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Only one of expected three refugees arrives

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Refugees from Nauru arrive at Phnom Penh’s airport last year. Pha Lina

Erin Handley, The Phnom Penh Post
Wed, 9 November 2016

Only one of an expected three refugees based on Australia’s offshore detention centre on the island of Nauru arrived in Cambodia on Sunday, officials confirmed yesterday in the wake of conflicting reports.

The man, a refugee from Syria, touched down alone after Australian officials informed Cambodian authorities that the two others – reported to be an Afghan and Pakistani – would not be on the flight, refugee department director Tan Sovichea said.

“At first there were three volunteers to come, then the day that they were due to fly, we were told ‘not this time’,” Sovichea said. He did not know the reasons for their decision, but said they may still choose to come to Cambodia at a later date.

Sovichea added that the family of the refugee, who was previously reported to be Sri Lankan but is in fact from Syria, were welcome to visit and apply to stay permanently, but said the Kingdom “doesn’t have a law for the family reunion of refugees”.

The Syrian is the sixth refugee to take up the Cambodian option under the controversial A$40 million aid pact inked in 2014, but of his five predecessors, only one has remained.

The news comes in the wake of Australia’s opposition party declaring it would oppose the government’s proposed lifetime ban for refugees who try to reach Australia by boat, and Immigration Minister Peter Dutton promising to release details on a plan to resettle 700 refugees in a third country soon.

Government needs $620M to cope with climate: org

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Touch Sokha, The Phnom Penh Post
Wed, 9 November 2016

Cambodian ministries are currently facing a $620 million funding shortfall if they are to implement their climate change adaption action plans by 2018, according to figures announced by NGO Forum at a press conference yesterday.

Fifteen ministries shared their action plans and funding requirements with NGO Forum researcher Long Sona, who reported that, collectively, their total funding needs were $865 million, of which just $245 million is currently available.

Of the 15 ministries surveyed, just two – the Ministry of Rural Development and the Ministry of Handicrafts – reported having received full funding for their action plans.

Khieu Borin, general director of the Environment Ministry’s department dealing with grassroots communities, said that while he did not have precise figures, he was certain his ministry – which reported a 30 percent climate change funding deficit – was in need of extra funding.

NGO Forum’s Sona urged ministries to seek grants from external partners, but not to become reliant on donor funding. “For our long-term goals, we have to urge the government to assign funds from the national budget for this project,” Sona said.

NGO Forum Executive Director Tek Vannara urged those present to take action, saying that climate change has become a serious issue in Cambodia over the past two years, with 1.7 million Cambodians facing flooding annually.

“Cambodia will be [further] affected by climate change. Strong winds and rains are going to occur often, so climate change is a challenge . . . that threatens both social and economic development,” Vannara said.

Black Monday No. 27, by KVD in Remembering H.E. Pen Sovann and a vote registration reminding for people in Cambodia

From government lips to Fresh News’s readers

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Staffers working at the Fresh News offices in September. Google maps / mengkong & sovann

Alex Willemyns and Mech Dara
The Phnom Penh Post, Wed, 9 November 2016

It's hard to avoid Fresh News these days. From last year’s major breaking news about the arrest warrant for opposition leader Sam Rainsy to its daily exclusives on new government orders, the site has for all intents and purposes evolved into the state’s unofficial news agency over the past two years.

Almost no one else breaks major government news anymore, and no other outlet can boast the same sources inside the government. The site posts almost 100 articles a day, many simply verbatim ministerial decrees published without commentary or hints about sourcing.

Prime Minister Hun Sen has also routinely praised Fresh News, which began its life as a barebones smartphone app in May 2014, for its speed and the tenor of its articles, and has more than once granted the outlet exclusive interviews – a rarity for the premier since the late 1990s.

Yet with access comes constraints, and any readers who restricted their news consumption to Fresh News would likely come away with a perspective about government officials and the opposition party peculiarly similar to that promoted by the Cambodian People’s Party.

“Fresh News is a CPP-aligned news service, so they don’t have freedom to report about sensitive issues of the government. They can only act as the mouthpiece of the government and the powerful people,” said Sun Narin, a former manager at VOD Hot News, a competitor.

Narin, who now runs the Phnom Penh Today site, said that while Fresh News had earned its reputation as the best source of state releases, its fawning over the CPP and attempts to promote scandals about the opposition left some questioning the site’s motives.

“People don’t trust that news service when it comes to political issues,” Narin said, explaining that he believed Fresh News was more interested in keeping its powerful sources happy than its readers informed. “This is contradictory to ethical journalism.”

Indeed, the site’s coverage of government officials and Hun Sen’s family tends to focus on their efforts to travel around the country and resolve crises, with coverage of opposition officials painting them as criminals and sexual deviants intent on tricking the people.

In the past week, its coverage of the CPP has included stories titled: Hun Many visits 153 families in Baseth district who were victim to violent winds, Hun Manet: ‘The reform of the education sector in Cambodia has made students strive to learn well’, and Cambodian citizens in Korea support and thank the Cambodian government, which always thinks about the wellbeing of those who migrate.

Its coverage in that time about the Cambodia National Rescue Party, meanwhile, has focused on aggressive pieces about late former prime minister Pen Sovann, including one titled: Reader’s view – the opposition is politically exploiting Pen Sovann’s corpse.

Another article, which was pinned to the top of the website for an entire day, quoted an anonymous Facebook page that accused the former premier – who became an opposition lawmaker at the 2013 election – of being a pedophile who had died because of his sexual activities.

“Pen Sovann fell into sickness and died because he had many women and young girls,” Fresh News quoted the anonymous page as saying, accusing the 80-year-old of being mostly fond of “the young girls who worked as his servants, as well as many more massage girls”.

In July, Fresh News also published a letter describing the Phnom Penh Post and the Cambodia Daily as foreigners “plunging Cambodians into a bonfire of war” after the two papers – unlike Fresh News – reported on a Global Witness report detailing Hun Sen’s family’s business empire. It was accompanied by repurposed Nazi propaganda showing the papers decapitating Cambodia.

Four months before, it had become the main news site pushing out dozens of recordings allegedly of deputy opposition Kem Sokha’s talking to mistresses on the phone – an issue aggressively pursued by the government until Sokha was sentenced to five months in jail two months ago for failing to appear for summonses related to the case.

Yet the site’s desire to defend the ruling party is in many ways a strange turn given the history of its co-founders, one of whom was a founder of the country’s last remaining opposition newspaper – Moneaksekar Khmer – until it folded two years ago. Soy Sopheap – now a known “fixer” for Hun Sen – has for the past 10 years also run the Deum Ampil site, where Fresh News’s other co-founder, Lim Cheavutha, served as website manager until he had the idea to launch a smartphone news app.

The pair launched Fresh News as an app for Android phones in May 2014, later expanding to Apple iOS phones. However, last November, after another news outlet described Sopheap as the “owner” of Fresh News, Cheavutha expelled Sopheap from the site. The pair have not spoken since.

“I don’t leave from someone, but if they leave, I don’t chase after them,” Sopheap said of his expulsion in an interview last week, before declining to comment any further about Cheavutha. “I don’t want to say anything bad,” he said.

Yet Sopheap, who says that he remains close to Hun Sen, said his philosophy at Fresh News and Deum Ampil was always to not shy away from claims he was biased toward the government.

“I never argue with people when they say I am pro-CPP or pro-government or pro-Hun Sen. I say that they are right,” Sopheap said. He added that his news supported the CPP over the CNRP because the party has more seats in the National Assembly.

“It’s because I support them that I have freedom to write what I want,” he continued. “I never criticise government policy – I support Hun Sen, so that means I support government policy and I just criticise the individuals. This is the role of journalists.”

“I criticise the individuals who do not abide by government policy,” he added. “That is why Hun Sen supports me – because I dare to criticise individuals.”

Cheavutha declined to comment on the reasons for Sopheap’s expulsion but maintained that his site had always maintained independence from the CPP.

“I would like to give no comment about this issue,” Cheavutha said of Sopheap, before describing Fresh News as both financially and editorially independent.

“We are 100 percent independent, because we are a private institution and we survive completely on advertising, and do not rely on any officials. We feed our staff, provide their salaries and run as a business.”

Cheavutha added there was no secret to how Fresh News had monopolised breaking news about the government since its launch two and half years ago. “To receive good news, we keep good sources,” he said.

Moeun Chhean Nariddh, director of the Cambodian Institute for Media Studies, said he did not think it was necessarily a bad thing that Fresh News had grown so close to the government, with the site becoming important for independent news outlets.

“After Fresh News gets the documents from the government, independent media outlets like the Phnom Penh Post or Radio Free Asia or Voice of Democracy can focus on the other side of the story,” said Chhean Nariddh. “So Fresh News fills a gap.”

He said an awareness had likely developed among many CPP officials that they could provide scoops to Fresh News without risking critical inquiry.

“Their editor has a relationship with the ruling party politicians,” he explained. “Sometimes they do not know if it is safe to release their information to journalists, but they seem to feel that their information is in safe hands if it is released to Fresh News.”

CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said the ruling party indeed appreciated the emergence of Fresh News over the past two years, but said that any criticism of the bent of their coverage was undeserved. “It is their individual rights as citizens,” Eysan said, adding that political bias in media was often in the eye of the beholder. “I have the view that the Phnom Penh Post is not independent,” he said.

2,759,760 citizens have yet registered to vote, 21 days left

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6,904,456 people registered to vote as of NOV 07



ប្រជារាស្ដ្រចំនួន ២.៧៥៩.៧៦០រូប នៅមិនទាន់ចុះឈ្មោះបោះឆ្នោតនៅឡើយ ហើយនៅសល់តែ ២១ថ្ងៃទៀតប៉ុណ្ណោះ។ ប្រជារាស្ដ្រចំនួន ១៣១.៤១៧រូបត្រូវទៅចុះឈ្មោះបោះឆ្នោតនៅរៀងរាល់ថ្ងៃ គ្រប់២១ថ្ងៃ ទើបគ្រប់ចំនួននេះ។

2,759,760 people have yet to register to vote and there are 21 days left. It would take 131,417 citizens to register to vote on a daily basis to meet these marks.
សេចក្ដីប្រកាសព័ត៌មាន៖ លទ្ធផលបណ្តោះអាសន្ននៃការចុះឈ្មោះបោះឆ្នោត ដើម្បីរៀបចំបញ្ជីបោះឆ្នោតថ្មី ឆ្នាំ២០១៦ ពីថ្ងៃទី០១ ខែកញ្ញា ដល់ ថ្ងៃទី០៧ ខែវិច្ឆិកា ឆ្នាំ២០១៦
6,904,456 people registered to vote as of November 7, 2016 and the voter registration started on September 1 and last through November 29.

9,664,216 people are eligible to register to vote.
Cambodia has a population of 15,721,366 citizens. Nationwide has 1,633 communes.
Data derived from NEC

Judge rejects Rainsy’s claim that Hun Sen bought Facebook 'likes'

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CPP social media official Som Soeun exits the Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday after winning a defamation case against opposition leader Sam Rainsy. Niem Chheng

Niem Chheng, The Phnom Penh Post
Wed, 9 November 2016

The Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday found Cambodian National Rescue Party president Sam Rainsy guilty of defamation for claiming Prime Minister Hun Sen and his social media team artificially bolstered the premier’s “likes” on Facebook.

Rainsy was convicted of defaming Som Soeun, a CPP official attached to the prime minister, by accusing him of ordering CPP members and state employees to create “fake accounts” to like the premier in a Facebook post on March 9.

The complaint also concerned Rainsy’s accusations that Hun Sen had purchased “likes” from “click farms”, operations in which low-paid workers create fake accounts to help bolster likes, followers and views on social media profiles.

Presiding judge Im Vannak said the “ill-minded” opposition leader, who fled abroad last year to avoid arrest in a separate case, had damaged Soeun’s dignity and confused the public.

“The fault cannot be excused, because the accused is an adult, a politician, and he has not been deterred,” said Vannak, who ordered Rainsy pay Soeun $3,750 in compensation and pay an additional $2,500 to the state in fines.

In a seemingly unprecedented ruling, Vannak also ordered that the decision be broadcast via local media for three days, but did not explain how such an order would be enforced.

The incriminating post by Rainsy highlighted a Post story in March that revealed that 80 per cent of the premier’s Facebook “likes” in the preceding month had originated abroad, with the CNRP president alleging the followers had been bought from “click farms”.

Alongside this, Rainsy published a set of instructions from Soeun directing CPP members to promote the premier’s Facebook page at “all meetings”, ensure all members “like” his page and “unlike” Rainsy’s page, and to organise “technical working groups” to create accounts to “like” Hun Sen.

The opposition leader said the instructions showed the CPP was pushing its “officials, supporters and networks – including civil servants, policemen and soldiers” to create “fake accounts” to bolster the premier’s Facebook popularity.

During the hearing, Soeun acknowledged he had issued the directive for CPP members to encourage them to follow the premier’s page. However, he said he took issue with Rainsy’s “exaggeration” that the instructions amounted to creating “fake accounts” and applied to civil servants, police and soldiers.

Soeun also said he was compelled to complain because of the click farm remarks.

“What he said affected the dignity of Samdech Techo [Hun Sen] and . . . my dignity,” he said.

Rainsy’s defence lawyer, Sam Sokong, however, questioned whether any real damage could be attributed to Rainsy’s post, noting his client’s right to freedom of expression.

“There is no harm to the victim,” said Sokong, who later flagged his intention to appeal.

Meanwhile, Rainsy yesterday said that he stood by his posts.

“Prime Minister Hun Sen has been manipulating Facebook figures in order to boast about his (apparently impressive but fake) popularity, which he uses as a political justification to legitimise the ongoing violent crackdown on his more and more numerous critics,” he wrote.

ASEAN’s Mekong Potential the Focus in Vietnam Meeting

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Cambodia will provide duty-free access to 29 Vietnamese products. It remains unclear as to the specific Vietnamese products that will enjoy this preferential duty. In 2015, trade between Cambodia and Vietnam surpassed $3 billion, falling short of the targeted $5 billion.
The recent WEF-Mekong meeting in Hanoi was a useful reminder of the subregion’s significance.
Image Credit: Flickr/Adrian Zwegers
The Diplomat, by Ling Han, November 9, 2016

Political and businesses leaders converged in Hanoi late last month as Vietnam played host to the World Economic Forum on the Mekong Region. Held October 24-27 in Hanoi, the Forum aims to enhance cooperation among leading firms in the region, thereby attracting capital for infrastructure development and to enhance connectivity along the Mekong River, one of the world’s largest and longest rivers. A stock take of the past week reveals a relatively bountiful harvest.

Greater cooperation between countries in the Mekong region is in the works. Laos and Vietnam announced plans to build a highway connecting their two capitals Vientiane and Hanoi. This highway will facilitate trade between the two countries that are chiefly dependent on the road network as the main mode of transportation.

Cambodia and Vietnam also signed an agreement to lower trade tariffs. This was inked on the sidelines of the ongoing ASEAN Summit in Hanoi, in an effort to boost trade volume between the two countries. Thirty-nine Cambodian products will enjoy duty-free access into Vietnam’s markets, including 300,000 tons of rice and 3,000 tons of dried tobacco. In return, Cambodia will provide duty-free access to 29 Vietnamese products. It remains unclear as to the specific Vietnamese products that will enjoy this preferential duty. In 2015, trade between Cambodia and Vietnam surpassed $3 billion, falling short of the targeted $5 billion.

With substantial natural resources and a population of 240 million, the Mekong region holds much potential. While these projects are a step in the right direction, it remains to be seen if the respective governments can implement these changes sufficiently quickly to ride the wave of development.

There were also implications for the wider ASEAN region as well. For instance, WEF-Mekong witnessed the launch of the ASEAN Regional Business Council. Comprising of 25 ASEAN firms and 30 global companies, this Regional Business Council aims to boost public-private partnerships in issues facing Southeast Asia. Infrastructure building, facilitating cross-border trade and investment and promoting the digital economy will be key areas of focus.

According to CIMB chief Nazir Razak, who will also head the Council, a strategic infrastructure program that promotes the concept of ‘blended finance’ will be launched in 2017. Big regional players such as Malaysia’s AirAsia, Vietnam’s VinaCapital Group, Thailand’s PTT Public Company and Philippine’s SM Investments Corporations are represented in the Council.

As these ASEAN-wide initiatives take off, the WEF-Mekong meeting was a useful reminder that the Mekong will be a big and growing part of that story.

យួននៅស្រុកខ្មែរ សល់ពីជំនាន់បារាំង?


Six decades later, RCAF playing a familiar tune

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Minister of Defence Tea Banh arrives at a celebration of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces’ 63rd anniversary yesterday. Heng Chivoan

Mech Dara and Shaun Turton
The Phnom Penh Post, Wed, 9 November 2016

Marking the 63rd anniversary of Cambodia’s armed forces, Defence Minister Tea Banh yesterday called on troops to protect the country from “colour revolutions” and “social turmoil”, a by-now familiar refrain that may say as much about Cambodia’s military history as its political present.

Speaking at the Ministry of Defence, Banh told top military brass and officials that the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces must “work with relevant authorities to protect security, public stability, prevent social turmoil and colour revolutions and strengthen democracy”.

Though the minister said the military’s role was to protect the “legitimate government”, his evocation of internal threats to the country appeared, yet again, a thinly veiled message to political opponents of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party.

The remarks echo hostile comments made by several RCAF generals in recent months, which have been largely directed at the opposition party. But while routinely condemned, partisanship is nothing new to Cambodia’s military, with researchers recently drawing a throughline from RCAF’s birth following the country’s independence from France in 1953, to its current senior leadership, derived largely from the Vietnamese-installed regime that toppled the Khmer Rouge in 1979.

In a paper released last year, academics Paul Chambers and Kevin Nauen argued that while 1953 and 1979 mark critical junctures in changes of power over security forces, the underlying pattern of the military’s subserviance to an authoritian leader has remained largely intact.

“Cambodian militaries have tended to be much more loyal to dominant political parties (and their leaders) than to the country as a whole,” the pair write of the armed forces under then-King Norodom Sihanouk, Khmer Republic prime minister Lon Nol, Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot and current Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Today, RCAF’s senior generals hold senior positions within the ruling CPP. Banh is a CPP standing committee member, as is RCAF Commander-in-Chief Pol Saroeun and powerful RCAF Deputy Commander-in-Chief Kun Kim.

And though their party positions are well known, their recent embrace of social media has allowed the broader public to see first hand the top generals’ dual roles, particularly when it comes to contributing to CPP “working groups”, which aim to rouse popular support, largely by delivering infrastructure projects on behalf of the party.

On July 3, Kun Kim, a four-star general, uploaded pictures of himself leading a working group meeting in Oddar Meanchey, while in the same month, Pol Saroeun, backdropped by a CPP logo, addressed members of his ruling party working group in Preah Sihanouk province.

Banh, a leader in the Siem Reap provincial working group, meanwhile, uploaded pictures on his Facebook page in March of him attending the opening of a new CPP building in the province, clad in a white CPP baseball cap.

Nauen, a senior research fellow at the Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, said for senior military figures, military and party roles were likely conflated. “It’s important to recognise that the party sees itself as the defender of the nation, the saviour of the nation, so I think in their minds, there are no inconsistencies between the [military and party] roles,” Nauen said.

អ្នក​នយោបាយ​និង​ពលរដ្ឋ​ខ្មែរ​ចាប់​អារម្មណ៍​ពី​ការ​បោះឆ្នោត​នៅ​សហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក

សម្ភាស​ លោក​ យឹម សុវណ្ណ ​ទាក់ទង​ជំនួប​លោក ហ៊ុន សែន

Callous thief stoops to rock-bottom methods

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Post Staff, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

It seems that thieves are up to some new tricks, as demonstrated in a case in the capital’s Tuol Kork district on Sunday.

A conniving crook decided to lay rocks along a path under the Stung Meanchey sky bridge along Street 271, deliberately tripping up a 26-year-old motorcyclist who was passing by and causing him to fall off his bike.

Just then, the lurking looter approached the man on the pretext of helping him, only to push him away and take the vehicle. The betrayed biker has informed police.

Nokorwat

Income-tax threshold to rise

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Garment workers produce shirts at a factory in Takhmao, Kandal province, in 2014. Scott Howes

Kali Kotoski, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

Cambodia workers, especially those in the garment industry or employed by the government, can expect a little extra cash on hand next year as the National Assembly reviews draft legislation that would raise the lowest taxable income threshold from $200 to $250.

Mey Vann, director of the financial industry department at the Ministry of Economy and Finance, said the proposed tax amendment – expected to pass and come into effect in January – is necessary to close the gap between low-income and high-income earners.

“The tax amendment is aimed to incorporate a policy that balances different income levels,” he said. “The increase from $200 to $250 will mostly affect the lowest salary earners like government employees and garment workers, so we decided to amend the tax so that they can avoid being taxed.”

Clint O’Connell, head of Cambodia Tax Practice for foreign investment advisory and tax firm DFDL, explained that under current law, taxable income kicks in for anyone earning over $200 a month at 5 percent. The amendment would raise this threshold to $250, while pushing the top of the income tier to around $375, from $312.

While raising the higher threshold will likely put a small dent in the government’s coffers and operating flow, he said that the reform should “provide some additional breathing space” for Cambodians on the lower side of the income spectrum.

“The increase in the tax band effectively results in workers who earn $250 per month receiving an additional $2.50 in the hand that would have otherwise been paid by their employers to the tax authorities as tax on salary,” he said.

Coupled with the General Department of Taxation’s announcement in October that the fringe benefit tax – part of an employer’s monthly salary tax obligation – would be reduced from 20 percent to zero across all industries, O’Connell believes this “should encourage increased compliance for those employers who are transitioning into the formal regime of taxation”.

While an extra $2.50 per month may not seem like much, Michael Gordon, a partner at tax firm KPMG Cambodia, said that any benefit given to low-income earners was a progressive step. “Any move to decrease the tax burden at the lower levels is welcomed,” he said.

“Increasing the levels of salary before tax is applicable is a welcome move.”

This will be the second time in the last two years that the government has raised the tax threshold for low-income workers. The move is seen as complementary to hikes in the minimum wage, which was raised to $153 a month in September, and increased basic living costs.

Rath Minea, acting president of the National Independent Federation Textile Union of Cambodia (NIFTUC), said the proposed increase in the salary tax threshold was a welcomed reform, especially as many garment workers effectively earn more than the minimum wage when overtime pay is factored in.

He said even small increases in worker hours could easily have tipped them into the $200 a month tax band.

“Even though the tax break is small, maybe only $1 or $2, it is necessary for workers to receive this extra income,” he said.

Additional reporting by Hor Kimsay

Holiday break begins badly with busted bus

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Post Staff, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

Twenty five frantic Chinese tourists bolted out of a tour bus after it started emitting fumes in the capital’s Chroy Changvar district yesterday.

The bus was headed towards Siem Reap when bellowing clouds of smoke were seen coming out from the vehicle’s exhaust, prompting the observant driver to pull over and inspect the engine.

The perturbed – but thankfully unscathed – passengers waited for several hours for a new bus to resume their journey.

Nokorwat

Potential customers to flood in for Water Festival

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People walk past stalls set up during the 2014 Water Festival in Phnom Penh. Vireak Mai

Cheng Sokhorng, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

Business are gearing up for the annual Water Festival, hoping to maximise their advertising exposure with campaigns and events aimed at the 2 million visitors expected to descend on the capital’s riverside area for the three-day event that starts on Sunday.

Mean Chanyada, spokesman for Phnom Penh City Hall, said five locations are being prepared for concerts and entertainment during the Water Festival. The government will organise events at some of these locations, while others will be arranged by the private sector, including Hong Meas, Bayon, Ganzberg and Leo.

“We expect everybody in the country will enjoy the Water Festival, so it is a good opportunity for business vendors to generate income,” he said.

The Water Festival is a traditional event that marks the end of the rainy season and the reversing course of the Tonle Sap river. Festivities were cancelled for three years after a stampede on a bridge packed with revellers in 2010 killed more than 350 people. The festival returned to the capital in 2014, though last year’s celebrations did not include its main event, traditional boat races, which dampened its numbers.

This year will see a full-scale celebration in Phnom Penh, offering businesses a prime opportunity for sales and advertising. However, profits have not always come easy.

Khieu Cany, chairman of PTG International Co Ltd, which provides space for companies to exhibit during the festival, said the event has often fallen short of expectation. He said his company lost money during the 2014 festival, and opted out of the 2015 celebrations after the boat races were cancelled.

“We experienced losses during previous years because of a shortage of visitors and difficulty renting out our booths,” he said. Cany said PTG was ready “to take a chance again” for this year’s event, and has sunk nearly $40,000 into preparations. The company plans to erect between 50 and 100 vendor booths near one of the key entertainment venues in Wat Bottom Park.

“This is our last chance to try this event. If we get a negative result, we’ll give up next year,” Cany said.

Yet so far, the response has been promising.

A total of 50 booths have already been booked, while Cambrew, the producer of Angkor beer, has rented nearly a third of the space for events.

Phoung Kim Vannak, sales and marketing director of Honly Food and Beverage, said the Water Festival was an ideal platform for advertising as millions of visitors circulate through a limited number of venues. If his company can reach even a fraction of these visitors, it would be well worth the effort.

He said Honly will use the festival as a platform to introduce potential customers to its products, which have only been in the local market since 2015.

“The main target in the festival is advertising our new beverage brands, and it’s a good chance for visitors to sample the flavour of our products,” he said.

“After the event, [we hope] they will go to a branch to buy our products.”

Prum Yuthen, event manager for Ganzberg beer, one of the festival’s main organisers, said the company was not looking at the event purely from a sales standpoint.

“Ganzberg is joining this event not only to make profit, but because we want to offer our customers entertainment and let them enjoy drinking fresh German beer that is different from the regular beer.”

City bans construction, trucks for Water Festival

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Thousands of people crowd Phnom Penh’s riverside to watch traditional boat races during Water Festival celebrations in 2014. Vireak Mai

Kong Meta, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

Phnom Penh Governor Pa Socheatvong yesterday issued a statement demanding a complete moratorium on construction projects and banning large trucks from November 12-16 for the Water Festival.

“We are going to ban any truck transporting goods as well as buses, cement trucks and any construction site from operating,” the statement reads.

The formal letter follows a declaration posted on Socheatvong’s Facebook page on Tuesday. Both statements said the measure was meant to “ease traffic congestion” during the festival.

“It is a serious prohibition during these days to not allow any big trucks or construction,” city official Chum Bunthoeun said.

Bunthoeun said local authorities are responsible for enforcing the moratorium.

Prum Samkhan, Chamkarmon district governor, said he didn’t think the stoppage would affect businesses negatively because people will not be working anyway.

“We received the information from the Phnom Penh governor, but I have not disseminated it to every commune yet,” Samkhan said.

When asked how violators will be punished, Samkhan said “we will see”.

Man screwed over by thieves in Pursat

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Post Staff, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

A man may be questioning his trusting instincts after being hoodwinked by two thieves in Pursat province on Tuesday.

The delinquent duo had stationed themselves along a bridge and approached the man as he passed by, asking if they could borrow a screwdriver to fix their motorbike.

When the victim dismounted to take a look at the swindlers’ motorbike, they whipped out a gun and took off with his moto. The betrayed bloke has filed a police complaint.

Fresh News

Official bats away Union Law concerns

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Demonstrators hold signs opposing the trade union law at a protest outside the National Assembly in Phnom Penh earlier this year. Hong Menea

Bun Sengkong, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

Labour Ministry spokesman Heng Sour in a radio interview on Tuesday refuted criticism that the controversial Trade Union Law burdened unions with cumbersome regulations, claiming the law was merely a continuation of existing policies.

On Tuesday, unions and rights group met to review the now six-month-old legislation and called on the government to ease the bureaucratic burdens, which they said hindered their right to organise on the factory floor.

Speaking to RFI, however, Sour maintained the law was simply an encapsulation of existing sections of the Labour Law, prakases and sub-decrees, and had actually eased regulations for union formation and ensured protection of workers’ rights.

“If you ask those who want to work outside legal boundaries, they could feel that this law is stricter. But in reality, the base of this law is from the old Labour Law,” Sour said.

Yang Sophorn, president of the Cambodian Alliance of Trade Unions, disagreed with Sour, saying increased documentary requirements to form a new union had curtailed workers’ ability to organise freely.

Worker electrocuted at building site in Phnom Penh

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Mech Dara and Cristina Maza, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

A 27-year-old construction worker died on Monday morning after being electrocuted on the job, local authorities said, an incident that once again called attention to the precarious working conditions in the construction industry.

Working on a building site in Toek Thla commune in Sen Sok district, labourer Kao Vichet died after receiving an electrical shock when his foot got caught on a live wire.

“He and three other workers were moving a metal bar when his foot got caught and pulled the wire . . . Water fell and caused an electrical shock and he was struck unconscious,” said commune police chief Sok Sophal, adding that the three other men escaped uninjured.

Vichet’s colleagues brought him to the Preah Kossamak Hospital where he later died, Sophal said, adding that the subcontractor who hired Vichet had paid compensation to his family.

Moeun Tola, head of the labour advocacy group Central, said the incident demonstrates the growing need for regulations to be put in place and adhered to by construction companies and subcontractors to ensure that working conditions on construction sites are safe.

“The construction industry suffers from two problems: a lack of regulations and also that the existing regulations aren’t working properly,” Tola said. “I don’t see a real commitment from the government to enforce the existing regulations.”

Over the past five years, the government put in place rules that require subcontractors to provide injury compensation for their labourers, but few companies abide by the rules, Tola noted.

“There needs to be responsibility from the main contractor and subcontractor, so they are responsible for work accidents and worker’s health,” he said, adding that the construction industry is one of the most dangerous sectors to work in.

But Leng Bunleng, Toek Thla commune clerk, said it was Vichet’s carelessness that led to his death. “He was careless, therefore he got shocked while the others could escape,” Bunleng said.

It remained unclear yesterday whether the construction site on which Vichet was working had proper permits.

Tonne of rosewood seized in Takhmao

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People unload roseswood from a truck that was abandoned by its occupants in Takhmao earlier this week after a brief chase by authorities. Photo supplied

Niem Chheng, The Phnom Penh Post
Thu, 10 November 2016

Police in Kandal’s Takhmao district intercepted a truck carrying more than a tonne of internationally protected Siamese rosewood late on Tuesday afternoon.

Seng Kim Khaun, a Kandal province economic crime police officer, said the seizure took place in Kampong Samnanh commune. The Korean-made 1.5-tonne truck, which had no licence plates, had just crossed the river from Phnom Penh across Takhmao Bridge.

“We followed it for about 2 or 3 kilometres, but the truck was getting faster. When we reached it, the driver had gone,” Kim Khaun said.

Officers were acting on a tip from a paid informant, who had spotted the truck that afternoon. “He saw a truck without number plates and entirely covered, and he reported it to us, for which we gave him around $10,” he said.

He added that he believed the driver had intended to carry the wood to Vietnam via National Road 2.

All exports of Siamese rosewood out of Cambodia have been illegal since 2013, and the international trade in the precious wood was all but outlawed by the United Nations Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) that same year.

However, CITES figures show that trade in Siamese rosewood across the Cambodia-Vietnam border continued to flourish despite the ban, with at least a million cubic metres being registered by the convention’s secretariat as having left the Kingdom for its eastern neighbour.

Kim Khaun said both truck and timber are being held by the Takhmao Forestry Administration office, whose representatives could not be reached.
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