 580

Daily

07:55

09:05

TG 581

Daily

10:05

11:10

PG 933

Daily

13:30

14:40

PG 934

Daily

15:30

16:40

FD 3616

Daily

15:15

16:20

FD 3617

Daily

17:05

18:15

PG 935

Daily

17:30

18:40

PG 936

Daily

19:30

20:40

TG 584

Daily

18:25

19:40

TG 585

Daily

20:40

21:45

PG 937

Daily

20:15

21:50

08:00

16:05

PHNOM PENH - BEIJING CZ 324

Daily

BEIJING - PHNOM PENH CZ 323

Daily

14:30

20:50

PHNOM PENH - DOHA ( Via HCMC)

DOHA - PHNOM PENH ( Via HCMC)

QR 605

1.2..5.6

22:35

05:15+1

QR 604

1.2..5.6

08:00

21:00

QR 603

..34..7

15:50

22:25

QR 602

..3.4..7

01:25

14:20

PHNOM PENH - GUANGZHOU Daily

08:00

11:40

CZ 6059

2.4.7

12:00

13:45

CZ 6060

2.4.7

14:45

18:10

CZ 323

Daily

19:05

20:50

09:40

13:00

PHNOM PENH - HANOI Daily

17:30

20:35

VN 841

Daily

HO CHI MINH CITY - PHNOM PENH

VN 841

Daily

14:00

14:45

VN 920

Daily

15:50

16:30

VN 3856

Daily

19:20

20:05

VN 3857

Daily

18:00

18:45

PHNOM PENH - HONG KONG 1.2.4.7

11:25

15:05

KA 208

1.2.4.6.7 08:50

10:25

KA 207

6

11:45

22:25

KA 206

3.5.7

14:30

16:05

KA 209

1

18:30

22:05

KA 206

1

15:25

17:00

KA 209

3.5.7

17:25

21:00

KA 206

2

15:50

17:25

KA 205

2

19:00

22:35

PHNOM PENH - INCHEON Daily

23:40

06:40

KE 689

Daily

18:30

22:20

OZ 740

Daily

23:50

06:50

OZ 739

Daily

19:10

22:50

PHNOM PENH - KUALA LUMPUR

5J - CEBU Airways.

MH - Malaysia Airlines

2 Tuesday

AK - Air Asia

MI - SilkAir

3 Wednesday

BR - EVA Airways

OZ - Asiana Airlines

4 Thursday

CI - China Airlines

PG - Bangkok Airways

5 Friday

CZ - China Southern

QR - Qatar Airways

6 Saturday

FD - Thai Air Asia

QV - Lao Airlines

7 Sunday

FM - Shanghai Air

SQ - Singapore Airlines

K6- Cambodia Angkor Air

TG - Thai Airways | VN - Vietnam Airlines

This flight schedule information is updated about once a month. Further information, please contact direct to airline or a travel agent for flight schedule information.

Camellia sinensis tea plants used in American Classic Tea grown at the Charleston Tea Plantation. reuters

AIRLINES

KUALA LUMPUR - PHNOM PENH

AK 1473

Daily

08:35

11:20

AK 1474

Daily

15:15

16:00

MH 755

Daily

11:10

14:00

MH 754

Daily

09:30

10:20

MH 763

Daily

17:10

20:00

MH 762

Daily

3:20

4:10

20:05

06:05

PHNOM PENH- PARIS

PHNOM PENH - PARIS 20:05

06:05

PHNOM PENH - SHANGHAI 2.3.4.5.7

1 Monday

INCHEON - PHNOM PENH

KE 690

FM 833

KA - Dragon Air

HONG KONG - PHNOM PENH

KA 207

2

COLOUR CODE

2817 - 16 Tigerairways

HANOI - PHNOM PENH

PHNOM PENH - HO CHI MINH CITY

AF 273

AIRLINES CODE

GUANGZHOU - PHNOM PENH

CZ 324

VN 840

SIEM REAP - PREAH SIHANOUK Flighs Days Dep Arrival K6 131 1-3-5 11:20 12:20

19:50

AF 273

2

SHANGHAI - PHNOM PENH 23:05

PHNOM PENH - SINGAPORE

FM 833

2.3.4.5.7 19:30

22:40

SINGAPORE - PHNOM PENH

Air Asia (AK) Room T6, PP International Airport. Tel: 023 6666 555 Fax: 023 890 071 www.airasia.com

Cambodia Angkor Air (K6) PP Office, #90+92+94Eo, St.217, Sk.Orussey4, Kh. 7Makara, 023 881 178 /77718-333. Fax:+855 23-886-677 www.cambodiaangkorair.com E: mai@royalaviationexpert.com

Jetstar Asia (3K) PP: No. 333B Monivong Blvd. Myanmar Airways International Tel: 023 220909.Siem Reap: No. 50,Sivatha Blvd.Tel: 063 964388 #90+92+94Eo, St. 217, www.jetstar.com Sk. Orussey4, Kh. 7 Makara, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. T:023 881 178 | F:023 886 677 www.maiair.com

Dragon Air (KA) #168, Monireth, PP Tel: 023 424 300 Fax: 023 424 304 www.dragonair.com/kh

Cebu Pacific (5J) Phnom Penh: No. 333B Monivong Blvd. Tel: 023 219161 Siem Reap: No. 50,Sivatha Blvd. Tel: 063 965487 E-mail: cebuair@ptm-travel.com www.cebupacificair.com

Tiger airways G. floor, Regency square, Suare, Suite #68/79, St.205, Sk Chamkarmorn, PP Tel: (855) 95 969 888 (855) 23 5515 888/5525888 E: info@cambodiaairlines.net

SilkAir (MI) Regency C,Unit 2-4,Tumnorb Teuk, Chamkarmorn Phnom Penh Tel:023 988 629 www.silkair.com

MI 601

1.3.5.6.7

09:30 12:30

MI 602

1.3.5.6.7 07:40

08:40

MI 622

2.4

12:20

15:20

MI 622

2.4

08:40

11:25

3K 594

1.3.6

12:35

15:55

3K 593

1.3.6

10:40

11:50

3K 599

2.4.7

17:25

20:25

3K 591

5

18:45

20:00

3K 592

5

20:45

23:45

3K 591

5

18:45

20:00

MI 607

Daily

18:10

21:10

MI 608

Daily

16:20

17:15

2817

1.3

16:40

19:40

2816

1.3

15:00

15:50

2817

2.4.5

09:10

12:00

2816

2.4.5

07:20

08:10

2817

6

14:50

17:50

2816

6

13:00

14:00

2817

7

13:20

16:10

2816

7

11:30

12:30

09:10

11:35

PHNOM PENH SORYA BUS TRANSPORT SCHEDULE INTERNATIONAL ROUTES

TAIPEI - PHNOM PENH

PHNOM PENH -TAIPEI BR 266

Daily

12:45

17:05

PHNOM PENH - VIENTIANE

BR 265

Daily

VIENTIANE - PHNOM PENH

Qatar Airways No. 296 Blvd. Mao Tse Toung (St. 245), Ground floor, Intercontinental Hotel PP Tel: +23 42 40 12/13/14 www.qatarairways.com

VN 840

Daily

17:30

18:50

VN 841

Daily

11:30

13:00

PP-HO CHI MINH DEPATURE

HO CHI MINH-PP

QV 920

Daily

17:50

19:10

QV 921

Daily

11:45

13:15

6:45, 8:30, 11:45

6:45, 8:00,11:30

PP-BANGKOK

BANGKOK-PP

6:30

6:30

PP-PAKSE,VIENTIANE

PAKSE,VIENTIANE-PP

6:45

7:30

PHNOM PENH - YANGON 8M 404

3. 6

YANGON - PHNOM PENH 20:10

21:35

8M 403

3. 6

16:45

FROM SIEM REAP

TO SIEM REAP

SIEM REAP - BANGKOK Flighs Days Dep Arrival K6 700 Daily 12:50 2:00 PG 924 Daily 09:45 11:10 PG 906 Daily 13:15 14:40 PG 914 Daily 15:20 16:45 PG 908 Daily 18:50 20:15 PG 910 Daily 20:30 21:55 SIEM REAP - GUANGZHOU CZ 3054 2.4.6 11:25 15:35 CZ 3054 1.3.5.7 19:25 23:20 SIEM REAP -HANOI K6 850 Daily 06:50 08:30 VN 868 1.2.3.5.6 12:40 15:35 VN 842 Daily 18:05 19:45 VN 844 Daily 19:45 21:25 VN 800 Daily 21:00 22:40 SIEM REAP - HO CHI MINH CITY VN 3818 Daily 11:10 12:30 VN 826 Daily 13:30 14:40 VN 3820 Daily 17:45 18:45 VN 828 Daily 18:20 19:20 VN 3822 Daily 21:35 22:35 SIEM REAP - INCHEON KE 688 Daily 23:15 06:10 OZ 738 Daily 23:40 07:10 SIEM REAP - KUALA LUMPUR AK 281 Daily 08:35 11:35 MH 765 3.5.7 14:15 17:25 SIEM REAP - MANILA 5J 258 2.4.7 22:30 02:11 SIEM REAP - SINGAPORE MI 633 1, 6, 7 16:35 22:15 MI 622 2.4 10:40 15:20 MI 630 5 12:25 15:40 MI 615 7 12:45 16:05 MI 636 3, 2 18:30 21:35 MI 617 5 18:35 21:55 3K 599 2.4.7 15:50 20:25 SIEM REAP - VIENTIANE QV 522 2.4.5.7 10:05 13:00 SIEM REAP - YANGON 8M 402 1. 5 20:15 21:25

BANGKOK - SIEM REAP Flighs Days Dep K6 701 Daily 02:55 PG 903 Daily 08:00 PG 905 Daily 11:35 PG 913 Daily 13:35 PG 907 Daily 17:00 PG 909 Daily 18:45 GUANGZHOU - SIEM REAP CZ 3053 2.4.6 08:45 CZ 3053 1.3.5.7 16:35 HANOI - SIEM REAP K6 851 Daily 19:30 VN 843 Daily 15:25 VN 845 Daily 17:05 VN 845 Daily 17:45 VN 801 Daily 18:20 HO CHI MINH CITY - SIEM REAP VN 3809 Daily 09:15 VN 827 Daily 11:35 VN 3821 Daily 15:55 VN 829 Daily 16:20 VN 3823 Daily 19:45 INCHEON - SIEM REAP KE 687 Daily 18:30 OZ 737 Daily 19:20 KUALA LUMPUR - SIEM REAP AK 280 Daily 06:50 MH 764 3.5.7 12:10 MANILA - SIEM REAP 5J 257 2.4.7 19:45 SINGAPORE - SIEM REAP MI 633 1, 6, 7 14:35 MI 622 2.4 08:40 MI 616 7 10:40 MI 636 3, 2 13:55 MI 630 5 07:55 MI 618 5 16:35 3K599 2.4.7 13:50 VIENTIANE - SIEM REAP QV 512 2.4.5.7 06:30 YANGON - SIEM REAP 8M 401 1. 5 17:05

19:10

Arrival 04:05 09:00 12:45 14:35 18:10 19:55 10:30 18:30 21:15 17:10 18:50 19:30 20:00

10:35 12:35 16:55 17:40 20:45 22:15 22:40 07:50 13:15 21:30 15:45 09:50 11:50 17:40 11:35 17:45 15:05 09:25 19:15

DOMESTIC ROUTES PP-SIEM REAP SIEM REAP-PP 6:15, 7:00- 12:00, 13:00, 14:00 5:30, 6:30, 7:00, 9:30, 10:30,12:30, 13:30 PP -SIHANOUK SIHANOUK-PP 7:00 To 12:00, 13:00, 14:30, 16:30 7:10, 8:00, 10:30,12:15, 14:00,15:30,17:30 PP-BATTAMBANG BATTAMBANG-PP 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12:00 5:30, 6:45, 7:45, 8:30, 9:30,10:30 PP-MONDULKIRI MONDULKIRI-PP 8:30 8:30 Further information, please contact: Tel: 023 210 359, Email:168@ppsoryatransport.com

REGULAR SHIPPING LINES SCHEDULES CALLING PORT ROTATION LINE RCL (12calls/moth) MEARSK (MCC) (4 calls/moth)

CALLING SCHEDULES

FREEQUENCY ROTATION PORTS

1 Wed, 08:00 - Thu 16:00

1 Call/week

2 Thu, 14:00 - Fri 22:00

1 Call/week

3 Fri, 20:00 - Sat 23:59

1 Call/week

1 Th, 08:00 - 20:00

1 Call/week

SIN-SHV-SGZ-SIN HKG-SHV-SGZ-HKG (HPH-TXGKEL) SIN-SHV-SGZ-SIN SGN-SHV-LZP-SGN - HKG-OSA-TYO-KOB - BUS-SGH-YAT-SGN - SIN-SHV-TPP-SIN

2 Fri, 22:00- Sun 00:01

1 Call/week

SITC (BEN LINE (4 calls/onth)

Sun 09:00-23:00

1 Call/week

HCM-SHV-LZP-HCMNBO-SGH-OSA-KOBBUS-SGH-HGK-CHM

ITL (ACL) (4 calls/month) APL (4 calls/month) COTS (2 calls/month)

Sat 06:00 - Sun 08:00

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Fri, 08:00 - Sun, 06:00

1 call/week

SIN-SHV-SIN

Irregula

2 calls/month BBK-SHV-BKK-(LZP)

34 call/month BUS= Busan, Korea HKG= HongKong kao=Kaoshiung, Taiwan ROC Kob= Kebe, Japan KUN= Kuantan, Malaysia LZP= Leam Chabang, Thailand NBO= Ningbo, China OSA= Osaka, Japan SGN= Saigon, Vietnam

SGZ= Songkhla, Thailand SHV= Sihanoukville Port Cambodia SIN= Singapore TPP= TanjungPelapas, Malaysia TYO= Tokyo, Japan TXG= Taichung, Taiwan YAT= Yantian, China YOK= Yokohama, Japan

FLY DIRECT TO MYANMAR WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY YANGON - PHNOM PENH PHNOM PENH - YANGON FLY DIRECT TO SIEM REAP MONDAY & FRIDAY SIEM REAP - YANGON YANGON - SIEM REAP #90+92+94Eo, St. 217, Sk. Orussey4, Kh. 7 Makara, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Tel 023 881 178 | Fax 023 886 677 | www.maiair.com

Plantation tour might be just your cup of tea Whitney Hopler

R

IDING a trolley through fields planted with neat rows of tea bushes, I was savouring the leftover taste of the Plantation Peach tea I’d sampled just before our tour of the Charleston Tea Plantation began. My husband and I and our 15-year-old daughter drink tea constantly at home (hot and iced, caffeinated and decaf, and a variety of flavours). So when we discovered this gem while planning a trip to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, we knew that it would be worthwhile to drive roughly 200 kilometres farther south to see how tea is grown, harvested and manufactured. “Tea bushes love heat and humidity, and we’ve got plenty of both right here,” said our guide, referring to the typical weather in South Carolina’s Lowcountry, where Wadmalaw Island is located. It’s about 35 kilometres southwest of downtown Charleston, which isn’t far geographically but seems worlds away culturally, since the quiet, sparsely populated island lacks Charleston’s sophistication. A few tea plantations had existed in the area over the past 200 years, our guide said. But none was particularly successful until the company that makes Lipton sold its research fields – used to study how tea grows best in North America – here on Wadmalaw to “professional tea taster” (as our guide described him) William Barclay Hall, a Canadian who studied tea in England and moved to South Carolina to grow it. Hall later began working with the tea company RC Bigelow Inc, which now sells the tea grown at the plantation under the label American Classic Tea. The plantation has developed a reputation among tea connoisseurs as a place that

carefully guards the flavour of its product. Soon after giving us an overview of the plantation’s history, our guide informed us we were about to encounter its founder. “That looks like Bill’s golf cart parked by the greenhouse right now,” he said, steering the trolley over. Feeling jumpy with excitement (or possibly from all the caffeine I’d consumed sampling tea before the tour), I bounded out of the trolley and nearly bumped into an older couple as I headed a bit too eagerly into the greenhouse. Slow down, I reminded myself. Slow seemed to be the key word here. Our group looked through a glass window into the greenhouse, watching Hall, whose long grey hair hung down over the top of his Tshirt, as he carefully examined tea plants waiting to be transplanted to the fields outside to see if they were ready. He slowly ran his fingers over the plants’ leaves with the concentration of a surgeon conducting a post-op examination. Whatever he saw seemed to fascinate him, and I became fascinated watching his fascination. Patience is crucial when growing tea, since tea bushes take several years to mature after they’re planted. Restraint is also important, since the best flavour comes only from the youngest leaves at the top of the bush each season – so producers need to be careful to use only those leaves when making tea, or they could ruin the flavor they’ve cultivated. I felt a twinge of regret as I thought of how many times in the past I’d rushed through the process of simply drinking tea – gulping. Afterward, I poured myself a cup of Island Green iced tea. But I didn’t just knock it back. I sipped it slowly, letting the golden liquid lie in my mouth like a Southern afternoon gently lingers on Wadmalaw Island, until evening melts it away. the washington post


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Entertainment NOW SHOWING

Space Project @ Meta

legend cinema

Cambodian Space Project Singer Srey Thi spins rare Indonesian vinyl at Meta House.

FAST AND FURIOUS 6 Hobbs has Dom and Brian reassemble their crew in order to take down a mastermind who commands an organisation of mercenary drivers across 12 countries. Payment? Full pardons for them all. 9:30pm

Get there early to catch Joshua Oppenheimer's festival hit The Act of Killing, which challenges those responsible for carrying out the executions of nearly a million convicted “communists” in Indonesia.

WORLD WAR Z United Nations employee Gerry Lane traverses the world in a race against time to stop the Zombie pandemic that is toppling armies and governments, and threatening to destroy humanity itself. 9:30am, 11:50am, 2:10pm, 7:15pm, 9:35pm

Meta House, Sothearos Boulevard 12.15pm

MAN OF STEEL A young itinerant worker is forced to confront his secret extraterrestrial heritage when Earth is invaded by members of his race. 1:55pm, 4:30pm, 6:50pm, 9:15pm

Channel some pent-up energy with new grappling classes.

AFTER EARTH A crash landing leaves Kitai Raige and his father Cypher stranded on Earth, 1,000 years after events forced humanity's escape. With Cypher injured, Kitai must embark on a perilous journey to signal for help. 11:15am

cineplex cinema MONSTERS UNIVERSITY A look at the relationship between Mike and Sulley during their days at Monsters University – when they weren’t necessarily the best of friends. Featuring the voice of Steve Buscemi. 9:15am, 6:45pm

Grappling @ K1 Gym Submission grappling is a combination of Brazilian jiu jitsu, catch and freestyle wrestling.

K1 Gym, #131 Street 199 6:45pm

Yoga @ Yoga Phnom Penh

Lead singer of the Cambodian Space Project, Srey Thi, is on the decks tonight at Meta House. SUPPLIED

TV PICKS

6:50am - MY WEEK WITH MARILYN: Colin Clark, an employee of Sir Laurence Olivier's, documents the tense interaction between Olivier and Marilyn Monroe during production of The Prince and the Showgirl. HBO

MAN OF STEEL (See above) 3:35pm, 8:20pm

8:35am - THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW: Jack Hall, paleoclimatologist for NORAD, must make a daring trek across America to reach his son, trapped in the crosshairs of a sudden international storm which plunges the planet into a new Ice Age. FOX MOVIES

AFTER EARTH (See above) 10:50am

6:05pm - CON AIR: A newly released ex-con and former US Ranger finds himself trapped in a prisoner transport plane when the passengers seize control. FOX MOVIES

WORLD WAR Z (See above) 11:15am, 1:30pm, 6:10pm

8pm - THE VOW: A car accident puts Paige in a coma, and when she wakes up with severe memory loss, her husband Leo works to win her heart again. With Channing Tatum. FOX MOVIES

Michelle Williams stars as bombshell Marilyn Monroe in My Week With Marilyn. BLOOMBERG

Stretch out midweek with a yoga class. This asana workout promises to burn off purities, and warm down with long restorative holds, pranayama (breathwork) and meditation.

Yoga Phnom Penh, #172 z2 Norodom Boulevard 6:30pm

Swing Dance @ ISPP Learn to lindy hop at ISPP. But beginners beware: this class is designed for lindy hoppers who already know their basics. $5 expats, $2.50 Cambodians.

International School of Phnom Penh, 158 Norodom Boulevard 6:30pm

Thinking caps “USE CAUTION, PLEASE!” ACROSS   1   6 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 23 24 26 31 32 33 35 39 40 42 43 45 46 47 49 51 55 56 57 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71

Used crosshairs Mexican War president Small-time skirmish Confession of faith “Walleye Capital of the World” It may wind up on the side of a house Flavorful Broadway musical based on “La Boheme” Completely botch Get with effort, as that last gob of toothpaste Prefix with “Chinese” or “European” One of the Bobbsey twins Actionable words Going by Yellowstone herd member “___ Hai” Sing Sing disorder Nestling noise Middle Eastern gulf Like some seals Tear asunder Agents making busts Tragic daughter-misjudger Hera’s hawkish son Yon maiden fair Drains on deck One taken in by another Part of a geisha’s garb “Forget it!” Journalists As a czar, he was terrible Planning to vote no Asian snake Migratory minnow muncher Trig ratio “Sri” follower Pretentious Some herbal selections Tree whose berries can be made into wine

DOWN   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9 10 11 12 13 21 25 26 27 28 29 30 34 36 37 38 41 44 48 50 51 52 53 54 58 59 60 61 62

Does summer stock Saddam used to rule it Presenter of choices Sword’s side Ones with seniority Year-after-year Top-selling cookie Boy with a blue blanket Boiler on a range Meat package covering # key Parenthetical comment Highest natural adult male voice Kinshasa’s country, once Ht. above sea level Shade of black Monk in high places Withdrawn apple spray Miserly one, or reversed, what he does Air Force Two passengers, once Pot covers, to Brits Limerick’s land Until the end of time Thomas Hardy novel “___ of the d’Urbervilles” Beats but good Decide on, as a date Meal Picnic side Writer Loos Delaware’s capital “Perceptual abstraction” Bert’s Muppet pal Old lab burner Unwritten, as a contract South African monetary unit Expressway First name on a marquee

Friday’s solution

Friday’s solution


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THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Sport Korea’s Inbee the player to beat at US Women’s Open

It is very difficult to look beyond South Korea’s Park Inbee as a likely winner of this week’s US Women’s Open in Sebonack, New York, where the world number one will be bidding to clinch her third major crown of the year. Inbee has dominated the women’s game this season, triumphing five times on the US LPGA Tour, and she will tee off in today’s opening round at Sebonack Country Club fresh from victory at the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship on Sunday. “I’ve played very good golf the last two or three months,” Inbee, 24, told reporters at Sebonack on Tuesday, while preparing for the third women’s major of the year. “Everything’s going the way I really want it to.” REUTERS

Pat McCabe out for rest of year with neck fracture Britain’s Sir Bradley Wiggins won the 2012 Tour de France, but has pulled out of defending his title.

AFP

Maurice Garin (centre) won of the first Tour de France.

AFP

Tour rides wheels of change as it reaches 100th edition M Julien Pretot

aurice Garin, winner of the inaugural Tour de France in 1903, belonged to an era of adventurous pioneers and so-called amateurs in a world without television and little press coverage. In contrast, the 2012 champion, Bradley Wiggins, and his Team Sky partners embody modernity and high tech in the multimedia age. Yet as the race prepares to celebrate its 100th edition, it appears the first and the last Tour winners are not entirely worlds apart. Garin, a former chimney sweep from the Italian valley of Aosta, was known as a hard-training perfectionist, who took great care of his machine. The White Bulldog, as the Franco-Italian was known, made the arduous decision to give up wine and even cigarettes to achieve his goal of winning the Tour. Wiggins, who started his career as a pursuit specialist and won three Olympic golds, went on a strict diet

to lose seven kilograms in his bid to become a Grand Tour winner. Both men were brought up across two cultures, prefiguring the globalisation of cycling’s showcase event. Like many boys from his valley, Garin left to become a chimney sweep in France, ending up in the north of the country where he developed his taste for cycling. Wiggins was born in the Belgian city of Ghent, one of the strongholds of Six-Day Racing, the cycling discipline in which his father Gary made his reputation as a solid yet maverick track rider. Both men hardly knew their fathers, which might explain their motivation and an explanation of their hunger to win. Cycling has undergone many transformations in the years between the two men’s victories and, with all due respect to the 198 riders starting the Tour in Corsica on Saturday – Wiggins will be missing through injury – the 60 brave men who embarked for the unknown in 1903 probably had more merit. Stages were twice as long,

with a 471 kilometre ride from Nantes to Paris, and often started at night. Bikes were gearless, three times as heavy – about 20 kilos – and riders were not allowed to receive any assistance so were forced to carry spare tyres around their necks in case of punctures. And punctures were common, as the roads were covered with gravel and dust, while cobbles were usual in the north. As a result, riders reached the finish line blackened by soot and dust mixed with their sweat. Crowd favourite Honore Barthelemy lost an eye in a crash in 1920 and used to remove his glass one while racing to avoid it being covered in dust. Riders were allowed to give up in one stage and start the next, although they did not compete for the general classification. The race was also open to strictly amateur riders, who usually spent most of their savings for the chance to compete on the Tour. One such amateur named Napoleon Paoli took part in

the Tour in 1919 and 1920 and was forced out each time, first when he was stopped by a landslide and then when he rode into a donkey. While such events are improbable nowadays, modern Tour riders still have to deal with the occasional bizarre incident. Last year, the race was halted during a stage in the Pyrenees when tacks and nails were spread over the tarmac, causing havoc in the peloton. The same thing happened in the second edition of the Tour in 1904, which was so marred by incidents that race founder Henri Desgrange considered cancelling the event forever. Not only were nails an everyday fixture of the race that year, competitors were attacked and beaten up by fans of rival riders, and the men who reached Paris in the four top placings were all disqualified for various offences, including taking the train. Unfortunately, as the case against seven-time winner Lance Armstrong, who was last year stripped of his titles for doping, has shown,

cheating has also been a feature of the modern Tour. Founder Desgrange ended the original formula of teams sponsored by bicycle manufacturers in 1930 when it turned out they were making arrangements to earn victory for the best man for their business at the expense of sporting concerns. The Tour was then raced by national teams, which revived interest in the event and forced the organisers to find new means to fund it as sponsors no longer paid to enter their riders. This is how the publicity caravan that has now become a crowd favourite and a vital feature of the Tour was invented. Sponsored teams returned in 1969, just as doping controls became systematic after the death of Britain’s Tom Simpson on Mont Ventoux in 1967. As Wiggins’s victory showed last year, the Tour is now much more an international event than a piece of French national heritage. Thirty-one nations were represented at the start in 2012, compared with five in 1903. REUTERS

Pate speed may trouble Patriots in CBL clash HS Manjunath

A classic confrontation is on the cards when Alaxan FR Patriots take on Pate 310 in the first of the three matches slated for Saturday at the Beeline Arena as the Cambodian Basketball League, sponsored by Western Union and Coca-Cola, resumes after a week’s break. Having lost to Extra Joss Warriors a breathtaking free-throw thriller, Pate 310 will be looking for a swing in fortunes, and the manner in which they

stood up to the Warriors’s three tall men in that game should give them confidence in dealing with some of the giants among the Patriots. Speed is what Pate will be heavily banking on to deal with Patriots allround ability. Meanwhile, the young all-Cambodian NSK Dream will have their work cut out against Galaxy, who are mainly made up of players from China. Galaxy’s surprise package was Kelvin Chau, whose 20 points set up his side’s victory over Post Buffaloes last

time, but they may find the going tough against NSK, whose mainstays are Sok Pagna and Chim Chandara. The Dream’s fate may hinge on how well this pair performs. Saturday’s card concludes with an interesting match-up between Extra Joss Warriors and Post Buffaloes. While the Warriors will try hard to maintain their winning momentum, the key to the team’s success could well be Ley Denestrosa, whose 30 points stood out against Pate. The Buffaloes will be eager to see

one of their key players, Kosal Khiev, back in action after missing the first game. The side will also feel much relieved at play time if Jay Roden were to report full recovery from his leg injury.

Saturday’s Games Alaxan FR Patriots v Pate 310 – 2pm NSK Dream v Galaxy – 4pm Extra Joss Warriors v Post Buffaloes – 6pm

Australia’s Pat McCabe has been ruled out of rugby for the rest of the year after suffering another fracture in his neck, although it is too early to determine whether it could threaten his career, the Australian Rugby Union said yesterday. The inside centre was taken off during the Wallabies 23-21 first test loss to the British and Irish Lions last Saturday in Brisbane and ruled out of the rest of the series. Medical checks on Tuesday showed the 25-year-old had sustained a recurrence of a fracture of a bone in his neck that originally happened last November against France on Australia’s northern hemisphere tour. The injury means he will miss the remainder of the Super Rugby season with the ACT Brumbies, Australia’s Rugby Championship campaign against South Africa, New Zealand and Argentina, and their endof-season tour to Europe. REUTERS

Black Caps skipper McCullum keen to face Kevin Pietersen

New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum insists he is relishing the prospect of going up against Kevin Pietersen in the second Twenty20 international at The Oval today, saying the “game’s better” when the star batsman is involved. Pietersen hasn’t played for England since leaving the tour of New Zealand in March with a knee injury that sidelined him from all cricket until last week. But the South Africa-born shotmaker returned to action in spectacular style by making an unbeaten 177 for Surrey in their County Championship match away to Yorkshire, an innings featuring 17 fours and seven sixes. AFP

Djokovic and Serena cruise, Tomic turns on ATP after win

Top seeds Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams cruised into the Wimbledon second round on Tuesday as the All England Club recovered from the shockwaves of Rafael Nadal’s exit 24 hours earlier. World number one Djokovic, the 2011 men’s champion, beat Germany’s Florian Mayer 6-3, 7-5, 6-4, while defending women’s champion Williams racked up her 32nd successive win, cruising to a 6-1, 6-3 win over Luxembourg’s Mandy Minella. Meanwhile, Bernard Tomic launched a second scathing attack on the ATP after edging past Sam Querrey in five sets, claiming the decision to ban his father from tour events was unjustly made “in 30 seconds”. Tomic’s father, John, has been suspended from the tour for allegedly assaulting his son’s former training partner, Thomas Drouet, and was not present to watch the Australian dig deep to reach the second round. THE GUARDIAN


22

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Tennis

TFC-backed clean up in Kep H S Manjunath

T

HE Tennis Federation of Cambodia and its global goodwill ambassador Hisae Arai are joining hands in a rare health and hygiene initiative involving nearly 1,000 volunteers to clean up the coastal city of Kep on Saturday. The project named Kep Kep Clean has been launched by the Miss Japan Volunteer Association, of which Arai is the Southeast Asian representative, promoting environmental awareness throughout the Kingdom. The 2011 Miss Japan Kimono will lead the volunteer force along with her sister Kiko, the 2012 Traditional Japanese Beauty Pageant winner, in this mass movement supported by the municipality of Kep and garbage collection company GAEA. Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh will also join the campaign, which starts from the Crab Market at 8am. Unveiling the project’s mascot Keppy designed by Hisae Arai herself at a news conference in Phnom Penh yesterday, the TFC Ambassador,

who completed her first year in that role last month, hailed the support extended by the Tennis Federation. “Keeping an exotic location like Kep, which is straddled by mountains and sea, clean is of paramount importance,� Hisae Arai told the gathering of media personnel. TFC secretary-general Tep Rithivit said the Federation was not only concerned with teaching tennis skills at grassroots level. “We also want our kids to learn lessons for life in keeping their surrounds clean so that they can shape their own destiny and guide the next generations,� he said. In her short address, Kiko Arai said this project was a great opportunity to show the rest of the country the importance of keeping cities clean. GAEA managing director Pho Phalkun said his company was happy to be associated with a mass awareness programme like this. Meanwhile, the municipality of Kep has announced that it will designate Hisae Arai as its goodwill ambassador to promote tourism and environmental awareness through out its territory.

Hisae Arai (second elft) and her sister Kiko (left) present Keppy the Kep Kep Clean mascot at a press conference yesterday.

EPICERIE FILMS / THOMAS GUILLAUME

Coming up on Friday, June 28, The Phnom Penh Post proudly presents

INSURANCE CAMBODIA

From June 16 and running through to June 27, for the first time and as second nation in Asia ever, Cambodia has the honour to be chairman of the 37th yearly convention of the World Heritage Committee. In the eight to 16 pages strong reports published in Khmer and English version of the Post, our newspaper will give insights into how Cambodia's UNESCO chairmanship will contribute to a robust future of the national tourism industry and the conversation of our World Heritage Sites such as Angkor Wat and Preah Vihear

A special report that reviews what’s available and what’s new in Cambodia for:

During the convention the Kingdom will host more than 1400 delegates of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee coming from 190 different countries and more than 200 members of the international press.

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The Post will publish messages of welcome from the Royal Government as well as a schedule of events and highlights of what's on the agenda.

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In the June 28 report two weeks later, we will publish what happened during the important series of meetings, including the Siem Reap closing ceremony on June 27. This is not only a chance for travel agencies, airlines, hotels, restaurants, banks, telecoms and all kinds of providers to highlight their companies in the special reports but all companies that are proud of Cambodia. For the special occasion the Post will increase its production by several thousands and distribute the papers to the international guests. Advertisers will be offered special discount rates for inclusion in both publications on June 14 and 28. Phnom Penh To advertise, contact borom.chea@phnompenhpost.com - call 012 76 34 81 or Siem Reap: Sophearith Blondeel - call 092 752 801 | 063 964 151 | Email:Sophearith.Blondeel@phnompenhpost.com This is a chance to show how much your company cares about the preservation of Cambodia's antiquities.

6

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SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE READ THE POST

Educational, Scientific and

Cultural Organization

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23

THE PHNOM PENH POST june 27, 2013

Football

Crown go down 4-1 in East Timor U15s match

It was a game of contrasting halves for the boys of Phnom Penh Crown Academy in their away fixture of the FAM-Frenz U15 Champions Trophy on Tuesday against East Timor. After squandering a penalty kick, the Cambodians took the lead with a well-worked goal but conceded an equaliser on the stroke of half-time. The hosts came out firing in the second session, capitalising on some goalkeeping errors to run out 4-1 victors in front of a 3,000-strong crowd at the Municipal Stadium in Dili. Crown’s record in the regional competition moved to one draw and three losses, putting them fifth out of the six teams in Group A. They play Chonburi Academy in Thailand this Saturday. DAN RILEY

Haze to blame as Cardiff cancel tour of Malaysia Phnom Penh Crown striker Khim Borey takes a free kick during their Metfone C-League game against Naga Corp yesterday at Olympic Stadium. The game ended 0-0.

SRENG MENG SRUN

Goalless stalemate keeps the table stable at the top HS Manjunath

C

ontrary to pre-match build up as a no-holdsbarred contest, a needle game in the Metfone CLeague between former champions Phnom Penh Crown and Naga Corp fizzled out into a goalless affair at Olympic Stadium yesterday. The stalemate held the sides to their current league standings, with Crown sitting third behind Boeung Ket Rubber Field and Svay Rieng, and Naga retaining their fourth spot. Intermittent showers during the second half only drove the spectators

to the top tiers in the stands while doing no favours at all to the men on the pitch. The game could have been Naga’s had not the right post come in the way of a firm strike by midfielder Ou Lyhorng from the top of the box at the stroke of regulation time. Minutes before this Naga miss, Crown had come closest to scoring when Odion Obadin’s header from a corner kick went harmlessly wide of the mark. There were some lively exchanges at both ends but neither side posed any serious threat, with much of the battle confined to midfield.

Crown clearly felt the absence of their top scorer Elroy van der Hooft, who was not in the line-up. South Korean signing Lee Ha-neul did inject some pace and purpose now and then but, overall, Crown could not break in the way they had done in their two previous outings. Neither side could get deep enough to cause a stir in the box thanks to both sets of defenders stoically holding their ground.

Senate make another point in tie In yesterday’s late kick-off, Ministry of National Defence failed to clinch the victory that would have guaran-

teed them top-tier survival, allowing Senate Secretariat to record just their second point from the whole season with a 1-1 draw. The Army men took the lead on a rain-soacked Olympic Stadium pitch a minute before the break through Phuong Soksana. However, Senate hit back shortly after the restart with an important equaliser by Chhim Seyha. Senate, already confirmed to finish at the bottom of the league, helped prolong the seemingly inevitable demise of fellow newcomers Asia Europe University, who now need MND to lose all three of their remaining fixtures while winning their own last two.

Ancelotti move has impact Tevez reaches terms Carlo Ancelotti has been formally confirmed as Real Madrid’s manager after signing a three-year contract, an appointment that will impact on elite Premier League clubs as Madrid kickstart their squad strengthening for the new season. The Italian was presented to the media in the Bernabeu’s Royal Box yesterday, having been replaced at Paris St-Germain by the former French World Cup winner Laurent Blanc. Ancelotti’s task will be to convince Cristiano Ronaldo to remain with Madrid and even, potentially, commit to a long-term deal, though the manager’s desire to revitalise the squad will have implications for Chelsea, Manchester City, Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal. Madrid are confident of deflecting City’s interest in the Malaga playmaker, Isco, who has already admitted that a move to the Bernabeu would “excite”. The Napoli forward Edin-

son Cavani is also wanted by the Spanish club, and Madrid appears his likeliest destination if he departs Italy, despite City and, more recently, Chelsea having expressed interest in bringing him to the Premier League. The Europa League winners are understood to have discussed using players in partexchange for a player who scored 29 goals last season and whose release clause is set at €63 million ($82.4 million), a fee Madrid would apparently be willing to meet. The Uruguay striker intends to speak with the Napoli president, Aurelio De Laurentiis, next month on his return from the Confederations Cup before determining where his future lies. “Real is one of the best clubs in the world but there is no deal yet,” Cavani told Spanish newspaper Marca. “When we’re kids, we dream about playing at a team like Real Madrid or Barcelona but, right now, I’m at Napoli

and I’m very proud to be there. If I leave one day, I’ll be ready to move to a bigger club. We’ll see.” The forward’s parents have each been quoted over recent weeks suggesting a move to Spain was likely, though Cavani stressed that he had asked his family “thousands of times to please not talk any more because it harms me”. Tottenham, too, may yet be frustrated by Ancelotti’s appointment after it emerged Madrid could also be willing to offer Brazilian club Corinthians €20 million for the midfielder Paulinho in a straight cash payment. The 24-year-old’s economic rights are owned by a third party, an issue that has dissuaded other suitors from pursuing the player, but Spurs believed they were close to securing his services, with any deal to be concluded after the tournament in Brazil. It remains to be seen whether Madrid will now trump them at the last. THE GUARDIAN

with Juventus: media

ArgentinIAN striker Carlos Tevez has agreed terms to join Serie A champions Juventus from Manchester City, Italian media reported on Tuesday. The reports said the 29year-old would sign a threeyear contract with the 29time Italian champions. Juventus did not immediately comment. Gazzetta dello Sport, Sky Sports Italia, Tuttosport and Corriere dello Sport all said an agreement had been reached following a meeting between officials from the clubs in Manchester, with Juventus expected to pay €12 million ($15.7 million). Tevez spent four years at Manchester City after joining them from neighbours United, but it was far from plain sailing. Although he won a Premier League winner’s media in 2011-12, he was also fined and suspended by City after refusing to warm up during a

Champions League match at Bayern Munich in 2011. He has also fallen out of favour with the Argentinian national side. His signing would mark a change in direction by Juventus, who have won the Serie A twice in a row without a big name forward. Coach Antonio Conte has rotated between any two of Sebastian Giovinco, Alessandro Matri, Mirko Vucinic and Fabio Quagliarella, who have shared the goals evenly between them. Tevez began his career at Boca Juniors in Argentina and has also played for Corinthians in Brazil and West Ham United in England. He has never been far from controversy and was once sent off for Boca after celebrating a goal against River Plate by flapping his arms to imitate a chicken, a reference to that fact Boca fans use “chickens” as a derogatory nickname for their arch-rivals. REUTERS

Premier League newcomers Cardiff City, looking to grow their brand awareness ahead of a possible IPO, have cancelled their six-day promotional tour of Malaysia this week because of the air pollution crisis in Southeast Asia. Cardiff manager Malky Mackay and forward Craig Bellamy were among a party of club representatives who were due to conduct promotional activities in Kuala Lumpur starting today. Last month Reuters exclusively reported that Malaysian billionaire owner Vincent Tan was exploring an IPO of the team after they sealed promotion to the lucrative English Premier League. REUTERS

Spain ready to send Italy crashing to defeat again

Italy will hold no surprises for Spain when they meet in the Confederations Cup semifinals tonight, defender Sergio Ramos said in assessing their first meeting since the Spaniards dished out a 4-0 hammering to win Euro 2012. The odds look heavily in Spain’s favour again. Unbeaten in their last 25 matches, Spain have only lost to Italy once in eight meetings since the 1994 World Cup finals, while Italy have also lost Mario Balotelli, their main attacking threat in this tournament. He has returned home with a thigh injury, but Ramos said Spain still expected a tough test at the Estadio Castelnao tonight in a match that kicks off at 2am Cambodian time. REUTERS

Fenerbahce are banned from Europe over fixing

Turkish club Fenerbahce have been banned from European soccer for two seasons for their involvement in a domestic match-fixing scandal, UEFA said on Tuesday. In a statement, the European governing body said another Turkish club, Besiktas, had been banned for one season. Both bans were linked to a scandal that rocked Turkish football in 2011. Fenerbahce, second in the Turkish league last season, will miss out on next season’s Champions League, which they had been due to enter in the third qualifying round, while Besiktas will have to drop out of the Europa League. REUTERS



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