Sunday, May 29, 2011

Toxic Waste Skin Coverings

Health Officials warned consumers to stop using skin whitening products which are extremely dangerous.

They have names like Fasco Herbal Cream and FC Lemon Herbal Whitening Cream, and are sold in many communities.

Some labels says they contain nothing more than vitamins and natural plants, which has been found to be untrue.

Health Officials said they detected dangerous and illegal levels of mercury in nearly a dozen brands of skin-lightening products.

Consumers are warned to avoid all skin-lightening products unless they are determined to be mercury-free.

Samples tested by the Health Department contained more than 33,000 times the permissible level of mercury.

They urge urged consumers to handle and dispose of the products as hazardous waste.

Mercury can be extremely dangerous, especially to pregnant women and young children.

It can damage the kidneys and nervous system.

Skin whitening and lightening products are marketed largely to dark skinned minority groups.

They are also sold to treat freckles and age spots, which means anyone might use them.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Cambodia’s micro-insurance industry

Cambodia's micro-insurance industry could launch as soon as August, as officials say rules governing the sector are nearing completion. The Ministry of Economy and Finance aims to hold a meeting to receive public feedback this month before finalising regulations drafted last year, the Ministry's Insurance Division Head In Meatra said. "We hope that we will launch [micro-insurance] sometime in August or later this year."

- General Insurance Association of Cambodia Chairman Chhay Ratanak
- Finance Ministry Insurance Division Head In Meatra
- Forte Insurance General Manager Youk Chamroeunrith
- Prasac, Cambodia's largest micro-finance institution
- MFI General Manager Sim Senacheert
- Infinity Insurance Chief Executive Officer David Carter

In Meatra emphasised the importance of raising awareness among Cambodia's rural population about the benefits of micro-insurance, adding the insurance offered would include coverage for health, death and livestock, among others. The plan to launch microinsurance had been proposed by the private sector in order to improve the industry at the grassroots level, he said, adding that many ASEAN countries, such as Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines, had already begun developing the industry. Strong regulation in the Philippines had led to a successful micro-insurance industry, according to In Meatra. He said Cambodia was on track to have similar legislation.

General Insurance Association of Cambodia Chairman Chhay Ratanak said the group had met with the Ministry in the last two weeks to discuss finalisation of the rules. "The plan is very good to help low-income people get insurance, and the government especially wants to convince them of the benefits of having insurance," he said. He said that while microinsurance offers fewer profits than other industries, many private companies are still interested because it offers a way to help Cambodia's poor. He also pointed to a potential boost in tax revenues. The Finance Ministry's In Meatra said the capital requirement being discussed to operate a micro-insurance business was US$200,000, though that had yet to be finalised.

Forte Insurance General Manager Youk Chamroeunrith said his company received permission from the MEF to implement a trial micro-insurance service in some of the provinces surrounding Phnom Penh. The trial, now a month old, is being used to gauge reaction of low-income people in the area, though it was still too early to measure the results, he said. Youk Chamroeunrith said the project is a joint venture with a local partner, however he declined to disclose its name. "We're not focusing on profit, given the premium is so small.

It's more about corporate responsibility," he said. In 2010, Forte signed a Memorandum of Understanding with, to sell micro-insurance. Prasac would earn an 8-percent commission for every $100 premium, MFI General Manager Sim Senacheert said last year. A rural client would pay a premium of $6 per year, and, in case of hospitalisation, the insurer would pay back $5 a day. Infinity Insurance Chief Executive Officer David Carter said that while he supported the micro-insurance initiative, the regulation had to both encourage growth while "limiting its horizon to small enterprise." "As the capitalisation level for micro-insurers will be lower than the insurers in the current market, the government has to ensure that there is no unfair competition from these new entrants to the insurance market," he said.

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2011052049250/Business/micro-insurance-rules-nearly-finished.html

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Coconut Oil Exports

United Coconut Associations of the Philippines (Ucap) reported coconut oil exports declined 23.1 percent in the first quarter of this year. Yvonne Agustin of Ucap, said a dry spell slashed coconut production reducing production. Coconut oil currently commands a good price in the international market compared to palm oil. Coconut oil is one of the Philippines top export products. Last year, export revenues from coconut oil hit $1.5 billion.

Cambodian Military

Cambodia Hosts Military Drill With US and Others while China gives over 50,000 sets of military uniforms and 257 military trucks

May 17, 2011

Military forces from Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia and the United States are in Cambodia for a multinational peacekeeping exercise. The training will focus on command structures, rescue missions and engineering projects such as the construction of hospitals and schools. After the training, the Cambodian forces are expected to rotate through U.N. peacekeeping missions in Sudan, Lebanon, Chad and Central Africa. The exercise is an important way to increase the cooperation between U.S. and Cambodian military forces.

May 26, 2011

The government of China delivered 50,000 sets of military uniforms to Cambodia, signaling closer defense cooperation between the two nations. Last June, 257 military trucks had been delivered to Cambodia. China is pleased to help Cambodian military as much as possible to tighten cooperation between the two nations. Cambodia hopes that China will continue to further support Cambodian Armed Forces.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Cambodia : Seaside Towns of Kampot and Kep

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

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

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

Although tourism has taken off in the past decade — for much of the 1980s and '90s, the area was off limits due to the presence of the Khmer Rouge — the two towns have avoided the dizzying and sometimes tacky growth of places like Siem Reap, where busloads of visitors swarm the ancient Angkor temples, and Sihanoukville, which caters to backpackers looking for a cheap alternative to coastal Thailand.

Instead of mega resorts and budget dives, Kampot and Kep have attracted a smattering of boutique hotels, bars and restaurants that draw on the area's history as a stylish retreat in the last century, when the French and Khmer elite spent weekends here soaking up the Riviera-like vibe.

Now, a new wave of expats and tourists is discovering the place. Ben O'Reilly, an Irishman who runs Mea Culpa, a guesthouse and wood-fired pizza restaurant set in a shady garden in Kampot, arrived as a tourist in 2004 and never left. "It stole my heart," he said. "The stunning beauty of the people and the area makes it stand out unlike anywhere else I've ever been."

A large part of the area's appeal is its time-capsule quality: While much of Southeast Asia has been eager to demolish remnants of the past and modernize, Kampot and Kep have preserved a century of Cambodian history in their streets and surrounding hills. As we rode into Kampot with our taxi driver, a 56-year-old local named Eav, we watched the past flash by through the windows of his Toyota Camry.

There, on the left side of the road just outside town, Eav pointed out a salt plant built by the Khmer Rouge. "They exported salt to the Chinese in exchange for arms," Eav said. Farther in was the columned and pleasingly dilapidated governor's mansion, a symbol of colonial power, and its necessary counterpart, the French-built prison, which is still in use. Next came the Chinese school with its elegantly curved roof, a reminder of the sizable influence of the entrenched Chinese-Cambodian community here.

"The people here are proud of these buildings, and we want to keep them," said Eav. "The local authorities are doing their best to preserve them." So, too, are the entrepreneurs who have come here, many of whom have restored old villas and shop houses.

One such business is Epic Arts Cafe, a nonprofit that employs people with disabilities, where we had coffee and fresh-baked chocolate chip cookies. After a stroll through the streets surrounding the abandoned market at the center of town, we reserved seats on a boat trip down the Kampong Bay River and into the Gulf of Thailand.

As we puttered along the mangrove-lined river in a long-tail fishing boat with Capt. Chim, a man in his early 30s, we passed villages of wooden shacks with corrugated metal roofs suspended over the water on stilts. Although Kampot is not as cosmopolitan as it once was — it was the country's primary port until the emergence of Sihanoukville in the 1950s — its access to the ocean continues to draw a mixed crowd.

We passed a fishing village with a white minaret poking out from a clump of palm trees, home to Cham Muslims, an ethnic minority that makes up 5 percent of Cambodia's population and tends to live apart from the majority Khmer. Several minutes later, on the opposite bank, ethnic Vietnamese fishermen waved to us from moored boats as they prepped their nets for the night's work ahead.

Gradually, the river widened until it deposited us into the Gulf of Thailand. Capt. Chim stopped the boat at a large sandbar some distance from land. Nearby, a hulking sand-dredging barge, pitched on its side, sat idle, a sign that the area's small-scale approach to development would not last forever. A joint Cambodian-Vietnamese firm is building a resort and casino here on reclaimed land, Capt. Chim told us.

That night, back on Kampot's sleepy riverside, we had well-made gin and tonics at the breezy Wunderbar before sampling the area's famous fresh seafood at open-air and candlelit Rikitikitavi, where the fish amok, a coconut-milk mousse made with white fish, was superb.

The next morning, we were ready to tackle the nearby Elephant Mountains, a series of jungle-covered hills that rise toward the coast before sloping dramatically into the sea. A trip up Bokor Mountain, which can be arranged through travel agencies in Kampot, is one of Cambodia's essential experiences.

As our car wound its way up the mountain, gaps in the thick roadside foliage revealed breathtakingly clear glimpses of the flat rice plains and salt fields that stretch for miles below. Near the top, tucked away in a small valley, is Bokor Hill Station, which the French built in the 1920s as a retreat from the sweltering Phnom Penh heat. They abandoned the area during fighting with Cambodian nationalists after World War II, and apart from some short-term stays by Khmer Rouge guerrillas, the Catholic cathedral, villas and four-story Bokor Palace Hotel have sat empty.

Rust-colored lichen and green moss have made primitive splatter canvases of the buildings' gray stone and reinforced concrete exteriors. As I wandered through the empty hotel, the wind whistled down empty corridors, the hand-painted floor tiles covered in layers of dust and grime. On the back veranda, where colonialists would have sipped aperitifs and enjoyed the fresh air, I chatted with a large family of Cambodian tourists from Phnom Penh. "There are ghosts in there," said a man named Hang, to nervous laughter from his family members. "People lost money at the casino and jumped to their deaths. They haunt these buildings."

Kep, the seaside retreat 15 miles southeast of Kampot, has its share of ghosts, too. Less a town than a collection of small resorts and seafood shacks, in the post-World War II years it was a glamorous weekend getaway for the Khmer elite, who vacationed in Le Corbusier-inspired villas built by the country's premier architects.

These villas reportedly hosted wild parties with actors, pop stars and artists who were driving a cultural renaissance in the 1950s and '60s. Now they've been reduced to little more than their foundations and a few walls. You can wander through them and imagine their former grandeur, but the only signs of life are the graffiti scrawled on the walls and the disused clotheslines left by squatters.

One exception is Villa Romonea, a six-room hotel that was designed as a private villa by leading Cambodian architect Lu Ban Hap in the late 1960s. The modernist-style house was the lifelong dream of a local businesswoman who grew up across the road. But she lived in the house for only a few years before the Khmer Rouge took over the area and eventually executed her. Her vision lives on, though, in the house's exquisite design, with its curved rear facade, which mimics the bend of the shoreline it faces, and the walls of windows that keep the minimalist interior airy, cool and light.

Life in Kep revolves around its rocky beaches, so in the late afternoons, it's best to head there to watch the locals gather to buy snacks such as the scrumptious num ompong, tubular rice cookies covered in black sesame seeds, from street vendors. The cookies go well with Campari and sodas at the Sailing Club, a nearby sky-blue bar and veranda.

Kep is known for its fresh crab, and the best place to sample it is Kim Ly restaurant, where metal cages containing the day's catch bob in the gentle surf. Sitting at a table facing the water, which glistened through tiny cracks in the floor below us, we devoured a heaping plate of crab, which is prepared with fresh green peppercorns from local farms. The way the sweetness of the crab meat interacts with the richness of the coconut milk and the spiciness of the peppercorns has made this dish a local institution.

The area's peppercorn is also renowned. Once a prized ingredient in the world's best kitchens — particularly in France — the crop was all but destroyed during Cambodia's 30-year civil war. It has made a comeback in recent years, and in 2010 the European Union and the Cambodian government granted it "geographical indication" status, which has raised its profile.

I wanted to see these farms firsthand, so we rented motorbikes and drove up into the low hills half an hour outside Kep, where peppercorn plantations thrive. Down a rutted dirt road is the Heng Kimean farm, run by 55-year-old Saem, who showed us around the clumps of vines growing on wooden poles spaced several feet apart.

He pulled a fresh sprig from a mature vine and offered it to us. We munched happily, the spice's mild piquancy tingling in our mouths. "I'm selling more and more to France," said Saem. "The chefs in Paris have found us again."

After years of inaccessibility, the world is also once again discovering the charms of Kampot and Kep.

Saturday, May 21, 12:28 AM
Cambodia's up-and-coming seaside towns
By Dustin Roasa
Roasa is a writer based in Phnom Penh.

Source :
http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/travel/cambodias-up-and-coming-seaside-towns/2011/05/05/AFynes7G_story.html

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Artists in the developing world

Art Sumo is the only website that provides you with access to international, handmade paintings at members-only pricing. In addition, paintings purchased on Art Sumo both support and encourage poverty-stricken developing world artists and help them to support their families.

http://www.springwise.com/non-profit_social_cause/artsumo/

http://www.artsumo.com/

Rising fuel costs affect Cambodian children

Climbing fuel costs are causing Cambodian parents to pull their children out of school.

The effect of increased gasoline prices is trickling down to Cambodian children who are increasingly being forced to drop out of school to scavenge for their families, according to parents and an education official.

Cambodia is reeling from higher fuel prices amid concerns that continued unrest in the Middle East and Africa will limit oil production and send oil prices even higher.

The cost of gas rose nearly 16 percent to 5,200 riel (U.S. $1.30) per liter (0.26 gallon) this month from 4,500 riel (U.S. $1.12) per liter a year ago.

Rong Chhun, the director of the Cambodian Independent Teachers' Association, says high gas prices have driven up food costs, leading parents to pull their children out of school.

Largely due to the rising cost of fuel, a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of fish now costs 20,000 riel (U.S. $5). The same amount cost 12,000 riel (U.S. $3) last year.

"The price increase is an alarming issue for people in general, but this is a major concern for those living in remote areas such as Mondulkiri and Ratanakiri provinces," Rong Chhun said.

"This is really affecting the children of the poor in Cambodia."

'We barely survive'

Seng Chan Chu, a mother of seven children who lives in Kompong Thom province says she must spend around 20,000 riel per day so her children can buy copies of their lessons from their teachers and pay for school fees.

She must spend an additional 40,000 riel (U.S. $10) per day for household expenses.

Seng Chan Chu earns only 100,000 riel (U.S. $25) a month.

"We barely survive. I have to ask some of my children to go to the field to catch crabs and other animals so we don't have to buy everything from the market," she said.

"I might not have enough money for them to go to school if this continues."

Mao Vanndy, a construction worker with four children who lives in Phnom Penh, also says he is considering taking his children out of school to help support the family.

"The level of difficulty [we endure] adds up every day. I have to wait and see what will happen. If this situation continues, I will have to make them quit school," he said.

According to a 2009 survey conducted by Cambodia's Teachers' Association, 36 percent of children quit school that year due to poverty and the high cost of living.

Helping to harvest

Children from impoverished families in Cambodia are also commonly called upon to leave school and spend their days laboring at farm chores during the fall harvest cycle.

When the school semester begins, many parents are still at work in the rice fields. They only return their children to school after the harvesting season, which means that the children are forced to miss the first semester and have trouble catching up.

Many families also require their children to work at home because they owe debt to other community members for business loans.

When the harvest season arrives, those who owe money are forced to take their children out of school to help in harvesting as a means of paying back the debt.

Last year, Rong Chhun called on the Cambodian government to enact educational reforms, which he said will be the key to reducing poverty.

"All Cambodian children should receive a basic education, but the current system does not correspond to the government's plan. We are concerned about this issue and have called on the Ministry of Education several times to find a solution," Rong Chhun said.

"The government should have a scholarship policy for poor students and should launch a campaign informing parents not to take their children out of school for labor," he said.

"We want the government to truly reduce poverty and to provide opportunities for poor students to have access to quality education."

Rising fuel costs

Fuel is a sensitive issue in the Southeast Asian region.

Fuel prices in Vietnam jumped by 18 percent in February, prompting motorists to stand in long lines at the pump to purchase gas before the hike went into effect and causing traffic congestion in cities.

In Vietnam, fuel is siphoned off and smuggled across the border to Cambodia to cash in on the higher prices, while gasoline smuggling from Thailand to Cambodia is also common.

Larger shipments of gasoline are smuggled to Cambodia via sea, while smaller shipments are taken across the border on land.

Authorities who catch smugglers often release them after being paid bribes.

In March Vietnamese authorities announced a plan to limit the operating hours of filling stations along the border to only 12 hours beginning from 6 a.m. to combat smuggling.

Vehicles traveling from Vietnam to Cambodia will be allowed to buy enough fuel to travel only 50 to 100 kilometers (31 to 62 miles) under the plan, according to the VietNamNet Newspaper report.

In 2007, when gas prices soared in Burma, monks took to the streets of Rangoon to protest in what became known as the "Saffron" revolution, drawing thousands of people. The revolt was put down by security forces who killed at least 31 people and beat and detained hundreds.

Source :
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/cambodia/dropout-05192011151950.html

Reported by Kim Peou for RFA's Khmer service.
Translated by Vuthy Huot.
Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Video : forced evictions in Cambodia

Cambodia has a history that dates back more than 2,000 years. I was born, raised and acculturated in that land until 1961, when I spent my senior year of high school under the auspices of a student exchange program in Ohio. I returned to Cambodia after graduation, but came back to the U.S. for college and graduate school, earning my B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in political science.

School and experience have shaped my political outlook on individual rights, freedom and the rule of law. My cousin, who graduated from a medical school in East Germany, pronounced that my political views were proof that I was "born before my time." I dislike dictatorship in any circumstances; I hate it as a form of government.

Cambodians are not as passive and docile as some may think. Weak and helpless, perhaps, but no person accepts tyranny indefinitely. Weakness and helplessness are able to be modified, but a change in attitudes and values needs to come first.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam.
Write him at peangmeth@yahoo.com

Source :
http://www.guampdn.com/article/20110504/OPINION02/105040309

See YouTube videos on forced evictions in Cambodia :
http://tinyurl.com/ytube-evictions

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Free house and land for Cambodian Soldiers

Deputy Army Commander General-Major Hun Manet the eldest son of Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen has announced that he would give 1 house and 5 rai of land plus a few thousand baht of their normal salary to anyone who are willing to become a soldier and fight against Thailand.

Source :
http://www.pattayamail.com/news/cambodia-recruiting-more-soldiers-to-fight-against-thailand-3089