A nation pays its last respects to King Father Norodom Sihanouk

Written By visalittleboy on Thursday 7 February 2013 | 04:50

Photo by Wikipedia: "King Father" Norodom Sihanouk, Ex-King of Cambodia

A nation pays its last respects to King Father Norodom Sihanouk

The nation stood still in an official moment of silence as fire consumed the body of King Father Norodom Sihanouk this evening during a moving and spectacular ceremony to close out the four-day royal funeral.

In front of Veal Preah Meru, where the King Father's ornate crematorium stands, more than 400 prisoners were officially pardoned in the afternoon and given gifts from the royal family. Inside, royals along with foreign heads of state and local officials shuffled past the casket, bowing as they offered their final respects.

Just after 6 pm, King Norodom Sihamoni and Queen Mother Norodom Monineath lit the pyre. The 3,000 in attendance sampeahed as Buddhist funeral chants filled the air. Across Phnom Penh, the sounds of an artillery salute could be heard half an hour later.

Over the course of the next two days, the King and Queen Mother will set off on a royal barge to scatter some of Sihanouk's ashes in the river.

The rest will be placed in a diamond urn, which mother and son will parade through the cremation site before storing at the Royal Palace.

Blocked from the streets surrounding the crematorium and Royal Palace, tens of thousands of mourners – the Cambodians whom Sihanouk had so enchanted during his life – observed the ceremony as best they could from a distance.

“I begged the police: if will not allow me to get in Veal Preah Meru, can they let me go in front of Royal Place to pay my respects to him? But they still would not allow me,” said 48-year-old Hun Savun, who traveled to the capital days ago from Kandal province in the hopes of getting one last glimpse of the king.

“I really want to see my king father’s coffin and pay respect to him in front of his coffin, I don’t want to see it by TV.”

Source: Phnompenhpost/04 February 2013
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CamBriefNews: Strange Small Pig Just Born Look Like Elephant

Written By visalittleboy on Sunday 9 December 2012 | 02:24

CamBriefNews: Strange Small Pig Just Born Look Like Elephant

Kampongcham Province, Cambodia: According to local newspaper from Cambodia, a small pig was born and looked like a small elephant.

A mother pig had babies with eleven small pigs on 5 December 2012 at Taing Kraing village, Chea Lea commune, Batheay district, Kampongcham province, Cambodia. One of the 11 small pigs, there was only one strange small pig look like a small elephant. Unfortunately, the strange pig was died.

Mr. Vong Chandy, 41 years old, a farmer and the owner of the pig said that he was very happy to see his pig had eleven babies, but he felt so strange after seeing the small strange pig that look like a small elephant. After getting the news, lots of villagers also came to see.

Let see the small elephant pig below:

CamBriefNews: Small elephant pig

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PRESS RELEASE ASEAN PLUS THREE COMMEMORATIVE SUMMIT Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 19 November 2012

Written By visalittleboy on Tuesday 20 November 2012 | 03:37

PRESS RELEASE ASEAN PLUS THREE COMMEMORATIVE SUMMIT Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 19 November 2012

The ASEAN Plus Three (APT) Summit this year 2012 was marked as the Commemorative Summit since it was the 15th Anniversary of the APT Cooperation. The APT Commemorative Summit, held at Peace Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on 19 November 2012, was chaired by Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo HUN SEN, Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia, and attended by the Leaders of the ASEAN Member States and the Plus Three Countries, namely the People’s Republic of China, the Republic of Korea and Japan. The Secretary-General of ASEAN also attended the Summit.

Leaders discussed the review and future direction of the ASEAN Plus Three cooperation and also exchanged views on regional and international issues.

The ASEAN Plus Three Leaders adopted two important documents, namely the ASEAN Plus Three Leaders’ Joint Statement on the Commemoration of the 15th Anniversary of the ASEAN Plus Three Cooperation and the Leaders’ Statement on ASEAN Plus Three Partnership on Connectivity. Moreover, the Leaders took note of the Report of the East Asia Vision Group II, Memorandum No. 9 of the Network of East Asian Think-Tanks, Summary Record of the 10th East Asia Forum, the Progress Report on the Implementation of the Second Joint Statement on East Asia Cooperation and the APT Cooperation Work Plan, and the APT Plan of Action on Education: 2010-2017.

To mark the 15th Anniversary of the APT cooperation, the Leaders welcomed the successful activities to commemorate the 15th Anniversary of the APT Cooperation, namely i) the “Workshop on APT Partnership on Connectivity” held on 15 June 2012 in Bangkok, Thailand; ii) the “APT Youth Leaders’ Symposium” held on 18-19 October 2012 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia; iii) the “APT Joint Cultural Performance: Unity in Diversity” held on 2-3 November 2012, in Siem Reap, Cambodia; and iv) the Track II Symposium on the Commemoration of the 15th Anniversary of the APT Cooperation on 17-18 September 2012 in Beijing, China. The Leaders also welcomed the selection of Siem Reap City of Cambodia as the “Cultural City of East Asia 2012 within the framework of the ASEAN Plus Three” and the designation of the year 2012 as “Visit ASEAN Plus Three Year.”

Source: ASEAN Summit 2012
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PRESS RELEASE Outcomes of the 21st ASEAN Summit Phnom Penh, 18 November 2012

PRESS RELEASE Outcomes of the 21st ASEAN Summit Phnom Penh, 18 November 2012

Peace Palace, Phnom Penh, Sunday, 18 November 2012: The ASEAN Heads of State/Government and the Secretary-General of ASEAN gathered at the Peace Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, for the 21st ASEAN Summit. Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo HUN SEN, Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia and the Chairman of the 21st ASEAN Summit, presided over the Plenary Session.

The Plenary Session of the 21st ASEAN Summit opened at 9:00 am with the different topics and issues. The ASEAN Heads of State/Government discussed the Progress of the Implementation of the ASEAN Charter and Roadmap for an ASEAN Community, Follow-up to the 20th ASEAN Summit, the Progress Report on the Implementation of Master Plan on ASEAN Connectivity, signed Phnom Penh Statement on the Adoption of ASEAN Human Rights Declaration, Exchange of View on Regional and International Issues, and issued Leaders’ Statement on the Establishment of an ASEAN Regional Mine Action Center (ARMAC).

ASEAN Leaders agreed to sign, adopt and note the following documents as the outcome documents:
- Phnom Penh Statement on the Adoption of the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration;
- ASEAN Human Rights Declaration (AHRD);
- ASEAN Leaders’ Joint Statement on the Establishment of an ASEAN Regional Mine Action Centre (ARMAC);
- Concept Paper on the Establishment of an ASEAN Regional Mine Action Centre (ARMAC)

ASEAN Heads of State/Government appointed H.E. Mr. Le Luong Minh, candidate from the Socialist Republic of Viet Nam, as the upcoming Secretary-General of ASEAN based on alphabetical rotation for 5 year term, January 2013 – December 2018.

The Leaders adopted the following documents: the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration (AHRD) and ASEAN Leaders’ Statement on the Establishment of an ASEAN Regional Mine Action Center (ARMAC).

Source: ASEAN Summit 2012
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Obama Back to White House

Obama Back to White House

After three days visiting Asia countries Thailand, Myanmar and Cambodia, today U.S President Barack left Cambodia for White House by around 6:00PM(GMT+7). Today is the final day of 21st ASEAN Summit 2012 that was held in Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia.

Thanks you Mr.President for your visiting...Hope to see come back visiting again soon..

U.S President Barack Obama
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Obama Presses Cambodia PM on Human Rights

U.S. President Barack Obama has voiced concerns about Cambodia's human rights record in what U.S. officials describe as a "tense" meeting with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Obama, who arrived in the capital, Phnom Penh, Monday, raised the issue of free and fair elections and the detention of political prisoners.

U.S Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes said Obama told the prime minister those issues are an "impediment" to the United States and Cambodia developing a deeper relationship.

Cambodian officials said in response that the concerns about human rights are exaggerated.

​​After the talks with Hun Sen, the U.S. president met with the 10 leaders attending the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in the capital.

In another development, Cambodian rights groups voiced disappointment about the adoption at the summit of an ASEAN Declaration of Human Rights, saying the declaration does not go far enough to ensure rights for all people. The head of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, Ou Virak said that, for example, the declaration gives people the right to demonstrate, but not if the demonstrations affect a country's social order.

President Obama arrived in Phnom Penh from Burma, where he addressed a crowd at the University of Rangoon earlier in the day. Obama said he had come to keep his promise and extend "the hand of friendship." He added that "flickers of progress" that have been seen must not be extinguished, but must become - in his words - "a shining North Star" for all the nation's people.

Earlier in the day, Obama met separately with Burmese President Thein Sein and democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi in the country's main city of Rangoon.

Read more at VOANews/19 November 2012
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Obama Meets China, Japan Leaders at East Asia Summit

PHNOM PENH — On the final day of his Southeast Asia trip, President Barack Obama met with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit in Phnom Penh, Cambodia

It was the first meeting between the president and Premier Wen since their talks at the last East Asia Summit in Bali last year and since Obama's re-election to a second term. The two have met five times in all.

As the two largest global economies, the president says China and the United States have a special responsibility to lead the way to ensure sustained and balanced global economic growth.

"It is very important that as two of the largest economies in the world, that we work to establish clear rules of the road internationally for trade and investment, which can increase prosperity and global growth," said Obama.

Premier Wen congratulated Obama on his re-election and spoke about the importance of a strong Sino-American relationship, calling it important for peace, stability and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and the world.

In describing the talks to reporters, Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes offered additional specifics, noting that meeting was the last the two will have, given leadership changes in China.

"They discussed the importance of the U.S. and China consistently maintaining our cooperation on a bilateral and global level. They discussed security issues including Iran. They discussed economic issues, including our commitment to strengthen the rules of the road in the global economy,” said Rhodes. “And, they discussed regional stability, reaffirming that China is part of our engagement here in this important region a critical part of that engagement, and our interest again in resolving territorial disputes and maritime disputes consistent with international rules of the road."

In his only other bilateral meeting at the East Asia Summit, President Obama met with Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda of Japan.

Those discussions focused on the U.S. - Japan alliance. Washington has urged Tokyo and Beijing to resolve tensions about disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Although there were expectations Japan would announce it is joining the Trans-Pacific partnership, a new free trade initiative, Rhodes says that did not happen.

Obama's Southeast Asia trip has enabled him to fill in more details of the U.S. economic and security shift to the Asia-Pacific region, of which nations in the Association of Southeast Asian nations (ASEAN) are a crucial part.

He addressed the shift toward the end of his speech in Rangoon, Burma.

"The United States of America is a Pacific nation. We see our future as bound to those nations and peoples to our West,” he said. “As our economy recovers, this is where we believe we will find tremendous growth. As we end the wars that have dominated our foreign policy for a decade, this region will be a focus of our efforts to build a prosperous peace.”

In their final statement, U.S. and ASEAN leaders say they are elevating the annual leaders meeting to a summit.

Source: VOANews/20 November 2012
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CamBriefNews: Cambodia To Celebrate National Independence Day

Written By visalittleboy on Thursday 8 November 2012 | 04:02

CamBriefNews: Cambodia To Celebrate National Independence Day

Phnom Penh: Tomorrow, 9 November 2012, Cambodia will celebrate a big event of Cambodia National Independence Day (9 November 1953 - 9 November 2012) at the area of Independence Monument. According to Cambodia Local Newspaper, His Majesty King Norodom Sihamoni, King of Cambodia will also join the celebration day.

Why Celebrating the Independence Day?

After World War II and into the early 1950s, King Sihanouk's aspirations became much more nationalistic and he began demanding independence from the French colonists and their complete departure from Indochina. This echoed the sentiments of the other fledgling nations of French Indochina: the State of Vietnam, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, and the Kingdom of Laos. He went into exile in Thailand in May 1953 because of threats on his life by the French and only returned when independence was won on 9 November 1953. Whilst independent, Cambodia retained an alliance with the French Union, until the end of the First Indochina War and the subsequent official end of French Indochina. On 2 March 1955, Sihanouk abdicated in favor of his father, established the Sangkum and took the post of Prime Minister a few months later, after having obtained an overwhelming victory in the parliamentary elections on September 1955.

So, the day 9 November 1953 is the day that Cambodian people is never forgettable. It's the great day that Cambodia received Independence from France by His Majesty King Father Norodom Sihanouk.

Photo: Cambodia Independence Monument, Phnom Penh

Visit Cambodia, The Kingdom of Wonder here..


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CamBriefNews: Obama Dances After Win Four More Years

CamBriefNews: Obama Dances After Win Four More Years

Barack Obama claimed victory as a second presidential term after the latest election in United States.

Below is an unofficial photo of Mr.President dancing in the white house. CamBriefNews collected from Facebook. Is it really our president dances after the win or not?

CamBriefNews would like to share the photo as a happy photo for President's victory.

Check photo below:

President Obama Dancing [Photo Source: Facebook]
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Cambodian Opposition Leader Asks Obama to Cancel Visit

U.S President Obama to Visit Cambodia on 18 November 2012

Cambodian Opposition Leader Asks Obama to Cancel Visit

VOA News, October 31, 2012

Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy is urging U.S. President Barack Obama to cancel his visit to Phnom Penh next month for a regional summit, on the grounds that would provide legitimacy to the rule of longtime Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Writing in The New York TimesI, Rainsy slammed the government of Hun Sen, who has ruled Cambodia since 1985. Rainsy is viewed as the prime minister's main rival; he lives in self-imposed exile to escape charges he says are politically motivated.

Rainsy says Hun Sen is trying to use next month's regional summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to garner legitimacy ahead of parliamentary elections next year. He suggests the meeting of world leaders be moved to another country.

Rainsy added that Cambodians with "a record of opposition to Hun Sen are in dread of the period right after Obama’s scheduled visit," when they fear politically motivated prosecution by Hun Sen's allies.

The 63-year-old opposition leader wrote that the political coalition he heads (the Cambodian National Rescue Party), will boycott the July 2013 elections, because the group "refuses to validate such a bogus exercise."

Rainsy says his coalition, formed in August, has enough support to win a "free and fair election." But he says the "minimum requirement for proper elections next year is that the National Election Committee be reformed" to become independent. The committee is currently dominated by members of the ruling Cambodian People's Party.

In the newspaper article, which also was published by The International Herald Tribune, Rainsy called on the "free world" to "seize the opportunity presented by Cambodia's elections" and compel Hun Sen to "play by democratic rules." If this does not happen, and if the ASEAN summit is not moved, Rainsy said the leader of the "world's standard-bearer of democracy," President Obama, should not visit Cambodia.

Hun Sen, who is 61, has vowed to stay in power until he is 90. His government is regularly accused of suppressing political freedoms and mistreatment of rights campaigners.

Describing what he expects to be a post-ASEAN summit crackdown on dissent in Cambodia, Rainsy recalled that a prominent activist, radio station owner Mam Sanondo, was arrested shortly after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Cambodia earlier this year for another ASEAN meeting.

Rainsy, who faces 11 years in prison for various charges, lives in exile. He has vowed to return to Cambodia to help opposition efforts for the 2013 election; the government, in turn, has promised he will face jail time if he does.

Some information for this report provided by AFP.

Source: VOA News/31 October 2012

According to NYTimes, Obama Should Stay Away From Cambodia>>>
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CamBriefNews: US President Obama to Visit Cambodia and Myanmar in November

US President Obama to Visit Cambodia and Myanmar in November

President of the United States Barack H. Obama will join the ASEAN-U.S. Summit here in November, H.E. Ouch Borith, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation said

after the meeting with visiting Deputy Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Mr. Joseph Y. Yun yesterday.

This upcoming visit reflects the increasing relationship between Cambodia and the U.S., he said.
Mr. Joseph Y. Yun also confirmed about U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s participation in the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting (AMM) in July this year, he added.

According to H.E. Ouch Borith, Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister H.E. Hor Namhong is scheduled to visit Washington D.C. in March this year.

On the same day, Mr. Joseph Y. Yun also met with Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy and Finance H.E. Keat Chhon. According to CambodiaUN News.

And based on Reuters, US President Barack Obama will visit Cambodia on 18 November 2012. And according to Reuters as well, Mr.President also plans to visit Myanmar on 19 November 2012.
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Special ASEAN Senior Officials’ Meeting (Special ASEAN SOM) for the Preparations for the 21st ASEAN Summit and Related Summits

Special ASEAN Senior Officials’ Meeting (Special ASEAN SOM) for the Preparations for the 21st ASEAN Summit and Related Summits

Phnom Penh, 23 October 2012

Under Cambodia’s ASEAN Chairmanship, on 22-23 October 2012, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation of the Kingdom of Cambodia convened the Special ASEAN Senior Officials’ Meeting (Special ASEAN SOM) for the Preparations for the 21st ASEAN Summit and Related Summits.

Delegations from all ASEAN Member States, and the ASEAN Secretariat attended the Meeting.

The Meeting discussed the preparations for the 21st ASEAN Summit and Related Summits, including deliberations on Summit-related documents, such as the draft Phnom Penh Statement on the Adoption of the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration, draft ASEAN Leaders’ Joint Statement on the Establishment of the ASEAN Regional Mine Action Centre, draft Bali Concord III Plan of Action, draft Joint Statement of the Heads of State/Government of the ASEAN Member States and the People’s Republic of China on the 10th Anniversary of DOC, draft Joint Statement of the 4th ASEAN-US Leaders’ Meeting, draft ASEAN Plus Three Leaders’ Joint Statement on the Commemoration of the 15th Anniversary of ASEAN Plus Three Cooperation, draft Leaders’ Statement on ASEAN Plus Three Partners on Connectivity, draft Phnom Penh Declaration on East Asia Summit Development Initiative, and draft Declaration of the 7th East Asia Summit on Resistance to Antimalarial Medicines.

In addition, while exchanging views on regional and international issues, the Meeting touched on the Zero Draft of the Regional Code of Conduct in the South China Sea (COC).

Source: ASEAN2012
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CamBriefNews: Hun Sen's ex bodyguard and three others confess crime

Written By visalittleboy on Sunday 8 July 2012 | 04:03

Hun Sen's ex bodyguard and three others confess crime

Yesterday's trial of former Hun Sen assistant Bun Sokha and his three accomplices saw all four confess to brutally beating four victims in a Koh Kong hotel, an incident that was captured on security camera and uploaded to YouTube, NGO officials attending the trial said.

Sokha, 38, the former deputy chief of staff of the prime minister’s bodyguard unit; his bodyguards, Sum Veasna, 37, and Meng Chheangly, 21; and driver Sum Chhaya, 25, admitted their guilt, but Koh Kong Provincial Court judge Huon Many did not render a verdict, saying it would be announced at a later date.

“The four accused accepted what they did wrong and asked for a reduced sentence,” In Kongchit, provincial co-ordinator for the rights group Licadho, said.

“Bun Sokha accepted the charges and told the judge that [he acted] because of his anger when a victim knocked on his door at the hotel. He feared the victim had bad intentions with his wife.”
>>> Read more>>> PhnomPenhPost: Friday, 06 July 2012 by Chhay Channyda
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CAMBriefNews: Kingdom to host ninth ASEAN defence meet

Written By visalittleboy on Thursday 15 March 2012 | 21:54

Cambodia's Defence Ministry is scheduled to hold the ninth ASEAN Chief of Defence Forces Informal Meeting in the capital from March 28 to 30.

The meeting aims to serve as a regional platform for defence forces from across Southeast Asia to discuss cooperative mechanisms to respond to regional challenges of defence and security.

Eth Sarath, deputy chief of defence for RCAF, said yesterday Brunei, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Myanmar and Vietnam would send representatives to the meeting. Source: PPPost
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CAMBriefNews: Agreement on border reached

Cambodia and Vietnam signed a letter of agreement yesterday for the completion of 70 per cent of soon-to-be-placed demarcating markers along their 1,270-kilometre shared border.

The agreement, signed by the head of Cambodia’s border affairs, Var Kim Hong, and the Vietnamese deputy of foreign affairs, Ho Xaun Son, stipulates that the countries will split the cost of markers and the cost of new mapping along the border.

“There is equality in the agreement regarding the construction of markers and air-mapping. The demarcating of the border of the two countries is expected to be completed this year,” Var Kim Hong said.

Ho Xaun Son said yesterday the demarcation of the border was in line with international laws as well border treaties of 1985 and 2005.

But opposition Sam Rainsy Pary spokesman Yim Sovann said the agreement seriously undermined the constitution of Cambodia.

“We have never acknowledged these treaties, and there is no legal standing,” he said. Source: PPPost
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CAMBriefNews: A Hard Lesson in Arithmetic

When Reaksmey (not his real name) was in high school two years ago, he and his classmates were urged to attend the supplementary classes taught by their teachers before and after regular school hours.

For an hour before school and two to three hours after each day, students paid teachers by the hour to attend. And while not stated in so many words, students knew attendance was all but compulsory if they intended to succeed.

“The teachers added more marks for students who took extra lessons if they only needed 10 or 20 more marks to pass the exam,” he said. “Most of the questions that appeared for exams also came from the exercises set during extra lessons.”

His younger sister, 14, now in grade eight at his alma mater, spends about 100,000 riel (US$25) per month for the extra lessons she attends for five subjects. She cited similar motivations for attending – preferential treatment from her teachers and guaranteed top-ups for exam results.

“Extra classes have become common throughout the country and everyone hears about it,” said chairman of Bridges Across Borders’ education technical team Sovoeurn Sou, who agreed that the classes are “more or less compulsory”.

Though the lessons have long been a feature of the public school system, teachers interviewed still declined to be named for fear of reflecting poorly on their schools.

“The teachers need more money, so they force the children to study,” an English teacher at a high school in Sen Sok commune summed up.

Less than 10 per cent of Cambodia’s state budget for 2012 has been set aside for education – US$251 million out of $2.7 billion. Public school teachers’ salaries are correspondingly low. The average salary of a secondary school teacher is $80 to $90 a month, while the better-qualified high school teachers take home closer to US$150.

One hour of extra lessons per student earned teachers about 1000 riel, teachers interviewed said, and with a class of at least 30 students attending one hour a day, teachers teaching one subject can earn an extra $45 a week. Most teach two subjects.

Students attended extra lessons for three to four subjects a day, one hour per subject, and forked out about $6 a week for the privilege, teachers and students said.

The means of ensuring that their students turn up for extra study sessions, as per Reaksmey’s and his sister’s experien-ces, are subtle but effective.

Teachers deduct from the grades of those who do not attend, said the English teacher, and humiliate them by asking them questions they do not know how to answer.

“The teacher, for examination, will put the very difficult question. The one who has gone to extra classes will know the answer. The one who does not go will not know the answer.”

The pressure of being forced to attend these classes can in itself be detrimental to students’ well-being, said Sovoeurn Sou.

“It affects students’ mindset that the teacher is teaching them to do things through force,” he said.

In addition to emotional trauma and lower grades, a more troubling issue is the ineffective use of curriculum time in an education system already plagued with subpar material and standards.

One CARE staffer, who also declined to be named, said teachers often save their best material and efforts for the extra sessions to compel students to attend. “This is harmful for students, especially for those who are still young. It takes a lot of energy to study for extra hours,” she said.

The practice starts young indeed, with students in primary school forced to stay back for one hour and the numbers gradually increasing to about four hours in high school. While these supplementary lessons for secondary and high school students have long been around, it was only in the past five years or so that primary school students were also included, said a mathematics teacher at a Chamkarmon district high school.

Bouy Bunna, consultant at the Ministry of Education, refused to comment on the practice directly, only saying that the ministry did not have a policy of teachers forcing students to pay for extra lessons.

However, he added that teachers and students can make arrangements outside of school hours if students need extra lessons. “The teachers cannot force the students to give them money for extra lesson, but if the students want to learn more ... they can give the money to their teachers.”

School principals are also aware of the practice, with the mathematics teacher saying that his school’s principal allows teachers to conduct their extra lessons on school grounds.

Parents, for the most part, are resigned to the practice, teachers say, as they are aware of the low salaries teachers receive.

However, students from poorer families are sometimes put at a disadvantage, when teachers refuse to allow those who cannot pay to attend the classes, said the CARE staffer.

According to the English teacher, forcing extra lessons on students is not a practice that sits well with his colleagues.

“The teachers themselves do not want to do it. They say, ‘If I had more salary, I would stop’,” he said with a shrug. Source: PPPost
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CAMBriefNews: Women urged to run in elections

Written By visalittleboy on Thursday 1 March 2012 | 20:19

Women urged to run in elections

Women were urged yesterday to take a more active role in politics by running in upcoming commune elections.

A group of 12 NGOs that comprise the Committee to Promote Women in Politics encouraged women to take part in this year’s third mandate of the commune council elections – due to be held on June 3 – in a bid to secure 25 per cent female representation in commune councils by 2015.

Koul Panha, executive director of the Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia, said the 2012 elections were an important step in achieving the 25 per cent goal by 2015.

“There are still fewer women in politics, especially at commune level because they fear being threatened, they fear violence and they see a lack of balance between the ruling party and opposition,” Koul Panha said...By: PPPost
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CAMBriefNews: Cambodia telco growth in 3G

CAMBriefNews: Cambodia telco growth in 3G

Despite the hype surrounding the advent of fourth-generation mobile services, the bulk of growth and profits in Cambodian telecom remains in 3G networks, experts say.

A recent study by London-based research firm Ovum notes that emerging markets such as Cambodia will see rapid growth in 3G this year as providers become more reliant on 3G revenues.

“Mobile broadband growth will be the biggest opportunity for emerging market operators in 2012 . . . operators across all emerging markets will experience strong data connection and revenue growth in 2012 as users look to gain access to data services, the internet and mobile content and applications,” the report says.

The resulting gains in revenue will also become a more important measure of overall growth this year, Ovum says, moving Cambodian operators away from what have been much-disputed subscriber numbers.

The number of Cambodian mobile subscribers surpassed the country’s total population of about 14.5 million in November, according to data obtained earlier this month by the Post. Insiders, however, estimate the number at between six and seven million.

Mobile profits are alleged to be scarce in the Kingdom, if collected at all, although official data is not available.

3G was the fastest growing market in Cambodia in 2011, and the trend was set to continue this year, Mobitel chief operating officer Kay Lot said.

Voice services were still a big contributor to revenues, however, he said.

“Voice will continue to dominate for a couple of years, but as far as growth is concerned, data services will grow faster. The past 18 month have seen considerable growth in data.”

The average revenue generated per 3G user was significantly higher compared to voice subscribers, Smart Mobile CEO Thomas Hundt said this week.

The relatively high price of fixed-line internet connections and internet service protocols were driving demand for 3G in Cambodia, as the service had become available in almost every province, he said.

“Mobile internet . . . in Cambodia has far outpaced all other ways to connect to the internet,” Hundt said.

He said 20 per cent of Smart users subscribed to mobile services.

Other industry insiders have put the figure as high as 30 per cent.

The decline in smartphone prices has further driven demand for mobile internet in emerging markets, the Ovum report says.

Smartphone makers in Phnom Penh confirmed the increase in domestic sales.

Sales for Chinese brand ZTE smartphones increased by about 60 per cent last year, according to data provided by ZTE HK Cambodia.

The company attributed the climb in demand for smartphones to a drop in prices in 2011, as well as an increase in device capability.

The value of LG smartphone sales increased 30 per cent in Cambodia in 2011 compared to the year before, LG Cambodia representative Hor Hab said.

“More and more people, especially young professionals, are demanding data [services], mobile internet on the go . . . and the cost of mobile internet is getting more affordable,” he said. Although the price of 3G-capable phones had continued to fall, affordability in Cambodia’s rural market would challenge mobile internet growth this year, Hundt said.

About 80 per cent of Cambodia's population lives in rural areas, with the country’s per capita income about US$900 in 2011, according to estimates from the Ministry of Economy and Finance.

The Ovum report notes that many emerging market operators will begin to assess the market for fourth-generation services, which will provide a considerable increase in bandwidth to subscribers.

Few companies, however, will launch 4G networks, the report says.

During 2011, Cambodian mobile users heard claims for 4G service, but analysts have said domestic companies don’t yet have the technology to hit true 4G speeds.

By: PPPost
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