Friday, December 7, 2012

mental disorders in Cambodia

MENTAL health infrastructure is "critically deficient" in Cambodia
where "alarming" rates of trauma-related mental disorders have been
documented, a report released in Phnom Penh has found.

The responsibility of caring for those with mental health problems,
particularly in severe cases, quickly overwhelms families, experts
from the Leitner Centre for International Law and Justice at Fordham
Law School in New York reported in the study.

That frustration extends to family members chaining up or locking in
cages from 10 per cent to 40 per cent of those with severe mental
disabilities, the study said, citing estimates by mental health
professionals.

One mother said she "locked her daughter in a bamboo cage for several
years" before professionals provided treatment for her psychosis.
The report also noted that patient numbers also overwhelmed mental
health workers. In 2010, Cambodia had around 35 trained psychiatrists
and 45 psychiatric nurses catering to a population of close to 15
million, it said.

"Despite notable progress, Cambodia's mental health infrastructure
remains critically deficient given the scope of mental health needs it
is called upon to address," the study said.

It recommended introduction of more community-based care and an
increase in financial resources allotted to the mental health sector.
A non-governmental organisation, the Transcultural Psychosocial
Organisation Cambodia, launched a scheme on Friday to train volunteers
to provide support and information to those who might be suffering
mental health problems.

Studies have found high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder among
Cambodians who survived decades of unrest and the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge
regime.

Up to two million people died from execution, disease, starvation and
overwork during the Communist regime's rule.

http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/world/high-rates-of-trauma-disorders-in-cambodia

Monday, November 26, 2012

About high paid ¨star¨ tutors in Asia

About high paid ¨star¨ tutors in Hong Kong

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-20085558

The celebrity tutor phenomenon is a result of the huge growth in
out-of-school tutoring in Asia.

The tutoring industry, or "shadow education" has become very
widespread in Asia, fed by the growth in universities and the rising
proportion of school leavers aiming for university.

It's not just Hong Kong. Tutoring has "spread and intensified in Asia
and become more commercialised," said professor Bray. In South Korea,
90% of primary school children attend such classes.

In South Korea, Thailand, Sri Lanka and India, tutorial schools use
star tutors to attract even more students. "They have found a way to
appeal to young people and pull them in. They create a buzz," he said.

"With so many tutors in Hong Kong, students don't know who to choose
so they go for the 'tutor kings' and 'tutor queens'," she said.

Some students just attend the lectures and watch video recordings of
lectures while others purchase add-ons such as personalised
interaction with the star tutor or tutor's aide via Facebook or email.

But they are not movie stars or supermodels: they are Hong Kong's
A-list "tutor kings" and "tutor queens", offering pupils a chance to
improve mediocre grades.

In Hong Kong's consumer culture, looks sell. Celebrity tutors in their
sophisticated hair-dos and designer trappings are treated like idols
by their young fans who flock to their classes.

And they have earnings to match - some have become millionaires and
appear regularly on television shows.

"If you want to be a top tutor, it definitely helps if you are young
and attractive. Students look at your appearance," said Kelly Mok, 26,
a "tutor queen" at King's Glory, one of Hong Kong's largest tutorial
establishments.

Her designer clothes and accessories are not just for the billboards;
it's how she likes to dress outside classes. But she is also careful
to add that she wouldn't be in such high demand if she could not
deliver top grades in her subject, English.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Cambodian children: What are you most afraid of?

"I am afraid of thieves, child rape and drug users," said 12-year-old
Panchma, a Cambodian girl in a survey of more than 6,000 children in
47 countries conducted by international child development coalition
ChildFund Alliance.

The survey of the hopes and fears of children aged 10 through to 12
shows that Cambodian children are significantly more concerned by
violent crime than most of their peers around the world, but have
particularly high aspirations for education in their country.

The study's findings place Cambodia alongside Liberia and Afghanistan
as the countries where the highest proportion of children emphasised
fear of violence and crime.

In response to the question, "What are you most afraid of?" just under
one third of Cambodian children surveyed answered violence and crime –
more than any other named fear.

This was a significantly high percentage compared to other countries
where an average of only 10 per cent of children surveyed named
violence and crime as their top fears, with most children responding
their top dreads were scary animals and insects.

The next most common fear among Cambodian children, identified by 22
per cent of respondents, was "unfulfilled aspirations, such as not
being able to complete school or find employment".

The importance that Cambodian children in the survey attached to
education was echoed in their responses about hopes and aspirations.

Nearly three-quarters of kids said that if they were the leader of
Cambodia, their main way to better children's lives would be to
"improve education/provide enrichment opportunities" – a response
given by only 39 per cent of children surveyed overall and 52 per cent
of children in developing Asian nations.

Education also inspired a particularly large response among Cambodian
children to the question: "If you could grow up to be anything you
wanted, what would you be?"

Thirty-seven per cent of Cambodian children said they would be a
"teacher/academic."

by Justine Drennan
Wednesday, 21 November 2012
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012112159844/National-news/violence-tops-cambodian-children-fears-global-survey.html

Monday, November 19, 2012

Profile of Theary C. Seng

Theary C. Seng is an American-Cambodian attorney and activist now
living in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. She was born in Phnom Penh in 1971 and
lived under the Khmer Rouge regime from 1975-1979. In 1980, she and
her family immigrated to the United States. In 2004, she chose to
return to Cambodia permanently.

In Cambodia, Theary founded the Center for Justice and Reconciliation,
a non-profit organization that seeks justice for the victims of the
Khmer Rouge. She is also a founding director of CIVICUS: Center for
Cambodian Civic Education, an organization designed to teach Cambodian
citizens about civil rights, law, and government. She lobbies and
speaks often about the major social issues in Cambodia which include
human rights, poverty, education, land grabbing, government
corruption, and human trafficking.

The Khmer Rouge regime was responsible for the deaths of 1.7 million
Cambodians, almost twenty percent of the population of the country at
the time. The Khmer Rouge army gained control of Cambodia in 1975. The
Khmer Rouge forced all of the residents of the cities to evacuate to
the countryside, to become slave labor in collectivist villages. The
Khmer Rouge arbitrarily killed anyone they didn't like, including the
systemic executing of everyone who was educated or had foreign
influences.

Theary Seng and her family witnessed the full extent of the horror.
While she and her family were evacuating Phnom Penh, Theary's father
decided to make a trip back to the city to get more food. He was never
seen again. Sometime later, Theary, her mother and a brother were
imprisoned for several months, where, one morning, brother and sister
woke-up to discover that while they were sleeping, their mother had
been taken away to be killed. Throughout the entire period, in both
the collectives and the prison, families and individuals were being
taken away and killed on a regular basis. Food, clothing, housing, and
medical care were scarce. Everywhere, people were tortured, worked,
and starved to death. Theary Seng's extended family of grandmother,
aunts, uncles, cousins, and brothers became refugees in their own
country. At first they tried to seek refuge in Vietnam, but that
proved too risky. They along with groups of other refugees decided to
escape into Thailand. But Thai soldiers forced them at gunpoint to
march back into Cambodia on a narrow path through a valley that was
heavily mined. If anyone refused, was too tired, or lagged behind, the
Thai soldiers simply shot them on the spot.

In 1979, Theary and her surviving extended family members were able to
successfully cross the Thai border at another location and arrive at a
refugee camp. After a year, they were accepted as refugees in the
United States. Theary went on to graduate from Georgetown University
in 1995, from the University of Michigan Law School in 2000, and is a
member of the bar in New York State.

In 2005, Theary published a memoir titled, Daughter of the Killing
Fields, incorporating historical sources, her own childhood memories
and feelings, as well as the recollections of her family and others.
As a young refugee in the United States, Theary became a Christian,
and she attributes her sense of social obligation--of a need to give
back--to her Cambodian past, combined with her Christian faith. As a
law student and a lawyer Theary had gone back to Cambodia several
times as a volunteer to assist with various human rights projects. In
2004, she moved to Cambodia permanently, with the initial intention of
working on labor issues. But eventually the scope of her attention
shifted and expanded to seeking justice for the survivors of the Khmer
Rouge. She has been an influential public figure in the efforts to
bring the former leaders of the Khmer Rouge to trial. Moreover,
Theary frequently writes and speaks about what is needed for the
Cambodian nation to recover from that evil regime. She has published
articles regularly in Cambodia Daily, the Phnom Penh Post, and
Ki-Media, She is also the co-host of a Cambodian T.V. show called,
Youth Leadership Challenge.

After the Khmer Rouge had killed her parents her parents, Theary
became the beneficiary of the unconditional love of her extended
family of grandmother, aunts, uncles, cousins, and her four brothers.
After many years of healing of healing in the U.S., she was able to
emerge from the experience with her humanity and her emotional health
intact. Unfortunately that has not been the case for numerous other
survivors. The Khmer Rouge years have scarred the psyche of millions
of Cambodians and left them with a legacy of domestic violence,
post-traumatic stress disorder, hyper-vigilance, and social
dysfunction that permeates their society.

In an interview, Theary said, "My work here is not to do anything big
but to be a common citizen back in my homeland where I suffered a lot,
and now I'm taking that suffering and shaping it into hope, and trying
to work with individuals who have not had the time and space to heal
that I've had."

Besides the killings and abuse, the Khmer Rouge destroyed all of the
commercial and education institutions in the country, leaving it as
the poorest country in the world. In Daughter of the Killing Fields,
she said: "I continue to mourn the loss of lives due to the Khmer
Rouge. Today, I also mourn the loss of human potential. How many Khmer
Mozarts, Einsteins and da Vincis will never be realized because there
are no infrastructures to encourage and absorb a Khmer child's
potential? I mourn when I meet a little girl on the street begging. I
see my face in her face. The only difference between us is in our
opportunities. At one point in my life, an opportunity existed which
led to other opportunities that nurtured and encouraged my budding
potential. In this little girl's situation, in light of the current
infrastructure and framework, the odds are stacked against her."

Theary Seng's own childhood story was a victory of hope over
persecution, suffering and evil. Theary could have chosen to remain
in the United States and pursue a career as an attorney, while living
a life of comfort and affluence. Instead, she has chosen to work to
inspire hope in her fellow Cambodians, to lead them to a vision of
justice, human dignity, and triumph over adversity.

A Profile of Theary Seng, Cambodian Human Rights Activist
http://blog.nominetwork.org/2010/10/profile-of-theary-c-seng-cambodian.html
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2010
by Stephen M. Bauer

Must-Have Job Skills in 2013

Even as employers remain cautious next year about every dollar spent
on employees, they'll also want workers to show greater skills and
results.

For employees who want to get ahead, basic competency won't be enough.

To win a promotion or land a job next year, experts say there are four
must-have job skills:

1. Clear communications

Whatever their level, communication is key for workers to advance.

"This is really the ability to clearly articulate your point of view
and the ability to create a connection through communication," says
Holly Paul, U.S. recruiting leader at PricewaterhouseCoopers, the
accounting and consulting firm based in New York.

For job seekers in particular, clear communication can provide a
snapshot of their work style to employers. "I can walk away from a
five-minute conversation and feel their enthusiasm and have a good
understanding of what's important to them," Ms. Paul says.

As office conversations increasingly move online, some workers are
losing or never developing the ability to give a presentation, for
example. Others may be unable to write coherently for longer than,
say, 140 characters.

"Technology in some ways has taken away our ability to write well.
People are in such a hurry that they are multitasking," and they skip
basics such as spelling and proofing, says Paul McDonald, senior
executive director of Robert Half International, a Menlo Park, Calif.,
staffing firm.

2. Personal branding

Human-resources executives scour blogs, Twitter and professional
networking sites such as LinkedIn when researching candidates, and
it's important that they like what they find.

"That's your brand, that's how you represent yourself," says Peter
Handal, CEO of Dale Carnegie Training, a Hauppauge, N.Y., provider of
workplace-training services. "If you post something that comes back to
haunt you, people will see that."

Workers also should make sure their personal brand is attractive and
reflects well on employers. "More and more employers are looking for
employees to tweet on their behalf, to blog on their behalf, to build
an audience and write compelling, snappy posts," says Meredith
Haberfeld, an executive and career coach in New York.

Ms. Haberfeld has a client whose employee recently posted on her
personal Facebook page about eating Chinese food and smoking "reefer."

"I saw it on Facebook. Her supervisors saw it," Ms. Haberfeld says.

3. Flexibility

The ability to quickly respond to an employer's changing needs will be
important next year as organizations try to respond nimbly to
customers.

"A lot of companies want us to work with their employees about how to
get out of their comfort zone, how to adapt," says Mr. Handal.
"Somebody's job today may not be the same as next year."

The ability to learn new skills is of top importance, says George
Boué, human-resources vice president for Stiles, a real-estate
services company in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "We want to know that if we
roll out a new program or new tools that the folks we have on board
are going to be open to learning," he says.

4. Productivity improvement

In 2013, workers should find new ways to increase productivity,
experts say. Executives are looking for a 20% improvement in employee
performance next year from current levels, according to a recent
survey by the Corporate Executive Board, an Arlington, Va., business
research and advisory firm.

"When you are at your job, do you volunteer for projects? Are you
looking for creative ways to help your organization," Mr. McDonald
says. "The way to really differentiate yourself is to be proactive."

Companies that are considering adding workers in coming years want
current employees to operate in growth mode now. "My clients are
looking for employees that have a great ability to understand what is
wanted and needed, rather than needing to be told," Ms. Haberfeld
says.

Even hiring managers need to work on certain skills as organizations
consider expanding next year. "The ability to spot talent and hire
people has fallen out of use over the last several years," says Ben
Dattner, an organizational psychologist in New York. "As the economy
turns around, companies will have to work harder to retain talented
employees. Companies have trimmed the fat, and now they have to build
the muscle."

Must-Have Job Skills in 2013
By RUTH MANTELL

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324735104578118902763095818.html?mod=WSJ_hp_us_mostpop_read#printMode

Thursday, October 25, 2012

hand-painted signage power of individuality

And that is what this resurgence of hand-painted signage is about: the
power of individuality.

Seeing the same lettering, the same color schemes, the same type of
signs everywhere we go has made us immune to the sad fact that
uniformity has taken over our cities.

This is never more apparent than when we walk by a shop with carefully
hand-painted signs.

It, almost without fail, will seem like the coolest and most
interesting shop on the street, even before we walk through the door.

Why? Because that store owner took pride in his or her business and
chose to display the individuality that other shops are missing.

http://weburbanist.com/2012/10/24/the-incredible-lost-and-found-art-of-hand-painted-signage

Convincing Women They're Too Hairy

Read how foreign companies use
psychology in advertising to sell
needless and useless products.

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-10-18/convincing-women-in-china-theyre-too-hairy

Cosmetics
Convincing Women in China They're Too Hairy
By Matthew Boyle on October 18, 2012

Sales of hair-removal creams in Asia are growing 20 percent a year.

In the $427 billion global personal-care products business,
manufacturers have long convinced women to focus on perceived flaws.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Social media, business and politics

More small businesses dedicating time to social media

One reason small businesses' interest in social media hasn't subsided
is because sites are constantly changing.

"When major shifts happen, some business owners panic with the
changes," Flint said. "But they have to remember that change affects
everybody. It sort of levels the playing field."

In Los Angeles, social media sites are fundamental for a business'
livelihood; food trucks announce their locations on Twitter to let
customers know how to find them and new health spas can attract
clients with a Groupon or Living Social deal.

Checking into a business through a social media site, such as
Foursquare, Facebook, Twitter and Yelp, is the modern equivalent of
talking about it with friends. But now the conversation includes
feedback from the company itself.

"The business owners can react to what people are saying or talk to
customers through their own page," said Dina Mayzlin, an associate
professor of marketing at USC's Marshall School of Business. "Social
media gives a restaurant a second chance to gain a customer who wrote
that they were unimpressed or the chance to build a deeper
relationship with their regular customers."

Businesses have a lot more to think about on social media sites than
just "likes" and "check-ins." There are tricks of the trade, such as
how to time posts, word Tweets and reveal attention-grabbing
giveaways.

The practice of setting a schedule for photos and messages to be
released to fans enables a business owner to set some time aside and
focus on the other demands of running an enterprise. The trick is to
balance traditional face time with customers and 21st century screen
time over the Internet.

"They might know how to run their business, but business owners might
still need help in how to utilize social media to its full potential"
with minimal time investment, said Katie Washington, director of
social programming for American Express. "For them, time is money."

http://articles.latimes.com/2012/oct/19/business/la-fi-social-media-small-business-20121019

Social media growing in US politics: study

WASHINGTON — Nearly two out of five US adults use social media to get
involved in politics, with the younger crowd and the ideologically
committed especially active, a study showed Friday.

The Pew Research Center study showed that 60 percent of adults use
social networking sites like Facebook or Twitter and that two-thirds
of these -- 39 percent of all US adults -- use social media for civic
or political activity.

Social media users who talk about politics on a regular basis or who
have firm ideological ties are the most likely to be active on the
sites, the study found.

And those aged 18-29 are "notably more likely than older users to have
posted their own comments, as are those who have at least some college
experience," Pew said.

"Now that more than half of adults use social media, these
technologies have worked their way into the rhythms of people's lives
at many levels," said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet &
American Life Project.

"At the height of the campaign season, it is clear that most social
media users, especially those who care about politics, are using the
tools to debate others, stay in touch with candidates, flag political
news stories and analysis that are important to them, and press their
friends into action. We'll see the fruits of this neo-activism on
Election Day."

Around 35 percent of social media users have used the tools to
encourage people to vote, the study showed, with Democrats (42
percent) holding an edge over Republicans (36 percent) and
independents (31 percent).

Around a third post their own comments or thoughts, or repost content
from someone else.

About 21 percent of those using Twitter or other social media belong
to a group on a networking site that is involved in political or
social issues, or working to advance a cause.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Mam Sonando’s lawyer Sok Sam Oeun Ignorant of Truth

Dissident Cambodian radio station chief Mam Sonando was sentenced to
20 years in prison.

Mam Sonando's lawyer is a rights advocate named Sok Sam Oeun.

He is the executive director of the Cambodian Defenders Project.

As his lawyer, he said it was not his place to comment whether or not
the court's ruling was just.

"Fair or unfair, I will not say. [That is a question for] the suspects
themselves because they know the truth, which I don't".

Mam Sonando, 71 operates the 105 FM Beehive radio station.

He was found guilty of insurrection and inciting villagers to take up
arms against the state.

Cambodian and international rights groups have called the accusations
against Mam Sonando baseless.

They say the government was seeking to justify its harsh crackdown on
the alleged Kratie rebellion.

During the rebllion, a 15 year old girl was killed by a stray bullet
fired by authorities as a warning shot.

In condemning the court decision, Human Rights Watch said this is

"the worst miscarriage of justice we have seen" since U.N. forces
withdrew about 20 years ago after helping to rebuild war-shattered
Cambodia."

There was no evidence Mam Sonando had been involved in the Kratie dispute.

The idea villagers were attempting to secede from the country is ridiculous.

Twenty years in prison is a "death sentence" for Mam Sonando, who has
been in poor health since his arrest.

International rights groups say this case raises concerns about the
impartiality of Cambodia's justice system.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton expressed "serious concern"
over the conviction.

She said "raises severe doubts about the impartiality and independence
of the court."

International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) said this case shows
how the Cambodian government uses the courts as a "tool for
repression."

http://www.rfa.org/english/news/cambodia/mam-sonando-10012012135649.html

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

History :: Who was Barry Commoner ?

Who was Barry Commoner ?

Barry Commoner died on September 30, 2012 in Manhattan, New York.

In his 1971 book The Closing Circle, a bestseller, Commoner suggested
that the American economy should be restructured to conform to the
unbending laws of ecology.

For example, he argued that polluting products (like detergents or
synthetic textiles) should be replaced with natural products (like
soap or cotton and wool).

This book was one of the first to bring the idea of sustainability to
a mass audience.

One of Barry Commoner's lasting legacies is his four laws of ecology,
as written in The Closing Circle.

The four laws are:

1. Everything is Connected to Everything Else. There is one ecosphere
for all living organisms and what affects one, affects all.

2. Everything Must Go Somewhere. There is no "waste" in nature and
there is no "away" to which things can be thrown.

3. Nature Knows Best. Humankind has fashioned technology to improve
upon nature, but such change in a natural system is, says Commoner,
"likely to be detrimental to that system."

4. There Is No Such Thing as a Free Lunch. Exploitation of nature will
inevitably involve the conversion of resources from useful to useless
forms.


Barry Commoner published another bestseller in 1976, The Poverty of Power.

In that book, he addressed the "Three Es" that were plaguing the
United States in the 1970s:

1. First there was the threat to environmental survival;

2. then there was the apparent shortage of energy;

3. and now there is the unexpected decline of the economy.

He argued that the three issues were interconnected:

1. the industries that used the most energy had the highest negative
impact on the environment;

2. the focus on non-renewable resources as sources of energy meant
that those resources were growing scarce,

3. thus pushing up the price of energy and hurting the economy.

Barry Commoner (May 28, 1917 – September 30, 2012) was an American
biologist, college professor, and politician.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_Commoner

In other ecology news today ::

Climate change and ocean acidification is killing off coral reefs
around the world.

One of the worst hit reefs if the magnificent Great Barrier Reef, off
of Australia, half of which has died off in the last 30 years, a new
study suggests.

Several human interventions could save the reef, Les Kaufman told LiveScience:

"The problem is entirely soluble, and coral reefs can be saved through
concerted effort over this and the following two or three
generations," said Kaufman. "There is absolutely no excuse for failure
to do this, and if we do fail our generation will forever be
remembered for unimaginable, unforgivable stupidity and sloth."

Read more:
http://www.businessinsider.com/half-of-the-great-barrier-reef-died-30-years-2012-10

Monday, October 1, 2012

Young people from provinces flood Phnom Penh to send money back home

According to the
Cambodian Rural Urban Migration Report Project (CRUMP),
http://www.mop.gov.kh/
undertaken by the
Ministry of Planning and United Nations Population Fund Cambodia,
http://web.unfpa.org/focus/cambodia/unfpain.htm
young people from the provinces are flooding Phnom Penh for work and
education opportunities.

On average, four per cent of a village's population migrate away each year.

One village lost 600 people in a single year.

Phnom Penh's population has doubled in roughly 11 years.

Infrastructure is concentrated only in Phnom Penh.

We need to fill the gap between urban and rural development.

Sometimes money is sent back home to the village.

The average remittance is about 40,000 riels ($10) a month.

Women send over a dollar more than men, even though they earn less.

Garment workers send 100,000 riel – about a quarter of their salary.

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012100259040/National-news/young-cambodians-in-exodus-to-phnom-penh.html

Cambodia: freedom of expression deteriorating

The United States says it is "deeply concerned" at the conviction of a
prominent Cambodian land rights campaigner who was sentenced to 20
years in prison on insurrection charges.

In a statement Monday, the State Department characterized the sentence
against Mam Sonando as "harsh" and called on the Cambodian government
to immediately release the 71-year-old.

A Cambodian court on Monday convicted Sonando of inciting villagers to
try to form their own state following a land dispute in eastern
Cambodia earlier this year. Sonando denied the charges.

His radio station, known as Beehive Radio, sometimes broadcasts
material critical of Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has ruled Cambodia
since 1985.

The Cambodian Center for Human Rights slammed the conviction as being
politically motivated. It said there is no evidence Sonando was
involved in the unrest, which the government viewed as a rebellion.

Amnesty International called the conviction "shocking and baseless,"
saying it reflects the deteriorating situation of freedom of
expression in Cambodia.

Cambodia has carried out an intensifying wave of sometimes violent
forced evictions affecting tens of thousands of people. Activists say
officials are increasingly cracking down on those who challenge the
land grabs.

Source:
http://blogs.voanews.com/breaking-news/2012/10/02/us-slams-harsh-sentence-against-cambodia-govt-critic/

Monday, September 24, 2012

Vietnam convicts 3 bloggers for anti-gov't posts

A Vietnamese court issued jail sentences ranging from four to 12 years
on Monday to three bloggers who wrote about human rights abuses,
corruption and foreign policy, intensifying a crackdown on citizens'
use of the Internet to criticize the government.

The cases are particularly high-profile examples of the Communist
government's attempts to stifle challenges to its authority on the
Internet, which has emerged as a major avenue for dissent in the
country of 87 million people.

President Barack Obama has mentioned one of the defendants, and the
mother of another died after setting herself on fire to protest her
daughter's arrest.

The defendants, two men and one woman, are founding members of the
"Free Journalists' Club," a group of citizen journalists who posted
their work on the Internet.

They were found guilty of spreading "propaganda against the state."

Nguyen Van Hai, who has written under the pen name Dieu Cay or
"Tobacco Pipe," got 12 years, Ta Phong Tan received 10 years and Phan
Thanh Hai got four years, according to defense lawyer Ha Huy Son.

The trial in Ho Chi Minh City lasted less than six hours.

The country regularly convicts dissidents, but sentences have
generally been around five years.

The United States, which is seeking closer economic ties with Vietnam
but is also pressing it on human rights, quickly criticized the
sentences.

Obama mentioned Nguyen Van Hai's case in a May speech that called for
greater freedom for media around the world.

"The government's treatment of Dieu Cay appears to be inconsistent
with Vietnam's obligations under the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights, as well as the provisions of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights relating to freedom of expression and due
process," it said in a statement.

Nguyen Van Hai criticized the government for its handling of tensions
with neighboring China over disputed islands in the South China Sea.

Tan, a former police officer, wrote a blog called "Justice and Truth"
that criticized police abuse of power. Her mother set herself on fire
in protest of the case in late July.
International rights groups have condemned the trial and called for
the release of the defendants.

"These harsh sentences against bloggers are absolutely outrageous, and
show the depth of the Vietnam government's intolerance of views that
oppose its own," said Phil Robertson from Human Rights Watch. "Today's
sentences show how deep-seated the Vietnam government crackdown on
basic human rights really is."

HANOI, Vietnam (AP)
By CHRIS BRUMMITT
24 Sept 2012

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Cambodia Special Economic Zones

The Royal Government of Cambodia (RFC) recognises that Special
Economic Zones (SEZs) in Cambodia are an important part of the
country's economic development because they bring infrastructure,
jobs, skills, enhanced productivity and not least the prospect of
poverty reduction in rural areas.

Location of the SEZs are vitally important so that the benefits in
terms of increased employment and poverty reduction can be shared
throughout Cambodia.

It is the policy of the Royal Government to lay production foundations
in regions other than Phnom Penh in order to build economic linkages
between urban and rural areas.

Cambodia is not an urbanised society and so the SEZs will provide
employment for the country's labour force which is predominantly from
the provinces and mainly women.

Fulfilling issues of corporate social responsibility, SEZs will also
be able to provide accommodation, education and healthcare services
for the workforce, something not generally provided by stand-alone
factories.

A sub-decree on the Establishment and Management of Special Economic
Zones (to include export processing zones and free trade zones) was
adopted in December 2005.

The Royal Government has since approved a total of 21 Special Economic
Zones (SEZs) located along the border with Thailand and Vietnam (Koh
Kong, Poipet, Savet, Phnom Den), at Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh.

Of the 21, 6 have commenced operations.

Aiming to attract more investors, the SEZs offer a 'One-Stop Service'
for imports and exports, with government officials stationed on-site
providing administrative services.

Applications to establish factories within the SEZs are dealt with
on-site as well as all administrative clearances, permits,
authorisations, etc.

Businesses within the SEZs also benefit from a number of fiscal
incentives, including income tax, customs, and VAT benefits.

Cambodia's SEZs are located adjacent to new road networks and provide
state-of-the-art factory buildings, plentiful water supplies, water
treatment plants, vocational training, banking services, postal
services and telecommunications.

Because of Cambodia's high cost of electricity, SEZs located inland
have installed power plants to generate their own electricity, while
those at the border buy cheaper electricity from Thailand or Vietnam.

SEZs located at the border not only benefit from the cheaper cost of
electricity, but also attract investors from the other side of the
border.

Investors from Thailand and Vietnam operating within these SEZs are
able to manufacture in Cambodia at a lower price and export directly
to Thailand and Vietnam, or further afield within Asean and the rest
of the world.

Special Economic Zones were formally introduced in Cambodia in 2005,
and there are currently 22 approved SEZs.

1. Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone (SSEZ) Sihanoukville
2. Sihanoukville Port SEZ Sihanoukville
3. Neang Kok Koh Kong SEZ Koh Kong
4. Suoy Chheng SEZ Koh Kong
5. S. N. C. SEZ Sihanoukville
6. Stung Hav SEZ Sihanoukville
7. N. L. C. SEZ Svay Rieng
8. Manhattan (Svay Reing) SEZ Svay Rieng
9. Poipet O'Neang SEZ Banteay Meanchey
10. Doung Chhiv Phnom Den SEZ Takeo
11. Phnom Penh SEZ Phnom Penh
12. Kampot SEZ Kampot
13. Sihanoukville SEZ 1 Sihanoukville
14. Tai Seng Bavet SEZ Svay Rieng
15. Oknha Mong SEZ Koh Kong
16. Goldfame Pak Shun SEZ Kandal
17. Thary Kampong Cham SEZ Kampong Cham
18. Sihanoukville SEZ 2 Sihanoukville
19. D&M Bavet SEZ Svay Rieng
20. Kiri Sakor Koh Kong SEZ Koh Kong
21. Kampong Saom SEZ Sihanoukville
22. Pacific SEZ Svay Rieng

According to the Cambodian Government's SEZ website, businesses within
SEZs "benefit from a number of fiscal incentives, including income
tax, customs, and VAT benefits."

Cambodian SEZs are designed to offer a 'One-Stop Service' for imports
and exports, and have specially trained government officials stationed
on-site to provide administrative services.

Applications to establish businesses within SEZs are dealt with
on-site, as is company registration and investment licenses, work
permits and labour books for workers.

Investment approvals, customs inspections and import-export procedures
are also conducted onsite.

Other benefits listed on the SEZ website include tax holidays up to 9
years, 0% VAT, full import duty exemption for raw materials,
machinery, and equipment, no export tax, permanent visas for families
of investors and free repatriation of profits.

Interest in Cambodia investing growing

With GDP growth averaging around 9% for the past decade, Cambodia is
certainly attracting interest from potential investors.

It has possibly the most investor-friendly environment in Asean with
no exchange controls, no restrictions on repatriation of profit, and
no discrimination between foreign and local investors.

Moreover, corporate income tax is 20% and there are tax holidays of up
to nine years.

Foreigners can also take out leases on land for up to 99 years and
foreign companies can buy land.

--

For Thai investors, the interest so far has been in Cambodia's growing
footwear and garment industry.

This is Cambodia's biggest employer and key export earner and there
are over 300 garment or textile factories.

Low wages – about one-third the level of Thailand's – are a big
attraction for investors, even though the minimum wage for garment
workers in Cambodia rose from $61 a month to $66 earlier this year.

Cambodian garments and footwear also enjoy favourable tariff-free
access to markets in the United States and Europe.

Many American and European brands are already outsourcing their
production to Cambodia.

One of the benefits for these companies is the unionised workforce and
labour laws in Cambodia, as it is assumed that basic rights of workers
are protected.

This provides insurance for big-name brand companies concerned about
possible consumer boycotts over poorly treated workers.

There are challenges, however, for investors in Cambodia's textile and
garment industry.

For example, there are already signs of labour shortages – earlier
this year the Cambodian industry association said that many vacancies
had gone unfilled as more young people were being lured to work
overseas.

--

Another potential problem is strong competition from Myanmar as
economic sanctions fade and investors from developed economies begin
establishing businesses there.

A third problem facing all manufacturers is the electricity supply –
electricity in Cambodia is expensive and access is largely restricted
to urban centres, with only 20% of households nationwide connected to
the power grid.

However, these issues do not seem to be a major concern to Japanese
investors who last year more than doubled their investment in Cambodia
to around $75 million.

According to the Japan Times, Japanese investors are focusing on
Cambodia as labour costs are rising in Thailand, China and Vietnam.

Although Japanese investors are interested in the garment and textile
industry, they are also concentrating on food processing, agriculture
and tourism, retail, transport services and natural resources
development.

--

The Japanese government has also worked with the Cambodian government
to develop the Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone near Thailand's
eastern border.

This industrial zone adjoins the Sihanoukville Port, which is the only
deep-water port in Cambodia, and the infrastructure is being developed
by Japanese engineers and contractors.

Sihanoukville Port is being prepared for listing on the Cambodian
Stock Exchange later this year and is expected to attract great
interest, given the success of the Exchange's first listing, in April
this year, when the IPO of the Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority was
many times oversubscribed.

As one of the frontier economies of Southeast Asia, and a close
neighbour, Cambodia should certainly be of interest to Thai SMEs
considering expanding their production base.

Although Cambodia has been mainly limited up until now to small scale
enterprises dominated by tourism and the garment and textile industry,
the new developments taking place are a sign of things to come.

Cambodia opening its doors to investment
10 Sept 2012
http://www.bangkokpost.com/business/economics/311715/cambodia-opening-its-doors-to-investment

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Cambodia steps up Internet surveillance

As Burma loosens its grip on the media, Cambodia has begun to rank
high among the countries repressing internet and telephone freedom in
the name of national security, safety and social order.

It is still not comparable to China or Vietnam, but Cambodia is moving
in the wrong direction.

Cambodia steps up Internet surveillance

Aug 30, 2012
By Clothilde Le Coz
http://asiancorrespondent.com/author/clothildelecoz/

Last February, the Kingdom of Wonders adopted an "inter-ministerial
circular", according to which every Internet cafe in the country has
to set up surveillance cameras and any phone shop has to register
callers using its services.

According to an unofficial translation obtained by the Asian
Correspondent, the circular is meant to "promote protection of
national security, safety and social order for the country".

Even though nothing has been implemented thus far, the circular is a
threat to every phone and Internet user in the country.

"This is not a law. The authorities simply decided to do whatever they
want to regulate online content in the country only because it could
violate khmer culture," stated Norbert Klein, the "founding father" of
the Internet in Cambodia and now the head of the Cambodia chapter of
the Internet Society.

To him, the circular is a "means of intimidation for Internet users
more than a means to protect their safety ".

In 1990, Norbert Klein connected Cambodia to the web at the back of
what is today an always-full restaurant in the heart of Phnom Penh,
where NGO workers and the expat population mix.

At that time, he wanted to help one of his colleague to complete an
online fellowship.

With a Colombian email program and a Singaporian modem it took them
weeks to get connected and finally read and receive emails.

Moreover, since the connection was asking for stable and steady
supply, the electricity was generated by a Vietnamese truck battery
stationed outside the house.

At that time, never Klein would never have imagined that the Internet
in Cambodia could deal with censorship.

After all, the only censor they faced in 1990 was the price: $5 per
minute of connection.

But then came human rights defenders like the Venerable Loun Sovath
using online tools to advocate for a cause, scandals arose when the
behaviors created by the Internet attempted to cult and religion and
the feared Jasmine Revolution started in neighbouring countries.

As of today, Cambodia has a bit more than 3% of its population online
with one of the quickest rates of growth in the region since it is
more than twice the number registered in 2011.

These are some of the reasons behind the Internet crackdown, which is
nothing but a simple agreement that the government can claim at any
moment and that consulted no elected member.

According to the inter-Ministerial circular signed by the Deputy Prime
Minister and the Minister of Post and Telecommunications, "past
experiences […] have shown that criminals and offenders always used
telecommunications services such as mobile phones, fixed phones, VoIP
and Internet as a means to commit terrorism, trans-boundary crimes,
robberies, kidnapping, murders, drug trafficking, human trafficking,
economic offenses, illegal installment of and illegal corporation of
all forms of telecommunications service, broadcasting of obscene
pictures and debauchery, which affect national customs, traditions and
social good moral values."

For these reasons, "all locations serving telephone and Internet
services shall be equipped with closed circuit television camera and
shall store footage data of users for at least 3 months.

Telephone service corporation owners along public roads shall [also]
record National Identity Cards of any subscriber".

As of today, there are more than 19 million sim card holders in Cambodia.

And it is still very difficult to get an ID card for Cambodian nationals.

For the Cambodian Center for Independent Media, which organizes "good
governance" forums in the country, the first obstacle to possess a
national id card is the price.

There is no fixed economic value to it and it can vary from $2.5 to $50.

According to the Ministry of Interior there are 9,27866 Cambodian
holding ID cards.

What does this circular mean for the almost ten million Cambodians
with sim cards but no ID ?

The will to control telecommunications is not new

This February circular is not the first attempt to control the use of
telecommunications.

However, it shows once again that the Ministry of Information is
excluded from the decision and seems to be less relevant when it comes
to regulation.

In 2010, the same Ministry of Post and Telecommunications attempted to
get the monopoly over the Internet cable industry in the country.

There are about 30 internet service providers in the country and 10
phone operators, which causes a loss of profit to the state-owned
services.

To solve this, the Ministry of Post and Telecommunications attempted
to direct all international internet traffic through Telecom Cambodia,
which would have charged other operators a transmission fee.

However this time, because the ministry of information went publicly
against it, it had to be abandoned.

Moreover, it has only been five years since the use of the
peer-to-peer software Skype has been authorized.

Even if it was possible to connect to it, it was still illegal for the
Ministry of Post and Telecommunications was loosing money.

This sounds like a false argument since the people using Skype were
the ones who could not afford a phone call.

There was a Cambodian version of Skype but its lack of popularity
among the high ranking society and its difficulty to be used made the
government give it in.

For most of human rights defenders, Internet remains a free space
where sensitive topics can be discussed.

For Chak Sopheap, online activist and contributor to the network
Global Voices online, Internet is a "digital democracy", which should
be put in place in reality, outside of a computer screen.

Internet activists in Cambodia are being more effective to advocate
for themselves and denounce human rights violations.

For example, when Loun Sovath records them, he get a double answer;
the international community takes an interest while the Cambodian
authorities arrest him. "Internet users are the ones that the
government fears the most", continues Klein.

This is also confirmed by Ou Virak, from the Cambodia Center for Human
Rights (CCHR), according to whom "activists use more the Internet
during protests for example. They can advocate for themselves online,
especially through Facebook. Before the Internet became popular, media
were the target of the government. Today, activists are".

This circular is not only limited to online and mobile content and
usage but also to radio stations since "any radio communication wave
system corporation shall require permission from the Ministry of Post
and Telecommunications".

The radio's mission is mainly defined as a "public service".

Therefore, the decision maker should be an institution and not a
private corporation.

This could therefore apply to any independent media trying to set up
as a private company to own airtime and a frequency.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Upward trend in European suicides

"The recovery of the European economies is dependent on the mental
health of the population," Muijen said.

The upward trend in suicides began in 2008, when the euro zone entered
a recession.

In a study published last year in the journal Lancet, researchers
found that suicides rose from 2007 to 2009 in nine of the 10 countries
they studied.

The countries "facing the most severe financial reversals of fortune,"
they wrote, saw a greater rise in suicides.

The most dramatic change was in Greece, where the number of suicides
rose 19 percent.

The study, by David Stuckler at the University of Cambridge and
others, found that for every 1 percent increase in unemployment, there
is a an associated 0.8 percent increase in suicides in people under
65.

Although the rate of suicides remains lower than in other countries,
including the United States, the trend has alarmed mental health
providers because suicide was so rare in the past.

Greece, where the Orthodox church denies a funeral to people who take
their lives, had the lowest suicide rate of any Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development nation before the downturn surge
in unemployment.

Full article (long):
http://www.tampabay.com/news/world/suicide-rates-rise-in-europe-amid-job-losses-and-severe-cutbacks/1245869

The Greek Ministry of Health reported that suicides jumped 40 percent
in the first half of 2011 as compared with the same period in 2010.

In a single year, the rate increased from 2.8 suicides for every
100,000 people to at least five per 100,000.

The country's national depression and suicide hotline saw a 40 percent
increase in calls from 2010 to 2011 and reported that the majority of
people seeking help had problems including the loss of a job or an
inability to cover living costs.

And at the time the need for such a service is increasing, public
sector help has been reduced.

According to the Society of Social Psychiatry and Mental Health, the
cutbacks have had a severe impact on people's ability to get the help
they need:

There's a three-month wait for people seeking public mental health
services, social security has been reduced and community-based centers
for care have been shut down.

The suicide notes left in coat pockets or on desks in Greece are being
passed around on the Internet and studied like the final treatises of
revered scholars.

Friends and neighbors of Perris, who was 60 years old, say they have
read his note over and over to try to figure out whether they could
have done something differently. He blamed the "powerful of this
Earth" for his situation.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

High school cheating and bribery

In a blatant defiance of examination rules, Cambodia's high school
students are looking up answers to test questions online through their
cell phones under the noses of proctors, some of whom have been
bribed.

"This year, cheating has increased," Cambodian Independent Teachers
Association president Rong Chhun told RFA as high school examinations
got under way in the country.

"Students are using smart phones to surf the Internet and Facebook for
answers," he said, adding that in some examination centers, school
proctors also ask students for bribes in the exams, which run from
Aug. 6-8.

The reports of bribery and cheating underscore Cambodia's reputation,
highlighted in a recent report by Berlin-based Transparency
International, for widespread corruption in the public sector.

Students have paid between 5,000 riel (U.S. $1.23) to 20,000 riel
(U.S.$4.91) for answers to exam questions, sources told RFA.

Cheating has been reported in the capital Phnom Penh and in Siem Reap,
Pursat, and Prey Veng, Rong Chhun said, while in Prey Veng, proctors
are allowing some students to take exams on behalf of others.

In Battambang province, it was calm outside the test centers on the
second day of exams. But inside, students were using smart phones to
look up answers to chemistry and history questions posted on Facebook.

Bribes required

Speaking to RFA, students said that proctors had asked students to
raise money for them in exchange for permission to cheat.

A father named Hang Sambo said that he had told his son not to bribe
proctors if asked for money.

One proctor, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that he had been
asked by his own supervisor for a payment of at least 200,000 (U.S.
$49.10) as a share of what his superior assumed would be the bribes
paid to him.

"Only a few in the classroom know the subjects. They are relying on
answer sheets," he said.

In some cases, students are using answer sheets provided by their
teachers, he said, while in others teachers are entering the answers
onto test papers themselves.

In Phnom Penh, students admitted using smart phones to cheat on their
tests, while RFA reporters saw answer sheets sold openly on the
streets close to examination centers.

Cambodian Independent Teachers Association president Rong Chhun said
he has asked the country's Ministry of Education to take immediate
steps to end the cheating during exams.

Berlin-based corruption watchdog Transparency International ranked
Cambodia 164th worst out of 182 countries surveyed in its 2011
Corruption Perception Index.

Cambodia's official Anti-Corruption Unit (ACU) launched an initiative
in May to eliminate bribes solicited by local commune councilors for
performing public services, with ACU deputy director Chhay Savuth
declaring the country's "culture of bribery has been in place for
over 20 years."

But international organizations have warned that Cambodia's
graft-busting bodies will be ineffective until they are free of
government influence and control.

Reported by Sophalmony Soun and Mom Sophon.
Translated by Samean Yun.
Written in English by Richard Finney.
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/cambodia/cheating-08072012170011.html

Monday, August 6, 2012

Doctors discriminate against the poor

Cambodia is instructing doctors to practice without regards to
socioeconomic status, according to the country's top health official,
amidst reports that women had been left to die during childbirth and
other patients have been refused treatment because they did not have
the money to pay for services.

Minister of Health Mam Bunheng said Friday that improvements in
healthcare quality and service had over the past two years
substantially decreased the number of maternal and child fatalities
across Cambodia, which has the highest infant mortality rate in the
Southeast Asia.

He said that since 2010 the ministry had worked to teach doctors not
to differentiate between the rich and the poor—a practice which had
led to some doctors refusing to admit pregnant women and other
patients who could not cover certain medical fees.

"We are working on a process to improve maternal and child health,"
Mam Bunheng said, adding that the ministry is also in the process of
drafting a code of conduct for midwives.

"We are also working to improve our midwives in health centers and
referral hospitals," he said. "We are working to train midwives to
work in communities."

Mam Bunheng said that doctors had been instructed to admit poor
patients and that the Ministry of Health had allocated equity fund
reserves for providing treatment and food to the underprivileged.

He said that the government has helped about two million poor patients
nationwide through the equity fund foundation.

Expensive fees

But the health minister's statement runs contrary to reports that have
recently surfaced in Cambodia about discriminatory practices against
the poor in hospitals around the country, particularly in rural areas.

Nob Mean, a farmer from northwestern Cambodia's Banteay Meanchey
province, told RFA that he had been referred to a hospital that had
charged him a number of fees for medical services.

"The referral hospital has asked me for money to pay for my bed. It's
expensive," he said.

"The hospital charged me 81,500 riels [U.S. $20]. It's a lot of money
for the poor," he said, adding that he considers service in the
country's health industry to be about 60 percent positive, but that he
would like the government to bring the standard closer to 100 percent.

Lor Vannthary, a physician who works for a domestic health
nongovernmental organization, said that while the government has paid
more attention to health issues in recent years, a number of problems
remain in the industry.

"Referral hospitals have been built, but they lack a sufficient number
of doctors. Young graduating doctors are refusing to work in remote
areas of the country and instead prefer the city," he said.

"Also, some doctors don't pay close enough attention to patients
staying in state hospitals because they have their own private
hospitals—the doctors are not being paid enough to work."

Heng Tai Kry, a secretary of state with the Ministry of Health,
acknowledged that some doctors are unable to pay enough attention to
their patients, adding that it was largely due to working long hours
with many different patients.

He denied the claim that negligence on the part of doctors was a
result of low pay.

"Doctors are paid enough to live, but sometimes the demand is too
great and we can't please everybody," he said.

"The same problem exists even in places like the U.S. and Singapore."

'Desperately poor'

Cambodia's Ministry of Health oversees more than 1,000 hospitals and
5,000 doctors across the country.

According to the London-based nongovernmental organization Health
Poverty Action (HPA), some 78 percent of Cambodians live in "deep
poverty" with four of out five living on less than U.S. $2 a day. The
group calls healthcare provision in the country "desperately poor."

Some 58 percent of people in mountainous areas were living below the
poverty line in 2004, it says, up from 40 percent ten years earlier.

"While poverty has decreased overall in recent years, the health of
indigenous people living in mountain areas has declined dramatically,
along with the quality of health services available to them," the
group said.

HPA says that with 98 deaths per 1,000 live births, Cambodia has the
highest infant mortality rate in Southeast Asia.

Health Officials Demand Equal Care
Cambodia's health ministry says doctors cannot leave the poor untreated.
2012-08-06

Reported by Tin Zakariya and Sok Serey.
Translated by Samean Yun.
Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

http://www.rfa.org/english/news/cambodia/healthcare-08062012174311.html

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Students Forced to Pay Bribes

Reports of bribery in Cambodian schools underscore the country's
uphill battle against corruption.

Cambodian schoolchildren are being forced to pay bribes to pass high
school admissions tests, a senior local educator said on Thursday
while calling on the country's Ministry of Education to have students
retake their most recent exams.

"These tests must be taken again, as the results of the previous tests
are not valid," Cambodian Independent Teachers' Association president
Rong Chhun told RFA in an interview.

Proctors and examiners for junior high school students are requiring
payments of between U.S. $30 to U.S. $60 for a passing grade on high
school entrance exams, Rong Chhun said, adding that "middlemen" are
charging similar amounts for assurances the bribes will reach the
right people.

"There is a price for middlemen between U.S. $30 to U.S. $50. I urge
the Ministry of Education to work with local authorities to bring the
suspects to justice," Rong Chhun said.

Cambodian Minister of Education Im Sethy could not be reached for
comment, but the reports of bribery in Cambodia's schools underscore
the country's reputation, highlighted in a recent report by
Berlin-based Transparency International, for widespread corruption in
the public sector.

"This bribery takes place across the country," Rong Chhun said.

Payment to proctors

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the parent of a student in Kandal
province said that his son had been told to pay U.S. $30 to proctors
at the Bun Rany Hun Sen High School Examination Center in order to
pass his exam, held on July 16-17.

"All students were asked to pay at least U.S. $30 dollars, including
my son. But my son gave only U.S. $25," he said.

Results of the exam will be released on July 28, he said.

Berlin-based corruption watchdog Transparency International ranked
Cambodia 164th worst out of 182 countries surveyed in its 2011
Corruption Perception Index.

Cambodia's official Anti-Corruption Unit (ACU) launched an initiative
in May to eliminate bribes solicited by local commune councilors for
performing public services, with ACU deputy director Chhay Savuth
declaring that "[Cambodia's] culture of bribery has been in place for
over 20 years."

But international organizations have warned that the country's
graft-busting bodies will not be effective until they are free of
government influence and control.

Students Forced to Pay Bribes :: 2012-07-26
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/cambodia/schools-07262012153620.html

Friday, July 13, 2012

Organic Farming, Youth Entrepreneurship, and demand in Thailand

American teenager Birke Baehr, now 13, was speaking at a TED
conference about his plans to become an organic farmer when he grows
up.
http://www.birkeonthefarm.com/
http://www.ted.com/speakers/birke_baehr.html

"Who would you rather pay for your health – the hospital or your farmer?"

The question may have come from the mouth of an 11-year-old, but Pura
Organic Foods Managing Director Martin Smetsers believes truer words
have never been spoken.

American teenager Birke Baehr, now 13, was speaking at a TED
(Technology, Entertainment, Design – ted.com) conference about his
plans to become an organic farmer when he grows up.

Martin runs the Pura Organic shop and distribution outlet in Thalang,
which supplies fresh organic fruit and vegetables, plus other food
items found across Thailand, to resorts, hotels and private buyers in
Phuket and surrounding areas, with a thriving free home delivery
service.

Originally from The Netherlands, Martin spent most of his working life
in the global financial markets, and met Klaus Hebben while working in
London.

Mr Hebben moved to Phuket to set up the Thanyapura complex in Thalang
along with the organic resort and farm Thanyamundra, in Khao Sok.

Martin was asked to set up Pura Organic Foods at the end of 2010 to
distribute the products from the farm, and find other sources in order
to increase the varieties available.

"I've eaten organic food for the last 22 years, largely because when I
grew up in Holland I was lucky to be living only 5km from an organic
farm. I eat it because it tastes so much better, and the health
reasons are an added bonus.

"As I have not been ill for more than half a day in the last 22 years
– and I know I don't look like the healthiest guy in the world – you
could say I am quite healthy."

Martin says all the fresh produce at Pura comes from Thailand, such as
green fruit and vegetables from Thanyamundra; white asparagus from
Prachuap Kiri Khan; cherry tomatoes on the vine, potatoes and onions
from Mae Hong Son; fruits from Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai; and buffalo
milk from Chachoengsao.

In total, Pura has around 1,000 different items, ranging from organic
rice and pasta, coconut oil, and olive oils, to wines, and bath
products.

They also stock organic yoghurt, produced in Phuket by local company
Swash, and will be introducing organic soups and healthy hotel minibar
snacks, such as juices, in the future.

But isn't organic food more expensive than regular fruit and
vegetables purchased from the local market? The answer is yes, but not
overly so.

Martin admits that most of Pura's goods are on average between 20 to
40 per cent more expensive than what can be found at the local market.
However, some products, such as wild rocket, are 30 per cent cheaper.

The cost increase largely comes down to the effort required to make –
and keep – the food organic, such as protecting product from being
contaminated, the effort involved in crop rotation and keeping the
soil healthy.

There's also the risk of crop disasters, and most of the farms are
small scale, such as Thanyamundra, which covers an area of some 60
rai.

In Thailand, there are tens of thousands of agriculture chemicals
registered, mostly fertilisers and pesticides, many of which find
their way into the food chain and the environment, says Martin.

There are also lax regulations around the use of the word "organic" on
food products, something which is strictly controlled in the US. In
Thailand, anyone can put "organic" on their food, and there's no way
of knowing if it is in fact true.

Most farms Martin buys organic produce from are checked by inspectors
of organic certification agencies, which only issue these when they
are satisfied with the level of organic correctness.

Pura has copies of these organic certificates on file. Additionally
many farms are visited by himself, and their processes double-checked.

But Martin is not fanatically against chemical fruit and vegetables,
and puts everybody's decision about healthy food down to choice.

"Using chemicals in products is bad for you – it won't kill you, it's
just better not to. To put it simply, what do you think is better,
putting synthetic chemicals into your body, or not?"

Farmers not only use chemicals to keep insects away from their crops,
but also to help them create a bigger, better product – such as a
glossy, fat tomato – and increase crop yield.

"Over the last 50 years or so there has been an increase in the use of
chemicals; while the prices, nutritional value, and taste was reduced.
Simultaneously health costs went up," says Martin.

But does the organic food actually taste better? Martin guarantees the
organic fruit and vegetables taste better than the ones from the local
market – no matter which market his staff go to.

Martin says, "That little chap Birke who wanted to be an organic
farmer and asked his audience, "Who they would rather pay, their
hospital or their farmer?" is inspiring. It's great to explain in
simplicity – organic is simply good for you."

Visit the Pura Organic website here.
http://puraorganic.org/

Organics: the need for green
by Claire Connell
http://www.thephuketnews.com/listing-author.php?listing_author=Claire%20Connell
July 2012

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Free Khmer Android Apps

Android Apps by Nokor e-Solutions Group ::
https://play.google.com/store/apps/developer?id=Nokor+e-Solutions+Group

Nokor Group has been operating in Phnom Penh since 2007.

Nokor Group supports:
- Cambodia Startup Weekend in Cambodia
- Cambodia's first Business Incubator, a project of InfoDev, managed
by EMC and RULE.

Nokor Group
Delano Business Centre
Number 144 Street 169
Khan 7Makara,
Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Tel: +855 (0) 23 99 27 33
contact@nokor-group.com
www.nokor-group.com

Generation Y :: Born between 1976 and 2001

... our generation also likes to work towards our passions, not just
to get a job to have one.

This mentality may hurt us now, but hopefully will pay off in the
future when our experience has been built up.

With 30% of Gen Y's believing meaningful work is very important to
them, packing boxes at a factory or sitting in a cubicle isn't our
idea of fun.

See Info-graphic attached ::

http://dailyinfographic.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/geny-in-the-workplace-infographic-mba-at-unc-640x3650.jpg

Friday, June 29, 2012

United States Ambassador Youth Council

==================================
Application Deadline: July 20, 2012 (5pm)
==================================

Ambassador William Todd, U.S. Ambassador to the Kingdom of Cambodia,
is pleased to announce the creation of the "Ambassador's Youth
Council."

Through this council, the Ambassador will directly engage Cambodian
youth and future leaders.

The Ambassador hopes to cultivate young leaders from around the
country, engage Cambodian youth on topics of interest to youth, and
receive input on U.S. Embassy programs and U.S. policies in Cambodia.

The U.S. Embassy is recruiting up to 15 members to serve a one-year
volunteer term on the Council.

========
Activities
========

Under the overall guidance of the Ambassador's Youth Council
Coordinator and under the direct supervision of the Alumni
Coordinator, the selected youth council will participate in the
following activities:

- Meet once every two months with the Ambassador

- Each meeting will also include another American staff member at the
Embassy so that youth can engage on a variety of topics

- Meeting agendas are driven by youth

- Council members make presentations on Cambodian youth issues and
Embassy representatives present on U.S. policy issues; discuss where
the two meet, with Council members providing input and suggestions for
change

- During the interval between the meetings, youth will plan their next
presentations and engage with each other on a dedicated Facebook page

- Advise on existing youth outreach programs

- Organize a youth town hall with the Ambassador

- Assist in organizing other Embassy events as appropriate (e.g.,
Earth Day, Women's History Month)

- Participate in special Embassy speaker programs

- Participate in existing FUSAAC volunteer opportunities to help in
their communities and actively engage with more youth, and learn about
U.S. government exchange programs

====================================
Selection Criteria for Youth Council Members
====================================

- Be a Cambodian between the ages of 16 and 30

- Must have a demonstrated commitment to leadership – such as being a
youth leader from an NGO, youth political association, or religious
community; a Fulbright and Undergraduate State Alumni Association of
Cambodia (FUSAAC) member or alumni of FUSAAC outreach programs; a
university student leader; or a young business leader or entrepreneur

- Be committed to serving a one-year volunteer term on the Council

- Have strong English-language skills (TOEFL score or IELTS score
preferred, but not required)

===========
How to apply
===========

Interested youth are asked to submit a CV (listing educational
background, work experiences including volunteer experience, and level
of English proficiency) and a Statement of interest to Public Affairs
Section no later than 20 July 2012.

The statement of interest must identify an issue important to the
applicant and outline a potential solution and how to implement it.

Please submit hard copies to:

Akhara Uy (Mr.)
Alumni Coordinator
Public Affairs Section
U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh
#1, Street 96, Sangkat Wat Phnom, Khan Daun Penh, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Tel: (855) 23 728 683

Or email to: uya@state.gov

==================================
Application Deadline: July 20, 2012 (5pm)
==================================

Source ::
http://cambodia.usembassy.gov/060812_pr.html

Monday, June 18, 2012

Cambodian women in politics

Cambodian women have fewer opportunities than men, and less access to
economic and political positions of power.

Women in Cambodia have more economic access and business ownership
than in some Western countries,
but they have less power in family, politics and civil society.

Women also face a greater risk of human trafficking.

In Cambodia, women earn $0.75 to every dollar a man earns.

http://www.voanews.com/khmer-english/news/Less-Power-for-Cambodian-Women-Report-Says-159439985.html

Women and youth still have only minor roles in Cambodian politics,
which remains dominated by men.

A huge percentage of young people remain disengaged from politics.

Many don't know who their local commune leaders are.

And few are actively involved in upcoming election campaigns.

Cambodian politics are associated with corruption and violence.

If Cambodians want change, they must get involved in politics.

Those who tend to get involved are men over 30.

Youth with international experiences have the potential to become a
great political force.

http://www.voanews.com/khmer-english/news/Much-Room-in-Politics-for-Women-Youth-Analyst-150611345.html

Political parties and voters themselves need to put more faith in women leaders.

Women remain under-represented in local and national leadership, but
that can change.

There are more women than men in Cambodia, so the majority need fair
representation.

More women candidates need to be placed at the top of candidacy lists.

Women need to become involved in politics at a young age.

Political parties need to provide women with opportunities to get involved.

Cambodian society values older and more experienced people.

If we don't give young people a chance we cannot develop quickly.

Young people nowadays are smart.

http://www.voanews.com/khmer-english/news/With-Upcoming-Elections-More-Women-Needed-Advocate-142354965.html

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Young Cambodian women and marriage

Despite Cambodia's evolving gender system, local men would rather pick
women with lower education qualifications as their love mates. As a
result of this finicky selection, it seems many bright young ladies
are left with a diminishing list of suitors.

Not unlike other men his age, Sen Sarat, a 23-year-old student at
Royal University of Agriculture, said that the wife of his dreams must
be between 20 to 23 years old and cannot be more highly skilled than
him, so that they can co-exist without criticism from society.

"I cannot accept if people look down on me as if I were hiding behind
my wife's skirt," Sarat said. "It seems impossible for me to choose a
highly educated lady as my life partner."

At the other end of the debate, 29-year-old Khem Vannareth, a
community development worker in an international organisation, admits
that she has never cared much for marriage even though age is catching
up. Nareth stresses that she has high expectations on her future
husband, and will not budge until she finds the right man.

A natural beauty with a cute smile, Nareth says that a combination of
her busy work schedule and dissatisfaction with the quality of her
suitors has led her to turn away many.

"As I have gained a lot of knowledge and international work
experience, my life views are broader, so I would prefer an educated
husband with higher job status compared to me," Nareth added.

Although Cambodian society and even her family sometimes pressure her
about being an 'old spinster', Nareth is unfazed and constantly
reiterates that she is a strong, independent person who earns her own
living.

"I prefer to be single for life than marry the wrong person, who may
ruin my life in the future," she said.

No doubt the decision to marry late is at one's discretion. However,
according to a reproductive health expert, Phim Somaly, women should
consider getting married before 30 years old to prevent complications
during the first child birth, especially the lack of nutrition to feed
their babies.

"The best time for a woman to start their family life is from 23 to 27
years old, for she would be at the right age to handle family
planning," Somaly advised.

Chou Bun Eng, Deputy Director of the Ministry of Women's Affairs at
the Interior Ministry, says that in Cambodian culture, men are afraid
of proposing to women of higher education, worse still if she was past
the 'marriageable' age. Equally disparaging is that women who marry
younger men are frowned on. For these reasons, singlehood is the only
way for some ladies.

"Cambodia's government always encourages women to gain high education
to work and help society, but if most of our young ladies get married
by 18 or 19 years old, how do this plan can be successful?" says Bun
Eng.

Her recommendation is that Cambodian men should be more understanding
and fair towards women, adding that they could consider marrying older
women between 25 to 30 years old because they are "better educated and
mature enough to be good wives'".

In the country's history pages, women were urged to get married as
soon as they flowered, from 14 to 16 years old. Hence, most of them
could not do anything besides housework.

The world has transformed since. The statement "women cannot do
anything besides moving around the kitchen" has long been abolished.
As Cambodia progresses, women have more opportunities for education
and to compete with men on equal platforms.

For many, being a housewife is a fading notion and marriage, an
unhurried prospect.

Wednesday, 13 June 2012
by Vannak Oum
Source ::
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012061356779/LIFT/is-education-a-turn-off-in-todays-cambodia.html

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Cambodian people research statistics

Rural areas measured in these surveys are only within a 25 km from urban areas.
Therefore the data does not represent the very rural countryside.

94% of Cambodians aged 15 or more own mobile phones.
Eighty-six per cent own motorcycles,
but only 10% own cars.

Considering urban versus rural automobile owners,
14% of urban dwellers are car owners,
while only 5% of rural people own cars.

Everybody watches television.
Television is the most trusted media for Cambodians.
99% of Cambodians have a television set at home.

As for education, 73% of the rural population have only completed
primary school.
In urban areas, 31% have only sixth grade education.

20% per cent of Cambodians are students.
Urban populations are better educated.
For education, people from the countryside tend to come to the cities.
Therefore, Cambodian cities will continue to grow.

Cambodians prefer to own their own business.
Owning a business is important.
61% say they are self-employed.
Entrepreneurship is very strong.
Cambodians tend to mix personal revenue with business revenue.

For employment, 37% of rural people work in agriculture
while only 6% of urban dwellers work in agricultural.

For employment in the total Cambodian population,
19% of people are involved in agriculture and
19% in wholesale and retail trade.
17% are employed in professions such as IT or real estate.
10% are employed in transportation and storage.
6% of Cambodians work in handicrafts.

Less than 2% claim to earn between $800 and $2,000 per month.
In urban areas that increases to 6%.

23% of Cambodians have fixed-line telephones;
28% of urban residents own computers,
while only 5% of rural residents own computers.

51% of urban people have radios
and 63% of rural people have radios.

99% of the population claim to own their own home
and 73% claim to own their own property.

3% of Cambodians have non-mobile internet at home
and 5% have access to the internet via mobile services.

7% of Cambodians have mobile internet access in the urban areas.

The most important value listed on surveys is the importance of the family.

Cambodia is a family-driven society,
It is a social society.
65% of people say their friends are important
and 57% say they like doing things in a group.

Indochina Research website ::
http://www.indochinaresearch.com

News Source ::
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012060156524/Business/research-shows-cambodian-entrepreneurship-tendency.html

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Cambodians not yet using banks

Cambodian people used banks less than any other country in the region.

Only 4 per cent of Cambodians had a bank account in 2011.

This is compared with 27 per cent in Lao PDR and 21 per cent in Vietnam.

Cambodia has a high percentage of borrowers in the mircofinance sector.

Cambodians borrowing informally from friends and family members was 39
per cent in 2011.

Informal lending is a threat to the financial stability and was high
above the regional average.

Informal lending often carries annual interest rates of more than 50 per cent.

The number of Cambodians saving at banks was 1 per cent.

Savings accounts are expected to grow in the near future as bank
services increase.

No credit card usage was reported, with about 3 per cent using debit cards.

Source ::
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012053056467/Business/cambodians-shun-banks.html

Monday, May 28, 2012

New Cambodian startup generates more than $1 million in revenue

"When you have this entrepreneurial spirit, you just have to do it."

For an Internet start-up, Arjuni faces more challenges than usual.

The e-commerce site that sells hair extensions operates out of a
five-story building here that lacks elevators and, sometimes, power.

Employees typically have to travel to remote villages by motorbike or
foot to pick up the goods that Arjuni sells.

And the office floor is cluttered with piles of hair strands instead
of computers.

May 28, 2012 :: Phnom Penh, Cambodia

In Cambodia, a Start-Up Combines Web Sales Skills and Hair Extensions
By Ron Gluckman for The New York Times

But like many new ventures, Arjuni is harnessing the latest Internet
tools like Twitter and social media to build a loyal customer base.

In just two years, the company, founded by Janice Wilson, has grown
from a handful of employees to 80, and it now generates more than $1
million in revenue.

The start-up is also slowly gaining market share from the industry's
dominant players in India and China, as well as retailers in the
United States and Europe.

"We not only buy and collect the hair ourselves, but sell it directly
to our customers.

This makes us stand out," Ms. Wilson said. "We're small, but
considered one of the top brands."

While hair extensions have been around for decades, they became a
fashion craze in recent years, when stars like Paris Hilton and
Britney Spears started using them to change their looks.

A large proportion of Arjuni customers, like Ms. Wilson, are
African-Americans seeking fuller styles for their tresses.

India has long provided much of the world's natural hair, sold to
wholesalers mainly in China, which in turn marketed their products to
retailers in Europe and the United States.

But Ms. Wilson found that Cambodians have similar hair quality, long
with cuticles in alignment.

"Probably 99 percent of the world's hair comes from India. Nobody had
thought of Cambodia," said Ms. Wilson, 39, straddling piles of hair on
the floor.

It is a small but potentially profitable niche. The hair extensions
business generates annual revenue of $250 million.

Ms. Wilson said it was important to her to have a business serve a
social purpose. Many of Arjuni's employees formerly worked in
Cambodia's notorious sex trade.

That effort helped attract seed capital from a Japanese investment
fund, Arun, formed in 2009 by Satoko Kono to help social enterprises
in emerging nations.

"We like how Arjuni is employing women, and helping the needy," said
Ms. Kono, who spent a decade with development organizations in
Cambodia.

Additional money came from the Cambodian Export Market Access Fund,
which is a World Bank-financed project that helps companies trying to
develop exports. The rest came from her savings, friends and family.

A lawyer by training, Ms. Wilson has built her business by making
customers feel engaged in the product via the Internet.

Customers eagerly describe their orders on home videos that they
upload on YouTube, with segments on topics like hair design, delivery
and grooming. Clients are encouraged to send in pictures of starlets
they want to emulate, like Catherine Zeta-Jones or Beyoncé. Arjuni
also floods Facebook with testimonials and promotions.

"Our clients are fanatical about hair," said Tiyana Peters, who
oversees social media for Arjuni. "We get everything from wedding
photos afterward to details on how the boyfriends react."

By dealing direct with customers, Arjuni eliminates the added cost of
working through another retailer or site. Extensions can cost
thousands of dollars, but typically average around $500.

The Internet has helped with damage control, as well. After rumors
spread online that Arjuni was stealing hair or forcing women to sell
it, the company began regularly posting more information on its
operations on networking sites.

"This was totally untrue. We buy the hair at fair prices, and tried to
explain it, but there isn't much you can do," Ms. Wilson said. "Our
company grew up in the age of social media," she said. "Social media
is huge, and has helped us, but these accusations really stung."

Her idea for the start-up was an evolution of sorts. Ms. Wilson,
originally from Green Bay, Wis., was on vacation in Cambodia four
years ago, she began thinking about opportunities to start a business
here.

Cambodia was in the midst of an economic boom and had the
fastest-growing economy in Asia, after China, for several years
running. One of the hottest sectors was real estate. Ms. Wilson, who
was working for a real estate firm in Colorado, decided to move to
Cambodia, and with local partners, planned a development near the
temples of Angkor, the country's top tourist attraction.

When Cambodia's property market suffered along with the global
economy, she faced a grim challenge. "I either had to give up and go
back to America, or find something else to do," she recalled.

The collapse of Cambodia's textile industry largely as a result of
cheap competition from China led to her idea. Cambodian workers with
sewing skills were suddenly unemployed, and nobody had looked at
Cambodian hair as a marketable material before.

"I was thinking, what is recession-proof?" Ms. Wilson recalled. The
answer: "vanity."

The best — and most expensive — hair extensions are made from natural
human hair, which is cut, cleaned and sewn into individual pieces. "It
was low-tech, they just needed to learn how to make them, and we just
needed sewing machines. We could use the skills already here," she
said.

The business was also a way to help workers develop marketable skills.
Ms. Wilson now provides employees with free English, computer and math
classes. A third of workers come from troubled situations like sex
trafficking or spousal abuse. "But we run everything as a business,"
Ms. Wilson said.

Ms. Wilson acknowledged that she and her staff members were extremely
ambitious at the outset, "trying to do everything at once —
collection, fabrication and distribution." But they have been able to
keep up the frenzied pace as the company grew.

"It's definitely been difficult to scale up," Ms. Wilson said. "But it
does make us better quality."

This spring, Arjuni added yet another facet to its operation — a
series of in-person events in the United States called Halo, where her
staff could meet and help groom customers.

"Do I feel I have aged a lot? Definitely," Ms. Wilson said. "But I
love being an entrepreneur. I love the challenges."

"When I worked in a law office, I was bored out of my mind," she
added. "When you have this entrepreneurial spirit, you just have to do
it."

Source ::
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/28/in-cambodia-a-start-up-uses-the-internet-to-sell-hair/?pagemode=print