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Aug
02
10 Cambodian journalists to visit Vietnam
Ten Cambodian journalists will pay a ten-day visit in Vietnam from Aug. 02 to 12, 2012 to boost the relations between the two countries in the information fields. The delegation of Cambodian journalists will be led by Mr. Pang Nat, Deputy Director General of the National Television of Cambodia (TVK). According to the schedule, during its stay in Vietnam, the delegation will visit Hanoi and other places of interest. Before the visit kicks off, the journalists has paid a courtesy call on to H.E. Ngo Anh Dzung, Vietnamese Ambassador to Cambodia.
Jul
28
Fish and rice, together at last
A new long-term project aims to boost fish stocks in rice fields. That was not a typo. For years, rice farmers in Cambodia have swept up fish – as well as frogs, snails and other aquatic fauna – that make their way from streams, canals and floodplains into rice fields. They then sell the fresh catches on the side or eat them at home. And now a four-year project funded by USAID is kicking off that reaches across four provinces in an attempt to replenish declining stocks, increase yields and provide an ongoing protein-rich source of food in poorer communities. “What we are doing here is nothing new to what they do traditionally,” said Alan Brooks, director for Malaysia-based WorldFish Center, the research institution overseeing much of the work. “People are very reliant on the seasonal pulses of fish that are there in the rice field naturally.
Aug
08
Cambodia to celebrate 45th anniversary of ASEAN Day
Cambodia, as the chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 2012, will celebrate the 45th anniversary of ASEAN Day on Wednesday, according to a press release from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Tuesday. The commencement of ASEAN flag hoisting will be presided over by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Hor Namhong on Wednesday morning at the ministry, the press release said. In the evening, there will be a reception, which will be presided over by Prime Minister Hun Sen with the participation of Dr. Surin Pitsuwan, Secretary General of the ASEAN. Both Hun Sen and Pitsuwan will deliver their speeches at the event. Founded on August 8, 1967, the ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
Aug
16
Tourism to Cambodia grow in June
Tourist statistics in June showed arrivals from Thailand to Cambodia continued to improve, while arrivals from Laos surpassed the usual market leader China for the first time. Cambodia’s Statistics and Tourist Information Department, Ministry of Tourism reported arrivals from Thailand in June doubled at 103% to 13,699 ranking it fifth in the visitor supply market. In June, visits from Laos also continued to spiral in June, surging 85.6% (22,174). China visits grew 39.8% to 19,918, but it slipped into second place after Laos. Overall, during June, Cambodia recorded 250,918 arrivals, increasing substantially at 29.8%. This growth rate was an improvement over the past two months: +24.3% in April and +22.6% in May. Over the six months, January to June, arrivals from Thailand and Laos improved 90.8% and 87% respectively. They ranked fifth and fourth suppliers. Based on January to June figures, the growth in June pushed the average up from 26.3% at the end of May to 26.8% at the end of June. The accumulated arrivals were 1,756,652. Besides Thailand and Laos, arrivals from the Philippines improved since the start-up of the first air link (Cebu Pacific) between the two countries (Manila-Siem Reap) 19 April. Arrivals jumped 60.4% in May, +52.2% and in June, +60%. Due to the increase, Philippines has ranked on the top 10 supply list since May. Vietnam showed a significant growth of 31% (72,385) after the rate fell to 12% in May. However, arrivals from Korea slipped from +11.5% in May to +7.1% (23,040) in June. By region, all markets reported growth except Africa which represents a very small share. It declined 23% to 355 visitors. Arrivals from Asia Pacific, accounting for 82.5% market share, grew 33.8% to 207,062. Over half of the visits, at 64%, were from ASEAN. Europe recorded a 14.5% increase (26,474), while the Americas gained 14% (16,472) and the Middle East, +9.7% (555). In Europe, the traditional key markets — United Kingdom and France — showed a minimal growth of 4% (6,419) and 4.2%(5,696) respectively. The strongest growth came from Russia at 61.2% on 3,356 visits. The surge in trips from neighbouring countries was reflected in a further rise of land arrivals. In June, trips registered at overland checkpoints accounted for 56% (140,518), up from 54.3% in May. In June, 42.4% travelled by air. Phnom Penh International Airport welcomed 54,359 passengers (21.7% share), while Siem Reap International Airport welcomed 52,084 (20.8% share). Phnom Penh and other provinces welcomed 133,712 tourists, or 53.3% of the total, improving 4838%. Siem Reap tallied 117,206 tourists with a slight increase of 13.3% over the same period in 2011.
Aug
01
Cambodiana Hotel
Situated on the riverside, the hotel overlooks the three rivers, Mekong, Tonle Sap and Tonle Bassac and within walking distance to the Royal Palace and National Museum. Lying in a pleasant area of Phnom Penh, travelers can tour around the city conveniently from the hotel location. Cambodiana is close to many attractions of Phnom Penh city. The Cambodiana hotel lies within reach of local transportation. This superior hotel can be found at 313 Sisiwath Quay, Phnom Penh, Kingdom Of Cambodia. The only Luxury Hotel Right on the banks of the Mekong River. Only minutes away from the most exciting attractions in Phnom Penh.it is a 25 minute drive from Phnom Penh International Airport (10km). One of Phnom Penh's landmarks, this large international-standard hotel is situated in large grounds fronting the river. There is a variety of room types, including several different styles of suite. Many rooms have superb views over the Tonle Sap River, with the Mekong River in the distance. All rooms are furnished to a very high standard. There are extensive food and beverage outlets, a large swimming pool, tennis courts and gardens. Many rate this hotel as being the best in Phnom Penh. Hotel Cambodiana a new concept in exclusive, personalised luxury accommodation for discerning guests, perfect for leisure or business travelers in search of privacy, relaxation and recreation. Our luxury hotel has 300 rooms and suites with excellent views of the Royal Palace or the historic Mekong River. The 4 star hotel Cambodiana hotel is one of business hotels in Phnom Penh. The hotel offers functional business facilities suitable for business purpose. Phnom Penh is one of popular destinations in Cambodia. The city has earned good reputation from its famous attractions. Travelers can have a resting stay while they are on holiday in Phnom Penh.
Aug
01
The feelings after visiting temples in Cambodia
The Mekong is a river I have always feared a little—it is sea-like, sinister, inscrutable. It breeds some of the world's largest freshwater beasts: Irrawaddy dolphins, giant catfish, and stingrays. It begins in Tibet and is the earth's most productive freshwater fishery. In November, it turns into a floodplain, and as I crossed it then its waves were thick with rotting flowers and roots and knotted floating grass. Birds swooped around the boat, following it, and their nests could be seen in the tops of drowned trees. After forty minutes, a silhouette came into view as if rising out of this temporary and demented unnatural sea: the forbidding "sacred mountain" of Phnom Da, its tower black against the storm and stark in its enforced solitude. Steps rose up steeply through still-wet jungle. At the top, the Mekong waters appeared on all sides and an imposing brick-and-stone prasat (the Khmer word for a tower or pagoda) stood alone in a froth of wildflowers, its walls dark rust-red and black. Beautiful carvings soared above the doorways, and the chiseled plinths were still firm and elegant. But the prasat itself was clearly empty: looted, or gutted by archaeologists—one never knows in Cambodia. A cowherd stood with his cattle before the main doorway. As I appeared, he simply held out a casual hand and said, “One dollar”—that Khmer refrain which every traveler guiltily repels. With him was a man suffering from some kind of illness, his hands twisted and his eyes lopsided. He seemed to be in informal charge of the shrine within. They watched me silently. Inside, there was a lingam stand (an emblem of the god Shiva) with two bowls of incense sticks, now exposed to the sky: Concentric brick rectangles rose vertiginously upward to an opening through which the rain fell. The tower was engulfed in forest, intimate amid its surroundings, and inaccessible to historical knowledge. The guardian came rolling toward me on his misaligned hips, his hand outstretched. He croaked out a greeting, which sounded like, “B’muray.” “B’muray,” I said. “No,” he repeated. “You Bill Murray. You give me five dollar.” (It is true that there is a resemblance.) For years, and especially when I lived in Phnom Penh, I had been coming to the National Museum and admiring a strange group of statues. They are kept in a gallery to one side, a little ignored, and are unlike any other in Cambodia. Dark green in color, far older than the masterpieces from Angkor Wat which otherwise crowd the museum, these huge pieces possess a style and sexual grace that seem to come from an entirely different civilization. They were discovered in the ruins of Phnom Da in 1935, by Henri Mauger, and were dated to about the sixth century A.D. In the middle was a gigantic figure of Vishnu with eight arms, his hands clutching a flame, an antelope skin, and a flask, and on either side of him two smaller figures of Rama and Balarama. To me, they were the most beautiful and imposing things in the museum, and the most emotionally appealing. And so I had always wanted to get to know the place where they had come from—the remote southern Cambodian province of Takéo. How could a site so unknown have produced art so great? Prasat Neang Khmau, built in the early tenth century, is also known as the Temple of the Black Lady—its name perhaps alludes to Kali, the dark goddess of destruction. The “Phnom Da style” is the most ancient sculptural genre in what is now Cambodia. The ten-foot figure of Vishnu is carved from a single block of sandstone, and only five of his eight hands are still attached to surviving arms. But all of them are carved with finesse, the individual nails carefully delineated. Like a young pharaoh, the god wears a tall cylindrical hat and a folded loincloth. His physique, too—slender and lifelike, with wide shoulders and a little bulging belly fat below the navel—reminds one of Egyptian figures. This is the oldest known Cambodian sculpture. Even the dark-green polished, shiny surface of Vishnu seems different from the texture of later styles. Where do these oval faces, aquiline noses, and almond-shaped eyes come from? Even the tear ducts, the pupils, and canthi of the eyes are perfectly carved. The figure of Balarama, the elder brother of Krishna, whcih stands to the right of Vishnu, is particularly moving. His left eye has been obliterated, but his gentle smile is still intact, as is the symbolic plow he carries. His figure is boyish, tilted at the hips. Rama, meanwhile, holds a tall bow and gazes down at us with a haughty gentility. As an avatar of Vishnu, he is associated with chivalry and virtue. I knew where Phnom Da was on the map—it lies a few miles from the Vietnam border, in the Mekong floodplain. This means that in winter it turns into an island and one has to get there by boat. This was forbiddingly appealing. Since none of the Khmer temples outside the tourist circuit of Angkor Wat are well known, I was well aware that it would be more arduous than simply taking a plane to Siem Reap and staying in yet another Royal Angkor Village boutique lodge with an Anantara spa. But there are only so many times you can walk around Angkor Wat at dawn with fifty thousand Korean tourists, searching for mystical solitude. People said that the temples of Takéo were like Angkor fifty years ago, even if they were nowhere near as grand. It was, I thought, unlikely to be true, but it would be enough for me if they were merely different. When I arrived in the port town of Takéo, the waters were so high that the longtails for hire at the jetties were almost level with the street behind them. Takéo is always a lethargic proposition: a market caked with fruit skins, a few lok-lak restaurants with nightly song and dance, a handful of wretched guesthouses with those balconies of oddly plasticated columns that Cambodians love. They were now milky-brown under storm clouds. The tops of submerged mango trees swarmed with swallows, grasses floating between them. It’s about a fifty-dollar longtail ride to cross this strange landscape that does not promise hospitality. On the far side of it can be found both Phnom Da and a very different place called Angkor Borei, a village in a lagoon with some unusual remains. They lie within an area known as "the cradle of Khmer civilization." Sixteen hundred years ago, Angkor Borei was a huge city named Vyadhapurya, the capital of a state that Chinese chroniclers of the third century A.D. called Funan. In A.D. 240, two Chinese ambassadors named Kang Tai and Zhu Ying visited the kingdom and provided a few fragmented descriptions of it. The Chinese gave the title "Fan" to the Funan kings, so their names have come down to us in Chinese forms—the founder king was known as Fan Shi Man. Funan was the first great state of Southeast Asia—and is also the least known, with much of its architecture having all but disappeared.
Aug
01
Angkor Wat pulls in the crowds
Visitors to Siem Reap’s historical Angkor Wat increased by a substantial 35% during January to June, the provincial tourism department reported late last week. The department said in the first half of 2012, 1.06 million international tourists visited the temple, with South Korea, Vietnam and China topping the supplier list. South Korea led the field with 190,400 visits increasing 49% followed by Vietnam with 127,890 visits (+12%) and China with 78,430 visits (+51%).
Aug
03
At Lowell Festival, the Tastes of a New Generation
Thousands of people attended the 15 th annual Southeast Asian Water Festival in Lowell, Mass., last weekend. They were treated to a wide variety of music, from traditional and folk to rap and hip hop. The music was as diverse as its fans, the divide indicative of two different generations of Cambodian-Americans. “I prefer traditional dance and music over hip hop,” said Hoeun Chhliv, a 52-year-old who fled Battambang province during the war and settled in the US in 1985. “I’m not interested in rap. It’s music for the youth, or younger generation, only. I can only understand a few words of the rap lyrics. Rap uses curse words. It’s painful to the ear and painful to the eyes.” But at this year’s festival, which also included a boat race and other ceremonies, a younger crowd emerged in favor of the new music, which requires less costuming and is more casual than older forms.
Aug
03
Cambodian Olympians vow to try their best
WASHINGTON DC - The six Cambodian athletes competing in the Summer Games this year in London say they realize the Olympics are the most competitive in the world, but they promised to do their best in their events. Cambodians are competing in judo, swimming, taekwondo and athletics. In a Skype interview with VOA Khmer, Davin Sorn, who started taekwondo when she was 15 years old, said for the first two years she kept losing. “But then I saw a slogan at the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports that reminds athletes that losing is a stage toward winning,” she said. “So I worked hard to win for myself, as well as for my country.” Cambodia first joined the Olympics in 1956, putting two equestrians in the Melbourne Games. Its athletes competed through the games in Munich in 1972. It had its greatest number, 13, at the 1964 Tokyo Games. After years of conflict, Cambodia rejoined the games in 1996 in Atlanta, Georgia, fielding five competitors across athletics, swimming and wrestling. This year’s six athletes mark the largest showing since then. It has yet to win a medal in any event.
Jul
04
Tourism co-operation is promoted in Mekong countries
Mayors of cities in the expanded Greater Mekong Sub-region (GMS) will meet in HCM City to discuss tourism co-operation, product enhancement, and promotion of youth tourism. The organisers of the International Travel Expo 2012 (ITE 2012) said city leaders from Phnom Penh (Cambodia), Vientiane (Laos), Yangon (Myanmar), Kunming (China), Bangkok (Thailand), HCM City (Viet Nam), and Jeju and Busan (South Korea) would attend a conference from September 12 to 14 during the expo. They will discuss ways to actualise the joint statement on tourism co-operation signed by the tourism ministers of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Viet Nam at the ITE last year. Each city will have 10 travel firms at the event. Some 200 tour operators from 30 nations and territories are expected to attend this year's event, to be called Four Nations – One Destination.-VNS
Jul
20
Cambodia Tourism eyes Indian, East Asian, Russians and Arabs
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen identified the Russian and Arab markets yesterday as promising emerging markets for the Cambodian tourism sector. Speaking at a conference on the industry's performance over the past 18 months and outlook for the next 18 months, he noted that the 1.5 million tourism arrivals in the five months to May were up 24 per cent from a year earlier. As marketing increases, Hun Sen urged the industry to pay attention not only to East Asia and India but also the "new emerging markets" for Russian and Arab tourists as well as existing markets such as European and America. "At the same time, we have to promote Khmer food and desserts more broadly," he said. Hun Sen called on government agencies to make "concerted efforts to facilitate and attract more connecting flights" from East Asia, India, Russia, Arab countries and Europe. At the same time, the prime minister said Cambodia Angkor Air should expand charter flights to other countries, especially Asean countries along with China, Korea and Japan. Hun Sen also noted that Cambodia was forecasting seven million visitors a year by 2020, generating about US$5 billion in export revenues and about 800,000 jobs.
Aug
28
Sihanoukville ... Cambodia’s next travel frontier
Efforts of the Cambodian Ministry of Tourism are starting to pay off after years promoting the country’s beach destination of Sihanoukville as the next travel frontier in Cambodia. A premier beach resort in Cambodia was not what travellers think of when booking a trip to Cambodia, according to Bangkok-based Backyard Travel sales manager Sibylle Rotzler. Until recently, getting to the seaside getaway of Sihanoukville was only accessible by a treacherous four hour drive from Phnom Penh that sees so many accidents that Cambodians usually insist on praying en-route at a temple. Awareness of the destination is growing since accessibility was made easier with scheduled flights to Sihanoukville from Siem Reap that restarted at the end of last year. The area also saw its first ship to cruise the Gulf of Thailand in a decade drop anchor with 1,000 Chinese tourists onboard this year. Marriott is due to open a luxury resort in Sihanoukville next year, featuring an 18-hole golf course and a marina. Meanwhile, construction of a bridge connecting the mainland to an island off the coast was completed last year with the same developer building a luxurious resort complete with a casino in the area. According to official figures, foreign visitors to Cambodia’s beaches grew eight percent to 180,000 people. This growth is expected to increase further after the country’s coastline was admitted to the prestigious Most Beautiful Bays in the World Club last year. However efforts to put Sihanoukville on the map were hindered by attempts to diversify Cambodia’s tourist attractions beyond the Angkor temples and the French colonial capital Phnom Penh. This was stalled further when in late 2008; Cambodia became one of the few countries in the world without its own domestic airline. A refurbishment of Sihanoukville Airport was completed at the end of 2009; however scheduled flights into this airport were delayed by two years. Critics say this was a result of the country’s “so called” flag carrier, Cambodia Angkor Air (that is 49 percent owned by Vietnam Airlines) generating little interest in developing new domestic destinations, instead channelling tourists in and out of Vietnam. Cambodia Angkor Air marketing executive Kloung Sivly said the relaunch of the scheduled flights, that flew 5,741 passengers to Sihanoukville in the first half of this year, fitted well with the government’s plan to promote links to the seaside resort.
Aug
09
Angkor Wat pulls in the crowds
SIEM REAP, Visitors to Siem Reap’s historical Angkor Wat increased by a substantial 35% during January to June, the provincial tourism department reported late last week. The department said in the first half of 2012, 1.06 million international tourists visited the temple, with South Korea, Vietnam and China topping the supplier list. South Korea led the field with 190,400 visits increasing 49% followed by Vietnam with 127,890 visits (+12%) and China with 78,430 visits (+51%). The report also cited a sharp rise in Thai tourists to the site at 61,340 visits recording a 201% increase. The Siem Reap provincial tourism department administration chief, Chhoeuy Chhorn, said South Korean and Chinese visitors increased in response to more direct flights from the two markets. “The main reason for the substantial increase in Thai visits to the temple site was the visit of fugitive, former Thai Prime Minister, Thaksin Shinawatra, who celebrated the Thai New Year in Siem Reap last April and over 50,000 of his supporters met him and also visited the temples.” The entrance fees to Angkor Wat starts at US$20 for international visitors for a day, US$40 for a three-day visit, and US$60 for the entire week. In 2011, the temples attracted 1.6 million foreign visitors, an increase of 23%. All of them had to pay a minimum of US$20 to tour the complex providing a rough estimate of the gate value for the company that handles the business. The Angkor archeological park is the Cambodia’s largest cultural tourism destination located 315 km from the capital Phnom Penh.
Feb
28
River cruise: Mekong and beyond

Cambodia cruise

A cruise from Cambodia to Vietnam is frequently surprising, often heart-rending, and always fascinating, reports Clare Mann.

“But you promised,” said a solemn little boy with trusting brown eyes. I had indeed promised to buy a scarf from him but my dollars had gone and now the boat was leaving. I felt an absolute heel as I hurried back up the gangplank of our fairy-tale boat, La Marguerite. We drifted away down the wide, slow-moving milky-brown Tonle Sap river, which flows into the Mekong at Phnom Penh, leaving the disappointed boy far behind.

The heart-rending incident happened after we had been taken to see the recently revived tradition of silk weaving in the Cambodian village of Chong Koh on an island in the river. Old looms, which had been hidden during the dark years of Pol Pot, had now been returned to use. Beguiling little girls selling armfuls of krama, a traditional scarf with multiple uses, had entwined themselves around us and led us around their village, practising their English and wanting our dollars. The girls scampered off, distracted by a motherly Italian tourist handing out sweets, and the boy sidled up full of questions about England. Is it a happy country? Did we all have blue eyes? From him I learnt a valuable lesson: carry plenty of dollars and spread them around to support the local communities and their handicrafts. After decades of violence, tourism is a lifeline for this fragile but emerging country.

Our river cruise started at Siem Reap. After crossing the 100-mile-long Lake Tonle Sap by motor launch, we were to sail 560 miles (900km) down the Mekong to Saigon in a week.

Before joining La Marguerite, we spent the morning immersed in the wondrous temples and ruins of Angkor Wat. Our guide, Mr Son, a former Khmer Rouge soldier, Buddhist monk and now tour guide, proudly showed us the three best-known temples, Angkor Wat, Angkor Thom and Ta Prohm.

Back on deck, I sipped Angkor beer as I read Jon Swain’s River of Time, a romantic but also disturbing account of being a journalist in Cambodia and Vietnam during the years of conflict, and his friendship with photographer Dith Pran (the subject of the film, The Killing Fields). It was hard to associate the country’s traumatic past with the peaceful scenes slipping by: fishermen casting their nets from delicate sampans, picturesque houses built on stilts, gleaming new pagodas on the river bank, lush paddy fields, children riding water buffalo, and everyone smiling and waving.

How welcomed we felt from our floating palace. We visited Cheung Kok Ecotourism village, where profits from the local handicrafts go towards teachers’ salaries and health care. Our Cambodian guide asked us not to give the local children money, though few asked. Instead he wanted to encourage them to go to school: “Education is my country’s future.”

We were taken to an orphanage, where we wandered freely; a child showed me her precious possessions tucked beneath her bed in a spartan dormitory. While my husband played badminton with some of the boys, I bought paintings by the children and pretty silk bags sewn by the girls. The children, happy and well cared for, sang to us as we sat in the shady garden. An elderly Australian in our group stood up to thank the children. He too had been an orphan. “Never give up and always do your best,” he told them with obvious emotion.

On excursions from the mother ship we visited ornate Buddhist temples and saw engine casings from B‑52 bombers that had been turned into huge drums, stark reminders of a turbulent past. We explored backwaters on tenders to visit markets, floating villages, schools and even a Catholic chapel on the water.

As we peered into houses, lives were laid bare for our inspection. There was no hostility at our prying eyes, only amused grins from the young men as they tinkered with boat engines while endless cameras clicked. But we wondered how long it would be before the novelty of all the attention wore off. We loved Phnom Penh. Our guides suggested we wore “ambassadorial attire” to visit the magnificent Royal Palace home of the present King. The centrepiece is a gold Buddha statue weighing 14 stone (90kg), studded with 9,584 diamonds. In the Russian Market and Central Market, we browsed avenues selling everything from miss-spelt designer knickers to fried beetles and bootleg DVDs.

A few buildings on the busy waterfront remain from the city’s colonial past. We stopped for cocktails at the famous FCC (Foreign Correspondents’ Club). It has a nostalgic air, with upstairs views of the river, geckos on the walls and whirling ceiling fans. It didn’t take much to imagine the brave and hard-bitten war corres-pondents who gathered there not so long ago.

The Khmer Rouge used Tuol Sleng school in Phnom Penh as a detention centre during their brutal rule in the late Seventies. It is now a Genocide Museum. Photographs of the men, women and children who were imprisoned and tortured here stare from the walls. They were then taken to the “killing fields”, mass graves outside the capital, to be executed. Visitors walked around the former class-rooms in stunned silence.

An English couple in our group quietly wept as we wandered around the killing fields at Choeung Ek later that day. The site is crude and immediate; shards of human bones and clothing were pushing through the worn mud paths. The central memorial is a tall glass structure filled with hundreds of skulls.

La Marguerite was a welcoming and cool refuge after our excursions. Named after the French writer Marguerite Duras, who grew up in French Indochina during the 1900s, it is elegantly decorated in French colonial style. There is an attentive crew of 42 to look after 92 passengers, and while the eight suites on the sun deck are the largest cabins and have private balconies, our stateroom, one of 38, was very comfortable.

We ate well, with a splendid buffet breakfast and lunch plus a four-course dinner each day. Indeed, we felt in serious danger of piling on the pounds with too little exercise. Although there was a small gym on board we found other distractions more enticing.

Our fellow guests were a diverse and interesting multinational group who quickly acquired nicknames from our travelling companions, Maddy and Christopher. In the evenings we were entertained by local dancers and musicians, films, and talks on the history of the region. Otherwise we played bridge on the deck, swatting the occasional mayfly as they swarmed around the lights.

On day four of the cruise we crossed into Vietnam. The difference was marked: along the riverbank many new factories appeared, the river traffic trebled, with countless laden barges, some piled high with bonsai trees and yellow marigolds in preparation for the Chinese New Year festivities. A family of five may cling to a moped (a luxury) in Cambodia, but the economic surge in Vietnam has brought new prosperity for many and here only one passenger rides pillion, and everyone wears a helmet.

There were a variety of organised excursions: a visit to the house, now a museum, of Marguerite’s lover, a wealthy Chinese; a catfish farm (not for those with delicate nostrils); and a brick works with ancient beehive ovens worked by slender young women for five dollars a day.

But the highlight was a tour by trishaw of the small town of Tan Chau. We cycled down narrow streets, where fighting cocks strutted in cane cages, barbers shaved their customers, coffins were stacked and painted vivid colours and large woks were stirred. And again we received nothing but welcoming smiles and delight at our presence.

Our last day and night were spent in Ho Chi Minh City, still referred to as Saigon by the locals. “Asia on steroids”, as an expat friend described it. We were charmed. But the American Museum made us shudder: heartbreaking photographs, facts and figures about bombs and chemicals used during the war.

A stiff drink at the Rex steadied us, followed by lunch at Ngon in Nguyen Du, patronised almost entirely by friendly Vietnamese who helpfully suggested what we should eat – not entirely successfully. We liked The Deck bar and restaurant, with its twinkling lights over the river, which gave us a glimpse of Saigon’s beautiful people at play.

Outside the cathedral, opposite the handsome colonial post office, a young couple getting married asked us to pose with them in their wedding finery. “Where are you going for your honeymoon?” I asked. “America,” they replied.

(source: telegraph.co.uk)

Aug
31
The more you give, the more you receive
Before leaving for Cambodia to do voluntary work, Li Kaiwen thought she was going to a poor country to offer her help. But, that was only half the story - she gained more from the experience than she ever imagined. The Chinese high school student remembers trying with all her might to saw some plywood under the scorching sun of Siem Reap. She was sunburned, and beads of sweat rained down her cheeks. Yet she could not get the work done. A 5-year-old Cambodian boy, seeing her struggling with the wood, ran to her and gently wiped off the sweat on her forehead with his sleeves. He offered to show Li how to saw the wood, which seemed like a piece of cake. The 16-year-old from one of the best international high schools in Beijing says at that very moment, she felt like an idiot. Related: A moment to reflect "If both the kid and I were left on a lonely island, the little one would be able to build himself a wooden shelter," she says. "But I, well educated, well fed and raised, would freeze to death." Many Chinese teenagers who did voluntary work in Cambodia for 10 days during their summer vacation have similar stories. They were among 69 Chinese students who participated in the Cambodia International Service project, aimed at giving teenagers an opportunity to do voluntary work in schools and orphanages in poor regions in Cambodia. They have to pay for the stay themselves. The program was started in early 2011 and 160 Chinese students have participated so far. While many of their peers spent the summer touring prestigious universities in Europe and the United States, these young volunteers spent 18,880 yuan ($3,000) each to build houses in Siem Reap. Li got to know of the project in school after listening to a talk by the program's founder, Xu Jiatian, who shared his experiences of Cambodia. She was thrilled. "I'm eager to try anything that will help others," she says. Her decision to do voluntary work in Cambodia surprised both her parents and classmates, who were worried about her safety. But having been to Cambodia, Li says although the country is poor, it is not as dangerous as expected. She says she will never forget her first impression of Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia. "The children walked on the streets wearing nothing, bare footed," she says. "And as we waved to the people on the streets, they all waved back and smiled at us sincerely." She also finds that the cows in Cambodia "look like sheep because they are too thin". "But the country is beautiful, nothing like I'd imagined." The village she volunteered in, is a six-hour drive from Phnom Penh. The first thing Li and other volunteers did was to stack some plywood to build a new house for an orphanage. Carpenters demonstrated how that was done. Later, they also worked in the fields, growing crops for villagers. "Almost everyone suffered from insomnia during the first few nights," says Tang Yutong, 18, another volunteer from Beijing. "Our backs and arms hurt so badly during the night because of the hard work in the day," says Tang, who has done three voluntary work tours in Cambodia since 2011. Both Tang and Li admit they do not have to do housework at home. Li says what kept them going is the lovely kids who gathered around them, wiped off their sweat and sang for them in the Cambodian language. Some of the girls would sit beside her and braid her long hair while she took a break. "The kids do not speak much English," she says. "But they paint pictures for us, and write the words 'I love you' on them." And she can never forget a little boy who was always beside her while she worked and on the day the house was completed, he looked at her in the eyes and said in English: "Tomorrow? You come?" Li says she burst into tears. The boy continued: "Two? Three?" "He wanted to know if I would be back in two or three days. I could not answer him," Li says. "All I know is I will be back every vacation. Those days in Cambodia have shown me a life that I did not know before." It has been weeks since Li and Tang have been back from Cambodia. Staying in their air-conditioned homes in Beijing, they still reminisce about the hot but happy days in Siem Reap. "It feels like being in two different worlds," Li says. "I used to do things that brought change to my life. But now, I am making changes in other people's lives."
Jul
30
Cuisine Wat Damnak in Siem Reap
Be prepared to be surprised at Cuisine Wat Damnak, a contemporary Cambodian restaurant in Siem Reap that has entirely transformed native dishes seen on the streets into haute cuisine. Having earlier eaten nom banh chok—a Cambodian dish of rice noodles with a thin curry gravy ladled onto it—at a local market after trooping through muddy walkways displaying squirming, bloody fish, the nom banh chok at Cuisine Wat Damnak was almost unrecognizable. It had a different and rather elaborate description on the menu: “Mekong langoustine in light curry and coconut broth, fresh rice vermicelli and local crudités.” Essentially it was a sophisticated version of nom banh chok—with the broth tasting richly of shrimps, and the dish topped with expertly-seared mini lobsters and a borrowed French element, crudités, or sliced raw vegetables. Decadent, but delicious. The dish was a showcase of how Cuisine Wat Damnak has created a distinctive identity for itself. Native Cambodian ingredients are used in an entirely different way, some staple dishes are given a fresh spin, and everything is served progressively in courses. “I like to see the food I am serving as Cambodian food with a modern French sensitivity,” chef Joannes Riviere says. Cuisine Wat Damnak The dining room at Cuisine Wat Damnak. The restaurant doesn’t offer a fixed menu—it only lists two degustation menus, one with five courses (US$17) and the other with six (US$24), which change every week. On the day of this reporter’s visit, the Mekong langoustine with rice noodles was the fourth dish in the six-course tasting menu. Mr. Riviere says the restaurant is set up around the idea of showcasing Cambodian produce, which is “nowadays a very common thing in restaurants in France and all over the world.” The former executive chef of acclaimed Hotel de la Paix’s Meric restaurant, who first came to Cambodia as a volunteer cooking teacher in 2003 and ended up staying in the country, decided to set up Cuisine Wat Damnak in 2011. He chose to focus on Cambodian cuisine after he noted that Western produce in Cambodia is often of very average quality. “On the other hand there are plenty of excellent fishes, amazing aromatic plants and unseen vegetables just outside of Siem Reap, waiting to be used. Cambodian cuisine naturally became an obvious choice,” he says. Among the several dishes served during this reporter’s visit, a starter of seared beef tenderloin stood out for its seemingly random mix of ingredients. Pinkish beef slices were plated with a surprising addition of beef jerky that was grilled with—and tasted strongly of—fish sauce, tendrils of young morning glory, wild mango kernel seeds and drizzled with “oyster sauce.” The dish boasted a burst of flavors that showed how Mr. Riviere’s French culinary influence has fused comfortably with the Cambodian ingredients, though it was a pity that the star of the dish—the beef—was overwhelmed by the supporting elements. One of the mains—black sticky rice porridge with quail and fish fillet—was similar to a risotto, another dish that displayed a masterful blend of traditional Cambodian ingredients presented in a Western way. Another main—braised pork—looked absolutely unassuming. But it turned out to be the best dish of the night. The star anise and caramelized palm sugar used in the fragrant dark braising liquid had seeped into the tender pork and lotus root pieces, and a piece of deep-fried crispy pork shank topped the dish, adding a crunchy texture. And with its focus on showcasing produce, Cuisine Wat Damnak is an exclusive to Siem Reap. Mr. Riviere is adamant that his restaurant simply can’t be replicated elsewhere. “I think we are successful because of the quality of the ingredients,” he says. “Without that our food would be very ordinary. If we move overseas then it would not work anymore.” Cuisine Wat Damnak is located between Psa Dey Hoy market and Angkor High School, Wat Damnak village, Sala Kamrek Commune in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Open Tuesday to Saturday from 6.30 p.m. till 9.45 p.m. (last order). For reservations, call +855 (0)63 965 491 / +855 (0)77 347 762 or email info@cuisinewatdamnak.com.
Aug
31
Rich-poor gap challenges ASEAN dream
Southeast Asian nations must redouble efforts to bridge development gaps which threaten the region’s efforts to create an EU-style single market, Cambodia’s prime minister said earlier this week. Building an ASEAN economic community by 2015 is the “top priority”, Hun Sen said as he opened the annual meeting of economic ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in the Cambodian tourist hub of Siem Reap. Emulating the European Union’s example, ASEAN wants to establish a single market and manufacturing base of about 600 million people — a goal that has been spurred by intensifying competition from China and India. With less than three years to go, ASEAN must “address challenges and bridge the development gap, which hinders the realisation of (the) ASEAN Economic Community as planned”, said Hun Sen, according to an official translation. The development gap among ASEAN nations “is still huge”, he said. The bloc’s 10 member states range from deeply impoverished Myanmar to advanced city state Singapore and emerging powerhouse Indonesia. “This requires us to double our efforts to promote further growth and improve equitable distribution of the fruits of growth at both national and regional levels,” Hun Sen said. In a step towards narrowing the gap between richer and poorer nations and achieving regional integration, the bloc last year set up a nearly US$500 million infrastructure fund offering loans to build roads, railways and other projects without direct foreign assistance. But according to Hun Sen, whose country currently holds the ASEAN chair, the fund “is still very small”. He urged the bloc’s economic and finance ministers “to attract more financing partners to increase the fund size” by approaching dialogue partners such as Japan, China, South Korea. ASEAN economies grew by 4.7% in 2011, Hun Sen said, despite the weak global economy, high oil prices and volatile capital flows. The figure was down from 7.6% growth in 2010, according to ASEAN data. Despite a slowdown in exports, ASEAN countries posted a combined trade surplus of more than US$90 billion in 2011, Hun Sen said. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. During their week-long meeting, the economic ministers will also seek to deepen economic engagement in talks with other nations including China, the United States, Russia and India. The meeting marks the first gathering of ASEAN members since a foreign ministers’ meeting in July ended in disarray over a maritime dispute in the South China Sea, exposing deep divisions within the bloc.
Sep
21
Cambodian PM targets 7 million tourists by 2020
Prime Minister Hun Sen says Cambodia can earn $5 billion a year from tourists by more than doubling foreign visitors to 7 million by 2020. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Prime Minister Hun Sen says Cambodia can earn $5 billion a year from tourists by more than doubling foreign visitors to 7 million by 2020. Hun Sen told a tourism seminar Thursday that Cambodia would need to improve the quality of services and infrastructure for tourists and strengthen laws safeguarding them to achieve the goal. He also said police must crack down on the use of guns in public places, especially those frequented by foreigners. Tourism Minister Thong Khon said Cambodia earned nearly $2 billion from 2.88 million foreign tourists last year, and expects 3.2 million foreign visitors this year.
Aug
21
Daun Penh and 7Makara see sharpest increases in value
The areas where land prices in Phnom Penh have increased most sharply over the past six months are the districts of Daun Penh and 7Makara, according to a report from Asia Real Estate Cambodia. The data shows that the price of land in Daun Penh district and 7Makara during the first six months of this year rose 19.7 per cent compared with the corresponding period in 2011. And the price of land in Chamkarmorn district – an area in some demand – increased only 5.3 per cent, while Tuol Kork rose 12.7 per cent. Keuk Narin, vice-president of Asia Real Estate Cambodia, said the price growth had begun in 2011 as the world economic crisis started to fade. “The economic sector started getting on better while the banking sector reduced loan interest rates, pushing real estate gradually upwards with those buying property having specific targets,” he said. The report revealed that land in Daun Penh district for business in the first six months of the year saw an average price of US$ 3,365 per square metre, with residential at $2,042 per square metre, compared to the same period last year, when business areas averaged $2,832 per square metre and residential areas only $1,692. 7Makara district’s business areas in the first quarter averaged $3,000 per square metre, and with residential at $1,681 compared to the corresponding period last year, when business land cost $2,597 and residential $1,357. In Chamkarmorn, business areas in the first quarter was at $2,685 and residential $1,362 In Tuol Kork, areas for business in the first quarter of the year averaged $2,140 with residential areas at $948 for same period last year the figures were $1,827 and $874 respectively . Keuk Narin said the real estate market by the end of the year was not expected to increase more than last year - it may be at only 6 per cent. He said real-estate investors had more knowledge about changing from residential property to business. Previously, they had invested in villas only, but now they had begun investing in apartments rather than selling or renting them. “One villa is rented from $3,000 to $4,000 a month, but if you build an apartment, not in the same area, and the land size is the same, you can earn from $40,000 to $50,000 a month,” Narin said. He added that demand for apartments has increased more than the available supply, from 5 per cent to 10 per cent. Sung Bonna, president of Bonna Realty Group and chairman of the Cambodia Valuers and Estate Agents Association, said that in Phnom Penh, the real purchase price for the first quarter had increased 10 per cent compared with the equivalent period last year. He said land in Daun Penh district was filled with investment in buildings, but the district had some good locations. “Daun Penh and Chamkarmon are good for a similar potential investment; actually, Boeng Keng Kang I residential area is in demand more than other areas in Phnom Penh,” he said. He added that land in Chamkarmon district had a 50 per cent potential, with Daun Penh at 70 per cent, while 7Makara is a multi-market area, but trading was limited.
Jul
18
Scientists help save 131 of Cambodia's 'temple trees'
New Delhi: Indian scientists have been successful in conserving 131 trees at the 800-year-old Ta Prohm temple in Cambodia, better known as 'Temple Tree'.? Experts from the Dehradun-based Forest Research Institute (FRI) along with the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) have been working on the Conservation and Restoration of Ta Prohm Temple (Cambodia) Project under the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme (ITEC) of the external affairs ministry.? The team, which has been working there since 2007, has started seeing some good results with improvement in the health of trees which were in a bad shape, threatening the monument built in the late 12th century by Jayavarman VII of the Khmer empire in memory of his mother. The temple is a Unesco World Heritage Site.?Several movies, including the Hollywood blockbuster Tomb Raider, were shot there.? Different species of matured and young trees, some standing on the ground and some on the walls and roofs of various structures, are seen in the temple premises.? The most common tree species is Tetrameles nudiflora, locally known as 'speung'.?N.S.K. Harsh, head of Forest Pathology at the Forest Research Institute (FRI), said that before starting the project, they conducted a survey and found that of the 131 trees in the premises, 36 needed immediate attention.? "The trees were found under stress at the site due to heavy tourist pressure, soil compaction, injuries to exposed roots and stems, cavities in trees and exposed buttresses and basal rotting. Besides, a few trees were dangerously leaning and causing the walls and other structures to collapse under their weight," Harsh told IANS. The tree height here ranges from 40 to 80 metres with huge trunks while the girth exceeds more than three metres in some cases and buttresses span up to 13 metres at the base.? The buttresses and roots are spreading all over the structures and ground, making them magnificent visual objects.? The institute's team carried out periodic treatment of the decayed portion of trunks, stems and roots of the trees by using eco-friendly material (an oleoresin tapped from a tree) followed by cavity filling with polyurethane foam and wax.? The exposed roots of trees were covered with soil in different sections. Periodic surface treatment with anti-fungal material on etched surfaces was prescribed.?A prop was provided to support a dangerously leaning tree and was designed to withstand its swaying and weight. A metallic support was designed and erected below a wall collapsing under the weight of the tree. "I would say timely intervention by FRI has halted further deterioration of tree health. The trees are now in a better health and their life span has increased," Harsh said. FRI has also carried out training classes for capacity building of local stakeholders so that they can continue the conservation work on their own post-2014 when the institute's contract ends.? Regular monitoring of tree health is being done to check the level of decay, insect attacks, phenological behaviour and emerging tree growth pattern.? This is not the first time that India is helping Cambodia in restoration of a heritage site. Indian archaeologists had successfully restored the world famous Angkor Vat temple in the country.?In India, the FRI has conserved the famous Bodhi tree ('pipal') in Bodhgaya, a direct descendant of the original tree under which the Buddha meditated. It has also conserved a neem tree in the Sai Baba temple in Shirdi in Maharashtra.
Jul
28
Cambodia’s tourism grows
Tourists from Thailand to Cambodia skyrocketed almost triple during April; raising Thailand to fourth place on the top source country list. Cambodia’s Statistics and Tourism Information Department at the Tourism Ministry reported tourist arrivals from Thailand skyrocketed 165.2% during April from 7,987 to 21,178. April had various holidays such as the Songkran holiday, a long holiday to celebrate Thai New Year and earlier in the month the Coronation Day holiday. Together they represented golden travel weeks for tourism. Another important factor was the improvement of diplomatic relations with Cambodia after the Yingluck government took office. Tourists from Thailand have rebounded with visits improving 64% during the first three months of this year moving the Thai market to seventh place, up from the eighth at the end of 2011. Overall, Cambodia welcomed 277,304 during April, an increase of 24.3%. Looking at January to April figures, the growth slowed down slightly compared to the first quarter bringing the average growth down from 27.8% to 27.1%. The accumulated arrivals were 1,272.514. Besides Thailand that was recorded a drastic improvement in April, arrivals from the neighbouring Laos and the Philippines also showed impressive increases, 69.8% and 60.4% respectively. Laos is the same as Thailand having its traditional New Year celebration in April. As for the Philippines, the inauguration of the first air link between the two countries (Manila-Siem Reap) 19 April by Cebu Pacific largely contributed to the growth and the annual Easter holiday peak. Cebu Pacific uses a 180-seat A319 aircraft flying three times a week. The Top three suppliers — Vietnam, South Korea and China still grew substantially by around 30%. However, There were a couple of the top 10 markets showing declines: US (-2.4%) and Japan (-4.5%). The surge in trips from neighbouring countries was also reflected in a rise of arrivals by land. In April, arrivals via overland checkpoints accounted for 53.1% (147,325), while arrivals by air, 45.5% (126,282). Data showed that 26.1% of people travelling by air landed in Siem Reap while 19.4% landed in Phnom Penh. In terms of regions, Asia and the Pacific recorded the strongest growth of 32% (212,038) followed by the Middle East, 20.6% (666); Europe, 6.8% (45,321); the Americas, 0.2% (18,865) and Africa, -30.4% (373). Several countries in Europe reported declines, including the UK that dipped 2.4%. France and Germany recorded small improvement, 6% and 3% respectively. The overall growth of 6.8% was largely due to the growth of the Russian market at 34.7%. Siem Reap welcomed 179,778 tourists, or 64.8% of the total, improving 38.3%. Meanwhile, Phnom Penh and other destinations tallied 97,526 tourists with a small improvement of 4.8% over the same period in 2011.
Aug
18
Reallocation of Cambodia's islands
More than 180,000 hectares on 28 of Cambodia’s 64 islands were reclassified as state private property for 31 companies seeking land concessions between 2008 and 2010, government sub-decrees reveal. The reclassification sub-decrees, compiled by investigators at the rights group Adhoc, pave the way for firms to secure 99-year leases to develop hotels, resorts and casinos, mostly on islands dotted across the coasts of Preah Sihanouk, Kampot, Kep and Koh Kong province. They include already popular destinations off Preah Sihanouk and Kep province such as Koh Tonsay (Rabbit Island), Koh Russey (Bamboo Island), Koh Rong, Koh Rong Somleom and Koh Takhieo, as well as far more obscure enclaves. Experts in the investment and conservation communities have told the Post that on top of these land reclassifications, many of which have since gained final approval, plots have been earmarked for development by private firms on almost every single island in the Kingdom. Adhoc senior investigator Chan Soveth said although this was good for a small number of individuals in the business community and rich foreign tourists, there were few island areas left for average Cambodians to enjoy their own country’s serene getaways. “For example, can residents travel along Sokha beach?” he said, using the private, 1.5-kilometre shore at Sihanoukville reserved exclusively for hotel guests as an example of how the Kingdom’s islands could soon become off limits to most Cambodians. Soveth said there was a lack of vision and co-ordination from the government as it hastily divvied up Cambodia’s islands, reclassifying land for 99-year leases without assessing negative effects such as the depletion of forest resources that supported communities. “We are concerned about development without transparency, and we don’t know what exists on those islands,” he said. Seven of the sub-decrees reclassify land to firms that are not named, while two are simply referred to as “Chinese company”, a not uncommon practice in documents related to land concessions in Cambodia. Some of the most audacious Cambodian island developments have been connected to shady individuals, including convicted pedophile Alexander Trofimov, who allegedly drove to his resort on Koh Pos from prison regularly before he was pardoned by the king last year. Adhoc’s list of soon-to-be concessionaires includes a veritable who’s who of controversial development including LYP Group (Koh Kong Knong), TTY Corporation Co, Ltd (Koh Koan) and Try Pheap Company (Koh Tonsay), all firms that have been involved in major land disputes. But Tourism Minister Thong Kong yesterday defended the aggressive island development plan, which was guided by the Cambodian Development Council, saying it would lead to jobs and prosperity for the local populations. “If it affected villagers, for what would we be doing it? We have to make villagers get profit from those development projects,” he said. Tobe Eastoe, protection adviser at Fauna and Flora International, said many companies had not even broken ground yet on their concessions, while some were developing on islands where 60 to 70 per cent of villagers depended on fishing for their primary income. “Different types of development pose different threats to the marine environment. Some, such as those we have worked with, are interested in preserving natural beauty, as it is their primary tourist attraction,” Eastoe said. “Some are more interested in large-scale development.” David George, Cambodia country manager at property investment firm CBRE, which has partnered with two of the biggest island development projects in Cambodia, said most firms developing Cambodia’s islands recognised it was in their own interest to do so responsibly. “If you allow poor development on your island, it will affect the quality of your whole island,” George said. He added that as Cambodia pushed to catch up with established markets in Thailand and Vietnam, it had the advantage of being able to learn from mistakes made in those countries. “In a country where you have a relatively small number of people who have quite a lot of land, they have quite a lot of power [as to] how it’s developed,” George said. With about 20 per cent year-on-year increases in tourist arrivals and the expected commencement of flights from Vietnam to Sihanoukville next year driving investment, Cambodia’s long-dormant island tourism industry had become nascent, he said. As greater numbers of well-heeled tourists sojourned out to luxury island resorts, increasing trickle-down revenues would ensure that smaller-scale, locally owned onshore businesses benefited, George said. But George and Thong agreed that a number of concessionaires who continued to idly sit on their leases – a strategy usually used to profit off land appreciation rather than follow agreed-upon development plans – remained a snag holding back tourist dollars from Cambodia’s beaches.
Jul
17
Asia Pacific turns Blu with continuous investment in Radisson Blu brand
Carlson Rezidor Hotel Group, one of the world’s largest and most dynamic hotel groups, today unveiled its latest Radisson Blu brand campaign - Turning the World Blu – in Asia Pacific, as part of the Group’s commitment to grow its first class hotel brand. Since 2011, the Group will have invested a total of USD 7 million in building the brand’s visibility globally. Radisson Blu is one of Asia’s fastest growing hotel brands, offering first class accommodation and engaging hospitality. Of the brand’s 346 properties in operation and under development globally, 20 per cent (69) are in Asia Pacific. During the second half of 2012, the Turning The World Blu brand campaign will roll out across the globe – the United States, Europe, Middle East, Africa and in Asia Pacific. The locally inspired creatives feature architecturally stunning landmarks, which represent the key markets in which Radisson Blu hotels and resorts are located, as well as iconic hotel photography and select visuals of the hotel interiors. At the center of the campaign is a focus on the brand’s hallmarks including 100% Guest Satisfaction, Late Check Out and Free Internet - which is available in every Radisson Blu hotel and resort around the world and is the brand’s most highly regarded hallmark among business and leisure travelers. The campaign represents Carlson Rezidor’s investment of USD 3 million in the Radisson Blu brand in Asia Pacific alone between 2011 and 2012. “We have established strong growth momentum in Asia Pacific, expanding the portfolio from one Radisson Blu hotel and resort in 2010, to 29 at the end of 2011. By 2015, the Group will have close to 70 Radisson Blu hotel and resorts operating in the region. Continuing our investment in the Radisson Blu brand for the second year is a strategic move to raise the profile of the brand as we continue to grow the number of Radisson Blu hotels and resorts in gateway cities and key destinations,” commented Simon C. Barlow, president, Carlson Rezidor Hotel Group, Asia Pacific. “The Turning the World Blu campaign marks a new milestone for the Radisson Blu brand, as for the first time Carlson Rezidor is investing in a global campaign that will see the brand reaching out to customers around the world. This campaign is part of the Asia Pacific’s three-year brand investment strategy to encourage travelers to ‘Discover Radisson Blu’. The integrated brand campaign will focus on promoting Radisson Blu brand hallmarks which are unique touch points for our guests when they stay with us. Through the campaign, we aim reach out and engage more guests to appreciate the World of Radisson,” commented Lucinda Semark, executive vice president, Revenue Generation, Asia Pacific, Carlson Rezidor Hotel Group. The Turning the World Blu campaign in Asia Pacific will engage business and leisure travelers across 15 countries and be dominated by online advertising on BBC.com, CNNGo, Tribal Fusion and TIME.com to build the Radisson Blu brand’s online presence, as well as in select pan-regional business titles including The Economist, TIME and Fortune China.
Aug
13
Cambodia's outbound travelers up 37 pct. in Q1
The number of Cambodia's outbound tourists had seen a remarkable rise of 37 percent to 188,270 in the first three months of 2012 from merely 137,320 in the same period in a year ago, according to the statistics of the Tourism Ministry on Sunday. Ang Kim Eang, president of Cambodia Association of Travel Agents, said Sunday that most Cambodian visitors ASEAN countries thanks to visa exemption agreements and geographical proximity and some visited China including Hong Kong, Macau, Kunming, and Shanghai. Among ASEAN states, Cambodians always go to Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia and Laos, said Ang Kim Eng, who is also the chairman of Great Angkor Tour. "For China, I observe that since the start of this year, more and more Cambodians have headed to China for leisure or business trips thanks to more direct flight connection and very close ties between the governments of Cambodia and China," he told Xinhua. He also attributed the rise of Cambodian outbound travelers to improving cost of living of Cambodian people. Cambodia has the population of 14.5 million. By the end of 2011, Cambodian per capita GDP (Gross Domestic Product) was 909 U.S. dollars, according to the government report. However, there is a wider income gap between the rich and the poor.
Sep
28
Bulgaria's Bolata Joins Global Most Beautiful Bays Club
The picturesque Bolata bay near the town of Kavarna on Bulgaria's northern Black Sea coast is going to be included in the "Most Beautiful Bays in the World" Club. The information was reported Wednesday by the Bulgarian Standard daily, citing the Chairman of the Association of Bulgarian Black Sea Municipalities, Atanas Stoilov, via the Kavarna Town Hall press center. The decision has been made several days ago in the Turkish port city of Bodrum during the Club's annual session. Bolata will become full-pledged member of the prestigious Club at its next regular meeting to be held in 2013 in Cambodia. The Bulgarian nomination has been presented and defended by the Club's Deputy President and Mayor of the Portugal's city of Setubal, Maria das Dores Meira. Meira is expected to become Head of the Club at the forum in Cambodia where plans are for Stoilov and herself to nominate another Bulgarian bay for membership – the one of the historical town of Sozopol on the southern Black Sea coast. Stoilov stresses that membership in the Club is a great opportunity to showcase Bulgaria as a global tourist destination, while having 2 of its bays in the Club will place it on the level of tourist countries such as Spain, Canada, and Portugal, and ahead of Turkey and Greece. Tags: tourist destination, Sozopol, northern Black Sea coast, Bulgaria, Kavarna, Bolata bay, club, Most Beautiful Bays in the World
Jul
17
Discover traditional Khmer food
Khmer cuisine has been significantly influenced by Thai and Vietnam traditional food, however it is a lot less spicy so that most Europeans can enjoy it without tears. Also, French cooking traditions are well known and assimilated by local chiefs. As with everywhere in Asia, the staple diet is rice. Rice served in all imaginable ways, fried rice, steamed rice, rice with pork or seafood, rice with vegetables or tropical fruits, rice with a special grass, with tree leaf, with sweet fruits, rice in desserts and even rice with rice! Chinese noodles are also very popular especially in everyday Khmer soups. Favorite Khmer plates are "Amok fish" – a steamed fish in coconut milk with curry, served in small packets made of banana leafs. Another traditional favorite is "Lok-Lak" – beef with vegetables in a lime and black pepper sauce. Also try green mango and shrimp salad, it's an excellent entrée before dinner. Cambodia is famous for its tropical fruits. Cambodian mangos are probably the best you will ever taste. Another tasty treasure are the passion fruits and mangosteens. Depending on the season, you can buy up to 30 different kinds of fresh fruits on any provincial market. Khmers have a strange tradition where they collect semi-ripe fruits and use them in soups and other dinner plates along with vegetables like carrots, onions or cucumbers. In Khmer cuisine pineapples and bananas often replace potatoes. You will find sweet pineapple cubes are often added to pork plates and to all kind of soups. Even to fried noodles or a barracuda barbeque. Fortunately for the gourmet tourist, modern agricultural chemicals still not widely used in Cambodian rural farms and the country actually is a real oasis of natural, organic food. It is a paradise for eco-tourists. Cambodia certainly has the potential to become a major exporter of healthy food products in the near future.
Sep
11
Raffles Hotel Le Royal Phnom Penh
For most tourists, a trip to Cambodia begins and ends in Siem Reap. While the amazing history of Angkor Wat is certainly a must for every traveller to see at least once in a lifetime, Cambodia is a country on the rise with appeal in other parts of the country as well. The capital, Phnom Penh, is experiencing rapid growth; for now, the low-rise cityscape is punctuated by only a few skyscrapers, but this will change as time goes on. Travellers who are looking for an Asian experience recalling a more relaxed pace of life in the less frenetic times will enjoy a stay at Raffles Hotel Le Royal, Phnom Penh's premier hotel. The Raffles expertise in recreating the genteel ambience of times past is especially appropriate in this city, and the property is certainly an excellent base for exploring such sights as the National Museum Of Cambodia, the Royal Palace, the Silver Pagoda, and Wat Phnom, located just a few hundred metres from the hotel. Phnom Penh's lively riverfront restaurant and bar scene is close enough to be convenient but far enough not to be disruptive when at home in the hotel. Now supplemented by a wing added in the 1990s, the original building's historic Personality Suites are named for other famous guests who have visited, including Mrs Onassis, French writer André Malraux, Charles de Gaulle, and Somerset Maugham. Regardless of location within the hotel, all accommodation reflects the history of the city in a chic and comfortable style. First opened in 1929, Raffles Hotel Le Royal has seen some of the world's most famous people pass through its doors. One of them was Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, for whom the hotel's signature drink, the Femme Fatale, was invented. A special set of glasses with a unique shape was created for the Femme Fatale, which is a blend of champagne, cognac, and creme de cassis; the hotel's legendary Elephant Bar still serves the drink in glasses of the same shape used for Femme Fatales and no other drink. Another US First Lady recently stayed at Raffles Le Royal, though in her capacity as US Secretary Of State, Hilary Clinton had less time for sightseeing than did Jackie O. No one should pass up a visit to Raffles' spa to take up the opportunity for a Khmer massage, which incorporates pressure-point stimulation into a treatment that also includes gentle stretching and muscle movement that leaves the beneficiary with surprising reinvigoration. Follow up a spa treatment with a fine dining experience at Le Royal, the hotel's deluxe restaurant, where the finest in Khmer and European cuisine is served to guests. Khmer cuisine is a superb balance of distinctly fresh and flavoursome ingredients. As in Thailand, Cambodia has a special cuisine reserved for the royal family, and Le Royal is the only restaurant in the country authorised to prepare royal cuisine for its guests. Less formal but no less appealing is Café Monivong, where a bountiful buffet breakfast is served each morning. Lunch and dinner are also served here, though the Sunday Personality Brunch is perhaps the most famous of its meals.
Sep
14
TOURS & DETOUR: Voluntourism opportunities this fall and winter
Greenloons, which guides travelers to sustainable vacations, suggests vacation adventures from Cambodia to Tanzania offering voluntourism opportunities for families and friends traveling over the upcoming winter holidays. “We can’t image a more meaningful holiday season and wish the world a happy New Year,” says Greenloons founder and president Irene N. Lane. Explore Cambodia and Laos Dec. 29, 2012, to Jan. 13, 2013, for example. New Hope Cambodia is a grassroots, hands-on non-government organization whose mission is to restore hope, dignity and promise to the local community of Mondul. Volunteer work varies from helping build a new school or library to participating with teaching in classrooms or visiting local families who require assistance. The rest of the time is spent with bike rides, swimming, cave-exploring and visits to the countryside. Departures are monthly and Lane calls this trip “ideal” for children 12 years and up. Accommodations are for 12 nights at hotels and guest houses. One night is with a family home stay and another night is on a sleeper train. All are designed to be authentic experiences with many of the comforts of home. Greenloons Voluntourism Vacations requires an average level of fitness and there are opportunities for hiking and biking. The price includes entrance and guide to Angkor Temples and the New Hope Volunteer Project, the UNESCO town of World Heritage of Luang Prabang and more. Maximum number permitted for group is 15, but the average size is 10 participants. Another project is Tanzania and Safari Dec. 9-21, 2012. Guests in Zanzibar volunteer in the village of Jambiani, helping teachers in local schools and organizing sports activities for community youth. The local government school in Jambiani has about 1,300 students and on average only 20 percent pass their government exams. Although English is widely spoken in areas frequented by tourists, a large percentage of Zanzibar’s population has limited English skills. Schools are very appreciative of assistance from English-speakers in helping children master the language. Due to a lack of teachers with science and computer training, volunteer contribution in these areas are also needed. Other opportunities for voluntourism are Zambia Community and Safari Dec. 29, 2012-Jan. 11, 2013, which is an adventurous trip across three countries with an authentic safari through national parks in search of the “Big 5” with time spent working on volunteer projects that benefit the people and the animals of the region. Guest walk with rhinos and gain personal insight into the culture of the Shangaan people one day and participate in the Livingstone community volunteer program the next. Project Kenya and Safari Nov. 26-Dec. 10, 2012, is a 15-day trip in which guests scour the Maasai Mara for lions, cheetahs, elephants and rhinos while camping under the sky for a uniquely African experience. Volunteers are involved at the Limuru Children Center, Mukeu special unit school and In His Image baby-rescue center. Project Peru Amazon and Project Costa Rica are two of the many programs in Latin America that Greenloons offers where volunteer work and family vacations combine to help these countries. Project Peru Amazon is a 9-day family adventure that includes travel by motorized canoe up the Tambopata River to spend 5 days at a center for the rehabilitation and conservation of wild animals. Zoologists help to maintain an interpretative trail, build animal enclosures and interact with the local community. An additional 2 days are spent in the rainforest learning about traditional medicinal plants, spotting exotic birds, caimans and monkeys. Departures are weekly. Project Costa Rica gets families involved with the Pacific Sea Turtle Project, a conservation initiative undertaken to protect endangered sea turtles and their nests and improving the chance of the hatchlings on Matapalo Beach. Over the 15-day program, families will volunteer in night beach patrols to protect the turtle nests, collect data, do some general cleaning and maintenance, and monitor the hatchery where baby turtles are counted and released. There are 2 days scheduled in the Monteverde Cloud Forest and another 2 days in the town of La Fortuna where activities in the Arenal Volcano area range from birdwatching to hiking and biking to canyoning and river rafting. Departures are July through November and the trip is recommended for children aged 12 plus. Continued...
Aug
01
Cambodian Minister of Tourism Receives VCFA Delegation
Cambodian Minister of Tourism H.E. Thong Khon received here recently a 20-member delegation of the Vietnam-Cambodia Friendship Association (VCFA) to Ho Chi Minh led by its President Mr. Truong Minh Nhut. During the meeting, Mr. Truong Minh Nhut sought Cambodia’s support and cooperation to successfully organize a four-day business forum in Cambodia in October, 2012. The VCFA president also expressed his pleasure to see the on-going cooperation between Vietnam and Cambodia in tourism, trade and culture as well as in social sectors, adding that he would bring some 200 Vietnamese businessmen to the upcoming forum. For his part, H.E. Thong Khon voiced his full support, saying that Cambodia is ready to cooperate with the Vietnamese side for the successful upcoming event. The members of VCFA delegation were the former Vietnamese experts who helped and supported Cambodia during the 1980s.
Aug
06
Historical site in Dong Nai Cambodian Deputy PM's visit
Vice President of the Dong Nai People's Committee Nguyen Thanh Tri pays courtersy visit to Men Sam An in Bien Hoa city (Source: VNA) Cambodia’s Standing Deputy Prime Minister Men Sam An on August 3 offered incense at a historical site in southern Dong Nai province where Brigade 125, the precursor of the Cambodian National United Front for National Salvation, was established. The Cambodian Deputy PM laid a wreath at the memorial stele for Brigade 125 soldiers and talked with staff of Division 302 of the Military Zone 7 High Command. She said she was moved to visit the site, which is evidence for the solidarity in fighting and close attachment between Vietnamese and Cambodian armies and people. She thanked the Vietnamese army and people for their great support for Cambodia in the struggle for national liberation in the past as well as in current national development. On May 12, 1978, in Long Giao commune, Cam My district, with the enthusiastic assistance of the Vietnamese Party, State, army and people, more than 200 Cambodian soldiers formed Brigade 125, commanded by Hun Sen, who is now Prime Minister of Cambodia. The brigade coordinated with the Vietnamese army and people in the struggle to liberate Cambodia from the Khmer Rouge regime on January 7, 1979. The site, inaugurated on January 2, 2012, is now home to 49 Cambodian fallen soldiers./.
Feb
28
Preah Vihear card in play following UNESCO listing

Since Monday’s decision by UNESCO to list Preah Vihear temple as a Cambodian

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World Heritage Site, the Kingdom’s nationalist rapture has subsided just enough to allow for more pragmatic thoughts of the pay-off.

Senior Cambodian People’s Party lawmaker Cheam Yeap said July 10 that he expected the listing of the 11th-century Hindu temple, which had long been hotly disputed by Thailand, to result in a major boon for the ruling party in the July 27 general election.

“I am at Prey Veng near the Vietnam border right now. We told the voters of the success of Samdech Prime Minister Hun Sen,” he told the Post.

Yeap said Hun Sen deserved credit for the world body’s decision because he had sent a letter to UNESCO requesting the designation six years ago.

“There is no doubt that Samdech Hun Sen is a CPP leader,” he boasted.

Yeap said Prey Veng residents, particularly farmers, were showing their support for the CPP and were elated and proud of their premier, as was he.

“I cried in front of my wife once I heard UNESCO had made a decision on the temple.”

Khmer-language newspapers this week featured numerous advertisements placed by CPP officials, congratulating Hun Sen, Deputy Prime Minister Sok An and CPP President Chea Sim on the world body’s decision.

However, Koul Panha, director of the Committee for Free and Fair Elections, a Cambodian election monitor, questioned any exclusive claim to ownership of the temple victory and discouraged politicization of the site.

“I think all political parties can use Preah Vihear as a means of attracting voters, but no one party or group should get the credit alone,” he said.

“I think Preah Vihear temple is the pride of all Cambodians, as well as the political parties…. If only one party makes political gains off of Preah Vihear temple, I am afraid there will be an internal dispute that will lead to different attitudes about the temple.”

Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker Son Chhay downplayed the ruling party’s hand in resolving the dispute with Thailand over ownership of the territory surrounding the temple, which for years had been the most significant obstacle to its listing.

“It is the normal obligation of a government to do this. It was not the special job of the CPP,” Chhay said.

Cambodia’s tourism sector, on the other hand, is less concerned with political points.

Ho Vandy, president of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents, said on July 8 that 162 tour operators have begun promotion plans for package tours of Cambodia’s expanding heritage corridor. They will advertise in about 100 countries.

Vandy said the proposed package includes stops at Angkor Wat, Koh Ker temple in western Preah Vihear province, Preah Vihear temple, and Wat Phu, another Khmer temple in Laos.

But the immediate concern, Vandy said, should be developing Cambodia’s overland routes to Preah Vihear, which at present are rutted and jarring, making the temple far more accessible from the nearby Thai border.

Then restaurants, hotels and shops will follow, he said.

Minster of Tourism Thong Khon agreed, saying that there eventually will be four roads leading to the temple and at least one key artery will be completed by next year.

“I already sent a letter to the Ministry of Public Works and Transportation to push for the road construction,” he said.

The first sign of things to come actually preceded UNESCO’s decision; in May the newly formed Preah Vihear National Authority, or PVNA, deployed 22 heritage police.

Hang Soth, director of the PVNA, a commission under the Council of Ministers, said the heritage police are charged with protecting the site from looting and vandalism.

He also said that the Thai border crossing at Preah Vihear will remain closed until Thai nationalist fervor simmers down, a worry he blamed on opposition activists in Bangkok.

“We respect our neighbor and the neighboring nation respects us,” he said.

But in Thailand, bruised nationalism remains unappeased, and the government of Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej is suffering from the fallout.

On July 10, Thai Foreign Minister Noppadon Pattama stepped down after the Constitutional Court ruled that he had acted illegally in signing an agreement supporting Cambodia’s bid to have Preah Vihear temple listed as a World Heritage Site without the permission of parliament.

His move had been approved by Samak’s cabinet, which the court also decided had violated the Thai Constitution in acting without parliamentary consent, a verdict that observers said could lead to a major cabinet reshuffle.

In his emotional resignation speech, Noppadon maintained he had acted in good faith in signing the agreement with Cambodia.

“I insist I have done nothing wrong. I have not sold the country out. I love Thailand, and would not cause any damage to the country.”

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AFP

UNESCO’s decision to list Preah Vihear temple as a World Heritage Site sparked impromptu street parties throughout the country this week.

Former King Norodom Sihanouk has responded to Thai critics of the deal, saying that those claiming parts of the temple are in Thailand, including the main entrance, ignore “historic facts” and were bent on sabotaging Cambodian-Thai relations.

Meanwhile in Preah Vihear province, the party rages on.

“We have danced for three nights and we will continue,” Ley Eang, proprietress of a coffee shop near the temple site, said.

“We are excited with the temple’s registration. We expect it to bring more tourists and investors who will improve people’s living conditions here.”

Preap Tan, provincial governor of Preah Vihear, said he had overseen a massive celebratory ceremony the morning of July 10 that drew upwards of 5,000 people to T’beng Meanchey, the provincial capital.

“People have danced every night and held ceremonies everyday. No one told them to. They do it themselves,” he said.

“We will have fireworks for the next three nights and cheer the temple.”

Source:     Phnompenhpost

Jul
14
Cambodia: the floating village of Chong Khneas
Floating lives, drifting across the waters of Tonlé Sap – one of the largest lakes of South-East Asia. On it, the village of Chong Khneas, where structures of bamboo are both home and boat. In Chong Khneas survival depends on fishing. More than five thousand people live here – the majority children – squashed into nearly two thousand hovels which float on the surface. The space is divided among Cambodians and Vietnamese, who share the common difficulty of living on – on average – the equivalent of less than one hundred dollars a month.[frax09alpha] In Chong Khneas survival depends on fishing. Tonlé Sap has an almost unparalleled biodiversity, with hundreds of species of fish. More than half of all fish production in Cambodia comes from here. Such abundance, however, does not always guarantee a livelihood for the inhabitants of this remote area. “We can feed ourselves, but it’s difficult to do much more than that”, a fisherman told me. The nearest market is about 20 Km from the lake, and to these people gasoline is almost a luxury. More than five thousand people live here – the majority children – squashed into nearly two thousand hovels which float on the surface. There are only two schools, run by foreign missionaries living in the region. Moreover, not all the children can study anyway. Many simply help their parents fishing or working in small family workshops. “You see these boys playing in the water?”, one of my hosts asked me. “They don’t yet know they have only two options in the future: either becoming fishermen, with the same hard life their parents suffer; or becoming beggars, hoping for spare change from the few travelers, who, just like you, visit our village in the rainy season.” On the surface of the waters, shifting reflections. And over the twisted bamboo, an uncertain destiny.
Sep
06
Vietnamese travel firms working for foreigners on home market
The number of foreign tourists to Vietnam has been increasing steadily in recent years. The number of Chinese tourists increased by 57 percent, while Cambodian by 66 percent last year, according to thebox.vn. In the first seven months of 2012, Vietnam received 773,000 Chinese, 421,000 South Korean, 329,000 Japanese travelers. However, the high number of foreign travelers to Vietnam does not always means the high income for Vietnamese travel firms and service providers. The problem is that Vietnamese travel firms, including the most well-known ones, cannot directly serve the travelers from the potential markets. The director of a big travel firm in HCM City admitted that the firm cannot receive Taiwanese, Cambodia, Chinese and South Korean for the last few years. Meanwhile, the number of Japanese travelers the firm receives has been decreasing year after year. In the past, it received 2000 Japanese travelers a year, while it served only 800 travelers in the first seven months of the year. “Like many other Vietnamese travel firms, we cannot penetrate the potential markets,” the director said. Vietravel, a firm considered as having high numbers of inbound tourists, reportedly received 1000 Taiwanese, 5000 South Korean and 14,000 Chinese travelers in the first half of 2012 – the very modest figures if compared with the figures for every market announced by the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT). Tran Van Long, Director of Du Lich Viet travel firm, said his branch in Hanoi receives Chinese travelers, but just a little, while most of the travelers come to Vietnam by air. No information about the other markets such as Japanese, South Korean, Taiwanese or Cambodia in the report of the company. Some Vietnamese travel firms announce that they get South Korean, Japanese or Chinese travelers. However, in fact, they simply “sell the right to receive tourists” to get commissions, while they do not directly serve the travelers. In fact, the tour operation is undertaken absolutely by foreign firms, and foreign tourist guides serve foreign travelers. Meanwhile, Vietnamese travel firms only provide services… on paper. Where does the money go? Thanh Nien has quoted Pham Trung Luong, Deputy Head of the Vietnam Research Institute for Tourism Development as saying that in many cases, foreign travel firms undertake all kinds of services, from collecting clients, bringing tourists to Vietnam, providing foreign tour guides and other services. Luong said since Vietnamese travel firms can only undertake minor jobs; they can only get very modest profit shares. The director of a Vietnamese travel firm, who asked to be anonymous, said that in many cases, foreigners set up travel firms in Vietnam under the names of their Vietnamese relatives, which allows them to provide all kinds of services. Phan Dinh Hue, Director of Vong Tron Viet travel firm, said when cooperating with foreign travel firms to bring Vietnamese tourists abroad, Vietnamese travel firms only undertake 20 percent of the total workload. For example, travel firms just book tickets, carry tourists to the airport. Meanwhile, the Thai partners would undertake all the other works in the Thai territory, including hotel, meal, and transport services. A foreign expert has warned that foreign travel firms have been more and more deeply “thrusting their hands” into the Vietnamese market, while Vietnam’s reactions remain too weak. It may happen that Vietnamese travel firms would have to work as hired workers on their home market, and lend a hand to
Aug
28
Cambodian Information Minister Supports the JCI’s City Cleaning Program
Cambodian Minister of Information H.E. Khieu Kanharith presided over here yesterday at the National Olympic Stadium the “Let’s Do It!”, a city cleaning program organized by Junior Chamber International (JCI) Cambodia. Thousands of Phnom Penh residents, students, Buddhist monks and representatives of national and international organizations and private companies attended the event. On the occasion, H.E. Khieu Kanharith said the beauty and sanitation of a city reflect not only the progress and modernization of that city, but also the ethical living and education level of its people. H.E. Khieu Kanharith expressed his high appreciation to the “Let’s Do It!” program, saying that it is a meaningful initiative to inspire the clean environment concept to the people. Ms. Touch Sarom, Acting Governor of Phnom Penh said waste management is one of the challenges in the capital city, and this campaign will raise more understanding on clean environment among the residents. Some 2 million Phnom Penh residents dispose of some 1,335 tons of waste and 350.000 cubic meters of waste water each day.
Aug
06
Cambodia to get its first Marine Protected Area
The coastline of Cambodia, running from Vietnam to Thailand, is soon to become a marine protected area, as announced by the British NGO Coral Cay in July. The organization, which started working in Cambodia in 2009, is now working closely with the Cambodian government to implement a protected area. The 69 islands that make up this part of Cambodia's coastline are surrounded by coral reefs and sea grass meadows and are home to marine creatures such as seahorses and turtles. The project, which will ultimately cover an area of 300 square km when it's completed in three years' time, will include conservation, recreation and sustainable fisheries areas. Jan-Willem van Bochove, Head of Science at Coral Cay Conservation, told Relaxnews that "the establishment of a multiple-use zonation plan would certainly help support sustainable eco-tourism to the area by having clear recreational and other zones. "If well managed, it is estimated that some of these activities could generate 1.2 million dollars in turnover." In the past years, Coral Cay has identified key areas of coral reef biodiversity that will be part of the program. The three-year program will help to monitor the marine habitats as well as to develop low-impact tourism initiatives and will also help to ensure support for different conservation management zones. The program is funded by Blue Moon Fund and Flora & Fauna international.
Feb
28
Cambodia turns Killing Fields into agricultural success

But since the ultra-Maoist’s disastrous drive from 1975 to 1979 to turn the country into an agrarian utopia bereft of markets, money and technology, Cambodia has quietly picked itself up and is poised to become one of the major rice exporters in the region, experts said.

From the dismal postwar years, Cambodia has steadily rebuilt its irrigation systems, developed its technology and slowly but surely reclaimed thousands of hectares of rice fields from land mines.

‘Cambodia will become a major rice exporter,’ Agriculture Minister Chan Sarun said. ‘We achieved food security in 1995, and last year, as well as self-sufficiency, we had 2 million tons left over for exports.

‘We currently have 2.5 million hectares under rice cultivation, but we expect to increase that to 3 million.

Cambodia’s rice producers and millers are optimistic about their future, and this year, Cambodia even sold subsidized rice to African countries, including Guinea, as a humanitarian gesture.

So confident is Cambodia of being able to hold its own with the big regional rice players in the future that Prime Minister Hun Sen has been a key proponent of a proposed regional rice cartel similar to that of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

Thailand’s brainchild, the proposed Organization of Rice Exporting Countries, was aimed at protecting the region’s major rice producers but has deeply concerned major importers, such as the Philippines, which said it would only benefit major producers.

Phou Puy, president of the Cambodian National Rice Millers Association, said new growing techniques, rice strains and irrigation projects could potentially double the country’s rice crop by 2015.

‘With these changes, Cambodia’s traditional one-time-per-year harvest can increase to two, even three times a year,’ Phou Puy said. ‘By 2015, that could provide exports of 10 million tons.

‘Currently, we stand at between 2 [million] to 5 million tons, depending on weather conditions,’ he said.

The 2015 projection would have Cambodia matching neighbouring Thailand’s export predictions for 2008. Thailand is currently the world’s largest rice exporter.

Cambodia is increasingly also becoming a player in biofuel production, but Phou Puy denied that that development would put to use land that could be planted for rice.

Vast industrial farms have sprung up on the north-western border with Thailand, producing corn and soybeans, and jatropha, which is endemic to Cambodia and a prime source of biodiesel, now takes up hundreds of hectares.

‘But these crops grow where rice doesn’t, so they do not impact on our rice yield,’ Phou Puy said. ‘I have no doubt Cambodia has the potential to match or surpass our rice-producing neighbours.

Such a development would be a major achievement not only for the country but also for donors who have poured billions of dollars into Cambodia’s agricultural sector.

While China has been a key donor for irrigation development, alongside others including the Asian Development Bank, Australia has led the way in Cambodia’s technological and scientific advances, funding research and development projects.

The Cambodian Agricultural Research and Development Institute has benefited from millions of dollars in Australian aid and in return has been integral in developing new strains of rice, more resistant to the whims of climate change and the ravages of insects.

The institute’s mission is to educate individual growers in a country where the bulk of people involved in agriculture work on mostly small family plots.

These sorts of measures have been so successful that Chan Sarun envisages a second lucrative niche market in organic rice, which demands a higher price but costs farmers less to produce because they don’t use expensive fertilizers and pesticides.

‘Organic rice is very popular,’ the minister said. ‘We aim to reduce chemical fertilizer use step by step. The world prefers natural food, so we are moving in that direction.

Mechanization will not come overnight, and experts agreed the days of Cambodia’s rice farmers plodding patiently behind a plough pulled by cows or buffalo were not numbered.

But they said simple techniques with the right cropping, strains and a guaranteed water supply might one day take Cambodia to the top of the region in producing one of the world’s most precious staples.

Aug
11
Cambodia, India Look to Improve Cooperation in Tourism, Vocational Training, Agro-industry
H.E. Deputy Prime Minister Dr. Sok An on Tuesday welcomed the Indian Ambassador’s comment that India is looking to expand cooperation in tourism and to assist Cambodia’s vocational training, and is interested in investing in agro-industrial crops in Cambodia, according to the Press and Quick Reaction Unit (PRU) of the Office of the Council of Ministers. Newly-appointed Indian Ambassador H.E. Dinesh K. Patnaik told Dr. Sok An of his ambition to boost bilateral tourism with Cambodia by encouraging the Indian movie industry to produce a short movie that features Cambodia’s wonderful cultural heritage, which will intrigue Indian tourists, said PRU. The ambassador recalled that Indian tourists flocked to Spain after they watched a movie about Spanish civilization, it added. Ambassador Patnaik said that an estimated 500 million people, out of India’s 1.2 billion population, have access to movies, and that will have a tremendous positive impact on tourism. “I am going to talk to Indian movie producers and encourage them to shoot Angkor Temple to attract more Indian tourists to Cambodia,” PRU quoted the ambassador as saying. H.E. Dr. Sok An, who is also Minister in Charge of the Office of the Council of Ministers, welcomed this move and mentioned that a U.S. producer had produced a movie in Cambodia called Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, and there was a French tiger film Two Brothers. The ambassador also said he has planned a dance ceremony at Angkor in which 70 Indian dancers will perform on Sept. 4, the day that the ASEAN-India car rally will stop over. The car rally will kick off in Indonesia and come to Delhi to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the ASEAN-India relationship in December. “I want people in Siem Reap and tourists to come to see the performance,” said the ambassador. H.E. Dr. Sok An supported the idea and said, “Cambodia wants a joint dance performance with India.” India also plans to build a textile museum that will also attract more tourists to visit Angkor. “Once you have a museum, people will come to visit,” said Ambassador Patnaik. Both sides also discussed Cambodia’s vocational training, said PRU, adding that the ambassador said that India expects to send its experts to assist Cambodia’s vocational training centre. Dr. Sok An said that Cambodia has set up vocational training centres, especially in Takeo province, where young people are encouraged to learn a number of skills for their careers.
Jul
31
Raffles Hotel welcomes American musical prodigy
American teenage classical music prodigy Michael Fleming will be performing at the Conservatory Bar at Raffles Grand Hotel d'Angkor tomorrow evening, starting at 7pm. The free gig has come about through one of those delicious twists of fate. According to Janet Chan, assistant director of sales at Raffles, Michael and his family are in Asia for holidays. They are staying at the hotel, and knowing that the Conservatory has a beautiful grand piano, they approached the hotel for Michael to play while on holiday. Janet says, "We thought it was a brilliant opportunity to support young talent as well as to showcase world music to our other in-house guests and fellow Siem Reapers. So that's how it started." Furthermore, 18-year-old Fleming will grace the audience with the premiere on piano of a short original composition inspired by what he has read about and photos he has seen of the Angkor temples. But on the morning of his performance in Siem Reap he will visit the temples for the first time, and that is sure to guarantee that his evening performance will be even more inspired. Fleming told Siem Reap Insider, "I will be seeing the temples of Angkor the morning of the performance in Siem Reap. For a great amount of time now, it has been a dream of mine to see these temples. Everything about them will be an inspiration to me. I hope the guide we are with when I visit the temples will bring them alive with their histories and stories." He added, "The style I write in is usually in the conservative modern classical style. The piece will be approximately 3-4 minutes. I have strong ideas from pictures and word of mouth, and I will be premiering the piece on the piano." So who exactly is this amazingly talented young American who has dropped into our midst to entertain and delight us? He says, "I am 18 years old and for all my life I have lived in Newport Beach, California. From a very young age, I have immensely loved music. Around the age of five, I started to play the violin and the piano. I loved the beautiful sounds they made and became very interested in classical music and its history and form. "From the seventh to the twelfth grade, I attended the Orange County High School of the Arts as a violin major in the instrumental music conservatory. In the tenth grade, I was appointed to write the score to Thornton Wilder's play, Our Town, at Vanguard University. With an open mind and dedication, I wrote the whole score for piano and violin with the discretion of the director. Throughout the play's performances, critics from all over the region had nothing but great things to say about my music. The play overall did so well that it went to a regional competition in Washington DC." Wilder's three-act play Our Town is about an average American town's citizens in the early twentieth century and their everyday lives. The play received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1938. In 1946, the Soviet Union prevented a production of Our Town in the Russian sector of Berlin "on the grounds that the drama is too depressing and could inspire a German suicide wave," according to the Christian Science Monitor. Michael Fleming says his composition was, "The first time that music was ever written for this play. [In 2011] I was awarded Meritorious Achievement by the Kennedy Performing Arts Center for the Best Score to a college play. "After that moment, I knew I wanted to write for the moving picture as a career. The next year, I was asked to be the music director of the American Coast Theatre Company to write and prepare music for the West Coast premier of the play, The Hiding Place by Tim Gregory. "That summer, going into senior year of high school, I auditioned for Boston Conservatory's high school composition intensive program. I was selected with five other people out of the entire nation to participate in the program at the prestigious school. My studies there included the analysis of both classical and modern symphonies, classical sonatas and string quartets. I had the opportunity to compose and hear my own music performed by professional musicians." "My school's administration had a vision for my senior class's graduation. They wanted everyone to collaborate together in some way, to create something beautiful from all sorts of backgrounds and talent. They believed I could fulfill that vision with my skills as a composer. I wrote a choral piece with small orchestral accompaniment in two weeks, and 120 seniors from different conservatories came together and created beautiful music from my piece. It was completely student produced with visuals and choreography." "The premier of this piece, entitled Of Voices and Visions, at my graduation was an absolute success. Everyone rose to their feet at the conclusion of the piece which gave me absolute bliss. My love and passion for music is indescribable. It is my love, my fuel, my everything. Starting in the fall, I will be a music composition major at Orange County's Chapman University, which holds one of the nation's best film schools." "And yes, I am multi-instrumental. As aforementioned, I play the violin and the piano. I recently picked up the accordion as well. My musical influences are Shostakovich, Barber, Tchaikovsky, John Williams, James Newton Howard, Michael Giacchino, John Powell, and Thomas Newman." Proceeds from the night will go to the Angkor Hospital for Children, an initiative introduced by the hotel's general manager Christian Sack. The hotel actively supports the hospital and as its blood bank has been low over the past months, Raffles staff donated blood last month and there will be another round this month.
Jul
20
Mekong agreement is signed between Vietnam and Cambodia
Cambodian Water Resources Minister Lim Kean Hor said Cambodia and Vietnam had signed a joint agreement relating to Mekong River issues including the proposed Xayaburi dam in Laos. Speaking after a meeting with Vietnamese Natural Resources Minister Nguyen Ming Quang in Phnom Penh Tuesday, he highlighted the importance of studying impacts on the Mekong. Quang was quoted as saying that the two ministries would cooperate and "continue to talk about issues related to Mekong border countries to develop and maintain the quality of water for historical stability." Financed by a Thai developer, the controversial Xayaburi dam would be the first across the mainstream of the Mekong River. Designed to produce energy mainly for Thailand, the project was suspended early 2012 following complaints from governments in other Mekong countries.
Jul
06
Tiger Airways to Launch Flights to Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Tiger Airways is to launch daily flights to the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh on 1 October 2012. Promotional fares to Phnom Penh are now available from Sin$ 78 one-way (Singapore to Phnom Penh) all-inclusive and US$ 60 one-way (Phnom Penh to Singapore) all-inclusive. These special fares are available till 18 July 2012, for travel from 1 October 2012 till 31 March 2013. Terms and conditions apply. “Cambodia has made great strides over the past decade to become both a tremendously popular tourist destination and a business hub in the region. Tiger Airways is glad to be able to contribute to the country's continued growth by further strengthening its international air links, offering travellers more choices of flights to better serve their needs, be it for business or leisure,” said Tiger Singapore’s Managing Director, Stewart Adams. “From soaking up the local sights and sounds with a leisurely stroll down Sisowath Quay, to visiting the famous Silver Pagoda, or even grabbing a bargain at the Central Market or the Russian Market, the city has plenty to offer to its visitors.” The flights will be Tiger’s first foray into Cambodia, and follows hotly on the heels of the launch of new flights to Hyderabad on 27 September 2012.
Aug
21
Discover the highlights of Phnom Penh – Cambodia
Far from the gleaming skyscrapers of modern Southeast Asian capitals such as Bangkok or Kuala Lumpur, Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh is a dusty and edgy yet somewhat enchanting city of crumbling colonial architecture, wide boulevards and chaotic markets. Phnom Penh riverside at dusk It is gradually modernising, with a few contemporary skyscrapers appearing on the skyline and the popular riverside promenade (Sisowath Quay) now lined with lively cafés, juice bars, hostels, hotels and restaurants – many of them filled with backpackers and other travellers. Despite that, however, Phnom Penh still has an edge and atmosphere found in few other Southeast Asian capitals. Some elements of the city are quite charming, such as the ramshackle market stalls and historic temples, while others can prove to be quite the opposite: tiny children gathering recycling from bins to make a few Riel for their family, and amputee beggars vying for tourists’ pockets. While most visits to the city are trouble-free, always watch your pockets and bags as there is a great deal of poverty in Phnom Penh that gives rise to opportunist theft. At the same time, look after your health by following the usual travel health tips such as avoiding ice in drinks (unless it’s from a trusted source) and always using a good mosquito repellent , particularly from dusk onwards, to protect yourself against malaria and dengue fever. Silver Pagoda at the Royal Palace, Phnom Penh Photo: Kirk Siang on Flickr Silver Pagoda at the Royal Palace, Phnom Penh The main tourist sights of Phnom Penh Dominating the city centre’s sightseeing attractions is the 19th century Royal Palace, including the fabulous Palace Grounds, Silver Pagoda and Temple of the Emerald Buddha. It’s open from 8am, and this is the best time to visit to avoid the heat. You’ll need to wear something decent to cover legs and shoulders, or you can hire a sarong and large t-shirt for a small fee at the entrance. Another central sight is the National Museum of Cambodia, which features an interesting collection of art from Cambodia’s ‘Golden Age’ of Angkor, alongside statues of Hindu Gods, ancient inscribed tablets and prehistoric burial artefacts. At its centre there is a lovely courtyard with a statue of Yama, the Hindu god of death (or the ‘Leper King’) taken from the Terrace of the Leper King in Angkor Archaeological Park. Garden at the National Museum of Cambodia Photo: mookE on Flickr Garden at the National Museum of Cambodia A must-see sight for anyone who wants to better understand Cambodia’s horrific past during the Khmer Rouge’s four-year campaign of terror is the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum. This school, which was converted into the country’s most notorious prison (‘S21′) in 1975, housed more than 14,000 people who were tortured and then killed and buried at the Killing Fields just outside of the city. Only eight prisoners made it out of the prison alive. Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum Photo: timmarec of Flickr Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum You can hire a taxi or tuk-tuk for the 17km trip out of town to the tranquil yet moving Killing Fields of Choeung Ek. A glass-sided Buddhist stupa containing thousands of human skulls lies at the heart of the mass graves that were discovered in 1979. Perhaps one of the city’s most bizarre attractions, which commission-earning tuk-tuk drivers will be quick to tell you about and encourage you to visit, is the Thunder Ranch Shooting Range. Situated near the Killing Fields, it is said to be run by a unit of the Royal Cambodian Army, and for a relatively high fee you can try shooting pistols or machine guns at paper targets. Many tuk-tuk drivers will try to include it in a ‘package’ with the Killing Fields, but if you don’t want to go there just make it clear that you’re not interested. And relax… After a hard day’s sightseeing, treat your aching limbs to a massage – there are plenty of spa places around the main tourist areas, prices are cheap, and the massage is generally very relaxing. This post is brought to you by Gap Year Travel Store – where you can find equipment for backpackers and independent travellers Photo credits: Phnom Penh riverside by judithbluepool, Silver Pagoda by Kirk Siang, National Museum Garden by mookE, Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum by timmarec. This article is originally published at Heatheronhertravels.com - Read more travel articles at Travel Blog Home You’ll also find our sister blog with tips on how to build a successful travel blog at My Blogging Journey
Jul
18
Tour guide training of Cambodian Minister of tourism
Dr. Thong Khon, Cambodia Minister of Tourism delivered a speech for the 11th Tour Guide Training in Phnom Penh City assessing the perspectives of Cambodian tourism as well as the importance of high qualified tour guides. In its speech, Cambodia Tourism Minister Dr Thong Kong praised the tourism sector as a major driver in jobs’ creation, generating immediate benefits for a wide circle of local people. The UNWTO estimates that each job in the tourism sector is generating up to two jobs in other sectors. As tourism is a major factor of growth, Cambodia wants to focus increasingly on the quality of service, especially among young workers. This is a crucial aspect of tourism development in Cambodia as the country is looking at welcoming more and more travellers. In 2011, ASEAN received approximately 79 million international tourists. In 2011, international tourists to Cambodia reached 2.88 million arrivals, an increase of 14% over 2010. Domestic tourism generated also some seven million trips (up by 3% over 2010) bringing national revenue of around US$ 1.91 billion (equivalent to 12% of GDP). Tourism helps creating some 350,000 direct jobs. During the first four months of 2012, Cambodia received 1.27 million international tourists, an increase of 27.1%, compared to the same period in 2011. In 2012, the Minister expects that Cambodia will pass for the first time the three-million mark with projections looking at some 3.2 million international tourists. In 2015, the year ASEAN will turn into a single economic market, the Association projects to receive around 107 million international tourists while Cambodia is targeting 4.5 million travellers. Looking further to the future, Dr Thong Khon estimates that total arrivals could reach seven million by 2020 generating US$ 5 billion in revenues and 800,000 employments in 2020. In respond to the continuous development of tourism which will be leading to the establishment of ASEAN community in 2015, ASEAN has set out the ASEAN Tourism Strategic Plan 2011-2015. Improvement of human resource quality in tourism is one of the three priority strategic directions of this plan. The adopted plan agreed on a Mutual Recognition Arrangement on Tourism Professionals focused on 32 job titles based on Hotel Services and Travel Services divided into 6 divisions. In the future, the tourism professionals are able to mobilize to work in ASEAN countries. In tour guide training course, trainees are required to study 27 subjects (360 hours), divided into 05 main parts, namely general knowledge, skill, legal knowledge, social knowledge and site visit. Future guides are also trained to protect and help managing natural resources, green space, cultural heritage, arts, and traditions. And to immediately lodge complaint or report to the Tourism Police, competent authority or tourism competencies in case of tourists acting illegally such as looting ancient heritage, drug trafficking, human trafficking and detention, minor abuse or prostitution. According to the Minister, tour guide training is very important as it can respond to the current and future market trend. So far, the Ministry of Tourism has trained 4,561 tour guides for Siem Reap and Phnom Penh areas, in which there are 1,035 tour guides for Phnom Penh speaking various languages such as English, French, Chinese, Japanese, Spain, Italian, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese, Russian, etc… To strengthen the quality of education and training on tourism professions, particularly tour guide and to enlarge the public-private cooperation, the Ministry of Tourism has allowed private schools and organizations to conduct tour guide training courses, such as the Paul Dubrule Hotel and Tourism School, created by the founder of ACCOR Hotels Group. Students cannot be eligible to become tour guides unless they apply for a license from the Ministry of Tourism which is valid for a two-year period.
Jul
17
Indian scientists help save 131 trees in Cambodian temple
New Delhi : Indian scientists have been successful in conserving 131 trees at the 800-year-old Ta Prohm temple in Cambodia, better known as 'Temple Tree'. Experts from the Dehradun-based Forest Research Institute (FRI) along with the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) have been working on the Conservation and Restoration of Ta Prohm Temple (Cambodia) Project under the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme (ITEC) of the external affairs ministry. The team, which has been working there since 2007, has started seeing some good results with improvement in the health of trees which were in a bad shape, threatening the monument built in the late 12th century by Jayavarman VII of the Khmer empire in memory of his mother. The temple is a Unesco World Heritage Site. Several movies, including the Hollywood blockbuster "Tomb Raider", were shot there. Different species of matured and young trees, some standing on the ground and some on the walls and roofs of various structures, are seen in the temple premises. The most common tree species is Tetrameles nudiflora, locally known as 'Speung'. N.S.K. Harsh, head of Forest Pathology at the Forest Research Institute (FRI), said that before starting the project, they conducted a survey and found that of the 131 trees in the premises, 36 needed immediate attention. "The trees were found under stress at the site due to heavy tourist pressure, soil compaction, injuries to exposed roots and stems, cavities in trees and exposed buttresses and basal rotting. Besides, a few trees were dangerously leaning and causing the walls and other structures to collapse under their weight," Harsh told IANS. The tree height here ranges from 40 to 80 metres with huge trunks while the girth exceeds more than three metres in some cases and buttresses span up to 13 metres at the base. The buttresses and roots are spreading all over the structures and ground, making them magnificent visual objects. The institute's team carried out periodic treatment of the decayed portion of trunks, stems and roots of the trees by using eco-friendly material (an oleoresin tapped from a tree) followed by cavity filling with polyurethane foam and wax. The exposed roots of trees were covered with soil in different sections. Periodic surface treatment with anti-fungal material on etched surfaces was prescribed. A prop was provided to support a dangerously leaning tree and was designed to withstand its swaying and weight. A metallic support was designed and erected below a wall collapsing under the weight of the tree. "I would say timely intervention by FRI has halted further deterioration of tree health. The trees are now in a better health and their life span has increased," Harsh said. FRI has also carried out training classes for capacity building of local stakeholders so that they can continue the conservation work on their own post-2014 when the institute's contract ends. Regular monitoring of tree health is being done to check the level of decay, insect attacks, phenological behaviour and emerging tree growth pattern. This is not the first time that India is helping Cambodia in restoration of a heritage site. Indian archaeologists had successfully restored the world famous Angkor Vat temple in the country. In India, the FRI has conserved the famous Bodhi tree ('pipal') in Bodhgaya, a direct descendant of the original tree under which the Buddha meditated. It has also conserved a neem tree in the Sai Baba temple in Shirdi in Maharshtra.
Jul
16
Choul Chhnam Khmer - New Year
People in the world always say New Year celebrate their happy festival. They usually schedule and prepare it differently, depend on their belief and tradition. For Cambodian have hold it since past till the present. The reason that cause to finish the old year for the are that: There have been some people believe that there is a story as following one time there were a person "KABEL MORHAPROHM" who asked three questions to "THORM BAL KOMA, the millionaire's on, who had known the three percepts of "TRAI VITH" and ail kinds of the animal's languages. They all had promised to cut the head of the person who failed the exam "THORM BAL" have no way to find the solution, he felled very hopeless, fortunately, there were two eagles which had spoken about these questions to make "THORM BAL" could find the way to settle the problems. The time of gambling arrived "THORM BAL " had spoken that: 1. In the morning, the happiness is on the face that is why all people have to wash their face. 2. In the afternoon, the happiness is on the breath to make the people take water to wash the breath. 3. In the evening, the happiness is on the foot to make the people wash their food in the evening. The result had broken out "KABEL MORHAPROHM" had to cut his head to give to the oldest had take it go around PRAS SOMERU mountain about 60 minutes after they all bring it to put in the center of KUHA KUNTH MALAY of KAILA mountain. In the end of the year the 7 females angles had changed their turn to take the head and go around the mountain every year till the present. This is the reason to cause "SANG KRAN" or changing the old year into the New Year. Khmer New Year Cambodian people are playing the Chaul Choung game in New Year Day. Some people have believed that for a period of one year the people always face the problems like diseases or serious obstacles to make them unhappy. When the one of the year they all had celebrated a great festival called "HAPPY NEW YEAR" and the people always prepare them-self, clean the house, and take food to offer the monks. They wear new clothes and play popular games. The festival usually is in 3 days period. The first day is "MOHA SANGKRAN" the second day is "VORNBORTH" and the third day is "THNGAI LIENG SAK". For that time they start to change the old year when the angle comes to get the duties from the former angle were schedule clearly. WHEN IS THE KHMER NEW YEAR'S DAY CELEBRATED? Since the period of Norkor Thom, the Khmer people used the Lunar calendar (The revolution of the moon), that why they dated Mekseh (name of the first lunar month, from mid-November to mid-December) as the Khmer New Year's month, and is the first month of the year. And Kadek (name of the last Lunar month) is the second one. After that, they turned to use the Solar calendar (The revolution of the sun) as the most, and they dated the Chetr (5th Lunar month) is the New Year's month, when the sun gets to the Mes Reasey. The Khmer New Year's day is often celebrated on the 13th April (Chetr), but sometime it is celebrated on the 14th April, because of the Solar calendar. The almanac which is base on the Solar calendar is called "Simple arrival or Sangkran Thormada. And the almanac which is based on the Lunar calendar, because the Lunar calendar is relevant to the Buddha's speeches. Khmer New Year Buddhist devotees pour water over the statue of a revered Buddhist monk during the New Year Celebrations. Beside, the Khmer New Year's day that is base on the Lunar calendar isn't regular, because we sometimes celebrate it in the night of the waxing moon (Khneut), or in the night of the waning moon. However, we usually celebrate it around one month. It means that we don't do it before 4th Keut of Khe Pisak (name of the Solar day) of Khe Chetr and not after 4th Keut of Khe Pisak (name of the 6th Lunar month), so that some of the Khmer people celebrate their New Year's day in Khe Chetr, such as the documents written by Mr. Chio-Takran, Khmer people celebrate this celebration with playing the hand-scarf-throwing game and they gather the statues of Buddha from everywhere to bath. In the other hand, the inscription in stone at Preah Khan is also stated this. Talking about there celebrations in this New Year's Day. The Khmer people celebrate them traditionally as below. A few days before the Khmer New Year's day, they prepared some food, clean their house, bought some news and so on. When the New Year's Day comes, they prepare something such as 5 candles, 5 incenses, a pair of 5 Baysey, a pair of Baysey Baklam, a pair of Slathor (a ceremonial ornament made with a banana tree trunk bake), a tray of cigarettes, some flowers and some fruits to sacrifice to the new heaven. When every is ready, they sit together near that place and light the candles to pray for happiness from the new heaven and start to pray before breaking each other. On the other hand, we have different celebrations during these 3 days of New Year's Day. On the first day, they take some food to offer the monks at the monastery in the evening, they gather the sand to build up a sandal mountain around the pagoda or around the bany tree in the early evening, and they some drink to the monks and invite them to bany. On the second day, children give some new clothes and money to their parents and grandparents. They also give some gift to their maids and poor people. In the evening, they go to build up the sandal mountain and start to bany that they consider it a Cholamony Chedey and ask the monks to bony and offer them the food to dedicate this sin to the spirit of the ancestor. In the morning of the third day, they also invite the monks to bany for the sandal mountain. And in the evening, they bath the monks and statue of Buddha. During this third day, the people also play some traditional games such as the hand-scarf-throwing game, they kick the nuts game, the tug of war game, trot dancing (Battambang, Siem Reap). They also dance some traditional dancing such as Rorm Vong, Rorm Khbach…. etc.
Jul
04
Gambles and tourism development in Cambodia
PHNOM PENH and MACAU - Since its casino resorts opened in 2010, Singapore has stood out as a shining example for global gaming companies. Everyone wants to imitate its success. But few places can match Singapore as a destination for international tourism and investment. Rather than trying to copy the Lion City, many aspiring gaming centers would do well to consider the Naga alternative, based on the casino in Cambodia. Singapore's example has been compelling. The country held an open tender for its two casino licenses starting in 2005, inspiring a fierce competition between most of the world's leading gaming companies. The so-called Singapore model, spelled out in the bidding requirements, demanded iconic properties, non-gaming attractions and tourism appeal. That meant successful aspirants would have to spend billions of dollars on their new properties, which Singapore's well-paid bureaucrats dubbed integrated resorts (IRs). As a result, Singapore wound up with two established international casino companies, Las Vegas Sands from the United States and Genting Group from Malaysia. They constructed the two most expensive casino properties yet built, with a total investment of more than US$10 billion. Hot stuff Marina Bay Sands has three 55-story hotel towers connected by a one-hectare rooftop deck that overhangs the east tower, creating a striking new vista in the Singapore skyline as well as a great vantage point to view the city. The resort also has a lotus-shaped museum, a million-square-foot convention center, and a glass-enclosed shopping mall. Genting's Resorts World Sentosa features Southeast Asia's only Universal Studios theme park, and a multimedia, interactive, indoor/outdoor maritime museum soon to be linked to the world's largest aquarium. Both resorts have celebrity chef restaurants, destination spas, and tens of millions of dollars in artworks inside and out. Combined casino revenue last year was estimated at more than US$6 billion, more than the total take of Las Vegas's casinos. They've become the most profitable properties for their companies, with combined profits on track to top US$2 billion this year. Non-gaming revenue was $1.5 billion and EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) reached US$500 million, "comparable to the top six hotel companies in the world", former Marina Bay Sands CEO Thomas Arasi noted at Global Gaming Expo (G2E) Asia 2012 in Macau. As good as the casinos have been for Las Vegas Sands and Genting, they've been even better for Singapore. From 10 million visitor arrivals and S$10 billion (US$7.9 billion) tourist expenditures in 2008, arrivals rose to 13.1 million last year, with expenditures topping S$21 billion. The city added close to 5,000 new hotel rooms that hospitality experts say were critically needed, yet seemingly defied the laws of supply and demand as rates rose 25%. I'll have what she's having Beyond numbers and dollars, the IRs have changed Singapore's image from stuffy and boring to exciting. They have in many ways given Singapore the "X factor" Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong sought when he proposed casino legalization in 2004. Seeing the impact of the two IRs, "Governments around the world will say, 'I want one of those'," Arasi observed. But not every place has Singapore's special attributes. Its government and legal system inspire the confidence foreigners need to plunk down several billion dollars. Equally attractive, more than one in seven Singapore residents is a millionaire. Even before the IRs opened, Singapore was a leading international travel destination, supported by one of the world's best airports in terms of both facilities and travel links. A country like Cambodia, especially the war-torn, capital-poor Cambodia of two decades ago, needs a different approach. NagaWorld, the only casino in Cambodia's capital of Phnom Penh, is a fraction of the size of Singapore's IRs. It was built in stages at a fraction of the cost, and is a fraction as profitable. But NagaWorld may be as beneficial to Cambodia as the IRs are to Singapore. In 1991, just after a United Nations administered peace agreement gave hope of ending decades of political chaos and civil war, the government asked for bids to build an airport and related infrastructure in Sihanoukville, a port and beach resort on Cambodia's southern coast about 185 kilometers southwest of the capital. NagaCorp founder and chief executive officer Chen Lip Keong, a Malaysian property developer who at the time had no experience in casinos, won the contract, which included the "carrot" of a gaming license, NagaWorld chairman Timothy McNally said. "Cambodia was starting at ground zero," McNally, a former US Federal Bureau of Investigation agent who joined NagaCorp after working as director of security and legal services at the Hong Kong Jockey Club, said. Rather than rounding out its tourist offerings, Cambodia was just trying to stop being the butt of the joke in Holiday in Cambodia, a 1980 punk anthem. It was a poor, war-weary nation struggling to get back on its feet, an unlikely site for casino development. "When I used to go on road shows, they would look at us like, a casino in Cambodia? Still any M-16s on the streets? There were a lot of perception issues," McNally said. In 1994, NagaCorp opened its first casino on a barge in the Mekong River. Two years later, the company saw its initial 20-year gaming license extended to 70 years. The license also gives NagaCorp exclusive rights to casino gambling within a 200-kilometer radius of Phnom Penh until 2036. The casino moved on shore in 2004, and in 2006 NagaCorp raised US$95 million with a Hong Kong stock offering, the first Cambodian company to list internationally, helping to open the country to foreign investment. By the end of this year, NagaWorld will total 1.4 million square feet, including 700 hotel rooms, a spa with Jacuzzi tub, sauna and steam bath in every treatment room, the country's top business meeting (and wedding) venue, and an epic breakfast buffet. The company doubled net profit to US$92 million last year, and this year welcomed 490,000 visitors in the first quarter. "We brought pride to Cambodia, prestige, showed confidence in Cambodia, and raised the visibility of the country and the company. We were confident the story would become monumentally better, like the country," McNally said. Ambitious expansion plans call for two more towers with over a 1,000 more hotel rooms and at least double the gaming capacity, plus Phnom Penh's first modern luxury mall. The US$369 million project, dubbed Naga2, includes a waterfront public park and a third tower that will be given to the government for offices. The company's success to date and ambitious plans are reflected in its share price. The stock has doubled in the value in the past year, compared with a drop of around 9% in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. Game theories Those successes have tracked Cambodia's wider economic gains. Since 1999, Cambodia's gross domestic product has grown by more than 6% every year except for a flat 2009, reflecting the global financial crisis. Overseas visitor arrivals have increased from 460,000 in 2000 to 2.8 million last year and are on track to top 3 million this year. "It has not happened by accident," McNally said. The government "has made a concerted effort with tourism. We've tried to tailor our offerings in line with what the government wants and needs". For example, NagaWorld's casino voluntarily excludes Cambodian citizens, except those who hold foreign passports. One of Cambodia's great needs is well-paid jobs. NagaWorld has 3,600 employees, more than 90% of them Cambodians. The company provides skills and language training to employees across the board, as well as advancement opportunities. Many Cambodian employees have moved through the ranks to become managers. Singapore needs more workers, not jobs. But below the surface, there are many similarities in the casino policies of Cambodia and Singapore. One key motivation for both was to change their international reputations. To get what they wanted, both countries decided to give foreign investors a lot of what they demanded. Both allow full foreign ownership of casinos, lengthy lease and license terms, and low gaming taxes, compared with nearly 40% in Macau. The Philippines has long had casinos, but now is trying to move to the next level as an international travel destination. The country has opted for a version of the Singapore model, demanding major upfront investment. The Philippines also has its own perception issues that are closer to Cambodia's than Singapore's regarding its safety as both an investment and vacation destination. Like Singapore, the Philippines allows its citizens to gamble in casinos, but they're not nearly as high-rolling as wealthier Singaporeans. The Philippines also has PAGCOR, the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation, a government agency that both operates and regulates casinos. In other words, it's poised to compete with the new private casinos while also setting down the rules for the game. The Philippines may have picked the right model, but PAGCOR's dual rule, different from anything in Singapore or Cambodia, could prove a deal breaker.
Aug
25
Cambodia, World Vision Join Hands To Combat Child Sex In Tourism
PHNOM PENH, Aug 22 (Bernama) -- Cambodia's Tourism Ministry and World Vision-Cambodia on Wednesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to forge partnership in combating sexual exploitation of children in tourism. A joint press release said under the MoU, the ministry and World Vision will work together with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and Interpol to address sexual exploitation of children in tourism in a dual prevention and protection approach. Together with the Cambodian government and tourism sector, World vision will work to become more aware of vulnerabilities of at-risk children and support responsible tourism practices that prioritise child protection, Xinhua news agency reported. World Vision will also work in communities with children, parents and community leaders to build resilience against abuse. The press release added the UNODC, in partnership with Interpol, is working with law enforcement agencies to protect children through strengthening law enforcement responses, identifying and countering child sexual exploitation in tourism. The MoU was signed between Hor Sarun, undersecretary of state at the Tourism Ministry and World Vision-Cambodia national director Jason Evans. The four-year project is sponsored by the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID) Initiative with a US$7.5 million fund for four countries in Mekong sub-region including Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand and Lao
Aug
10
Young Cambodians are attracted by art exhibitions
Young Cambodians are pushing the boundaries in modern and abstract art and are gaining great respect from professionals who deal in the art business. One gallery curator Ou Monich said she really admires the artists who put their true spirit into art, exposing themselves to the public as Cambodian youths with an attitude to put oput there. Generally most Cambodian artists are inspired by works from overseas, with only a few brave enough to burst with through with their own exhibitions. One young man - Rin Chhoum Virak – organised his own exhibition based on his love of films from the 1950s and 1960s and has zeroed in on the peak period of the film industry during that era. He wants more Cambodians to be educated about it. Ly Sotheany, 24, has exhibited her works and after completing a photographic course where she realised the advantage of being seen by the wider public. The slender Sotheany has exposed her masterpieces twice in 2011 and was recently exhibited in House number 240, with support from the French Cultural Center. But there remains a barrier between young artitsts and getting access to the gallery scene. At just 16, Virak has devoted much of his time researching old films and other pop culture material from the period. “I consider it more realistic for young people to know where to to get advice to exhibit in a place they will be seen,’’ he says. “ But while some are so eager they don’t know the process. .’’ Youth have to be brave and Meta House offers a venue for pushing the limits. ”’Meta House welcomes the inputs of Cambodians,” says Nicolaus Mesterharm of the local NGO. “We want to show more Cambodian artworks - films, photos and more. Young Cambodians can meet other Cambodians or foreigners to exchange ideas, and together we can all be come stronger. “I think in general that the public lack information about our exhibitions. Cambodians who come to the exhibition usually heard abiut it from friends or that a family member is part of the create the exhibition. “I think lack of knowledge about artwork is the biggest barrier in getting them here.” In short, foreigners dominate the audience. “I see a lot of artworks by Cambodian youth, but most of the time it’s only foreigners who come to look at it,” he says.
Aug
31
Cultural Heritage for All
By inheriting invaluable cultural property from respectful ancestors, Cambodia became the Kingdom of Wonder resounding to the world by its marvelous work of art of those who created and left for our present generation as historic gifts, such as Angkorwat Temples, Preah Vihear Temple, and Banteay Srey Temple, etc. At the national level,Cambodia have taken a great deal of measures in safeguarding the cultural heritage, which include raising the public awareness, setting out principles to encourage the protection, strengthening the tourism policy, designing laws and regulations to secure the protection; and engaging the participation from Civil Society and local NGOs. At the international level, Cambodia has expanded its cooperation with countries and organizations in the region and the world to help sustain the existence and development of National Cultural Heritage.
Feb
28
Exhibition on wild animals protection opens in Hanoi


Wild animals exhibitionThe exhibition entitled “Say no to products of wild animals on the verge of extinction” aims to convey a message that these species are protected by laws and wild animal products’ trafficking will be fined and prosecuted.

The exhibition, which is being held by the Wildlife Trade Monitoring Network (TRAFFIC) under the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in association with the General Departments of Customs and Environment, opened on May 11, 2010 and will last through May 2011.

Jul
09
Cambodia: from Angkor Wat to the island resort Song Saa
Maggie O’Sullivan explores Cambodia's temples, including Angkor Wat and where Angelina Jolie was in Tomb Raider, and a dazzling new island resort. Angkor Wat temple, Cambodia Angkor Wat temple, Cambodia Photo: Alamy Aki Ra was a child soldier in the Khmer Rouge. After the war, he learnt how to clear landmines, working first with the UN and then on his own. Nearly 20 years later, he’s still clearing mines and runs the Cambodia Landmine Museum just outside Siem Reap, as well as a residential school for at-risk children. Sovann Koth was a child soldier in the Cambodian army, often going without food or water. He was told that if the Khmer Rouge caught him, they would eat him. Koth is now a tour guide and hopes to open a hotel one day. I went to Cambodia to see the temples, but as I watched the sun rise at Angkor Wat on my last morning, it was Aki Ra, Sovann Koth and the many like them who occupied my thoughts. Yes, the temples are beautiful and awe-inspiring, but I found the descendants of those who built them over 800 years ago more so. Like many, I suspect, my recollections of what happened in Cambodia in the Seventies and Eighties were pretty vague. And the more I read about the genocide, the civil war, the disease and destruction, the less certain I felt about going. Would its grisly past insinuate itself into its present? Well, how could it not – though my introduction to Cambodia was gentle enough. Song Saa is a new 27-villa resort spread over two tiny islands in the Gulf of Thailand. It offers the type of barefoot luxury that is common in the Indian Ocean but which, for now at least, is unique in Cambodia. Building it has been a labour of love for its Australian owners, Melita and Rory Hunter. They have a long association with the country and were determined to provide luxury that trod lightly on the environment, was in harmony with nature and benefited the local community. The result is a special resort – barely visible from the sea – with great food (the chef used to work on North Island in the Seychelles where the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge spent their honeymoon), fabulous villas designed by Melita, a beautiful beach, a holistic spa and unfailingly charming staff. Related Articles The Song Saa is a new resort spread over two islands (photo: Alamy) If all you want to do is kick back in some style and comfort, this is the place to do it. But if you want to get more involved with the local community, meet the villagers, go out with the fishermen or see how one of the resort’s local agricultural schemes is working, you can do that too. During our stay, Song Saa arranged for two monks to come and give us a blessing. In Cambodia, you’re never very far from a monk. Though the Khmer Rouge reduced their number to just a few hundred, there are around 60,000 today and most villages support a small monastery. After a great deal of chanting, one of the monks tied a piece of scarlet yarn around my wrist for luck. Inauspiciously, it fell off the following day, but perhaps it was just the heat as by then I had swapped the cool breezes of Song Saa for the sweltering temperatures of Siem Reap. It was 7.30am when Sovann Koth picked me up from La Résidence d’Angkor, one of the city’s loveliest hotels, and already the day was on the uncomfortable side of warm. By the time we finished our first temple, Angkor Thom, I felt queasy. After two more temples, I’d had enough. We found a lump of masonry in the shade and sat down. I asked Koth why he had taken a photograph of the priest blessing a party of Japanese. Surely it was sacrilegious? Koth laughed. “He was a fake! The priests who offer blessings for money in the temples are all fake. I wanted him to know that I had seen him.” We talked about the ancients; about the difference between worldly and divine apsaras, and the many carvings and bas-reliefs. Then Koth told me about his time in the army and about his six children, three of whom he and his wife had adopted. They hoped to adopt more, he added. Orphans are an emotive subject in Cambodia. Orphanages proliferate, though 75 per cent of their occupants are children who have been abandoned rather than orphaned. Some of the orphanages are set up purely to make money, while others encourage unhelpful hug-an-orphan tourism. I wondered about the children who sell postcards at the temple gates. “They go to school for half a day and come to the temples for the other half. If you buy, you encourage their parents to send them, but if you don’t buy you reduce the family’s income.” Koth sighed. There’s no easy solution to many of Cambodia’s troubles, it seems. Next up, beautiful Ta Prohm, a jungle temple held together by vast, pale tree roots that twist through its crumbling walls and towers. Koth pointed to a spot where tourists were taking it in turns to be photographed. “This is where Angelina comes out of the temple in Tomb Raider,” he said, adding that he liked Jolie – whose land purchases and adoption of a Cambodian boy have aroused much criticism – a lot. Ta Phrom, the jungle temple from the film Tomb Raider (photo: Alamy) Later that day, I went to meet a fashion designer called Eric Raisina. In his tiny workshops, Raisina has spent the past few years teaching his 30 staff to dye, weave, cut patterns and make up garments – skills, like so many others, that have been practically lost in the past 30 years. Raisina’s designs sell mainly to expats and visitors; local girls prefer the sexy, kooky styles affected by South Korean pop singers. My guide the following day worried about these fashions in the way that fathers of girls do the world over. He liked traditional things, he said, like the singer Sinsi Samuth. “He was Cambodia’s Elvis Presley. But he was killed by the Khmer Rouge in 1975…” It’s salutary how many conversations in Cambodia end the same way. We were driving out of Siem Reap, having watched the sun rise at Angkor Wat (which was pretty crowded despite the early hour), to visit Aki Ra’s landmine museum. In a collection of small, stifling rooms we inspected mines, bombs and other explosives, all dug up by Aki Ra. There are still around a million live landmines in Cambodia, and though injuries caused by them are significantly reduced, there were still 211 such accidents last year. We watched a film about Aki Ra’s heroic endeavours and I left with a lump in my throat and two bars of $10 landmine-shaped soap – “a soap to wash landmines away”. As I left Siem Reap that night, I thought about all the people I had met. The waitress determined to be “a manager”; the driver learning German; the receptionist who was studying marketing; Sovann Koth and his plans to to open a hotel.The horrors of the past have not been forgotten and there is still much about the country that needs fixing. But the positivity of the people I met was humbling and it’s this that I will remember long after I’ve forgotten which king built which temple.
Jul
31
Life still slow in Cambodian beach towns
A ninja delivers a high kick to a cow before punching it in the udder, and the cow, on its hind legs, squirts him with milk. The Cambodians on the bus around us roar with laughter. We're trundling along a two-lane highway in Cambodia's south, heading for the coast. It's sweltering in here, and the American kung-fu pastiche is the only entertainment on board. Outside, we pass statue after statue crowning highway roundabouts, all points of regional pride: a crab, a salt-panning couple, a Khmer princess standing atop a crocodile - and a rhinoceros, whose significance I can't decipher. This wasn't quite how I expected to find Cambodian history, in a country known more for the tragedy of its past than the quirks of its present. While the vast majority of visitors to the country flock to the magnificent temples of Angkor Wat in the West, smaller, quieter beach towns provide just as much of an insight to the Cambodian psyche. Kampot and Kep are two coastal spots that visitors are slowly discovering - with an emphasis on the slow. Life here is not to be rushed. One of Indochina's best-preserved colonial-era towns, Kampot sits by the Teuk Chhou River, its French shophouses casting long shadows in the deep gold light of sunset. It's best enjoyed with a - what else? - Angkor brew at one of the many relaxed waterfront bars, or from a longtail boat puttering out past fishermen returning to town for the night. In the countryside beyond the giant durian that crowns Kampot's largest roundabout lies a patchwork of golden dry-season grasses, white cows, and unexpected red earth thrown up by the ubiquitous motorcycles. We hire a tuktuk for the day and drive out of town and away from its dusty, frontier-like bustle. The region is known for its durian (a tropical fruit infamous for its foul smell), seafood, peppercorn, and salt farms, and we're off to see a quieter side of the country, away from the rapid development of the big cities, with their teetering high-rises, honking traffic and tangled power lines. In the early morning light, we squint out across the blinding salt plain, watching women methodically stamping the clay in preparation for salt collection while quietly chanting. Kampot pepper during the colonial era was a mainstay for the best chefs of Paris, and is still widely exported. We wander amongst the pepper trees, nibbling the small red fruit around the seed, crunching down for the flare of sharp flavour that is a reminder of the tiny grain's potency. Cambodia is racing to catch up to its neighbours after the murderous Khmer Rouge regime froze progress in the 1960s, and it's visible everywhere. Enormous satellite dishes protrude from behind traditional wooden houses, and at temples hidden deep out among farmland, monks chat on mobile phones. And as we travel away from the coast, past tiny villages whose inhabitants stop to watch the occasional tuktuk or moto pass by, we find a group of children who can greet us in several languages. "Hello! Bonjour! Buenos dias!" they crow, clamouring to lead us up the hill, showing off their fathers' plots of spinach and cabbage, telling us they hope to become doctors one day. Kep-sur-mer, an hour east along the narrow coast road, was founded in the early 1900s as a beachside escape for the French and Cambodian elite, and still boasts an elegant waterfront promenade where families gather. Children clamber on the huge crab statue, swinging from its claws. Couples stroll hand in hand in the afternoon sun, looking out across the Gulf of Thailand. The market sells fresh crab and fried fish laid out on large leaves, local women swatting away stray dogs that venture too near. And if Kep still feels too big, Rabbit Island is only 20 minutes away across the water. The main beach boasts still waters, a few bungalows and seafood restaurants, and a green, hilly interior. Chickens run under hammocks strung between palm trees, and it's hard to see why tourists have so far shunned this spot in favour of the louder, sleazier Sihanoukville - although perhaps it's a blessing. Our tuktuk putters along the sun-dappled coast road, curving out along the water, overlooked by ruined 1950s villas. Slowly being reclaimed by the land, these buildings are ravaged by bullet holes, with empty, staring windows and vines creeping along doorways. Once-elaborate brick fences now hold only long grass. Cows graze where once were living rooms, unconcerned. We wander around the front yard of a sprawling mansion our driver tells us once belonged to a Prime Minister. Squatters have moved in, laundry flapping in the yard. A baby's cry drifts from an upstairs window. Through the open front door, we can see a charred grand staircase. Cambodia's bright-seeming present is inextricably intertwined with its past, glimpses of which, like these war-riddled houses, are never far away, kung-fu cows notwithstanding. IF YOU GO There are no direct flights between Australian cities and Phnom Penh. Singapore Airlines (www.singaporeair.com), Malaysia Airlines (www.malaysiaairlines.com), and Thai Airways (www.thaiairways.com.au) all offer flights from major Australian cities to Phnom Penh with one stop; typical travel time via Bangkok is about 12 hours. Kampot is 148km from Phnom Penh and buses depart regularly during the morning for the four-hour trip. Sihanoukville is 105km west of Kampot, and minibus tickets cost about AUD$3. Kep is 25km from Kampot towards Phnom Penh, and a tuktuk day hire costs about AUD$15, depending on your negotiation skills.
Aug
16
Tourism project puts temple on road to recovery
Walking the vine-wreathed paths of Banteay Chhmar, a 12th-century temple near the Thai border that some call the “second Angkor Wat” feels like sneaking into a renowned historical site after the tour guides and the tourists have all gone home. The pervasive silence can strike a first-time visitor as odd, given that the temple is open to anyone who embarks on the trip. But it is far from abnormal, say members of the Community-Based Tourism project in Banteay Chhmar village, an initiative supported by the group restoring the temple, Global Heritage Fund. Hampered by its isolation and working on a shoestring budget, the project has made slow, but steady, progress since its inception five years ago. The number of sightseers goes up and down. “Some days, one person will sit alone in the temple, some days, there is a group, and some days, no one visits the temple,” says the local director, Tath Sophal, while balancing himself against scaffolding on top of a section of ruins. “The tourists who want to visit here, they always ask when they email, ‘What about the road?’ he said. That road, a 69-kilometre sun-baked stretch of potholes, is a turbulent, two-hour ride from sleepy Sisophon town in northwestern Banteay Meanchey. And that’s without inclement weather. When the potholes collect water, as they have a habit of doing during the rainy season, the moist clay soil creates muddy, slippery impasses. Towards the end of last year, when the country experienced major flooding, four or five tour groups cancelled their visits. Although inaccessibility is a problem tourism infrastructure and the financial benefits that go with it have been growing year after year. In 2007, when the program was established, 281 people visited Banteay Chhmar, which archaeologists believe was built by King Jayavarman VII during the Angkorian period. The temple, though in disrepair, retains ornate bas-reliefs carved into walls depicting military confrontations between ancient Khmer soldiers and Cham armies. The first year, tourists only spent around $3,000. Through a number of expanded activities, the project boosted revenue and took in $10,000 last year. In the period of January through July of 2012, visitors and profits were up 25 per cent, Sophal said. Even the forbidding road that everyone emails about is getting a long overdue makeover, courtesy of the Asian Development Bank. Construction should be finished by the end of 2013. The project trained tour guides in English, introduced scenic ox-cart rides and offered cooked meals at the office. Tourists can also sleep over at “homestays,” in which four families have refurbished parts of their residences as modest guest houses. “I like hosting the tourists when they come here,” said Siem Seiv, 64, who arrived in the dusty and placid area of 1,200 families in 1993, after spending time in a Thai refugee camp following Khmer Rouge rule. Siev and his family partitioned off a half the second floor, two bedrooms in total, for overnight guests. “So we are like one family together,” Siev said. Although he makes about $400 a year from the homestay, it’s not enough, he says, explaining that he farms for extra income. Most of the tour guides have two, or even three, jobs because giving tours is not steady full-time work. Peat Pel, 38, is a guide, a moto taxi driver, a traditional music teacher and a farmer. He needs the extra work to help raise his two kids. He’s been taking intensive English classes for the past year as part of an agreement with tutors in Siem Reap.
Aug
08
Cambodia to get its first Marine Protected Area
The coastline of Cambodia, running from Vietnam to Thailand, is soon to become a marine protected area, as announced by the British NGO Coral Cay in July. The organization, which started working in Cambodia in 2009, is now working closely with the Cambodian government to implement a protected area. The 69 islands that make up this part of Cambodia's coastline are surrounded by coral reefs and sea grass meadows and are home to marine creatures such as seahorses and turtles. The project, which will ultimately cover an area of 300 square km when it's completed in three years' time, will include conservation, recreation and sustainable fisheries areas. Jan-Willem van Bochove, Head of Science at Coral Cay Conservation, told Relaxnews that "the establishment of a multiple-use zonation plan would certainly help support sustainable eco-tourism to the area by having clear recreational and other zones. "If well managed, it is estimated that some of these activities could generate 1.2 million dollars in turnover." In the past years, Coral Cay has identified key areas of coral reef biodiversity that will be part of the program. The three-year program will help to monitor the marine habitats as well as to develop low-impact tourism initiatives and will also help to ensure support for different conservation management zones. The program is funded by Blue Moon Fund and Flora & Fauna international. Tourism in Cambodia In 2011, more than 2.8 million tourist arrivals were registered in Cambodia mainly from Vietnam (614,000), Korea (340,000), China (247,000), and the US (153,000). The most visited places in Cambodia include Angkor Archaeological Park with its Temple of Angkor and the Bayon Temple. Unlike its neighbor Thailand, beaches in Cambodia only attract around 10 percent of the total of tourists each year.
Aug
10
Cambodia, India Look to Improve Cooperation in Tourism, Vocational Training, Agro-industry
H.E. Deputy Prime Minister Dr. Sok An on Tuesday welcomed the Indian Ambassador’s comment that India is looking to expand cooperation in tourism and to assist Cambodia’s vocational training, and is interested in investing in agro-industrial crops in Cambodia, according to the Press and Quick Reaction Unit (PRU) of the Office of the Council of Ministers. Newly-appointed Indian Ambassador H.E. Dinesh K. Patnaik told Dr. Sok An of his ambition to boost bilateral tourism with Cambodia by encouraging the Indian movie industry to produce a short movie that features Cambodia’s wonderful cultural heritage, which will intrigue Indian tourists, said PRU. The ambassador recalled that Indian tourists flocked to Spain after they watched a movie about Spanish civilization, it added. Ambassador Patnaik said that an estimated 500 million people, out of India’s 1.2 billion population, have access to movies, and that will have a tremendous positive impact on tourism. “I am going to talk to Indian movie producers and encourage them to shoot Angkor Temple to attract more Indian tourists to Cambodia,” PRU quoted the ambassador as saying. H.E. Dr. Sok An, who is also Minister in Charge of the Office of the Council of Ministers, welcomed this move and mentioned that a U.S. producer had produced a movie in Cambodia called Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, and there was a French tiger film Two Brothers. The ambassador also said he has planned a dance ceremony at Angkor in which 70 Indian dancers will perform on Sept. 4, the day that the ASEAN-India car rally will stop over. The car rally will kick off in Indonesia and come to Delhi to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the ASEAN-India relationship in December. “I want people in Siem Reap and tourists to come to see the performance,” said the ambassador. H.E. Dr. Sok An supported the idea and said, “Cambodia wants a joint dance performance with India.” India also plans to build a textile museum that will also attract more tourists to visit Angkor. “Once you have a museum, people will come to visit,” said Ambassador Patnaik. Both sides also discussed Cambodia’s vocational training, said PRU, adding that the ambassador said that India expects to send its experts to assist Cambodia’s vocational training centre. Dr. Sok An said that Cambodia has set up vocational training centres, especially in Takeo province, where young people are encouraged to learn a number of skills for their career
Jul
26
Get more information about National Museum of Cambodia
The National Museum of Cambodia is located on Street 13 in central Phnom Penh, next to the Royal Palace. The visitor’s entrance to the compound and the admissions ticket booth are at the corner of Streets 13 and 178. Opening hours are from 8.00am until 5.00pm daily. Last admission tickets are sold at 4.30pm. Admission costs are $3 for foreign visitors, 500 riels for Cambodians. Children and school groups are free Guided tours can be arranged for individuals or groups at the museum entrance. Tours are available in Khmer, English, French and Japanese. A one hour group tour costs $3 Photography is not permitted within the museum galleries, but visitors are welcome to film or photograph the museum exterior and courtyard. Those wishing to obtain images of the museum or collection for study or Publications should email the museum to request an application form or contact a staff member. Smoking is not permitted inside the museum. The Museum store is located at the main entrance. Postcards, souvenirs, replica sculptures and books on a variety of art and culture topics are available. Cloakroom facilities are available at the main entrance. Please leave large items and bags here. Bathrooms are located downstairs near the main entrance. See the map overleaf for detail see map overleaf for details. Donations to the museum are greatly appreciated and contribute to operating costs, programmes to protect Cambodian heritage and museum maintenance. Donation boxes are located near the main entrance, or contact a member of staff.
Jul
20
Tourism in Cambodia gets new step
The number of international visitors to Cambodia continued to rise between January and May this year compared to the same time last year, data received from the Ministry of Tourism indicated. The number of international tourists visiting Cambodia increased 26.3 per cent to 1,505,734 visitors in the first five months of the year compared to 1,191,757 tourists in the same period last year. The figure revealed that international visitors travelling by land increased by 35.7 per cent, 19.2 per cent by air and 12.5 per cent by sea. Cambodia’s tourism market may be affected by the European market because of Greek’s debt crisis. The Cambodian tourism market will be able to attract visitors from the nearby Asia Pacific and ASEAN regions, tourism minister Thong Khon said. The growth in the number of tourists visiting Cambodia is more than was expected in 2011, which was 15 per cent. The factors pushing the increase consist of Cambodia’s ASEAN chairmanship, international standard restaurants and more direct flights and political stability, said Ang Kim Eang, President of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents.
Sep
21
New push for tourism cooperation
With the aim of attracting 25 million international visitors from 2013 to 2015 to Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam (CVLM) the respective ministers of tourism pushed for greater cooperation in developing the region’s tourism sector on Friday, according to the Vietnamese Communist Party official news outlet. At a conference held in Ho Chi Minh City, the ministers also planned for at least four million “exchange visitors” between the four countries, Sai Gon Giai Phnong newspaper reported. Ang Kim Eang, president of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents, said increasing tourists visiting the region is possible. “Cambodia alone plans to attract 4.5 million international visitors in 2015,” he said. The four countries have around 10 World Heritage sites, adding that they attract tourists from all over the world, he added. Visiting tourists these days try to see more than just one country and Vietnam Airlines plans a new flight route between Saigon and Jakarta, promoting to travel between the two ASEAN countries, Ang said. Poev Ponarak, managing director of Asia Corner Travel, which mainly works with European and American tourists, said CLMV's goals are laudable, but he still sees the region’s limited infrastructure as a hindrance. “I think we still need many more years to develop the tourism services,” he said. At the conference, the ministers also reviewed the implementation of the Ministerial Joint Statement on CLMV tourism cooperation signed in 2010. According to ASEAN tourist statistics, 81.2 million tourists visited the ASEAN region in 2011, compared to 73.6 million in 2010
Sep
13
Citizen Seng
I looked up from my barbecue to watch the waves crashing on the reef. A mini-bus drew up and slowed down. The driver tooted his horn and the passengers waved and shouted a greeting. It was not for me however. "Cola Chanta!!" they shouted. The object of their attention smiled and waved back from her barbecue stall, next to the roundabout at Korotogo on the Coral Coast. "See you later friend!" she responded. Chanta Seng owns and operates her barbecue stall, working with other women from Korotogo. The stall is very popular, both with locals in Korotogo and Sigatoka as well as those who are regular on the Suva/Lautoka route and find her roadside cafe, across the road from the beach a wonderful spot to enjoy a lunch time barbecue or hotdog or an evening plate of palau. For Chanta, Korotogo is home. It is a far cry from how her life began. Chanta was born in a refugee camp in Thailand to Cambodian parents who had fled the violent and oppressive regime of Pol Pot, made famous in the film, "The Killing Fields". The family had lost everything - their land, home, possessions under the regime. Her family returned to Cambodia in 1992 when the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) was established to ensure implementation of the Agreements on the Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia Conflict, signed in Paris on 23 October 1991. The mandate included aspects relating to human rights, the organization and conduct of elections, military arrangements, civil administration, maintenance of law and order, repatriation and resettlement of refugees and displaced persons and rehabilitation of Cambodian infrastructure. Interestingly, a number of Fijians served in UNTAC. For Chanta and many Cambodians, their nation was born in 1992. As a result of living the first 11 years of her life as a refugee, Chanta was illiterate, even in her own language of Khmer. The family, having lost everything under the regime settled in Pursat, a rural area where most people survive on subsistence crops and live in poverty. She did not even have access to education as culture dictated that the males of the family receive priority in education, even if they are younger than their sisters. Little Chanta began her new life in Cambodia selling fruit on the street or in the market, to earn money for her family. It is not only a difficult life for women and girls in Cambodia, it is also very dangerous. Trafficking or slavery of women and girls is rife in Cambodia. Cambodia is a source, transit, and destination country for human trafficking. The traffickers are reportedly organized crime syndicates, parents, relatives, friends, intimate partners, and neighbours. Cambodia has a problem of sex tourism involving children. Some children are sold by their own parents. Others are lured by what they think are legitimate job offers like waitressing, but then are forced into prostitution. Children are often held captive, beaten, and starved to force them into prostitution. (Read more at http://www.uri.edu/artsci/wms/hughes/cambodia.htm) You can imagine how difficult it must have been for this young woman who knew nothing of the world, let alone Fiji, to travel thousands of kilometres to this island nation. In Fiji she is one of only 4 Cambodians living in the country. Sitting at Chanta and her husband's house in Korotogo, I hear laughter coming out of the kitchen where my wife and Chanta are catching up. I remember that when my wife and I met Chanta in 2003 she was incredibly shy. When we would visit her and her husband she would hide in the room because she was embarrassed at not being able to speak English. Now she expresses herself freely and passionately. Chanta is now a Fijian. She is proud of not only her blue passport but of her voter registration card. For her Korotogo is home. She goes to all the events in the koro, drinks yaqona with the women and on weekends her barbecue stall is a local hangout. Earlier this year, when she left to visit her sick sister in Cambodia, the women of the village sat her down and told her that Korotogo was her home and that she was one of them. Back at the barbecue stall, one of Chanta's friends, Bulou, says something to her in Nadroga dialect and then tells me, "she's going to speak Nadro soon; and Hindi too." Chanta and another friend Sila both laugh loudly. The night Drue Slatter won the Hibiscus crown, the women gathered at the home of one adopted daughter of Korotogo to celebrate the victory of another. Chanta's story echoes that of many who have struggled and overcome obstacles. Her story resonates with that of the Girmitiyas and others who found in Fiji not only a new life but a new culture of deep understanding, acceptance and love for the other. In a globalised world, many of our Fijian brothers and sisters struggle to find acceptance and a sense of belonging in the countries in which they settle. Here in Fiji, despite all our differences and difficulties - there is still openness, and an acceptance of the other. Yet it goes beyond mere acceptance. Perhaps it is because deep down we realise that we are all just people trying to live life - to love, to work, to find happiness and make a home for ourselves and our children and be part of a community. That is at the heart of all our actions. That perhaps is the core of our common humanity. "Simplicity, Serenity, Spontaneity." Rev. James Bhagwan is an ordained minister of the Methodist Church in Fiji and Rotuma, currently a Masters of Theology student in Seoul, South Korea.
Jul
31
Cambodian town with gruesome past lures tourists
Want to see Pol Pot’s grave or his broken toilet seat? How about a visit to the house of a feared Khmer Rouge commander known as “The Butcher”? Welcome to the town of Anlong Veng, a former Khmer Rouge stronghold which hopes to become the next must-see destination on Cambodia’s dark tourism trail, but which faces calls not to glorify its role in the country’s bloody past. A rectangular mound of earth lined with half-buried glass bottles and protected by a corrugated iron roof marks the spot where Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot was hastily cremated in 1998. Aside from a sign asking visitors to “please help to preserve this historical site” there is no information on offer, leaving Cambodian tourist Pov Dara, 27, to ponder the significance of the low-key grave. “I feel sad for the people but not for him,” she decides, after snapping a photo of her relatives flashing the peace sign. Up to two million people died from overwork, starvation or execution when the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, attempted to create a communist utopia in the late 1970s.His cremation site, which attracts some 10 visitors a day, is one of 14 tourist spots the government intends to “preserve and develop” in northern Cambodia’s Anlong Veng. Other places of interest include leaders’ old homes and a rusty radio truck used to broadcast Khmer Rouge propaganda. Impoverished Cambodia is no stranger to genocide tourism, with the Tuol Sleng torture centre in Phnom Penh and the nearby Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, where thousands died, among the nation’s most popular attractions. But while the focus at those sites is on victims of the 1975-1979 regime, Anlong Veng is populated by one-time loyal Khmer Rouge followers, giving it the feel of a town that has found itself on the wrong side of history. ‘Cambodia’s memories are not for sale’ As locals relish the lucrative prospect of welcoming more tourists to the once isolated area, observers stress the need to educate guests about Cambodia’s history-and avoid turning the destination into a Khmer Rouge nostalgia tour. To that end, the tourism ministry has teamed up with the esteemed Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which researches Khmer Rouge atrocities. The centre is preparing to publish a guidebook based on the stories of long-time residents and it is training tour guides to provide meaningful information about “what happened and why during the Khmer Rouge regime’s final days”, said the group’s director Youk Chhang. A museum is also planned. But it is important not to exploit the country’s tragic past, he told AFP. Cambodia’s memories are “not for sale”, he said. “We have the responsibility to ensure that Anlong Veng is a historical and responsible site to educate the public.” The Khmer Rouge was ousted by Vietnamese forces in 1979, though regime leaders and supporters continued to wage a low-level guerrilla war against the government. Anlong Veng, near the Thai border, was the Khmer Rouge’s last rebel centre before the movement disintegrated in the late 1990s. One of the best-preserved visitor sites in town is the lakeside home of late military commander Ta Mok, known as “The Butcher” for allegedly orchestrating brutal massacres that killed thousands, although locals remember him as a generous leader who gave the town a road, a bridge, a hospital and a school. Ta Mok, who briefly led the Khmer Rouge in its final days, was the only rebel who refused to surrender or strike a deal with the government after Pol Pot’s death. He was arrested a year later and died in prison in 2006 awaiting trial. His airy house is little more than a shell today, its furniture looted long ago. But several walls are still adorned with colourful yet amateurish murals of temples and a map of Cambodia-symbols of Ta Mok’s patriotism, according to the site’s caretaker San Roeung, himself an ex-Khmer Rouge soldier. “A lot of people here liked Ta Mok. When the enemy came, he took people to safety,” said the 60-year-old, who helped build the house as well as the two cages outside used to hold Ta Mok’s enemies. He added that he hoped an influx of visitors would improve living standards for locals, who could “grow mangoes or jackfruit to sell to tourists”. ‘I’d call it the killing camera’ Few are more excited about the town’s tourism potential than Anlong Veng district deputy governor Nhem En-who was the chief photographer at Tuol Sleng, where he endlessly captured images of inmates awaiting certain death. A Khmer Rouge insider until he defected in the mid-1990s, Nhem En has built up a huge archive of photos, as well as a bizarre collection of keepsakes such as Pol Pot’s sandals, his uniform and his shattered toilet seat.Now he is looking for a partner to help set up a private museum to display his treasures, he said, having apparently given up on the idea of selling key items in the hope of earning hundreds of thousands of dollars. “These items might not be worth much financially but, in historical terms, they’re invaluable,” he told AFP at his home, after showing some of his favourite possessions. “This camera, if I put it in a museum, I would call it the killing camera,” he said, as he held up a vintage Rolleicord, “because all of the people in Tuol Sleng who came before it died.” Nhem En insists he was not in a position to help any prisoners, all he could do was “follow orders” and “mind his own business”. Tuol Sleng prison chief Duch was in February sentenced to life in jail by Cambodia’s UN-backed war crimes court, the first person to face justice for horrors committed under the regime. The court is now trying the three most senior surviving Khmer Rouge members, but Nhem En has little interest in the proceedings, preferring to muse about Anlong Veng’s nascent tourism industry. The ancient temples of Angkor, which attract more than a million visitors a year, are a mere two-hour drive away, and Nhem En believes that if a fraction of those visitors added Anlong Veng to their itinerary, his town, with its plentiful guesthouses and restaurants, would benefit considerably. “Anlong Veng will not go backwards,” he said, though he emphasised that his own collection of memorabilia is about more than just profiting from his time with the Khmer Rouge. “I’m doing this to make the world understand more about the Khmer Rouge regime,” he said. – AFP
Sep
05
Siem Reap: Top 5 things to do
SIEM REAP, Cambodia – Everyone goes to Siem Reap for one reason – to see the world-famous Angkor temple complex. Siem Reap is the gateway to the Angkor temple complex, wherein its centuries-old architecture and art give meaning to Cambodia's tourism campaign "Kingdom of Wonder." Walking the grounds of the temple ruins amid the dense forests and fields will make you feel like Indiana Jones or Lara Croft. But there’s more to Siem Reap than just the temples. Here are some of the essential Siem Reap experiences: Sunrise at Angkor Wat No trip to Siem Reap would be complete without seeing the ancient stone city of Angkor. There are hundreds of temples, each with impressive architecture and art. Some temples are better-restored than others, but each has a unique charm. The most famous of the temples is Angkor Wat. Built in the 12th century, Angkor Wat was built as a temple for the Hindu god Vishnu. A view of the world-famous Angkor Wat at sunrise / Photo by Cathy Rose A. Garcia, ABS-CBNnews.com Visit the Angkor Wat at sunrise. The majestic spires are bathed in early morning glow making it a very memorable sight. Going in the early morning is also a good idea to avoid the heavy crowds, especially during the weekend. For a unique experience, go on a balloon ride for an aerial view of the Angkor complex. Other Angkor temples are no less impressive than the Angkor Wat. In Angkor Thom, Bayon Temple stands in the center of the walled city. It is known as a complex of "face towers," or towers with huge stone faces of Buddha. Ta Prohm, a temple-monastery built in the late 12th to 13th century, is perhaps best known as the location for the "Tomb Raider" movie. There are huge trees growing on top of the temple ruins, giving it an eerie but romantic atmosphere. Bayon Temple Banteay Srei, which means Citadel of Women, has a unique beauty that lives up to its reputation as "Jewel of Khmer Art." The buildings, which were built in the second half of the 10th century are made of red sandstone and decorated with intricate wall carvings. Your inner Indiana Jones will be unleashed when you go to Beng Melea, located about an hour and a half's drive from downtown Siem Reap. Built in the middle of the 12th century, Beng Melea is still largely unrestored with collapsed towers and galleries. You might find yourself crawling and climbing up large chunks of stone. It can be quite exhausting, but worth the experience. Going 'amok' Cambodia's national dish, fish amok (fish curry), is a must try. Usually it is served in banana leaf, but the version we tried was served in a coconut. The curry is lightly spiced but flavorful, and perfect with steamed rice. Another must try dish is Khmer curry. The red curry might give the impression it is spicy, but it is surprisingly not since the red chili is tempered by the coconut cream. Cambodian noodle dishes are also quite tasty. Mee ketang is a Cantonese-style noodle dish with wide rice noodles, vegetables, mushrooms in oyster sauce. Lok lak, stir-fried marinated beef served with a fried egg on a bed of lettuce and tomatoes, was a bit disappointing. The beef wasn't tender and dipping it in a sauce of black pepper, salt and lime juice didn't help. Depending on the restaurant, it can be served with French fries or rice. Cambodian dish Lok Lak The green mango salad, which has carrots, mango, onion and basil in fish sauce, was a refreshing surprise. The fresh spring rolls, with its raw vegetables, thicker rice paper and not-so-sweet peanut sauce, was bland. Fried spring rolls, with cabbage, carrots and taro, are a much better choice. Freshly cooked sticky rice with a slice of jackfruit wrapped in banana leaves may remind Filipinos of "suman", but it still has a unique Cambodian flavor. If you want to try the most Cambodian dishes in one sitting, head to Koulen II restaurant which offers a buffet with Apsara traditional dance show only for $10. If you want to learn how to make Khmer dishes, there are cooking classes offered at Temple, along Pub Street. Search for Cambodian souvenirs Tourists can get a feel for a traditional Cambodian market at the Phasar Chas (Old Market). But after a day at the temples, most tourists head to the night market. There are several night markets in Siem Reap, but don't worry about getting lost since there are big flashing signs of "Night Market" everywhere. The night market offers a wide range of souvenirs, such as T-shirts, keychains, ref magnets, silk scarves, silver accessories and wood carvings. Haggling is a must! For high quality products, go to Artisans d' Angkor which showcases silk fabrics, stone and wood carvings, silver plating and lacquer items. A social business, Artisans Angkor has helped revive Khmer arts and crafts, as it established workshops that educates and trains young, disadvantaged Cambodians. Workshop at Artisan d'Angkor Visit the Landmine Museum Cambodia Landmine Museum The Cambodia Landmine Museum is a reminder of the horrors that landmines have caused in the country. In fact, if you look closely, some of the temples have signs that say the area has been cleared of landmines. Aki Ra, a former Khmer Rouge child soldier, is at the forefront of de-mining efforts, having established the museum and the NGO Cambodian Self-Help Demining. The museum, a 30-minute tuk tuk ride from downtown Siem Reap, gives visitors a closer look of how landmines work, the destruction it inflicted and what they can do to help rid the world of landmines. It's a sobering look at Cambodia's past, and gives visitors a sense of just how much suffering Cambodians went through. Visitors can donate to the Museum Relief Center, a shelter for some Cambodian children who were injured or orphaned due to landmines. Relaxing Khmer-style After a long day of trekking at the temples and shopping, relax by getting a Khmer massage. There are several places offering massage and reflexology treatments along Pub Street and even in the night market. There's also several "fish foot massage" stalls, where fish nibble at the dead skin on your feet. It may feel ticklish at first, but you'd be surprised at how clean your feet look after. A 30-minute fish foot massage costs just $3 with a can of Angkor or Cambodia beer.
Aug
18
Some information about Devata
Angkor Wat is home to the world’s most fascinating archaeological mystery: Why do images of women dominate the largest religious monument on Earth? Angkor Wat lotus pond About Devata.org The Khmer temple of Angkor Wat: an ancient model of heaven on Earth. In the 12th Century AD, the Khmer Empire ruled most of what is now Southeast Asia. As Europe struggled in the Dark Ages, King Suryavarman II built the massive edifice of Angkor Wat at the height of his empire’s glory. A3 CGN 026a 300 About Devata.org Cruciform Gallery devata at Angkor Wat But within 200 years, the powerful Khmer civilization mysteriously collapsed. Theories about the cause of its downfall abound but nothing is definite. You see, aside from limited temple inscriptions no written records of the great Khmer Empire survived its demise. The “best” written account available is from the Chinese diplomat Zhou Daguan, who recorded his journey to Suvannabhum — the legendary Khmer “Land of Gold” — 150 years after Angkor Wat was completed. Centuries passed. Dense jungle swallowed the magnificent Khmer temples and cities. Western scholars had never even learned that the great Khmer race ever existed. But in the 19th Century, French explorers rediscovered the ruins, initiating 150 years of intense scholarship that continues today. Yet we believe that they have missed the most important keys to the puzzle, hidden in plain sight… People worldwide instantly recognize Angkor Wat. Few, however, realize that this massive temple protects an extraordinary treasure unlike any building on Earth: Inside its walls we find a royal portrait gallery with 1,796 women realistically rendered in stone. For 150 years, scholars have dismissed the women as ”wives to entertain the king in heaven” or ornaments “to decorate bare sandstone walls”. Our growing body of research indicates that these women served much more profound roles than mere decoration. And perhaps these women were the driving force behind the civilization itself. For the first time, our investigation asks: Who are the women of Angkor Wat? Why are images of women immortalized in the largest temples the Khmer civilization ever built? What did these women mean to the Khmer rulers, priests and people? How does the Cambodian dance tradition relate to the women of Angkor Wat? Do the women of Angkor Wat embody information important to us in modern times? w gopura devata About Devata.org Devata on the West Gopura of Angkor Wat Devata.org is seeking answers to these questions in a variety of ways. This website is an information clearinghouse for all who wish to participate in this adventure. Here are some key areas of inquiry: Recent Posts: Look to the right column to see the 15 newest articles on the website. Book News & Reviews: Articles about the newest books and authors relating to our investigation and to Cambodian history. Cambodian Dance: Since the dawn of recorded history, Cambodian royalty has nurtured a sacred female dance tradition passed down from teacher to teacher. Today’s dancers preserve a modern inheritance of discipline, grace and wisdom. This category includes articles about Cambodian dance; ancient and modern. Devata & Apsara Photos: Meet the women of Angkor Wat (and other Khmer temples) face to face. Our website features the world’s first online photo galleries with sequential, mapped portraits of the women of Angkor Wat. Our digital archive has thousands of technical photos of women portrayed in the major Khmer temples, all of whom will be available to the public here. Devata Research: Here you’ll find article about our research including: the Devata Database Project, Facial Pattern Recognition work with Michigan State University, “Is Angkor Wat a 12th Century Facebook“, excepts from the upcoming book “Daughters of Angkor Wat“, and more. a4 gw i 4819 157x300 About Devata.org Angkor Wat devata on the West Gopura - west wall Khmer History: Articles and reviews devoted to understanding and illuminating the extraordinary Khmer civilization. Participate(!): If the importance of women in history resonates with your curiosity and beliefs we invite you to get involved by helping in these vital areas: translation (translators wanted French to English, English to Khmer), promoting online visibility of women in history (reporters and journalists welcome), promoting these stories in conventional media (newspapers, TV, radio) and contributing your own ideas, research and papers (including for potential publication). Store: Soon we plan to offer beautiful products to promote our philosophy and our discoveries while helping non-profit causes. In the meantime, please enjoy, question, debate and contribute to the theories and information offered on Devata.org. Use your eyes, your heart and your mind. Weigh the evidence. These ancient women have much to teach us about the rich history of Asia. They embody a variety of cultures stretching from India through Southeast Asia and Indonesia to China. Join us in celebrating the contributions of the Khmer Civilization: past, present and future.
Jul
31
Take a visit to McBuddha restaurant, top nosh at rock bottom prices
Over the years Siem Reap has had a Funky Buddha, a Buddha Lounge and now it can boast the very first McBuddha too. Located on the road to Artisans d’Angkor, just across from Terrasse des Elephants, the restaurant, which has been open over one year, has seen a surge in popularity of late with Reaper residents harking its praises. Owner Whisna credits an increased online presence for the new-found interest in his place, while anyone who’s dined at the streetside venue will say it’s down to the eats. It might look like any other, plastic-chaired, $2.50-a-plate joint, but McBuddha is something altogether more special. Served up with presentation usually more associated with fine cuisine (and not the sort of dinners Ronald McDonald doles out), McBuddha’s grub is also of a five star standard. With chef Savuth having trained at SalaBai,Whisna says he saw no need to serve up the same food as his neighbouring restaurants, “Because we cook mostly for westerners, we wanted to have a different style.” Taking advantage of his chef’s mean kitchen skills, Whisna’s menu includes fresh takes on Khmer classics, with tofu loc lak a favourite among diners, one of whom spoke of her delight to finally get a chance to try the national dish in a veggie-friendly form. Despite the higher standard of food and service McBuddha still keeps its eats cheap, something Whisna says is crucial to stay competitive. Another draw for the western crowd is what goes on behind the bar, where McBuddha’s resident cocktail mixer, Sarath, concocts a variety of cheap, yet potent bevvies. For $2, the Mc Special will get you on your way with vodka, triple sec, midori, orange juice and lemon…now if only they sold those in Mackey D’s. Regular food offers, and a buy-one-get-one-free happy hour from 5-10.30pm daily all makes for some bargain dining. As for the name, Whisna says the idea for it came from a close German friend of his. While its Pub Street namesakes, Funky Buddha and Buddha Lounge have long-since closed their doors – and courted controversy for their names in the meantime - it seems it may be a case of third time’s a charm for Whisna. Some on the Temple Town Facebook page did comment, however, that pairing the word Buddha with an ode to a fast food chain which side-lines as a poster child for globalisation was less than appropriate for a Buddhist country. But Whisna doesn’t agree. “This name is good luck,” he concludes. As Reapers all scramble to find restaurants that rival their old ill-fated street-food favourites, McBuddha is a definite contender; the food isn’t just cheap, it’s tasty too, service comes with a smile and drinks come well-made. If you’re willing to look past the red plastic, the roadside location (and the hankering for a Big Mac), you might just find yourself saying OMB.
Jul
16
Water and Moon Festival and Boat Racing
For the people of Cambodia, the water Festival (The pirogue Racing Festival) in Phnom Penh is the most magnificent traditional festival. For three days Phnom Penh citizens, foreign tourists and peasants from various provinces gather in the capital to celebrate festival night day. The water festival had background for so long time. The water festival ceremony is the army training to do attest of the army for preparing to do a battle. In the history, Khmer King always does the battle with enemies by sailing. So he prepares this water festival ceremony every year to choose Champion of sailing battle, as in Bayon Temple, Batteay Chhmar in the Preah Bat Jayvarman VII. We had seen a lot of statues about sailing battle under leading of Jayvarman VII. The custom of this is to have from then up to the present. On the other hand the water is celebrated every years in November to honor the victory of Cambodian Naval forces in the reign of King JayvarmanVII, during Angkor period of the 12th century. And this ceremony is to history about military exercise of our navy force in the course of national defense and to express thanks to the 3 Buddhist symbols Gods and holy thing which helped us and agriculture field and serves as an opportunity to pray for our lord for the happiness and sufficient rain for rice cultivation. Besides the regatta, the water festival also includes three other ceremonies: Illuminated float (Loy Pratip), Moon salutation (Sampeas Preah Khe) and the eating of pestle new special rice with banana or coconut juice (Ork Ambok). The ceremony last three days to provide opportunity for people to by part in competition that there were to types of boats from near and far of provinces, taking part in the races, the pirogue and the rowing boat. Each boat was manned by about thirty to forty men or women. The boat with a man or a woman dancing softly and gracefully to the rhythm of the drums on the bow as an encouragement to the rowers moved swiftly through the water. There as the race winners will be rewarded a lot of good such as: drink, money, clothes, rice, cigarettes and the commission of the boat racing day must seek donations in order to provide this prize for participants. During the nighttime at about seven o'clock the river was lit by jazzy illuminated boats, which floated slowly, and smoothly on the water's surface. Each of them was equipped with thousands of flashy neon lights arranged in different colorful, fancy patterns representing state institutions, ministries and services. After a little time fireworks and multi color were lit to entertain people. Some of people made loud noises. They burst into different shapes and colors in the sky under the clapped and cheered with joy each time at the sight of the fireworks. Finally the water festival is the festivity for the Cambodian people who celebrated every years and going for a walk during the ceremony days really refreshed our mood. The lively festive atmosphere helped relive our tension and trouble.
Sep
10
Cambodia’s Tourism Increases in the First Seven Months of 2012
In the first seven months of 2012, foreign arrivals to Cambodia were more than two millions, up from 1.62 million over the same period last year. Herewith, the Cambodian Ministry of Tourism has set a target of receiving 3.3 million foreign tourists in 2012, 4.5 million in 2015 and 7 million in 2020. The growth of foreign tourists to Cambodia is thanks to the country enjoying peace and safety, mainly hosting the big international events such as ASEAN meetings, said a senior official of the Cambodia Association of Travel Agents (CATA). They came to Cambodia in the manner of family visit, package tour, business, and foreign guests, he said, adding that Vietnam took the first rank among foreign arrivals to Cambodia. Tourism industry is one of the four major pillars supporting the economy of Cambodia. Last year, the tourism sector gave jobs to 800,000 Cambodians, generating a turnover of nearly two million dollars equal to 12% of the country’s gross domestic product.
Jul
26
Cambodia's in the eyes of foreigner
French-born visual artist Fonki has returned to Cambodia for a new documentary on his artwork and a public exhibition at Institut Français. Photograph: supplied French-Cambodian artist Fonki has returned to his roots with a locally made documentary set to capture the artist’s work. Born in France and raised in Montreal, Fonki, 22, has remained connected to his Cambodian roots. Visiting Cambodia for the first time when he was four, his earliest memories reflect the stark difference between life in the country during the United Nations Transnational Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) era and the present day. “It’s peaceful here [Cambodia] now. When you walk along the street, there is no violence,” he said. The documentary, operating under the working title Wet Paint, aims to inspire people of all ages and bolster the popularity of street art within a community still largely wedded to classical art forms. “It is our challenge to make the elderly understand what we [the young generation] are doing,” said Fonki. “Each generation communicates in their own different way. If the documentary helps us find a common cause, it would be a magic touch that inspires all generations.” The entire production is a self-organised project, with funding received from family, friends, and an arts outfit in Canada. Despite the hardships of working with limited resources, the young artist maintains: “When you want to do something, there is always a way. There is no excuse. You can build something out of your energy.” The setting of the documentary will move from Montreal to Cambodia, where Fonki will introduce his art to the public. The art works to be included in the film are inspired from the detailed bas-reliefs of the Angkor temples and a mélange of street art from other countries. In the previous visit to the kingdom, Fonki contacted the Bophana Centre and the Cambodian Film Commission, receiving technical assistance and information about the current contours of Cambodian society. “Talking to them, my crew and I got more knowledge of what is happening here,” he said. “It has helped us to understand the sense of being in Cambodia.” The film will be produced with Khmer, French and English versions. “Because street art is on the street, and the street is for everyone. There is no discrimination as long as they all find the same inspiration,” he explained. Wet Paint is expected to be ready for release in May of next year. A fresco painted by Fonki will be unveiled on the façade of the Institut Français building this Thursday evening at 6:30pm.
Aug
06
Welcoming to Cambodia with the feeling after the visit
I LIKE all sorts of critters. I'm especially fond of mammals and right at the top of the tree is the cute and cuddly sun bear - not that I've ever tried to cuddle one. But I wanted to when I visited the Free the Bears Sanctuary in Cambodia. I had to wonder how it is possible to mistreat these beautiful animals. Without rescue, they would have ended up in a neighbouring country's bear paw soup. Cambodia is one of the poorest countries in Asia and yet there are people who take the time to look after these endangered animals. That's the standout thing about this country: yes, there are phenomenal temples and engaging cities but it's the warmth and humanity of the people that leaves a lasting memory. There was a time when Cambodia's entire human population was endangered. During the murderous reign of Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge from 1975-79, currency was abolished, the postal service dismantled and the country cut off from the outside world. The population was marshalled into slave-labour camps and put to work in the countryside. Millions died. These were the Killing Fields. Sobering, yes, and so recent that it's hard to think of it as history. Yet, it's essential for understanding Cambodia barely a generation removed from those dark and brutal days. I began my visit on the outskirts of the capital, Phnom Penh. Here, in a dusty field, is the Memorial Stupa of Choeung Ek, a pagoda filled with 8000 skulls - a haunting reminder of the horrors this land has seen. The Phnom Penh of today is a far cry from the deserted shell of a city repopulated in 1979. It bustles with commerce, traffic and the cry of market vendors. I was up early, following the whisper of the tai-chi women to the Mekong River boardwalk. In sweeping arches, as graceful as the gold-dipped Royal Palace, they welcomed the sun. With smiles and shy greetings they asked me to join in. But I had much to see before I could stop and stretch. The palace and Silver Pagoda or Phnom Penh's beckoning shops? I couldn't resist either. The palace is also the official residence of Cambodia's King Sihamoni. Parts of the complex are off-limits but the throne room and the Silver Pagoda are dazzling. After the Khmer Rouge era, the Silver Pagoda is one of the few places in Cambodia with an intact collection of ancient Khmer art. It's a must-see on any Phnom Penh tour. So are the shops. There's the Russian Market (souvenirs and fakes) or the Central Market (delicious and photogenic quantities of the freshest fruits and vegies) or the fashionable boutiques - French colonial shop-houses, exquisitely restored and converted along Street 240. Many of these are shops-with-a-cause. They support not-for-profit charities, including disabled war victims and AIDS orphans. Afterwards, it was back to the riverfront for a sundowner. To the north of the palace is restaurant row, a happening strip of bars and cafes. It's the perfect place to chat with the locals while planning a visit to Cambodia's piece de resistance. Up-country, near the northern extremity of Lake Tonle Sap, is the elegantly ramshackle town of Siem Reap Cambodia's tourist central. It's easily accessible by plane or bus or riverboat. It has gorgeous architecture, great hotels and an inspired "foodies district" known as Bar St. But it's Siem Reap's neighbour, Angkor Wat, that draws travellers. Angkor Wat is Asia's largest temple, ranked with the pyramids of Egypt and Petra in Jordan. Magical in any light, but particularly when set against the rising sun, it should be on everybody's bucket list. It induces a treasure-trove of superlatives from the moment your moto - a Cambodian tuk-tuk - delivers you to the causeway entrance, until the minute you drag yourself back out across the moat. And yet, Angkor Wat is only the beginning. Like many tourists, I was unaware of the vast scale of Angkor Thom: the city - a jungle-clad plain of stone temples and palaces, once home to more than a million people. The peak of civilisation was between the 10th and 12th centuries and one wonders how the locals got around. The distances are so great that a moto is an essential and fun way to see the countryside and get from temple to palace to temple. The Bayon was my favourite, a maze of twisted corridors and staircases hidden beneath overhanging roots and vines. There are 54 gothic towers, decorated with 216 faces of the deity Avalokiteshvara. It's an evocative place where the stonework bears an uncanny resemblance to the Angkorian ruler of the time. The faces of Avalokiteshvara are smiling, just like the faces of the Cambodian people I met on my journey. For, despite the bleakness of their recent history, the Khmer are a wonderfully welcoming people. That's the legacy of this land. Like the sun bears in the sanctuary, I was enveloped in warmth and humanity that easily overshadowed some of mankind's darker moments.
Aug
13
China's sway over Cambodia tests Southeast Asian unity
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Students in their twenties sit behind old wooden desks in Cambodia's capital, Phnom Penh, scribbling away as a teacher barks out phrases in a foreign language above the roar of motorcycles outside. Unlike in most other countries in the region, the students at this private language school and others nearby are not learning English -- it's Chinese. Along the street, signs with golden Chinese letters on newly painted red-and-yellow buildings offer cheap crash courses in Mandarin. "Before, people came to this area to study English but now it's Chinese," said Gua Fa, a teacher and manager of the Ming Fa Chinese School. "The students all want to be tour guides, Chinese translators, or work in banks and restaurants." It's another sign of China's growing influence in Cambodia, something that is upsetting the unity of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). China has a good standing in impoverished Laos and Myanmar as well, ASEAN members along with Cambodia, much to the chagrin of others in the bloc such as Vietnam and the Philippines, which are at loggerheads with Beijing over a territorial dispute in the South China Sea. Singapore, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand make up the rest of the grouping. As cash-strapped and underdeveloped Cambodia increasingly turns to Beijing, the group is worried about being held hostage by China's economic power over its poorest members. "While China's loans and infrastructure projects have benefited the region, there has been growing resentment," said Bonnie Glaser, a senior fellow at Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). "There are also worries of excessive dependence on China as well as fears of increased vulnerability to economic pressure." Of ASEAN's three poorer members, Cambodia appears to be the most under Beijing's sway. About 40,000 Cambodians have enrolled in Chinese language schools, according to the Khmer Chinese Association in Cambodia, bucking the trend in a region promoting English ahead of 2015 launch of an ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) that wants to draw investors to a $2 trillion market of 10 countries and 600 million people. "It will be more useful than English," said Heng Guechly, a student at another private school. "There's a lot of demand and China has a good relationship with Cambodia, so more Chinese will come to do business here." Official data shows Chinese investment in Cambodia was $1.9 billion last year, more than double the combined amount of ASEAN countries and 10 times more than the United States. Phnom Penh's low-rise skyline is dotted with Chinese cranes and construction projects. The two countries' flags fly side-by-side on building sites, where foremen shout in Mandarin at Cambodian laborers who grumble about the unfamiliar Chinese food they get served. Official data showed 151,887 Chinese tourists visited Cambodia in the first half of this year, up 33 percent from the same period in 2011, with the tourism industry hoping to lure one million Chinese a year by 2020. Agribusinesses are being set up by Chinese companies and 70 percent of the 330 factories manufacturing garments -- Cambodia's biggest foreign currency earner and source of employment -- are Chinese-owned. ECONOMIC COERCION China's deep ties with Cambodia, and to a lesser extent with Laos and Myanmar, have effectively given Beijing an outsider's veto over decisions in ASEAN, which require consensus among all members. That was demonstrated last month when an ASEAN foreign ministers' meeting in Phnom Penh ended without a joint communiqué for the first time in the group's 45-year history. The Philippines placed the blame on China, saying it had leaned on hosts Cambodia to torpedo any mention of territorial disputes in the oil- and gas-rich South China Sea. According to diplomats at the ASEAN meeting, Laos and Myanmar tacitly supported Cambodia's determination to keep bilateral disputes with China out of the communiqué.
Aug
17
Cambodian PM wants closer ties with Vietnam in trade, investment, tourism
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Thursday that the country wanted to see further cooperation with Vietnam in trade, investment, tourism and culture for mutual benefits of the two neighbors' peoples. The premier's remarks were made during a meeting with Vietnamese deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, chairman of the National Committee for Prevention and Control of Drugs, AIDS and Prostitution, at the Peace Palace. He also highly evaluated the good and friendly relations between Cambodia and Vietnam. On the drug combat issues, Hun Sen encouraged both sides' drug officials to intensify cooperation through information and expertise exchanges in order to timely crack down on all forms of drug offensives. Meanwhile, Nguyen Xuan Phuc said that his visit to Cambodia was to strengthen cooperation in drug combat. He also pledged to encourage more Vietnamese investors to Cambodia in order to deepen the bilateral ties in trade and investment. Phuc made a 3-day visit to Cambodia on Tuesday. During the stay, he had held a bilateral talk with Cambodian deputy Prime Minister Ke Kim Yan, chairman of the National Authority for Combating Drugs. Both sides pledged to intensify cooperation to fight against cross border drug trafficking and all forms of drug offensives. Also, he paid courtesy calls on Cambodia's President of National Assembly Heng Samrin and the first Vice-President of the Senate Say Chhum.
Jul
04
Phnom Penh, the city of spetacular tourism destination
The capital of the Kingdom of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, is located at the confluence of three rivers - the Mekong, the Bassac and Tonle Sap. The city is divided into three sections - the north, an attractive residential area; the south or the French part of the city with its ministries, banks and colonial houses; and the centre or the heart with its narrow lanes, markets, foods stalls and shops. Over the past four years, the city has undergone tremendous changes - businesses are springing up constantly and tourism is once again booming. Cambodia has one of the most liberal investment laws to further boost managed to retain its charm and character - cyclos that weave through traffic with ease, broad boulevards, old colonial buildings, parks and green spaces that reminds one of the country's French heritage, and above all its people who always have a smile for you. A stone's throw away from the Tonle Sap is the royal Palace built on the site of the Banteay Kev, a citadel built in 1813. The Palace grounds contain several buildings: the Throne Room of Prasat Tevea Vinichhay which is used for the coronation of kings, official receptions and traditional ceremonies; the Chan Chhaya Pavilion which is a venue for dance performances; the king's official residence called the Khemarin; the Napoleon Pavilion and the spectacular Silver Pagoda. This pagoda is worth exploring. It owes its name to the 5,000 silver tiles weighing 1kg each which cover the entire floor. Silver Pagoda The emerald Buddha sits on a pedestal high atop the dias. In front of the dias stands a life-size Buddha made of solid gold and weighs 75kg. It is decked with precious gems including diamonds, the largest of which is 25 carats. Also on display at the sides are the coronation apparel and numerous miniature Buddha in gold and silver. The walls surrounding the compound which is the oldest part of the palace, are covered with frescos depicting scenes from the Khmer version of the Ramayana. Independence MonumentINDEPENDENCE MONUMENT The monument was built in 1958 to symbolise the independence that Cambodia gained from France in 1953. The French fully abandonned their interests in Indochina following defeat by the Vietnamese at the battle of Dien Bien Phu in May 1954. Independence is marked in Cambodia o­n the 9th November. The monument has a unique and peculiar style and doubles as a memorial to Cambodian patriots who died for their country. National Museum NATIONAL MUSEUM The NATIONAL MUSEUM of Cambodia is housed in a graceful terracotta structure of traditional design (built 1917-20) just north of the Royal Palace. It is open Tuesday to Sunday from 8 to 11 am and from 2 to 5 pm; entry is $3. Photography is prohibited inside. The School of Fine Arts (École des Beaux-arts) has its headquarters in a structure behind the main building. Wat Phnom WAT PHNOM You may also want to check out WAT PHNOM which sits on a tree covered hill about 30m high in the northeast of the city. It is said that the first pagoda was built in 1373 to house four statues of the Buddha deposited here by the Mekong river. It was discovered by a woman named Penh. Thus, the name Phnom Penh, the hill of Penh. The people believe that this temple is powerful in that anyone who makes a wish will have it granted. It is not surprising to see many people coming here to pray for protection or healing. Many bring lotus flowers as offerings for prayers answered.
Jul
16
Let's get more information about Pchum Ben Day in Cambodia
October is the month when Cambodian people celebrate the festival of Phchum Ben. Together with Khmer New Year in April, Phchum Ben is the most important festival in the Khmer religious calendar. Cambodians have faithfully observed the festival every year for as long as anyone can remember. The word 'Ben' in Khmer means to collect; 'Ben' also means to cup or mould cooked rice into portions. To 'Ben Baht' means to collect food to give to monks. The word 'Phchum' means to congregate or to meet together. Regardless how busy they may be during the fifteen days of Phchum Ben. Cambodian people try not to miss a visit to the pagoda to dedicate food and offerings to the dead. The festival's final day, September 28th, is the actual day of Phchum Ben, when people traditionally meet together at the pagoda, said the Venerable Ly Sovy of Lang Ka pagoda. By doing this, Cambodians show respect for their ancestors. Everyone goes to the pagoda every year to honor this tradition, and nobody complains. "According to [Buddhist] belief, people feel sorry for and remember their relatives who have passed away," Ly Sovy said. "They may be their parents, grandparents, a sister, a brother, daughter or son." Om Sam Ol, a monk at Steung Meanchey pagoda, explained more about the beliefs behind the festival: "During Phchum Ben, souls and spirits come to receive offerings from their living relatives," he said. "It is believed that some of the dead receive punishment for their sins and burn in hell - they suffer a lot and are tortured there," he added. "Hell is far from people; those souls and spirits cannot see the sun; they have no clothes to wear, no food to eat," Om Sam Ol continued. "Phchum Ben is the period when those spirits receive offerings from their living relatives and perhaps gain some relief. Relatives consecrate and dedicate food and other offerings to them." Everyone goes to the pagoda because they don't want the spirits of dead members of their family to come to seek offerings at pagodas in vain. It is believed that wondering spirits will go to look in seven different pagodas and if those spirits can not find their living relatives' offering in any of those pagodas, they will curse them, because they cannot eat food offered by other people," the monk said. "When the living relatives offer the food to the spirit, the spirit will bless them with happiness", he added. According to the monk, legend has it that Phchum Ben came about because relatives of King Bath Pempeksa defied religious customs and ate rice before the monks did during a religious ritual. After their death, they became evil spirits. He explained that later when a monk known as Kokak Sonthor gained enlightenment and became a Buddha on earth, all those evil spirits went to ask him "when can we eat?" The Buddha said "you have to wait for the next Buddha in the Kathakot Buddhist realm. In this realm, evil spirits cannot eat." When the next monk, Kamanou, achieved enlightenment and became a Buddha, all the evil spirits came again to ask the same question, and he gave the same answer as the previous Buddha. Later another monk, Kasakbour, achieved enlightenment and became a Buddha, and the hungry evil spirits again asked him the same question. The Buddha told them the same thing - to wait for the next Buddha. The final Buddha, Preah Samphot - also known also as Samanakkodom - said to the evil spirits, "Wait for your relative, King Bath Pempeksa, to offer merits and dedication. When the dedication is made, the food will be yours to eat." King Pempeksa finally made an offering, but he did not dedicate the offering to the spirits of his relatives. All the spirits that were related to him cried that night. And when King Bath Pempeksa went to the Valovan pagoda to visit the Buddha, he was told by the Buddha that, "All the spirits of your relatives are crying, demanding food. The spirits should get food in the realm of Kathakot. Although you offered food and did good deeds, you did not dedicate the food and good deeds to them." So King Bath Pempeksa made another dedication and offering, and this time he dedicated the food and merits to his relatives. The evil spirits received the dedication and were finally reborn into paradise. "It is believed that some of the dead receive punishment for their sins and burn in hell - they suffer a lot and are tortured there," he added. "Hell is far from people; those souls and spirits cannot see the sun; they have no clothes to wear, no food to eat," Om Sam Ol continued. "Phchum Ben is the period when those spirits receive offerings from their living relatives and perhaps gain some relief. Relatives consecrate and dedicate food and other offerings to them."
Jul
04
Ancient Cambodian opera will be rescued by launching Save World Art
Portland actress Helena de Crespo was travelling through Cambodia about four years ago, when an accidental encounter changed her life. After visiting the famed temples of Angkor Wat in that battle-scarred country near Siem Reap, she headed down a road with her interpreter. There on the side of the road was an ornate traveling theater. De Crespo, born in Spain and raised in Britain, was familiar with outdoor theatre, as years ago she had traveled in South America, performing with a troupe that mounted shows in various venues, some of them outdoors. But she hadn’t seen anything like this, especially amid the poverty of the land. “I told my interpreter ‘Stop the car, I want to meet them,” de Crespo recalled. The Cambodians along the roadside accepted her visit calmly. She urged her interpreter to ask them who they were and what they did, and in turn, to tell them that she was an actress. When they found out she was involved in theater, they welcomed her openly. They offered her what little food they had, and invited her to take photographs. They showed her how they powered the stage lights with an old generator run by a car engine. They showed her their costumes, and how they lived under the stage. Amid dire poverty and life in substandard conditions, they were performing live theater in Khmer (Cambodia’s official language) regularly to local audiences, who regularly number over 1,000 at a single presentation. After more than two hours had passed, she had had animated discussions with company director Len Chouen, and she learned his amazing story. Len Chouen had come from a theater family who performed the ancient art form of Bassac, a mix of opera, theater, music and dancing dating back 4,000 years, disciplines he learned as a child. When all artists in Cambodia were slated to be killed during the Khmer Rouge, his family members were wiped out by Pol Pot’s soldiers, but because he was small he was hidden under their dead bodies, and was able to escape. De Crespo learned that Len Chouen had formed his company, about 86 members in all–including orphans wandering the countryside–in order to preserve Bassac. As she was about to leave, he begged her to help the company, which is titled the Reasmey Ankgor Bassac Theater Troupe. “I was leaving the next day,” de Crespo said. “All I could think about was them. I was really ignorant. I didn’t know anything about Bassac. All I could see was those people suffering. I thought, ‘What can I do? Where can I turn?’ Bassac, she learned, is an ancient art form originating from India, using many of that country’s mythological characters, and was inspired by the Ramayana, an ancient Sanskrit epic that is an important part of the Hindu canon. Ramayana thematically explores human values and the idea of dharma, the principal or law that orders the universe. So many people were unable to read, so through traveling theater they learned about the gods and their traditional stories through theater. When she returned to Portland, de Crespo started contacting various social service agencies to help raise money. No one in America answered her request, but through her connection with England’s Actors Equity, she found International Performance Aid Trust (IPAT), a group operating out of Britain and Belgium. Eventually, their funding enabled the Bassac company to purchase land for their theater center. Other improvements are in the works, including a water pump, health center, school and a more permanent theater space. “They’ve got some pigs and chickens and a pond for fishing, and papaya trees have been planted,” de Crespo said. But she said there is much more that they need. During the monsoon season, she added, the theater group members are forced to move elsewhere due to lack of shelter. De Crespo and a group of other Portland people sympathetic to her cause have recently formed a not-for-profit group titled Save World Art. The Cambodian project, originally called “Cambodian Treasures–The Bassac Project,” will be the inaugural effort of this fund-raising group. And to raise money de Crespo has launched her own money-raising project, the performance of a chilling, dryly funny one-woman play titled “Elective Affinities” by Syrian-American playwright David Adjmi. A site-specific playlet about a wealthy woman with no humility, it is designed to be performed in opulent private homes, and is by invitation only, although de Crespo says that could change. She has performances slated in the Portland area and in Ashland this summer. “Many people in Cambodia are still struggling to say alive,” de Crespo said. “Between 1975-1979, two million Cambodians perished during the genocide. Even after 30 years their infrastructure is still very bad.” She added that Save World Art is geared toward helping with buildings, health, sanitation and self-sufficient food production. But it’s also aimed at something more that could help the entire country–reviving an ancient art form that can enhance tourism as well as the quality of life for Cambodians. “Who would have thought,” de Crespo said, ” that my stopping a car and walking out to meet a group of people in the Cambodian countryside would have such a great effect on my life?” You can contribute a tax-deductible donation to help the Cambodian project here or here. Watch “Cambodian Treasures: Preserving Bassac Theatre”
Sep
13
Fixture cancellation angers touring team
The Football Federation of Cambodia’s decision over the weekend to scrap this Thursday’s scheduled friendly fixture between the Cambodian national team and Khmer Europe XI has enraged the visiting side comprising Cambodians living abroad. The 2012 Metfone C-League Super 4 playoffs, which has its third place playoff on Wednesday and final on Saturday, will feature a significant number of national team players. However, with the tour being months in the planning with many of the foreign-based players requiring unpaid leave from their jobs, the obvious fixture clash was somehow overlooked by the Federation until just days beforehand. “Everyone in the team is angry because so much time and effort have been put in to prepare us for the match,” Battambang-born Australian Chan Tolson posted on his Facebook page on Saturday. “So disappointed flying all this way for nothing.” Khmer Europe will instead face 2011 league champions Phnom Penh Crown, who missed out on the Super 4 playoffs this year, in a friendly at 3:30pm on Thursday at Olympic Stadium.
Aug
16
Chinese firm plans investment in Cambodia
China's Hainan Ruijin Investment Holding Group planned to invest in rice plantation, cow farm and tourism development in Cambodia, the group's chairman Pan Xiaoping said Wednesday. Pan said during a meeting with Heng Samrin, president of Cambodia's National Assembly that his company decided to establish an overseas branch office in Cambodia to focus on the three projects. Pan did not say when the projects will be started. Heng Samrin pledged full support for those projects, which he said will be good to boost the development of Cambodia's economy. "Foreign investment is a key factor to accelerate economic development in Cambodia," he said
Jul
27
Strengthen Cambodia- VietnamDefense Cooperation
Commander of Cambodian Royal Air Defence Force, General Un Navi was received on July 25 in Hanoi by Deputy Chief of the General Staff of Vietnam People’s Armed Forces, Lieutenant General Vo Van Tuan, Vietnam News Agency (VNA) reported. In the meeting, Lieutenant General Vo Van Tuan said the Vietnamese Government, people and army always treasure the solidarity and friendship between Vietnam and Cambodia, said VNA. He expressed his delight at the effective cooperation in defense between the two countries, which significantly contributes to tightening the friendship between both countries and armies. For his part, General Un Navi briefed his host about the working results between his delegation and the Command of the Vietnam Air Defence-Air Force, adding that the visit is a great chance for the two air defense forces to exchange experience in their work, added VNA.
Aug
16
Tourism entrepreneurs get connected
The Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) has begun matching tourism entrepreneurs in an effort to provide better quality services to tourists in Cambodia, company officials say. Thourn Sinan, chairman of PATA’s Cambodia chapter, said the matches would allow better quality services among the tourism entrepreneurs of Cambodia to thrive. “This is the best channel for connecting you to the people you need to know,” he said, adding that “it’s not just about what we know, but who we know in this business.” The purpose of matching entrepreneurs is to strengthen relations, extend business networks, raise awareness of important issues, and to save time in Cambodia’s tourism industry, according to a press release from PATA. Nuon Someth, undersecretary of state for the Ministry of Tourism, said late last week that this was the second time PATA organised entrepreneur matching, and 63 companies took part, compared to only 40 companies during the previous event. “We can consider this event as an important one for participating in improving tourism sector in Cambodia,” he said. Statistics from the Ministry of Tourism show the number of international tourists visiting Cambodia grew almost 27 per cent in the first six months of 2012 compared to the same period in 2011. Visitors coming to Cambodia during the first six months of the year numbered 1,756,652, compared to 1,385,029 in 2011. Tourism Minister Thong Khon said the tourism situation in the Asia Pacific region and ASEAN, in particular, is better than other areas of the world.
Jul
30
ASI rebuilding the glory of Buddhist complex in Cambodia
There are signs of devastation everywhere and vandalism too. Still, the sights at the Ta Prohm Buddhist monastic complex, built by Cambodian king Jayavarman VII around 1181 CE in Siem Reap province can leave visitors benumbed. Massive silk cotton trees have grown on the vimanas of shrines and uprooted many other structures, including galleries, shrines, pillars, and lintel beams. Corbelled roofs have caved in and pillars with beautiful carvings have broken into two. The gopuras on the east and west look forlorn with the sand-stone blocks that form the visage of Avalokitisvara dislodged from their places. Amid the ruins are the 48 pillars of the Hall of Dancers. Bas reliefs of Apsaras and Bodhisatvas have been gauged out of shrines and their niches are barren. Every morning at this complex, there is a scrimmage of international tourists. “At 9 a.m. itself, there are long queues to see the trees that have grown over vimanas. Some of the trees are more than 40 metres tall,” said D.S. Sood, Deputy Superintending Archaeological Engineer, Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) and team leader of the Ta Prohm Temple Project. Tourists come from all over the world but mainly from South Korea, Japan, France, Germany, Singapore and India. “We are a team of five from the ASI, restoring the Ta Prohm complex from December 2004,” Mr. Sood said as he hosted a team of visiting Indians, led by T. Satyamurthy, former Superintending Archaeologist, ASI, on June 24. “It is a challenging work because of the environmental and site conditions. Safeguarding the authenticity of the monuments is of utmost importance. UNESCO has said we cannot cut any tree because it wants the people to see here how the trees and the complex coexist,” said Mr. Sood. Jayavarman VII dedicated this temple to his mother. He called it a “Rajavihara” (the royal temple). The word “Ta” means ancestors and “Prohm” originates from Brahma, Hindu god of creation. The main image in the sandstone complex is that of Pragnya Paramita, goddess of wisdom. The complex — 1,150 metres long and 663 metres wide — has concentric enclosures that house 39 shrines with small vimanas, galleries, the Hall of Dancers, a causeway connecting the third and fourth enclosures etc. Dr. Satyamurthy called Ta Prohm “an outstanding monument” built of interlocked sandstone blocks without any binding material. It was different from the monuments in India because it had a single core. Jayavarman VII, a Buddhist, was succeeded by Jayavarman VIII, a Hindu. Jayavarman VIII systematically destroyed the Buddha images at Ta Prohm, Angkor Thom, Prea Khan and Banteay Kdei. The shifting of the capital from Siem Reap and invasions, internal disputes and neglect led to the ruin of the monuments. UNESCO inscribed Ta Prohm on the World Heritage List in 1992. Today, it is one of the most visited complexes in Cambodia’s Angkor region. The conservation and restoration of Ta Prohm is a partnership project of the ASI and the APSARA (Authority for the Protection and Management of Angkor and the Region of Siem Reap). When the ASI team arrived at Ta Prohm in 2004, everything was in ruins: there was very little standing other than the gigantic trees. Mr. Sood, senior conservation assistants T.K. Ganju and A.K. Soni, and senior draftsmen E.P. Biswas and H. Raghavendra assessed the challenge. Mr. Sood said, “We studied the monument, its behaviour and tendency, how the structures were built, their methodology and technology, their stability, the materials used in their construction, why conservation was necessary and the quantum of conservation to be done. We analysed the causes of neglect.” The first structure that the ASI restored to its glory was a completely collapsed gallery in the third enclosure. It was rectangular in shape. Its corridor, corbelled roof and two parallel rows of pillars had fallen. Only the corridor’s rear wall, once decorated with bas reliefs of mythical figures, stood. The ASI team restored the gallery and the causeway with balustrades, connecting the third and fourth enclosures. Mr. Sood said, “After proper documentation, we removed the gallery’s fallen stones, using a crane. We documented all parts of the gallery. The stones were numbered and measured for their length, breadth and height, and weighed. It was a jigsaw puzzle to find out to which part of the gallery the stones belonged. We were clear that we could not use broken stone blocks without joining them. If the broken parts of a block were available, we joined them by inserting steel rods inside after drilling holes in the blocks. We used the same kind of material. We did not use mortar or any binding material. We started the gallery restoration in 2007 and completed it in 2010.” It was an equally big challenge to restore the Hall of Dancers. “The roof had caved in. There was no access to go inside,” Mr. Ganju said. The ASI team meticulously restored the hall, block by block. Where the sandstone blocks were missing, it used stones from the original source: the Kulen Mountain. A massive tree stands inside the hall on one side. “We will keep the tree as it is, because UNESCO wants people to understand how it looked before the restoration. On the right side, we will restore the roof,” Mr. Sood said. During the hall’s restoration, the ASI found the lower half of a beautiful golden crown. The hall was not meant for performing dances. Monks used it for meditation. The gopuras on the entrances on the east and west are being restored. Dr. Satyamurthy called the restoration work “a remarkable achievement in the context of the enormity of the challenges involved.” The ASI took the help of the Forest Research Institute, Dehra Dun, to prop up the trees that had grown on the structures. Water and Power Consultancy Service Limited, New Delhi, did hydrological and ground-penetrating radar studies to understand the movement of the roots below the soil. The Indian Institute of Technology — Madras helped the ASI in resolving the structural stability of the monument. About 200 Cambodian workers, skilled and semi-skilled, are assisting the ASI team. If the magnitude of work at Ta Prohm is any indication, the ASI team has its hands full till at least 2014.
Aug
11
Local chefs awarded silver
Things were cooking in Pattaya for the five-chef Cambodian team from Siem Reap. Photograph: supplied A team of five Siem Reap chefs won a silver medal at their debut appearance in an international culinary contest in Pattaya, despite almost being derailed by over-bearing Thai customs officials. Siem Reap Chef’s Club coordinator and team leader Chan Sophea, the food and beverage manager at Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa, said the team suffered a setback at the Thai border while travelling to Thailand’s biggest hospitality art competition and showcase, the Pattaya City Culinary Cup 2012, which was held last month from July 26-28. Chan Sophea said that unfortunately when the Cambodian team reached the border, they were held up for about 3.5 hours by Thai customs who would not allow them to bring all their equipment. He said, “Everyone got very tired and stressful, but we still managed to get to the first meeting at Pattaya city on time.” And happily the team prevailed, surprising everyone, possibly even themselves, by coming second in the contest and winning the silver medal in their debut performance. Chan Sophea told Insider, “We are Cambodian and we are proud to win the silver medal for the first cheer.” He said the five chefs competing in the team were representatives of Cambodia with a mission to show Khmer cuisine to the world. He added, “We tried with our full commitment and all our hearts to succeed. It was very challenging competition. The judges scored not only on the taste of the food we cooked, but also on the creative preparation, clean hygiene, and teamwork activities. “The competition started at 10am and ran until 3:30pm. We ate nothing that day, but we were full with hope and confidence.” Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa’s general manager Hanno Stamm accompanied the team to the contest, which he said was very professional and tough. “The competitions were not limited to cooking, but also included housekeeping, waiter, and bar competitions,” he said. “The whole thing lasted three days, with our chefs cooking on the last day. This obviously caused not a little anxiety among our chefs as they watched the other competitors doing their thing the first couple of days. “I think our chefs did a bloody good job. Although they are all very capable, they had never competed nationally or internationally before. Cooking in front of judges and spectators must have played havoc with their nerves. Personally, I am very proud of all of them and I think it was great how they represented their hotels and Cambodia. But it would have been nice to get some support from the government. We could not even get posters or brochures from the Ministry of Tourism. “But apart from doing very well, the team also had a chance to see how things are done outside Siem Reap. I think even more important than the silver medal is the experiences they gained.” The comprised five leading Siem Reap hotel chefs: two from Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa, one from Grand Soluxe Angkor Palace Resort and Spa, one from Sokhalay Angkor Resort and Spa, and one from Ree Hotel. Training took place at the Victoria, and the hotel was the driver in getting the team to Thailand. Hanno Stamm said, “The whole thing came about as a bit of an accident: the competition organiser, Mr Willment Leong, came to Siem Reap to visit our chef Vuthy – they used to work at the Raffles together. “Whilst here, he started talking about the upcoming competition and wanted to know if chefs here in Siem Reap had ever done anything like that before. It was at this stage that Vuthy and Sophea, our food and beverage manager came to see me and asked if I was willing to support the idea. “Sure I was! Not because I thought that they would stand much of a chance to be honest, but because I thought it would be a great learning experience. Subsequently, the chefs came to the Victoria every Sunday for four weeks to practice.”
Aug
21
Cambodia’s new Tourism frontier
A year ago, getting to Sihanoukville required perseverance and a certain degree of bravery. There had been no flights to Cambodia’s premier beach resort for years — at least no scheduled services — and cruise ships docking here were few and far between. Buses from Cambodia’s star attraction, Angkor Wat, take 10 hours and the first section of the road from Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville sees so many accidents that Cambodians usually insist on praying en route at a cliffside temple. “A seaside getaway is not what most travellers think of when they book a holiday to Cambodia,” said Sibylle Rotzler, sales manager of Bangkok-based Backyard Travel, which recently launched a tour taking in the south-coast resorts of Sihanoukville, Kep, a sleepy French-colonial town, and Koh Kong, a new destination on the eco-tourism trail. Scheduled flights to Sihanoukville from Siem Reap finally restarted at the end of last year, then earlier this month the first ship to cruise the Gulf of Thailand in a decade dropped anchor here and with it about 1,000 Chinese tourists. Meanwhile, the luxury hotel chain Marriott is due to open a resort in Sihanoukville next year featuring an 18-hole golf course and a marina. And, after completing a new bridge from the mainland to an island a kilometre off the coast last July, the developer Koh Puos Investment Group has started building a similarly luxurious resort complete with a casino. Following years spent promoting Sihanoukville and the rest of the coastline as the next travel frontier in Cambodia, efforts by the Ministry of Tourism seem to be paying off finally. Last year, the number of foreign visitors to Cambodia’s beaches grew eight percent to about 180,000 people, according to official figures. This growth is expected to accelerate after the Cambodian coastline was last year admitted to the Most Beautiful Bays in the World Club, a prestigious collective that also includes Halong Bay in Vietnam and Mont Saint Michel in France. But efforts to place Sihanoukville on the map also point to wider problems that have plagued the tourism industry in Cambodia in recent years as it has tried to diversify beyond the Angkor temples and the French colonial capital Phnom Penh. In mid-2007, Sihanoukville was the scene of an airplane crash in which all 22 people on board died, less than six months after its airport reopened following decades of disuse during and after the Khmer Rouge era. The following year, the European Union blacklisted the now-defunct Siem Reap Airways, which in turn blamed the ban on Cambodia’s lack of compliance with international aviation safety standards. With Siem Reap Airways effectively dead and a black mark against its civil aviation record, in late 2008 Cambodia became one of the few countries in the world without its own domestic airline stalling efforts to diversify its tourism industry. When the refurbishment of Sihanoukville Airport was finally completed at the end of 2009, it took a further two years for scheduled flights to restart, a delay many in Cambodia’s tourism industry blamed on the schizophrenic nature of a new airline that started earlier the same year. Although Cambodia Angkor Air (CAA) was supposed to be the national flag carrier, critics say 49% ownership by Vietnam Airlines means it has little interest in developing new domestic destinations and every desire to instead control Cambodia’s civil aviation and channel tourists in and out of Vietnam. Kloung Sivly, a marketing executive at CAA, said the decision to relaunch scheduled flights between Siem Reap and Sihanoukville — which start at US$228 return this low season — was “in harmony” with the government’s plan to promote links to the seaside resort. Traffic to Sihanoukville remains minuscule. CAA, the only carrier to the beach resort, flew 5,741 passengers to Sihanoukville in the first half of this year, said Kloung Sivly, meaning the newly reopened airport is operating well below its capacity of 700,000 passengers per year. CAA has no immediate intent to fly between the capital Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville, he said. “However, we do have a plan to operate this route in the long term.” Meanwhile, Vietnam Airlines planning executive Do Thi Phuong Trinh said connections between Sihanoukville and Ho Chi Minh City would be decided “based on market demand at the appropriate time”. As yet, there are still no direct overseas connections to Sihanoukville, while CAA’s only international destination remains Ho Chi Minh City — Vietnam Airlines’ main hub — more than three years after Cambodia’s new national carrier first began flying. Critics have argued that Cambodia’s aviation problems go beyond its safety record and the new national carrier. Air Asia CEO Tony Fernandes publicly complained this month that airport charges in the country were overly expensive compared to the rest of the region, which was deterring airlines, although he did single out Sihanoukville as a possible new destination. Societe Concessionaire des Aeroports (SCA), which operates all three of Cambodia’s air terminals, has offered incentives at Sihanoukville including a waiver on ground-handling fees in a bid to get airlines to fly there. Khek Norinda, SCA’s communications and marketing manager, points out that the struggle to re-establish scheduled flights to Sihanoukville has been as much to do with prevailing economic conditions as anything else. “We need more time to build the profile of Sihanoukville as a regional resort destination,” he says.
Sep
17
Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Viet Nam cooperate in developing tourism
At a conference aimed at promoting tourism in the region, ministers of tourism from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Viet Nam (CLMV) agreed yesterday ( Sep 14) that the four countries will work together to attract 25 million international visitors to the region from 2013 to 2015, with at least four million "exchange visitors". The conference was presided over by Hoang Tuan Anh, Viet Nam's Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism with the participation of many international media units from Russia, Egypt, Australia, Sweden, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar ... The ministers reviewed the implementation of the 2010 Ministerial Joint Statement on CLMV Tourism Co-operation to develop tourism in the four countries. These targets were mentioned at a press briefing held yesterday following the first meeting of the CLMV Tourism Ministers in HCM City. Attending the conference were Bosengkham Vonhdara, Lao Minister of Information, Culture and Tourism, Thong Khon, Cambodian Minister of Tourism, and Thet Oo, Ambassador of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar in Viet Nam. Minster Tuan Anh told the press that the ministers were pleased with the "impressive development" of tourism in all the four countries in recent times despite the global economic crisis and other problems including natural calamities and conflicts in several areas. "Last year, CLMV welcomed over 12.3 million international visitors, a growth of 14.5 per cent in comparison with 2010. Of them, exchange visitors among the four countries reached 2.1 million, accounting for 17 per cent of the total number of international visitors," he said. Tourism agencies of the four countries have since actively participated in the activities of the International Travel Expo HCM City held annually to promote the "Four Countries – One Destination (4CODE)" concept, he said. In order to reach the goal, the four countries will also consider the issuance of a single tourist visa for five countries in the Mekong sub-region including Thailand, after assessing the effectiveness of one planned by Thailand and Cambodia. The ministers of Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar appreciated the initiative taken by Viet Nam in making a documentary film introducing 4CODE in 2010. The national tourism agencies and tourism associations of CLMV had also co-operated well with each other in organizing the Tourism Alliance Awards and will increase cooperation with international partners such as the ASEAN - Japan (AJC), the ASEAN-Korea (AKC), the Asian Development Bank (ADB) ... They noted that Viet Nam had successfully held the 4CODE Tourism Investment Conference in September 2011. The four countries have also supported each other in organizing several regional international events including the ASEAN Tourism Forum (ATF) in Cambodia and Laos. The forum seeks to exploit the tourism potentials of the region as a whole. The ministers noted and appreciated the support of international countries and organizations like ASEAN Japan Center and ASEAN South Korea Center in training human resources and promoting CLMV destinations in Japan and South Korea. Ha long bay, one of tourism spot in Vietnam The contribution of Asian Development Bank, which has invested in tourism infrastructure, public tourism, and developing human resources through the Greater Mekong Subregion Sustainable Tourism Development Project, was especially appreciated, Mr Hoang Tuan Anh said. At the press conference, the four ministers signed the CLMV Tourism Joint Co-operation Plan for the 2013-15 period. The new plan specifies increased information exchange among the four countries as well as the development of joint tourism products that are of high quality. It also envisages joint efforts in attracting more investment into the tourism sector as well as acting together in promoting co-operation with the third parties including countries and international organizations. The ministers emphasized the need for human resources training and development, saying it would determine the quality of tourism products and services in the sub-region. They also agreed to hold the Tourism Ministerial Conference every year with the four nations taking turns to host it. Cambodia would be the next host, they said. The Tourism Ministerial Conference was held under the auspices of the International Travel Expo HCM City 2012, which closes today.
Sep
08
Rich-poor gap hinders ASEAN integration - Cambodia
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Southeast Asian nations must redouble efforts to bridge development gaps which threaten the region's efforts to create an EU-style single market, Cambodia's prime minister said Monday, August 27. Building an ASEAN economic community by 2015 is the "top priority," Hun Sen said as he opened the annual meeting of economic ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in the Cambodian tourist hub of Siem Reap. Emulating the European Union's example, ASEAN wants to establish a single market and manufacturing base of about 600 million people -- a goal that has been spurred by intensifying competition from China and India. With less than three years to go, ASEAN must "address challenges and bridge the development gap, which hinders the realization of (the) ASEAN Economic Community as planned," said Hun Sen, according to an official translation. The development gap among ASEAN nations "is still huge," he said. The bloc's 10 member states range from deeply impoverished Myanmar to advanced city state Singapore and emerging powerhouse Indonesia. "This requires us to double our efforts to promote further growth and improve equitable distribution of the fruits of growth at both national and regional levels," Hun Sen said. In a step toward narrowing the gap between richer and poorer nations and achieving regional integration, the bloc last year set up a nearly US$500 million ASEAN infrastructure fund offering loans to build roads, railways and other projects without direct foreign assistance. More partners But according to Hun Sen, whose country currently holds the ASEAN chair, the fund "is still very small." He urged the bloc's economic and finance ministers "to attract more financing partners to increase the fund size" by approaching dialogue partners such as Japan, China, South Korea. ASEAN economies grew by 4.7 percent in 2011, Hun Sen said, despite the weak global economy, high oil prices and volatile capital flows. The figure was down from 7.6 percent growth in 2010, according to ASEAN data. Despite a slowdown in exports, ASEAN countries posted a combined trade surplus of more than $90 billion in 2011, Hun Sen said. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. During their week-long meeting, the economic ministers will also seek to deepen economic engagement in talks with other nations including China, the United States, Russia and India. The meeting marks the first gathering of ASEAN members since a foreign ministers' meeting in July ended in disarray over a maritime dispute in the South China Sea, exposing deep divisions within the bloc. - Agence France-Presse
Aug
07
Scam brokers nabbed at Phnom Penh airport
Four brokers accused of duping 19 victims out of thousands of dollars for non-existent jobs in South Korea were arrested at Phnom Penh International Airport on Saturday. Keo Thea, chief of Phnom Penh’s anti-human trafficking and juvenile protection department, said Por Sen Chey district police arrested Lok Sido, 32, Kuch Sopha, 35, Puth Sophal, 26, and Meng Savun, 28, after one of the victims filed a complaint at a nearby police station when the promised flight to South Korea never arrived. “According to victims, some of them spent from US$1,000 up to $2,000 on brokers seeking jobs and preparing documents,” he said. One of the 19 victims said yesterday they arrived at the airport on time to board a flight as instructed by brokers. “But we waited for a long time – no flight. We called the brokers but they said the flight maybe had been postponed. We stopped believing them and decided to file a complaint to the police on the same day,” he said. Moeun Tola, head of the labour program at the Community Legal Education Center, said brokers regularly exploiting Cambodians seeking jobs in South Korea are assisted by false promises plastered on billboards advertising training centres. “The worker needs to go to the Ministry of Labour but the billboard of the South Korean training schools really confuse people – that you just pay $50 and then you can go to work in Korea,” he said. Tola said the ministries of labour and education should review the licensing of such facilities. Neither ministry could be reached for comment yesterday. The arrests came three days after South Korea implemented controversial new legislation aimed at curtailing migrant worker exploitation that rights groups say may have the opposite effect. On August 1, South Korea enacted a new Measure for Improvement in Foreign Workers’ Change of Workplaces and Prevention of Broker Intervention policy aimed at reducing the frequency of migrant employees changing jobs. Rights groups including Amnesty International, the Asia Pacific Mission For Migrants and the International Forum for Democracy and Cooperation have said the policy leaves migrants with nowhere to go if they find themselves in exploitative working conditions. Where in the past migrant workers seeking to change jobs were provided a list of labour-Amnesty International said in a statement late last month that if the migrant workers did not find a new job within three months, “they will lose their work visa, thus risking arrest, imprisonment and deportation”. Questions have also been raised over how the policy’s aim of curtailing exploitation by providing lists of workers rather than businesses will actually help, given that brokers could find the new list just as, if not more, useful.
Aug
18
Architectural prize is given to Cambodia
A new building at the Royal University of Phnom Penh has won a prestigious international architectural prize. The extension to the Hun Sen Library was awarded the 2012 Sustain Magazine International Project for Sustainability, a fitting reward for a building that is sensitive to its location and yet elegant and beautiful. The architects were both Khmer and western; lead architect Geoffrey Pyle has spent much time in Cambodia, and is aware of both the challenges and the potential of the country. “I came to live in Cambodia with my family in 2003, loved it and stayed for nearly five years,” he told Post Property. “Since then I have split my time between London and Phnom Penh. I really like the openness to ideas and the interest in growth and change here. Cambodia is a special place and after nine years, it feels both familiar and fascinating.” The award-winning library extension - intended to double the size of the library to provide new reading and study areas, seminar rooms, teaching spaces and special collection rooms - presented architectural challenges which were perfectly suited to Pyle’s sustainability-minded approach. “I have had a professional interest in sustainability all of my working life; it is for me a fundamental part of design along with the many other aspects that make good architecture,” he said. Despite being a professional architect, Pyle says that throwing up new buildings isn’t always the best thing to do. “One big issue is that architects and the building industry exist to build, and building means an expenditure of energy - we should be looking for ways of re-utilising old buildings as well as minimising the carbon footprint of new ones - at the same time as asking ‘is a new building necessary?’” The Sustain award for the library extension was earned for, in the words of the judges, taking “a holistic approach to sustainability, using local resources and trade where appropriate. The design solution is robust and appropriate to its context. If this approach can be taken as standard and replicated in more international projects it would really impact on sustainable development in developing countries.” Thought was also given to keeping as much of the budget as possible spent within the country: local materials and techniques were specified so that money would be fed into the local economy. Carpentry, metalwork, plastering and terrazzo were carried out by local skilled labour. Pyle says that he attempted to design the building in a way that was appropriate to Cambodian culture. “The design aims to take a similar approach to the New Khmer Architecture of the 1960s, which reinterpreted contemporary thinking about design in terms of local culture and context. The design of the library responds to its site, to the climate, to building methods and particularly to the way students in Cambodia like to study, which is in groups as well as individually,” he said. He went on: “The existing library already provides spaces which are fairly enclosed and protected from the outside environment; we wanted to make spaces which flowed from one to another and had good natural light and views out to the trees and the water behind the building. How natural light falls in a space, and how that space is connected to nature outside I think are fundamental to the human experience of architecture, whatever the culture. The openness of the spaces hopefully says something to the students about the availability of knowledge which is present in the library.” Pyle believes that Cambodia’s capital has the opportunity to become a world leader in sustainable architecture and design: “Phnom Penh is a special case due to its recent history, but this gives it the opportunity to be ambitious about what kind of city it wants to be. It could have a strong ‘green’ strategy with excellent buildings which are very responsive to environmental issues. It could choose to skip the stage of highly-cooled glass buildings which the West is full of and move instead to low-energy, greener buildings.” He warns that it is imperative that the world learns to do this quickly. “We can’t as a world continue to use natural resources at a rate which can’t be replaced.” The growth of Phnom Penh is, for Pyle, both exciting and challenging. “It is exciting that Phnom Penh is growing. That brings issues of traffic and potential overdevelopment, which is a challenge for the city authorities, but there are some very good people there working on these issues. It would be helpful to have a clearer city plan to guide developers and give a lead to land use and zoning. And I think it is time for a system of protecting the most important examples of urban heritage in the city, including some 1960s buildings.” Pyle says that he doesn’t see any major changes in urban planning happening in the near future. “Creating substantial new green spaces in any city is difficult; it requires a strong will on the part of the authorities and an acknowledgment that public open space is beneficial to the inhabitants of a city and therefore to the city itself. With the potential for generating income from the development of ‘unused’ land, I am not hopeful about any radical changes in direction in the short term.” However, Pyle says he is generally optimistic about the future of Cambodia’s built environment. “I think it is going mostly in a good direction and new projects are improving in quality all the time," he said. "More young Cambodian architects and urban designers are graduating and many are getting experience and training overseas, seeing and experiencing how things are done well elsewhere, which is extremely valuable.”
Sep
27
Highlights of Cambodia
Cambodia is officially known as the Kingdom of Cambodia and is located in the south of the Indochina Peninsula and in the heart of Southeast Asia, making it a natural gateway to Laos, Thailand, Indochina, Myanmar and Vietnam. Its shape and geography divide it into four natural regions: the mountains and forests in the North, the vast rice fields of the Central Plains, the semi-arid farm lands of the Northeast plateau, and the tropical islands and long coastline of the peninsula in the South. After many years of isolation and civil war, Cambodia opened to tourists in the mid-1990s and the country expects to receive more than three million visitors in 2012. Cambodia's primary tourist destinations are Angkor Wat and the other temples of Angkor near Siem Reap, Phnom Penh, and the beaches of Sihanoukville. Other new destinations such as the hill tribe areas of Ratanakiri and Mondulkiri, the remote temples of Preah Vihear and Banteay Chhmar, and quaint provincial capitals such as Battambang, Kampot and Kep, are just now being discovered by travelers, and all offer the unique experience of ‘unspoiled' Cambodia. Things to do: Angkor Wat, which took over 400 years to complete, covers an area of more than 400 square kilometers. It is the world's largest religious building, and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Enjoy the spectacular sunset from the Phnom Bakheng Temple, as well as elephant cruising. Discover Phnom Penh, the Royal Palace, the National Museum, Tuol Sleng and the Killing Fields. Receive a water blessing from a Buddhist monk at the beautiful Tep Pranamm Pagoda inside Angkor Thom. Get off the beaten path at Sambour Prei Kuk, one of the lesser-visited temples. Cruise past the magnificen.t floating villages lit by the warm glow of the evening sun on Tonle Sap Lake. Explore deserted French beach villas in Kep or eat fresh seafood at Cambodia's favorite beach destination, Sihanoukville. Visit Preah Vihear, a World Heritage Site. A one day excursion to Phnom Kulen, which is widely regarded as the birthplace of ancient Khmer Empire.
Sep
13
Cambodia conducts child protection and training for tourism professionals
ECPAT Cambodia, the Local Code Representative for Cambodia, conducted several training workshops for the tourism industry in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap. On August 2-3, 2012, 44 staff members of the Sofitel Phnom Penh Phokeethra, including the General Manager, Director of Training and Development, Front Desk Manager, Human Resource Manager, Director of Sales and Marketing, Front Desk Receptionist, Restaurant Manager, Banquet Manager, Club Manager, Director of Housekeeping, Laundry Manager, Director of Engineering, Fitness Manager, Revenue Manager, Credit Manager, and Corporate IT Manager, have been trained on protecting children from sexual exploitation in travel and tourism. Sofitel Phnom Penh Phodeethra is currently in the process to become a member of The Code and will be the first hotel in Cambodia to do so. On August 13-14, 2012, ECPAT Cambodia organized its 11th capacity building workshop on the protection of children from sexual exploitation in travel and tourism at Apsara Angkor Hotel and Resort in Siem Reap. Participants were 23 tourism professionals, ranging from Front Desk Managers, Human Resource Managers, to General Managers. Since 2009, ECPAT Cambodia has provided training to 122 tourism companies (and 169 staff members) with the aim to encourage them to establish ethical policy to protect children from sexual exploitation in travel and tourism and report possible cases to authorities. In addition to the regular training, ECPAT Cambodia has provided training to the hotels that are interested in having their staff trained on child protection.
Aug
31
Signing Ceremony on Japan’s Assistance for Study Project on Angkor Area
A signing ceremony of a Memorandum of Understanding on Japan’s Assistance for Study Project for the Improvement of the Angkor Area in Siem Reap city, Siem Reap province, on Aug. 29 under the presidency of Cambodia’s Senior Minister H.E. Cham Prasidh, Minister of Commerce and H.E. Yukio Edano, Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan.
Jul
28
New border crossing to open at Preah Vihear
Cambodia and Thailand will open another permanent border crossing between Preah Vihear province and Thailand’s Ubon Ratchathani province on Wednesday, following a meeting earlier this month between Prime Minister Hun Sen and Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Sinawatra. An Ses, the new permanent border crossing, is primarily used for the trade of agricultural products. Cambodian people usually import products from Thailand through the crossing, and it used to open on every Tuesday and Thursday, said Sar Thavy, deputy governor of Preah Vihear province. “We will also consider further opening of border crossings for the interest of the people in both countries,” Hun Sen said after his meeting. Cambodia and Thailand currently have 23 permanent border crossings, said Touch Ra, deputy director of Oddar Meanchey’s Chong Sa Ngam border crossing. The two countries are also considering opening more border crossings in Oddar Meanchey province, Sar Thavy said.
Jul
04
Get more information of Koh Ker Temple in Cambodia
Koh Ker was once an ancient capital of Cambodia, located in Srayong Cheung village, Srayong commune, Kulen district, about 49 kilometers west of the provincial town. The Koh Ker complex is on the Chhork Koki highland. It was built by King Jayavaraman IV (AD 928-942). Koh Ker temple is 35 meters high, and its design resembles a seven-stepped stupa. The temple faces west toward Angkor city. It was built to worship Treypuvanesvara, the god of happiness. So far, 96 temples have been found in Koh Ker: Dav, Rumlum Bey, Beung Veng, Trapiang Prey, Dey Chhnang, Srok Srolao, Lingam, Kuk Srakum, Trapiang Ta, Sophy, Krahom, Andoung, Ang Khna, Teuk Krahom, Damrei Sar, Krarab, Banteay Pichoan, Kuk, Kmao, Thneung, Thorn Balang, Rohal, Chamneh, Sampich, Trapiang Svay, Neang Kmao, Pram, Bat, Khnar Chen, Klum, Chrab, Dangtung, Prang, Kampiang.... These temples were not constructed near each other. Today, many of them are no longer standing, and some are buried in the ground. The followings are locations and descriptions of some of the Koh Ker temples: . Neang Khmao Temple The Koh Ker complex is along a trail that is about 3 kilometers long. The first temple, Neang Khmao sits atop a small hill on the east side of the trail. The temple, which faces west toward Angkor city, is made of sandstone. It is 20 meters high and resembles a stupa. The temple terrace is 2 meters high and divided into three decks. The temple is surrounded by a laterite rampart, 44 meters square and 2 meters high. The rampart has only two openings; one on the east side, and the other on the west. The temple once housed lingam and yoni, but only yoni remains. The lintel sculpture has been damaged, but otherwise, most of the temple is in good condition, while nearly three-quarters of the rampart is good condition. . Pram Temple About 700 to 800 meters north of Neang Khmao temple is another temple called Pram temple. Constructed of laterite and sandstone, it sits on a small hill surrounded by bushes that block the lingam and the lintel. The main body of the temple is in good condition. . Chen Temple Farther down the trail is a three-peak temple made of laterite and sandstone. It faces east and is called Chen temple. Inside the temple there is a piece of lingam and remnants of a statue of King Jayavarman IV. A sculpture of garuda's head on the south lintel is missing. The temple is overgrown by forest. . Preng Well About 800 to 900 meters farther, there is the Preng well, which is similar to a pond. Surrounded by stone, it is 20 meters square. The terrace is about 8 centimeters high. The water in the pond is clear, and a nearby tree provides shade for weary visitors looking for a place to relax. . Rampart of Koh Ker Temple Another kilometer down the trail is the rampart of Koh Ker temple. 1 kilometer long and 2 kilometers high, it is made of laterite. Koh Ker temple is the middle of a rampart, surrounded by 20 more temples. Some of the temples are: . Kuk Temple or Gopura Kuk temple or Gopura is made of sandstone and has a sculpture of lotus petals on the temple fronton. Although the door frame is damaged, most of the temple is in good condition. A Shiva lingam that once was housed inside has been looted. . Prang Temple Prang temple is constructed of sandstone and bricks. There are five separate parts of this temple. About 70 percent of the temple is still standing. . Krahom Temple About 10 meters farther is Kramhom temple (The red temple). Constructed of brick and shaped like a seven-level pyramid, the temple is decorated with a 20-meter-tall sculpture of lotus petals. Inside the temple, there is a 3-meter-tall statue of Shiva with eight arms and four heads. The statue is supported by a l-square-meter base. The statue is seriously damaged, only some parts remain. . Khmao Temple Farther down is Khmao temple. On the wall and door frame of the temple, there is a partially damaged inscription. Near the temple is a rampart gateway to Kampiang temple. The gateway is a 2-meter staircase. Some sculptures of lotus petals, seven-headed nagas and garudas remain. . Koh Ker Temple About 300 meters farther to the west is Kampiang or Koh Ker temple. From a distance, the temple looks like a small hill, because it is covered by forest. Up close, however, it is actually a 35-meter-high stupa made of sandstone. It has seven levels, each level about 5 meters above the other. Each deck has a 2-meter-wide terrace, and there is a 55- step staircase to the top. At the top of the temple, there are large statues of garudas supporting Shiva lingam Treypuvanesvara. Nearby, there is a 4-meter square well, now completely covered by grass. According to local villagers, if a coconut is dropped into this well, it will appear in the pond near Neang Khmao temple. There is vegetation growing on top of the temple, and from there visitors have an excellent view of the surrounding landscape, in particular, Phnom Dangrek, Phnom Tbeng, and Kulen district.To the north of Koh Ker temple is another temple, Damrei Sar temple, but it is heavily damaged. To the northeast, is Iingam temple. This temple once housed three Shiva lingams, but some are now damaged.
Aug
31
Rich-poor gap challenges ASEAN dream
Southeast Asian nations must redouble efforts to bridge development gaps which threaten the region’s efforts to create an EU-style single market, Cambodia’s prime minister said earlier this week. Building an ASEAN economic community by 2015 is the “top priority”, Hun Sen said as he opened the annual meeting of economic ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in the Cambodian tourist hub of Siem Reap. Emulating the European Union’s example, ASEAN wants to establish a single market and manufacturing base of about 600 million people — a goal that has been spurred by intensifying competition from China and India. With less than three years to go, ASEAN must “address challenges and bridge the development gap, which hinders the realisation of (the) ASEAN Economic Community as planned”, said Hun Sen, according to an official translation. The development gap among ASEAN nations “is still huge”, he said. The bloc’s 10 member states range from deeply impoverished Myanmar to advanced city state Singapore and emerging powerhouse Indonesia. “This requires us to double our efforts to promote further growth and improve equitable distribution of the fruits of growth at both national and regional levels,” Hun Sen said. In a step towards narrowing the gap between richer and poorer nations and achieving regional integration, the bloc last year set up a nearly US$500 million infrastructure fund offering loans to build roads, railways and other projects without direct foreign assistance. But according to Hun Sen, whose country currently holds the ASEAN chair, the fund “is still very small”. He urged the bloc’s economic and finance ministers “to attract more financing partners to increase the fund size” by approaching dialogue partners such as Japan, China, South Korea. ASEAN economies grew by 4.7% in 2011, Hun Sen said, despite the weak global economy, high oil prices and volatile capital flows. The figure was down from 7.6% growth in 2010, according to ASEAN data. Despite a slowdown in exports, ASEAN countries posted a combined trade surplus of more than US$90 billion in 2011, Hun Sen said. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. During their week-long meeting, the economic ministers will also seek to deepen economic engagement in talks with other nations including China, the United States, Russia and India. The meeting marks the first gathering of ASEAN members since a foreign ministers’ meeting in July ended in disarray over a maritime dispute in the South China Sea, exposing deep divisions within the bloc.
Jul
13
Discover the Angkor Thom - Great Angkor City
Angkor Thom is undeniably an expression of the highest genius. It is, in three dimensions and on a scale worthy of an entire nation, the materialization of Buddhist cosmology, representing ideas that only great painters would dare to portray. BACKGROUND Angkor Thom, the last capital of the Khmer Empire, was a fortified cit enclosing residences of priest, officials of the palace and military, as well as buildings for administering the kingdom. South Gate of Angkor Thom These structures were built of wood and have perished but the remaining stone monuments testify that Angkor Thom was indeed a "Great City" as its name implies. Temples inside the walls of the city described in this article are Bayon, Phimeanakas, Baphuon, Terrace of the Elephants, Terrace of the Leper King, Prah Palilay, Tep Pranam and Prasat Suor Prat. The Royal Palace situated within the city of Angkor Thom is of an earlier date and belonged to kings of the tenth and first half of the tenth and first half of the eleventh centuries. Although the foundations and an enclosing wall around the palace with entry towers have been identified, little evidence remains of the layout of the buildings inside the enclosure. This absence of archaeological evidence of the royal buildings suggests that they were constructed of wood and have perished. The French ascertained a general plan of the Royal Palace (see map opposite). It included the temple-mountain of Phimeanakas and surrounding pools together with residences and buildings for administering the capital, which were probably at the back of the enclosure. Jayavarman VII reconstructed the original site of the Royal Palace Palace to erect the city of Angkor Thom, which was centered on the temple of Bayon and surrounded by a wall. Zhou Daguan the Chinese emissary, who provided the only first-hand account o f the Khmer, described the splendor of Angkor Thom. At the center of the Kingdom rises a Golden tower Bayon flanked by more than twenty lesser towers and several hundred stone chambers. On the eastern side is a golden bridge guarded by two lions of gold, one on each side, with eight golden Buddhas spaced along the stone chambers. North of the Golden Tower of Bronze [Baphuon], higher even than the Golden tower. a truly astonishing spectacle. With more than ten chambers at its base. A quarter of a mile further north is the residence of the King rising above his private apartments is another tower of gold, These are the monuments which have caused merchants from overseas to speak so often of "Cambodia the rich and noble " Symbolically, Angkor Thom is a microcosm of the universe, divided into four parts by the main axes. The temple of the Bayon is situated at the exact center of the axes and stands as the symbolical link between heaven and earth. The wall enclosing the city of Angkor Thom represents the stonewall around the universe and the mountain ranges around Meru. The surrounding moat (now dry) symbolizes the cosmic ocean.
Sep
21
New International Airport To Be Built in Siem Reap
Cambodia is going to build a new international airport in Sotr Nikum district, some 45 kilometers from Siem Reap provincial town with a US$1-billion joint investment between Camco Airport Co., Ltd. and Lees A & A Co., Ltds from South Korea. The construction will begin at the end of this year or in early 2013 and it is expected to complete by 2018 or 2019, H.E. Tek Reth Samrech, Secretary of State at the Office of the Council of Ministers told a local media recently. Once finished, the new international airport will be able to welcome all kinds of large airplanes, he said. According to the statistics from the Ministry of Tourism, in the first seven months of 2012, the Siem Reap International Airport received totally 573,941 passengers, an increase by 24 percent if compared to the same period in the previous year.
Jul
04
Ministry of Tourism takes a visit to Belarus
Cambodia’s Ministry of tourism waves his hands from the aircraft to lawmakers and other senior officials who were present to see him off at the Phnom Penh International Airport on June 18, prior to his departure to pay an official visit to Belarus at the invitation of H.E. Mr. Vladimir Andreichenko, President of the House of Representatives of Republic of Belarus.
Feb
28
Hopes for second tourism stimulus


tourism stimulus campaignThe tourism stimulus campaign 2010 has seven main areas, three of which are brand-new. They are a sales program in the “low” season called “Impressive Vietnam Grand Sale 2010,” aiming to attract more domestic and foreign guests, an on-point tourism promotion program for those visiting Vietnam with the motto “Friendly Vietnam welcomes you” and a countryside program for overseas Vietnamese.

Diversified stimulus

According to Nguyen Van Tuan, Director General of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) and general manager of the second campaign, the campaign is specifically aimed to increase the number of domestic tourists as well as those from Vietnam’s main markets. In particular, it focuses on high-spending tourists who stay many days in Vietnam in order to increase tourism revenues. In general, VNAT hopes to welcome 4.2 million international arrivals and 27-28 million domestic tourists, Tuan stated.

Among the three new programs, the tourism industry will concentrate more on the “Impressive Vietnam Grand Sale 2010” program in the low season to attract more customers. This kind of tourism through sales has recently developed strongly, says Vu The Binh, Director of Department of Travel under VNAT, adding that this is probably the main income generator for the tourism industry in many countries in the region.

To achieve good results, VNAT will cooperate with the Trade Promotion Bureau under the Ministry of Industry and Trade and Vietnam Airlines to carry out the program during August and September in big cities and major tourism centers across Vietnam like Hanoi, Danang and HCMC.

Many activities will run during the two months of the program such as organizing lucky draws for customers at supermarkets and shopping centers that register to join the sales program, opening the Impressive Vietnam Grand Sale Fair 2010 with discounts from 10-50% and much more. Tourists who participate in the sales programs will also get some additional benefits like a value-added tax refund, tourist privilege cards and shopping coupons. At any shopping place participating in the program, tourists can show their passports or ID cards to receive the benefits.

“Traveling combined with shopping is a trend that is now growing well,” Binh says. “The revenue from shopping by tourists is the main source of income for the tourism industry in Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore. These countries have been successful in organizing sales campaigns for the past few decades. Vietnam will follow the trend, but we will do it in different ways to adapt to Vietnam’s specific conditions.”

Response from enterprises

Businesses in the travel and hospitality sector hope that after the first campaign last year, the tourism authorities have more experience in organizing a tourism stimulus campaign so that the tourism industry and enterprises will benefit from the second campaign.

Tran Kim Long, General Director of Bong Sen Corporation, which manages a number of hotels, restaurants and travel agencies nationwide, told the Weekly that although he cannot tell exactly what effects the stimulation program brought to the company’s business last year, Bong Sen supports the campaign. One way or another, such a campaign has had positive effects on the company’s business results in particular and enterprises and Vietnam’s tourism in general.

Since late last year, affiliates of Bong Sen Corporation, including Palace Saigon Hotel, Bong Sen Saigon Hotel, Bong Sen Annex Hotel, Vietnam House Restaurant, Lemongrass, Brodard Bakery and Lotus Tours have already had plans for 2010. Many promotion programs to stimulate sales are the main parts of the plans.

Long says that these plans will be actively adjusted to adapt to market developments during the year as well as to correspond to VNAT’s stimulus campaign. “If VNAT organizes such campaigns continuously, this is really a good chance to create the conditions for enterprises in the tourism industry to boost their business,” he says. “I hope that this year’s campaign will have better effects on Vietnam’s tourism. Moreover, to make an effective stimulatus campaign, it is necessary to have good, comprehensive cooperation among the four main elements of the tourism industry, including tour operators, hotels, shopping centers and airlines.”

Phan Dinh Hue, Director of HCMC-based Viet Circle tour operator, agrees with Long: “We always welcome such campaigns, so this year we will also join with price discounts from 5-10% and other programs. More discounts will be offered if other suppliers also provide more discounts.”

Meanwhile, Saigontourist Travel Service Co. already plans to boost activities to popularize Vietnam’s tourism brand in international markets by participating in fairs and exhibitions. Besides introducing tour programs in Vietnam and seeking more partners, these events help people understand more about Vietnam’s tourism potential.

To support VNAT’s campaign, the flagship air carrier Vietnam Airlines has announced a 50% discount for domestic flights from March 1 till the end of this year. It will also work with VNAT to promote Vietnam’s tourism abroad and through mass media.

Long, Hue and other business people comment that this year’s campaign seems more professional. So, to get better results, they say that Vietnamese tourism should focus more on training human resources and building infrastructure to meet tourism demands. The infrastructure system has seen some improvements, but they are not comprehensive. Community participation in tourism is also very important.

If a really friendly image of the Vietnamese country and people combined with a better infrastructure system are created, Vietnam’s tourism will grow, Hue says. “In my opinion, VNAT must have a good long-term strategy as well as a detailed plan for every year,” Hue adds. “This work needs the participation of a group of experts, and then VNAT will design specific activities based on consultations. It is a fact that so far VNAT has made plans by itself, so they often do not meet the practical demands of tourists and travel agencies.”

Above all, these enterprises hope that with the second tourism stimulus campaign, companies in Vietnam’s tourism sector will start to actively cooperate with each other. VNAT’s role is only to provide direction.

Feb
28
Cambodia Reluctant To Host Sea Games In 2015

“Technically, it is quite tough for Cambodia to host it, especially from the NOCC capacity, but that depends on the government leaders who have clear and long vision on the matter,” said Vath Chamroeun, secretary general of the National Olympic Committee of Cambodia (NOCC).

He said a number of factors such as human resource, sports structure, sport management, environment, and financial resource needed to be reviewed before a country decided to lodge a bid for the regional sports event.

It was reported that Laos had to spend about US$100 million to host the multi-sport event in 2009, according to Chamroeun.

A founding member of the SEA Games that was launched in 1959, Cambodia has never hosted the event.

Chamroeun said during a meeting of the SEA Games Federation Council in Jakarta on May 28-29, the Cambodian delegation was advised to host the SEA Games in 2015.

(source: BERNAMA)

Feb
28
Vietnamese days to be held in China and Russia


Vietnam's picturesThe events are aimed at promoting the country’s image as well as investment, trade and tourism and boosting bilateral cooperation with the countries.

The PM directed the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry to draw up plans to hold Vietnamese Days in both countries.

The events will also be part of the celebrations to mark the 60th anniversary of the establishment of Vietnam-China diplomatic ties, the Vietnam-China Friendship Year 2010 as well as the 60th anniversary of Vietnam-Russia diplomatic relations.

Jul
26
Get more information about modern living on the south side of the city
The suburbs south of Mao Tse Toung Blvd, such as Toul Tom Poung, Boeung Trabek and Psar Doeum Thkov, have undergone a rapid transformation over the last couple of years, with a culmination of recently constructed apartment blocks and shopfront options now dominating the area. While accommodation in the south side of the city offers a retreat from the high rents of the central suburbs, amenities are still at hand. Some of the major features include Sovanna Shopping Complex, the freshly constructed Boeung Trabek Plaza and the stalwart tourist attraction Russian Market. A number of restaurants catering to western-palettes have also started to emerge, as the area continues to blossom. 120105_11aUS$1,200 A two-bedroom apartment located in a recently constructed apartment block, it boasts 24 hour security, parking, serviced café and rooftop gymnasium. The property comes fully-furnished with a well-equipped kitchen complete with breakfast bar, stylish bathrooms and well-lit bedrooms. It also has two balconies that provide sweeping views of Phnom Penh to the south. A great option for occupants who require modern-living and the amenities that come with it, the property is on the market US$1,200 per month, however, the owner is willing to negotiate depending on the length of the lease. 120105_11bUS$850 Another two-bedroom apartment situated in a new apartment building, it features ground-floor parking and 24 hour security. The property comes furnished with a fully-equipped kitchen, modern bathrooms and spacious bedrooms, while the living area is bright and well-ventilated courtesy of a small adjoining balcony. Listed at US$850 per month including some services and amenities, this option offers value for money. 120105_11cUS$800 A great opportunity to live in one of the capitals’ latest apartment blocks, this two-bedroom property offers city-living at its best, with free utilities, internet, parking and 24 hour security. It comes fully-furnished with western-style kitchen and bathrooms, and large, comfortable bedrooms. The tasteful furnishings in the bright and airy living area are the highlight of the apartment, which is on the market for a reasonable US$800 per month. For further information on these properties and others in Phnom Penh, Independent Property Services director David Murphy can be reached on 077 959 861 or dmurphy@independentpropertyservices.com. Alternatively, visit www.independentpropertyservices.com
Sep
05
Angkor Wat and the management of millions of visitors
SIEM REAP - It is Cambodia’s largest tourism success. Angkor Wat beautiful structures, a testimony of Khmer’s artistic skills and sense of architecture graved for ever into the stone, are a magnet for world tourism. According to the Apsara Authority –which runs the temples’ complex near Siem Reap- 1.15 million people visited Angkor Wat in 2010, 1.5 million last year. And more are due to walk around the historical area iN 2012 as numbers could reach 1.8 to 1.9 million. Officials indicate that 640,000 foreign tourists saw Angkor in the first three months of this year - a 45% rise over the same period of 2011. With the rise in tourism, temples are increasingly threaten by undisciplined behaviours from travellers, despite signage and explanation provided by authorities. The task is daunting: garbage along the paths, climbing in non-authorized areas –including on some temples’ facades- already forced authorities to act tough. They now restrict the visit of some of the monuments and monitor ways tourists are going around. For the last two years, the number of people allowed up Phnom Bakheng to watch sunset is restricted, while the upper levels of Angkor Wat are closed to tourists and wooden staircases cover up much of the soft sandstone to protect it from erosion caused by millions of shoes. But more needs obviously to be done. Apsara Authority on Wednesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with three Japanese companies to conduct a feasibility study to solve various environmental problems in the Angkor area. The MoU was signed between Bun Narith, director general of Apsara Authority, Shoichi Kobayashi, chairman of the Japan Development Institute, Yasumasa Isetani, director of the JGC Corporation, and Makoto Nagao, director of the MAEDA Corporation. It was witnessed by Cham Prasidh, Cambodia’s minister of commerce, and Japan’s Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry, Yukio Edano. The MoU is aimed at solving various environmental problems in the Angkor area through the introduction of state-of-the-art technology and building on its eco-friendly heritage model to include a possible emissions-free zone, according to a statement released on the signing. Talking to the Phnom Penh Post , Bun Narith told that the MoU will help the Cambodia’s ancient heritage minimise the environmental impact on the area of Angkor. “It promotes the development of the Angkor complex, the Apsara Authority is co-operating with three Japanese company to conduct the study on what the project calls ‘Smart Community to protect our ancient heritage’,” he explained, adding that the project starts with the signing of the MoU and plans to be finished next February, under the financial support from Japan’s finance ministry. The study will focus on the feasibility of an electric vehicle transportation system, photovoltaic, energy management system, water recycle system and mega solar system for the area. Cambodia so far has failed to diversify its tourism by attracting travellers to other areas despite ongoing promotions for new eco-areas such as Rattanakiri or Kratie in the Northeast and East of the country or by promoting coastal tourism. Visitors’ growth at Angkor exceeds largely growth in other areas due also to an oversupply of accommodation in Siem Reap, which makes the destination easy to stay. Cambodia now stays at a crucial point. Not only are the temples threatened but also the city of Siem Reap. Its old architecture has been mostly turned down and replaced by cheap unaesthetic buildings made in China –Cambodia’s number 1 supplier in construction materials as well as infrastructure projects-. They are also problems of electricity supply or clogged rivers due to the overpopulation of the area… UNESCO warned long time ago that Cambodia should be prepared to face massive flows of visitors to iconic Angkor Wat. The situation seems more serious than ever now and the government will have to stick to a strict control of the area to be sure that the temples will be visible for future generations.
Jul
30
Cambodian town with gruesome past lures tourists
ANLONG VENG, Cambodia — Want to see Pol Pot's grave or his broken toilet seat? How about a visit to the house of a feared Khmer Rouge commander known as "The Butcher"? Welcome to the town of Anlong Veng, a former Khmer Rouge stronghold which hopes to become the next must-see destination on Cambodia's dark tourism trail, but which faces calls not to glorify its role in the country's bloody past. A rectangular mound of earth lined with half-buried glass bottles and protected by a corrugated iron roof marks the spot where Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot was hastily cremated in 1998. Aside from a sign asking visitors to "please help to preserve this historical site" there is no information on offer, leaving Cambodian tourist Pov Dara, 27, to ponder the significance of the low-key grave. "I feel sad for the people but not for him," she decides, after snapping a photo of her relatives flashing the peace sign. Up to two million people died from overwork, starvation or execution when the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, attempted to create a communist utopia in the late 1970s. His cremation site, which attracts some 10 visitors a day, is one of 14 tourist spots the government intends to "preserve and develop" in northern Cambodia's Anlong Veng. Other places of interest include leaders' old homes and a rusty radio truck used to broadcast Khmer Rouge propaganda. Impoverished Cambodia is no stranger to genocide tourism, with the Tuol Sleng torture centre in Phnom Penh and the nearby Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, where thousands died, among the nation's most popular attractions. But while the focus at those sites is on victims of the 1975-1979 regime, Anlong Veng is populated by one-time loyal Khmer Rouge followers, giving it the feel of a town that has found itself on the wrong side of history. As locals relish the lucrative prospect of welcoming more tourists to the once isolated area, observers stress the need to educate guests about Cambodia's history -- and avoid turning the destination into a Khmer Rouge nostalgia tour. To that end, the tourism ministry has teamed up with the esteemed Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which researches Khmer Rouge atrocities. The centre is preparing to publish a guidebook based on the stories of long-time residents and it is training tour guides to provide meaningful information about "what happened and why during the Khmer Rouge regime's final days", said the group's director Youk Chhang. A museum is also planned. But it is important not to exploit the country's tragic past, he told AFP. Cambodia's memories are "not for sale", he said. "We have the responsibility to ensure that Anlong Veng is a historical and responsible site to educate the public." The Khmer Rouge was ousted by Vietnamese forces in 1979, though regime leaders and supporters continued to wage a low-level guerrilla war against the government. Anlong Veng, near the Thai border, was the Khmer Rouge's last rebel centre before the movement disintegrated in the late 1990s. One of the best-preserved visitor sites in town is the lakeside home of late military commander Ta Mok, known as "The Butcher" for allegedly orchestrating brutal massacres that killed thousands, although locals remember him as a generous leader who gave the town a road, a bridge, a hospital and a school. Ta Mok, who briefly led the Khmer Rouge in its final days, was the only rebel who refused to surrender or strike a deal with the government after Pol Pot's death. He was arrested a year later and died in prison in 2006 awaiting trial. His airy house is little more than a shell today, its furniture looted long ago. But several walls are still adorned with colourful yet amateurish murals of temples and a map of Cambodia -- symbols of Ta Mok's patriotism, according to the site's caretaker San Roeung, himself an ex-Khmer Rouge soldier. "A lot of people here liked Ta Mok. When the enemy came, he took people to safety," said the 60-year-old, who helped build the house as well as the two cages outside used to hold Ta Mok's enemies. He added that he hoped an influx of visitors would improve living standards for locals, who could "grow mangoes or jackfruit to sell to tourists". Few are more excited about the town's tourism potential than Anlong Veng district deputy governor Nhem En -- who was the chief photographer at Tuol Sleng, where he endlessly captured images of inmates awaiting certain death. A Khmer Rouge insider until he defected in the mid-1990s, Nhem En has built up a huge archive of photos, as well as a bizarre collection of keepsakes such as Pol Pot's sandals, his uniform and his shattered toilet seat. Now he is looking for a partner to help set up a private museum to display his treasures, he said, having apparently given up on the idea of selling key items in the hope of earning hundreds of thousands of dollars. "These items might not be worth much financially but, in historical terms, they're invaluable," he told AFP at his home, after showing some of his favourite possessions. "This camera, if I put it in a museum, I would call it the killing camera," he said, as he held up a vintage Rolleicord, "because all of the people in Tuol Sleng who came before it died." Nhem En insists he was not in a position to help any prisoners, all he could do was "follow orders" and "mind his own business". Tuol Sleng prison chief Duch was in February sentenced to life in jail by Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court, the first person to face justice for horrors committed under the regime. The court is now trying the three most senior surviving Khmer Rouge members, but Nhem En has little interest in the proceedings, preferring to muse about Anlong Veng's nascent tourism industry. The ancient temples of Angkor, which attract more than a million visitors a year, are a mere two-hour drive away, and Nhem En believes that if a fraction of those visitors added Anlong Veng to their itinerary, his town, with its plentiful guesthouses and restaurants, would benefit considerably. "Anlong Veng will not go backwards," he said, though he emphasised that his own collection of memorabilia is about more than just profiting from his time with the Khmer Rouge. "I'm doing this to make the world understand more about the Khmer Rouge regime," he said.
Jul
23
Cambodia gambles on development
PHNOM PENH and MACAU - Since its casino resorts opened in 2010, Singapore has stood out as a shining example for global gaming companies. Everyone wants to imitate its success. But few places can match Singapore as a destination for international tourism and investment. Rather than trying to copy the Lion City, many aspiring gaming centers would do well to consider the Naga alternative, based on the casino in Cambodia. Singapore's example has been compelling. The country held an open tender for its two casino licenses starting in 2005, inspiring a fierce competition between most of the world's leading gaming companies. The so-called Singapore model, spelled out in the bidding requirements, demanded iconic properties, non-gaming attractions and tourism appeal. That meant successful aspirants would have to spend billions of dollars on their new properties, which Singapore's well-paid bureaucrats dubbed integrated resorts (IRs). As a result, Singapore wound up with two established international casino companies, Las Vegas Sands from the United States and Genting Group from Malaysia. They constructed the two most expensive casino properties yet built, with a total investment of more than US$10 billion. Hot stuff Marina Bay Sands has three 55-story hotel towers connected by a one-hectare rooftop deck that overhangs the east tower, creating a striking new vista in the Singapore skyline as well as a great vantage point to view the city. The resort also has a lotus-shaped museum, a million-square-foot convention center, and a glass-enclosed shopping mall. Genting's Resorts World Sentosa features Southeast Asia's only Universal Studios theme park, and a multimedia, interactive, indoor/outdoor maritime museum soon to be linked to the world's largest aquarium. Both resorts have celebrity chef restaurants, destination spas, and tens of millions of dollars in artworks inside and out. Combined casino revenue last year was estimated at more than US$6 billion, more than the total take of Las Vegas's casinos. They've become the most profitable properties for their companies, with combined profits on track to top US$2 billion this year. Non-gaming revenue was $1.5 billion and EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) reached US$500 million, "comparable to the top six hotel companies in the world", former Marina Bay Sands CEO Thomas Arasi noted at Global Gaming Expo (G2E) Asia 2012 in Macau. As good as the casinos have been for Las Vegas Sands and Genting, they've been even better for Singapore. From 10 million visitor arrivals and S$10 billion (US$7.9 billion) tourist expenditures in 2008, arrivals rose to 13.1 million last year, with expenditures topping S$21 billion. The city added close to 5,000 new hotel rooms that hospitality experts say were critically needed, yet seemingly defied the laws of supply and demand as rates rose 25%. I'll have what she's having Beyond numbers and dollars, the IRs have changed Singapore's image from stuffy and boring to exciting. They have in many ways given Singapore the "X factor" Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong sought when he proposed casino legalization in 2004. Seeing the impact of the two IRs, "Governments around the world will say, 'I want one of those'," Arasi observed. But not every place has Singapore's special attributes. Its government and legal system inspire the confidence foreigners need to plunk down several billion dollars. Equally attractive, more than one in seven Singapore residents is a millionaire. Even before the IRs opened, Singapore was a leading international travel destination, supported by one of the world's best airports in terms of both facilities and travel links. A country like Cambodia, especially the war-torn, capital-poor Cambodia of two decades ago, needs a different approach. NagaWorld, the only casino in Cambodia's capital of Phnom Penh, is a fraction of the size of Singapore's IRs. It was built in stages at a fraction of the cost, and is a fraction as profitable. But NagaWorld may be as beneficial to Cambodia as the IRs are to Singapore. In 1991, just after a United Nations administered peace agreement gave hope of ending decades of political chaos and civil war, the government asked for bids to build an airport and related infrastructure in Sihanoukville, a port and beach resort on Cambodia's southern coast about 185 kilometers southwest of the capital. NagaCorp founder and chief executive officer Chen Lip Keong, a Malaysian property developer who at the time had no experience in casinos, won the contract, which included the "carrot" of a gaming license, NagaWorld chairman Timothy McNally said. "Cambodia was starting at ground zero," McNally, a former US Federal Bureau of Investigation agent who joined NagaCorp after working as director of security and legal services at the Hong Kong Jockey Club, said. Rather than rounding out its tourist offerings, Cambodia was just trying to stop being the butt of the joke in Holiday in Cambodia, a 1980 punk anthem. It was a poor, war-weary nation struggling to get back on its feet, an unlikely site for casino development. "When I used to go on road shows, they would look at us like, a casino in Cambodia? Still any M-16s on the streets? There were a lot of perception issues," McNally said. In 1994, NagaCorp opened its first casino on a barge in the Mekong River. Two years later, the company saw its initial 20-year gaming license extended to 70 years. The license also gives NagaCorp exclusive rights to casino gambling within a 200-kilometer radius of Phnom Penh until 2036. The casino moved on shore in 2004, and in 2006 NagaCorp raised US$95 million with a Hong Kong stock offering, the first Cambodian company to list internationally, helping to open the country to foreign investment. By the end of this year, NagaWorld will total 1.4 million square feet, including 700 hotel rooms, a spa with Jacuzzi tub, sauna and steam bath in every treatment room, the country's top business meeting (and wedding) venue, and an epic breakfast buffet. The company doubled net profit to US$92 million last year, and this year welcomed 490,000 visitors in the first quarter. "We brought pride to Cambodia, prestige, showed confidence in Cambodia, and raised the visibility of the country and the company. We were confident the story would become monumentally better, like the country," McNally said. Ambitious expansion plans call for two more towers with over a 1,000 more hotel rooms and at least double the gaming capacity, plus Phnom Penh's first modern luxury mall. The US$369 million project, dubbed Naga2, includes a waterfront public park and a third tower that will be given to the government for offices. The company's success to date and ambitious plans are reflected in its share price. The stock has doubled in the value in the past year, compared with a drop of around 9% in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. Game theories Those successes have tracked Cambodia's wider economic gains. Since 1999, Cambodia's gross domestic product has grown by more than 6% every year except for a flat 2009, reflecting the global financial crisis. Overseas visitor arrivals have increased from 460,000 in 2000 to 2.8 million last year and are on track to top 3 million this year. "It has not happened by accident," McNally said. The government "has made a concerted effort with tourism. We've tried to tailor our offerings in line with what the government wants and needs". For example, NagaWorld's casino voluntarily excludes Cambodian citizens, except those who hold foreign passports. One of Cambodia's great needs is well-paid jobs. NagaWorld has 3,600 employees, more than 90% of them Cambodians. The company provides skills and language training to employees across the board, as well as advancement opportunities. Many Cambodian employees have moved through the ranks to become managers. Singapore needs more workers, not jobs. But below the surface, there are many similarities in the casino policies of Cambodia and Singapore. One key motivation for both was to change their international reputations. To get what they wanted, both countries decided to give foreign investors a lot of what they demanded. Both allow full foreign ownership of casinos, lengthy lease and license terms, and low gaming taxes, compared with nearly 40% in Macau. The Philippines has long had casinos, but now is trying to move to the next level as an international travel destination. The country has opted for a version of the Singapore model, demanding major upfront investment. The Philippines also has its own perception issues that are closer to Cambodia's than Singapore's regarding its safety as both an investment and vacation destination. Like Singapore, the Philippines allows its citizens to gamble in casinos, but they're not nearly as high-rolling as wealthier Singaporeans. The Philippines also has PAGCOR, the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation, a government agency that both operates and regulates casinos. In other words, it's poised to compete with the new private casinos while also setting down the rules for the game. The Philippines may have picked the right model, but PAGCOR's dual rule, different from anything in Singapore or Cambodia, could prove a deal breaker. Macau Business magazine special correspondent and former broadcast news producer Muhammad Cohen told America's story to the world as a US diplomat and is author of Hong Kong On Air, a novel set during the 1997 handover about television news, love, betrayal, financial crisis, and cheap lingerie. See his blog and more at MuhammadCohen.com.
Jul
06
Heritage Suites Hotel inSiem Reap
Location. Heritage Suites Hotel is located in Siem Reap, close to Angkor National Musuem, Royal Garden, and Lucky Mall Super Market. Nearby points of interest also include Wat Preah Prom Rath and Angkor Trade Center. Hotel Features. Heritage Suites Hotel's restaurant serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner. A poolside bar and a bar/lounge are open for drinks. Room service is available during limited hours. The hotel serves a complimentary breakfast. Recreational amenities include an outdoor pool. The property's full-service health spa has body treatments, massage/treatment rooms, facials, and beauty services. This 4.5-star property offers limo/town car service and audio-visual equipment. Complimentary wireless Internet access is available in public areas. Wedding services, translation services, and tour assistance are available. Guest parking is complimentary. Additional property amenities include a library, multilingual staff, and gift shops/newsstands. Guestrooms. 26 air-conditioned guestrooms at Heritage Suites Hotel feature complimentary bottled water and safes. Bathrooms feature handheld showerheads. They also offer bathrobes, slippers, and complimentary toiletries. High-speed Internet access is available. In addition to desks, guestrooms offer direct-dial phones. Rooms also include windows that open and hair dryers. Housekeeping is available daily.
Sep
18
CLMV considers single visas
In a bid to reach new goals, tourism leaders from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam (CLMV) said they are considering minimising the issuance of visas to a single tourist visa to visit the four countries. Speaking at a CLMV conference in Ho Chi Minh last week, Tourism Ministers from the four countries reached a state of cooperation, agreeing to work together to attract up to 25 million international visitors into the region by 2015, Saigon Daily reported. As a means of reaching the new goal, the four countries said they would consider combining tourist visas for international visitors hoping to tour the Indochina region. As well as covering the Mekong sub-region, the visa would also include Cambodia’s current tourism partner, Thailand. Pleased with the “impressive development” of tourism negotiations, Minister Tuan Anh told media that combined, the four countries saw 12.3 million international travellers visit the region, a growth of 14.5 percent on 2010. The Minister said as well as combining visas, the four Ministers were also looking towards creating new plans to increase information exchange across the four countries and develop new tourism products.
Aug
20
Three Cambodian Children Films To Compete in the Asian International Film and Video Festival in Japan
Three out of 16 pieces of short film, screened at the Preliminary in-country Contest for the Asian International Children Film and Video Festival to be held in Japan in November, have been selected. The three winning films are the masterpieces of students from Tuol Tompoung and Wat Koh High Schools in Phnom Penh and Hun Sen Sereipheap High School in Takmao, Kandal province. This preliminary contest took place here yesterday at the Cambodia-Japan Cooperation Center (CJCC). According to the Embassy of Japan in Cambodia, the contest is organized by the Embassy of Japan in cooperation with the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports and the CJCC for the purpose of promoting mutual understanding among students in Asia. The selected theme this year is “The Meaning of Life”, said the embassy, stressing that 36 pieces of 3 minutes short film were submitted by students of 8 high schools in and around Phnom Penh. The 3 winning groups in this preliminary contest will be invited to Japan by the government of Japan in November to participate in the final round of the aforementioned festival which will be held in Minami Awaji City, on Nov. 24, it said. High school students selected from Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Chinese Taipei, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Mongolia and Japan are also invited to the festival, it added.
Sep
11
ASEAN nations promote tourism in city
According to organizers, Cambodia and Myanmar will introduce their heritage tourism products, while the products of Vietnam and Laos focus on sea tourism and ecotourism respectively. The four countries will bring to the expo their typical products and jointly promote to attract international tourists. Nguyen Van Tuan, general director of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), said at a press conference in HCMC on Thursday that the tourism ministers of the four countries would meet at the expo to discuss tourism cooperation. After that, mayors of cities in the Greater Mekong Sub-region, including Phnom Penh, Vientiane, Yangon, Bangkok and HCMC, will also meet in the city and promote tourism cooperation between the four countries and the Mekong Sub-region with specific activities to create competitiveness in the area. “Through previous travel expos, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar have had several joint tourism promotion programs. But now we want to expand the scale and cooperate with countries of the Mekong Sub-region to create a greater competitiveness,” said Tuan. The expo will take place at Saigon Exhibition and Convention Center in District 7 from Thursday until next Saturday. According to organizers, the expo will feature 233 booths of travel firms and hotels from 19 nations and 26 local tourism promotion agencies. Around 200 customers from 33 markets will buy international tourism services and meet partners at the expo. In addition to meetings for travel firms, the expo will include programs for tourists.
Jul
16
Travelers want greener flights, and more of them
A survey by Airbus has revealed that a majority of travelers expect to fly more in the future but are concerned about the environmental impacts of air travel as well as the noise of jets and the stress of flying. The results of the two-year consultation Airbus had with more than 1.75 million people worldwide found that: * 63 per cent of people said they would fly more by 2050 * 96 per cent believed aircraft would need to be more sustainable or ‘eco-efficient’ * 66 per cent wanted quieter aircraft and 65 per cent, planes that were fully recyclable * Almost 40 per cent thought (door-to-door) air travel was becoming increasingly stressful With 60 per cent of those surveyed believing that social media would not replace the need to see people face-to-face, Airbus Executive Vice President of Engineering Charles Champion said there was still nothing better than “face to face contact”, calling aviation “the real World Wide Web”. But as more people took to the skies more often, Mr Champion said the higher their expectations would be for the “end-to-end passenger experience”. Confirming this, the Airbus consultation highlighted a ‘predictable’ list of gripes such as airport queues, slow check-in and baggage collection, delayed departures and holding patterns around airports. "For example we’ve seen concern about queues at airports and people are understandably not happy about it,” he said. “But the reality is those capacity constraints are a sign of things to come unless the industry can work together to cut delays, and with aviation set to double in the next 15 years, that’s what we’re looking at.” Meanwhile, Airbus announced this week that since its debut in 1988, the A320 Family aircraft has carried some 7 billion passengers - the equivalent of the current world population.
Jul
16
Aspara studying ticket cost
Ticket prices for Angkor Wat will increase after a feasibility study is conducted by tourism experts, according to an official from the Apsara National Authority, the state-run body charged with maintaining the archaeological park. The experts were determining how feasible increasing entrance fees for Cambodia’s UNESCO World Heritage site would be, but had not provided a date when they expected to present their results, authority general director Bun Narith said. “They are looking into ways to increase the amount raised through ticket sales before we take the conclusions to the goverment for approval, pending which there will be an increase,” Narith said. The plan would not directly increase the general entrance fee of $20 per person for a one-day pass, but was an effort to steer tourists towards less-visited locales in the park to ease congestion and wear and tear on the temples, he said. Cambodian Association of Travel Agents president Ang Kim Eang said the study was a welcome look at Cambodia’s largest tourist attraction and the price of tickets in Cambodia was still inexpensive compared with those in neighbouring countries, but an increased entrance fee was not necessary at this time. “We welcome the study prior to any specific increase, as a clear study will help ensure there is as little impact on visitors as possible,” Eang said. According to Ministry of Tourism figures, visitors to Angkor Wat increased by nearly 29 per cent during the first five months of this year compared to the same period in 2011.
Aug
04
Biggest photo fest ever
The program preview for this year’s Angkor Photo Festival has been released, and the festival, now in its eighth edition, will be bigger with a record number of submissions and exhibitions. The festival will be held from December 1- 8, and Jessica Lim, the festival’s Asia coordinator, is obviously upbeat about this year’s response. She told Insider, “We had a really amazing response to our call for applications, receiving a record number of over 1,200 submissions. This year, the program will be showcasing more photographers, about 130 photographers from over 65 countries. That's a lot of amazing work to look at.” But the increased showcasing of photographers will not come at the cost of the quality. Jessica added, “As always, our priority when planning for the festival is maintaining the quality of the program, ensuring that it remains cosy and accessible for as many photographers as possible, and that we serve out our objective of highlighting photographers from Asia.” This year there’ll be an added emphasis on outdoor exhibitions, and the contributions from the popular Blowup program – a sort of photographic graffiti – will also be ramped up. Jessica said, “The outdoor exhibitions that we're having this year will be rather spectacular. There will be more details to come about all of them, but for now, I can say the group show exhibition by Greenpeace is a massive story that is in production and will be shown for the first time at the festival. “Our local outreach activities are also having a revamp. Blowup Angkor this year will be more mobile, more accessible, and while I can't give more details now as we are in the planning stage, I can say we will be using technology to really bring photography to the masses.” Jessica also gave an insight into new developments that give her a buzz. 120803_sr01b Cambodian immigrants in the US. PHOTO © Pete Pin / Magnum Foundation “Personally, I'm looking forward to Andri Tambunan's exhibition. Since he won the inaugural 2011 Reminders Project Asian Photographers Grant last year, he has been working really hard on his winning project, documenting the AIDS/HIV epidemic in Papua, Indonesia. One year later, it is going to be really interesting to see what he has accomplished. It is really great for us that we've been able to be involved in some way in this project, from the start to the end. “Also, I'm really keen to see the group shows that we're going to have. Group shows have a different energy, and it is always great to see one that is curated well. Japanese photographers are becoming more exposed now, and the Tanto Tempo Cafe Gallery from Japan is putting together Labyrinth, a rather unique exhibition of six Japanese photographers. Another one would be Birthmark on the Map, a collaborative project by a blog community from Russia, which aims to capture everyday life in Russian provinces.” Siem Reap Insider will be running regular festival updates in the coming weeks.
Sep
28
Bulgaria's Bolata Joins Global Most Beautiful Bays Club
The picturesque Bolata bay near the town of Kavarna on Bulgaria's northern Black Sea coast is going to be included in the "Most Beautiful Bays in the World" Club. The information was reported Wednesday by the Bulgarian Standard daily, citing the Chairman of the Association of Bulgarian Black Sea Municipalities, Atanas Stoilov, via the Kavarna Town Hall press center. The decision has been made several days ago in the Turkish port city of Bodrum during the Club's annual session. Bolata will become full-pledged member of the prestigious Club at its next regular meeting to be held in 2013 in Cambodia. The Bulgarian nomination has been presented and defended by the Club's Deputy President and Mayor of the Portugal's city of Setubal, Maria das Dores Meira. Meira is expected to become Head of the Club at the forum in Cambodia where plans are for Stoilov and herself to nominate another Bulgarian bay for membership – the one of the historical town of Sozopol on the southern Black Sea coast. Stoilov stresses that membership in the Club is a great opportunity to showcase Bulgaria as a global tourist destination, while having 2 of its bays in the Club will place it on the level of tourist countries such as Spain, Canada, and Portugal, and ahead of Turkey and Greece. Tags: tourist destination, Sozopol, northern Black Sea coast, Bulgaria, Kavarna, Bolata bay, club, Most Beautiful Bays in the World
Aug
01
Where to Stay on Cambodia's Temple Tour
Most of the temples in Takéo Province can be reached handily from Phnom Penh. The walk to the summit proved the accuracy of this pessimism. It’s little wonder no one comes here. Surrounded by cliffs and ruined walls, Phnom Bayong is reached by a near-vertical staircase and is infested with murmuring bats. The boy told me that the mountain was sacred and that Buddhist nuns were looking after the ruins. They browsed the jungle surrounding it in search of ingredients used in traditional folk medicines. If I wanted, they would paint spells on my body to protect me from illness. It would be one dollar more. I readily agreed to this and paid up, but instead of visiting the spell-writing nuns, for some reason we ended up trudging down to another little temple nearby, from where the great delta waters could also be seen, a pale-brown brightness reaching to a somberly green horizon. Like Phnom Bayong, it was enigmatic, fragmented in some way, and on the point of disappearing into forest. The Hindu images had long ago been removed. My dollar-sucking guide explained that there were four other temples on the sacred mountain and that there was a Buddhist hermit whom I could meet. The hermit would also paint spells on my body, and they would be even more powerful than the spells painted by the nuns. It would be one dollar more. What about the nuns? I asked. The nuns had run away, he said. They were afraid of foreigners. “Can’t we pay them to come back?” “Pay? They nuns. Come to hermit.” I paid up again, but as with the nuns the Buddhist hermit could not be found, and we ended up wandering all over the mountain as the afternoon waned. No one ever painted any spells on my body, but the boy did tell me the most famous legend of Phnom Bayong, which goes something like this: Once upon a time a king called Preah Bat Bayong Kaur lived on this mountain with his wife, Neang Sak Kra’op (meaning roughly “the lady with perfumed hair”). The nefarious King of Siam—the Thais are always the bad guys in Khmer stories—heard of her beauty and sailed to the mountain in a ship. He threw a party for the queen, and while the Khmer guests were distracted, he made off with her and never returned. Years later, her son, Dey Khley, went in search of her and happened to come across her without knowing who she was. He fell in love with his mother and married her. But when they returned to Bayong, the king recognized his former wife and sentenced his son to build twelve huge ponds. The prince, said the king, could be reincarnated only when the twelve ponds ran dry. But even today they are full of water, and so the luckless son is still waiting in the afterlife for a drought. Thus are punished even the unwitting perpetrators of royal incest. The Cambodian countryside is filled with such myths, which are like the rumors that come out of a past that recent history has all but obliterated. This is a land of submerged memories—a secretive and wary land which is mindful that bad things can always happen again. On the way back to Phnom Penh the next day, I stopped at the magnificent Angkorian-era temple of Phnom Chisor, built in the eleventh century by King Suryavarman I of Angkor. It’s the closest and most forbidding large-scale temple complex to Phnom Penh, apart from the lovely ruins of Ta Prohm on the Tonlé Bati lake. There is a kind of imperial swagger to it, a sense of overarching power. Both Ta Prohm and Phnom Chisor are more spectacular than the older Takéo temples—especially Chisor, with its superb terraces and richly carved reliefs. But now Chisor seemed to me less poignant than mysterious Phnom Da or Phnom Bayong. Two other temples are connected to Chisor by a monumental staircase that winds its way down the side of the mountain, and the whole complex possesses a coherent splendor that Bayong cannot match. Yet Chisor feels more like what one experiences on a larger scale at Angkor. Coming down the enormous staircase, I enjoyed watching the boys playing soccer in a field of motionless cows that seemed not to notice the football flying between their legs. I was glad there weren’t five thousand tour guides ready to explain what this meant. I TOOK MY CAR back to Route 2 and on the way stumbled upon two neglected brick towers that stood at the edge of a modern shrine. They are the remains of a place called Prasat Neang Khmau, or “Black Lady” in Khmer, a tenth-century temple whose name perhaps alludes to Kali, the dark destructive goddess. I knew that from here had come two enigmatic statues that are now also in the National Museum in Phnom Penh. Like the sculptures of Phnom Da, they have fascinated me for years, and when I returned to Phnom Penh I went in to look at them. One is an equine avatar of Vishnu known as Vajimukha, a male body with a horse’s head, and the other is a female divinity of some kind dressed in a fluted robe that is tied above a lustrous, smooth navel. Her head is missing, and her surface is now a dark-jade color. They stand in the same room as the great pieces from Phnom Da, and although they are from a later century, they have the same archaic otherness about them. They are more beautiful, more human somehow than the masterpieces of Angkor that occupy the foreground of our perceptions of Cambodia. And like the place from which they were torn long ago by French experts, they are something of a quiet secret—a civilization within a civilization, waiting to be rediscovered when Cambodia can finally afford the splendid luxury of memory.
Sep
17
Funding grows to restore Angkor Wat
SIEM REAP, 13 September 2012: The Cambodia government signed an agreement with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation, late last week to assist in safeguarding Angkor Wat, the country’s most prestigious World Heritage site. The deal was inked between Cambodia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister in charge of the Council of Ministers, Sok An and UNESCO Representative to Cambodia, Anne Lemaistre. Rome University’s Professor, Valter Maria Santoro, who heads the Italian technical mission for stone consolidation in the temple, said the two-year project will focus on the restoration of a moat embankment at Angkor Wat. Mr Sok An said the second phase project will cost US$250,000 including US$200,000 from the Italian government and US$50,000 from the Cambodian government. “The Italian government, through UNESCO, has been involved in helping to safeguard Angkor Wat Temple since 1994…. the continuous support signifies a further cooperation between Cambodia, UNESCO and Italy.” Currently, Cambodia has been collaborating with 14 countries and 28 international teams who are handling 60 different projects to preserve and restore the temple. The Angkor archeological park is Cambodia’s most important cultural tourism attraction, located 315 km from the capital Phnom Penh. The temple was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1992. From January to June this year, 1.06 million international tourists visited the temple, with South Korea, Vietnam and China topping the suppliers’ list. There were 61,340 Thai tourists, a 201% increase over the same period.
Aug
01
Former Khmer Rouge stronghold becomes next must-see destination
Want to see Pol Pot's grave or his broken toilet seat? How about a visit to the house of a feared Khmer Rouge commander known as “The Butcher”? Welcome to the town of Anlong Veng, a former Khmer Rouge stronghold which hopes to become the next must-see destination on Cambodia's dark tourism trail, but which faces calls not to glorify its role in the country's bloody past. A rectangular mound of earth lined with half-buried glass bottles and protected by a corrugated iron roof marks the spot where Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot was hastily cremated in 1998. Aside from a sign asking visitors to “please help to preserve this historical site” there is no information on offer, leaving Cambodian tourist Pov Dara, 27, to ponder the significance of the low-key grave. “I feel sad for the people but not for him,” she decides, after snapping a photo of her relatives flashing the peace sign. Up to two million people died from overwork, starvation or execution when the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, attempted to create a communist utopia in the late 1970s. His cremation site, which attracts some 10 visitors a day, is one of 14 tourist spots the government intends to “preserve and develop” in northern Cambodia's Anlong Veng. Other places of interest include leaders' old homes and a rusty radio truck used to broadcast Khmer Rouge propaganda. Impoverished Cambodia is no stranger to genocide tourism, with the Tuol Sleng torture centre in Phnom Penh and the nearby Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, where thousands died, among the nation's most popular attractions. But while the focus at those sites is on victims of the 1975-1979 regime, Anlong Veng is populated by one-time loyal Khmer Rouge followers, giving it the feel of a town that has found itself on the wrong side of history. ‘Cambodia's memories are not for sale’ As locals relish the lucrative prospect of welcoming more tourists to the once isolated area, observers stress the need to educate guests about Cambodia's history - and avoid turning the destination into a Khmer Rouge nostalgia tour. To that end, the tourism ministry has teamed up with the esteemed Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which researches Khmer Rouge atrocities. The centre is preparing to publish a guidebook based on the stories of long-time residents and it is training tour guides to provide meaningful information about “what happened and why during the Khmer Rouge regime's final days”, said the group's director Youk Chhang. A museum is also planned. But it is important not to exploit the country's tragic past, he told AFP. Cambodia's memories are “not for sale”, he said. “We have the responsibility to ensure that Anlong Veng is a historical and responsible site to educate the public.” The Khmer Rouge was ousted by Vietnamese forces in 1979, though regime leaders and supporters continued to wage a low-level guerrilla war against the government. Anlong Veng, near the Thai border, was the Khmer Rouge's last rebel centre before the movement disintegrated in the late 1990s. One of the best-preserved visitor sites in town is the lakeside home of late military commander Ta Mok, known as “The Butcher” for allegedly orchestrating brutal massacres that killed thousands, although locals remember him as a generous leader who gave the town a road, a bridge, a hospital and a school. Ta Mok, who briefly led the Khmer Rouge in its final days, was the only rebel who refused to surrender or strike a deal with the government after Pol Pot's death. He was arrested a year later and died in prison in 2006 awaiting trial. His airy house is little more than a shell today, its furniture looted long ago. But several walls are still adorned with colourful yet amateurish murals of temples and a map of Cambodia Ä symbols of Ta Mok's patriotism, according to the site's caretaker San Roeung, himself an ex-Khmer Rouge soldier. “A lot of people here liked Ta Mok. When the enemy came, he took people to safety,” said the 60-year-old, who helped build the house as well as the two cages outside used to hold Ta Mok's enemies. He added that he hoped an influx of visitors would improve living standards for locals, who could “grow mangoes or jackfruit to sell to tourists”. ‘I'd call it the killing camera' Few are more excited about the town's tourism potential than Anlong Veng district deputy governor Nhem En - who was the chief photographer at Tuol Sleng, where he endlessly captured images of inmates awaiting certain death. A Khmer Rouge insider until he defected in the mid-1990s, Nhem En has built up a huge archive of photos, as well as a bizarre collection of keepsakes such as Pol Pot's sandals, his uniform and his shattered toilet seat. Now he is looking for a partner to help set up a private museum to display his treasures, he said, having apparently given up on the idea of selling key items in the hope of earning hundreds of thousands of dollars. “These items might not be worth much financially but, in historical terms, they're invaluable,” he told AFP at his home, after showing some of his favourite possessions. “This camera, if I put it in a museum, I would call it the killing camera,” he said, as he held up a vintage Rolleicord, “because all of the people in Tuol Sleng who came before it died.” Nhem En insists he was not in a position to help any prisoners, all he could do was “follow orders” and “mind his own business”. Tuol Sleng prison chief Duch was in February sentenced to life in jail by Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court, the first person to face justice for horrors committed under the regime. The court is now trying the three most senior surviving Khmer Rouge members, but Nhem En has little interest in the proceedings, preferring to muse about Anlong Veng's nascent tourism industry. The ancient temples of Angkor, which attract more than a million visitors a year, are a mere two-hour drive away, and Nhem En believes that if a fraction of those visitors added Anlong Veng to their itinerary, his town, with its plentiful guesthouses and restaurants, would benefit considerably. “Anlong Veng will not go backwards,” he said, though he emphasised that his own collection of memorabilia is about more than just profiting from his time with the Khmer Rouge.
Aug
31
IP rights discussed for Angkor Wat
The ancient works of Cambodia’s King Suryavarman II could become a protected intellectual trademark if the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) finalises a treaty recognising cultural heritage, the organisation’s head said yesterday. Angkor Wat, a 12th century temple complex and the Kingdom’s No 1 tourist destination, became an area of contention with India earlier this year when an Indian organisation announced plans to produce a replica in the country’s state of Bihar. Although the organisation, Mavahir Mandir Trust, has altered plans for what was reportedly a carbon copy of the structure, Cambodian officials have decried the potential economic and cultural effects on the country. While not naming the dispute directly, WIPO director general Francis Gurry said the exploits of the national treasure should belong to Cambodia. “I cannot make comments on that case but I would say you have a unique cultural heritage in Cambodia that nobody else can produce,” he told the press yesterday during the “44th ASEAN Economic Ministers Meeting.” “What intellectual property should try to do is enable that rich cultural heritage to be translated into a commercial asset. But not a commercial asset for all people. A commercial asset of Cambodia.” The challenge now, according to Gurry, was finding a mechanism for putting Cambodia in complete control of what he called the Kingdom’s “intellectual and cultural heritage”. The treaty under discussion, which could become international law within a year, would provide a comprehensive framework for protecting works such as Angkor against domestic and international forgeries, he added. Mavahir Mandir Trust has not abandoned its plans to build the temple, the Post reported this month. The Indian organisation said it will remove the word “Angkor” from the name of the project and claims the structure will surpass the size of Cambodia’s Angkor Wat, which is currently the largest Hindu complex in the world. The Hindu style of the temple could raise further questions on the ultimate origin of the structure’s intellectual concept. The Indian project was a grievous infraction on Cambodia’s economic rights and cultural heritage, Dit Tina, undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Commerce, said yesterday. The Cambodian government was actively engaged in the drafting of the WIPO treaty, although future international recognition was still questionable. “Now we are working with WIPO. International laws or agreements require negotiation and discussion to get approval from each member state.” “We know only what we are going to protect, but we don’t know how we will protect it or whether other countries will agree to join the treaty. It depends on the negotiations ... to establish an international law that we can use against the violation. But at this time, we are in the negotiation stage.” The vast majority of intellectual property law today pertains to the contemporary cultural and intellectual products of companies. Cambodia has recently come under intense scrutiny for its inability to protect the intellectual property of foreign companies on its soil. Early this year, the US Embassy in Phnom Penh called infringements in the Kingdom “pervasive”. Cambodian officials have admitted they lack the resources needed to curb the sales of pirated DVDs and other protected goods.
Jul
21
Old colonial villas boost Cambodia's tourist industry
Cambodia's old colonial villas are getting new life. And their restoration looks set to bring a new wave of tourism into the Country. The seaside resort of Kep is a region blessed with unspoiled natural beauty, cooler weather and famous seafood. But the town has remained underdeveloped ever since the Khmer Rouge captured it 1969 - beating the French into retreat. And many of the town's Art-Deco holiday villas were destroyed by the fighting and later looting. But now developers are breathing new life into the around 100 villas still-standing. Romonea villa is among them. Following its opening in 2010, today it serves as a boutique hotel. Stephane Arrii, Property Manager of Villa Romonea Hotel, said, "Since 2007 a lot of owners, both foreigners and Khmers, have purchased land and renovated some of the houses or they bought, or built, houses of their own. It's a marvelous place with a lot of natural energy and simplicity. " The artwork and furnishings inside Villa Romenea are from a style that was popular in Cambodia in the 1960's. David Konenberg, Belgian tourist, said, "It's really a big villa with a very distinct style from that era. The grounds are quite big with a nice view of the Gulf of Thailand and there is everything you need to relax, to rest, in a very special place with a very special energy." A billion dollar resort is also under construction at nearby Bokor Mountain, and a ferry now connects Kep with the popular Vietnamese resort island of Phu Quoc. This should spell good news for businesses in Kep for the coming years.
Aug
18
Beautiful Sy Phal - Cambodia’s star shoemaker
It's not easy for Westerners to find suitable shoes in a country where people are so much smaller than they are. But seasoned expats in Phnom Penh have found the solution: a hidden local shoe shop known as Beautiful Sy Phal that is increasingly attracting a local clientele. Outside the shop, racks of sandals for men and women are for sale. Behind the scenes, however, in the back of the shop, around 20 shoemakers are hard at work cutting leather, making moulds for shoes, and sewing. This family business has been open for more than 30 years, although it was forced to close during the Khmer Rouge years. It specialises in shoes made from cow, sheep, crocodile and even python. Ay Sisopheap, the owner, says: “The shop existed before the 1970s, but we postponed during Khmer Rouge time. Around the 1980s, we revived our shoe shop at the same place. We don’t want to give up our business because this is our career left from our grandfather.” It wasn’t until 1997 that the shop attracted notice from foreigners, according to Sisopheap. Frustrated with the local markets, where they were unable to find the right-size shoes among the mix of flip flops and tiny shoes, expats flocked to Beautiful Sy Phal, on Street 273. The shop is always busy, especially at weekends, according to Ay Sisoheap. The majority of customers are expats and tourists, but an increasing number are Cambodian, he says. “Most of our clients are expats or foreign tourists. At least 70 per cent are foreigners.” But his client base is changing. “Recently, we have noticed Cambodian people who always buy their shoes from the market have changed their behaviour. They are beginning to get their shoes made like foreigners too.” The shoes, made from leather and rubber imported from Thailand, come in up to a hundred colours. Clients usually bring their old shoes to show and ask the shop to copy them, but sometimes ask to have shoes designed and made on the spot. The process takes three or five days. Men’s shoes are available for $30, while women’s sandals can be bought for between $17 and $22. “If they want to have their shoes made with python or crocodile leather, it’s three to four times more expensive than cow leather because those are rarer materials. But I think the quality of the leather is the same,” Sisopheap says.
Aug
28
Indonesia Bonding With Cambodia in Trade
Siem Reap, Cambodia. It was a chilly afternoon in 1993 at a rubber plant forest in Kampong Cham. Soehardjono Sastromihardjo, now Indonesian ambassador to Cambodia, was riding with a United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia convoy on a mission to supervise the country’s first general election, when a group of Khmer Rouge guerrillas appeared and stopped the convoy. AK-47 rifles and grenade launchers were pointed at the trucks, ready to fire; a slight misstep could have resulted in disaster. Without thinking, Soehardjono shouted: “Indonesia, Indonesia!” Almost instantly the guns were lowered and the guerrillas retreated. “That shows how high our name was held in Cambodia,” Soehardjono said in Siem Reap over the weekend, recalling the incident. “And it is still true now particularly among the political elites.” Indonesia was involved in advanced talks in Cambodia during the late 1980s. Known as the Jakarta Informal Meeting, Indonesia was trying to help put an end to Vietnam’s invasion of Cambodia, in what some observers called the Third Indochina War (1978-91). Despite these close ties, however, Indonesia has been slow to benefit from trade and investment with Cambodia, often finding itself behind other countries eager to get a foothold in the country. Indonesia’s exports to Cambodia last year were worth about $220 million, according to Soehardjono. That is a tiny drop in the $12.3 billion in total trade that Cambodia did last year. China and Thailand made up more than half (52.5 percent) of Cambodia’s imports of $6.9 billion last year, while the United States accounts for the lion’s share of Cambodia’s exports (41.5 percent), according to the CIA World Factbook. “We must capitalize on our close political assets for better economic ties,” Soehardjono said. He spoke in an interview with the Jakarta Globe, which was invited by the Indonesian government to attend an Asean meeting this week. Mohamad Helmi, business development director of Galuh Prabu Trijaya, an Indonesian trading company, echoed the sentiment. “I came to start a business here seven years ago,” Helmi recalled, “I found Cambodians disappointed. They wondered why, right after peace, Indonesians stopped coming here.” Helmi said the Cambodian government has been very accommodating to investors, and encourages more Indonesian businesses to come to the country. Talks to push business ties between the two countries have been held. Soehardjono said Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen asked three things of Indonesia on the sidelines of the Asean Summit in Bali, last November. He wanted Indonesia to import rice from Cambodia, have direct flights between the countries and invest in its telecommunications sector. Cambodia has exported rice to Vietnam, Thailand and Europe. “Ironically, we import rice from those two countries,” Soehardjono said. “Why don’t we import directly from Cambodia?” Hun Sen asked for direct flights between Indonesia and Cambodia to boost tourism in the two countries. A province in Central Java has a “sister temple province agreement” with Cambodia’s Siem Reap province. As part of the agreement, the Central Java government suggests that tourists at Borobudur Temple visit Angkor Wat Temple, and vice versa. “That arrangement won’t work if it takes a whole day to travel between the two places,” Soehardjono said. A tourist flying on Malaysia Airlines from Jakarta to Siem Reap, for example, would have to spend four hours on the plane and another four hours in transit at Kuala Lumpur International Airport. The third request from Hun Sen was for Indonesian telecommunications company Telekomunikasi Indonesia to invest in Cambodian telecommunications provider CamGSM. Telkom pulled out of the bidding in October last year prior to the talks, partly because of price differences. Cambodia’s economy has been growing at 6 percent annually for the last two years, pointing to a promising future for investors in the country. Soehardjono said it was now up to the Indonesian business community to enter the Cambodian market. “Our consumer products are in high demand, in particular our pharmaceuticals, which they regard as having good quality,” he said, adding that agricultural machinery, fertilizer and tires from Indonesia were also well received. Helmi said the agricultural sector in Cambodia was lucrative with low labor costs and improving yields. And foreign investors can hold up to a 100 percent stake in Cambodia, though that could change in 2015. “So, if my fellow Indonesians want to come to Cambodia, the time is now,” he said.
Aug
06
Cambodian filmmaker uncovers truth about the Khmer Rouge and Camp 32
Hom Chhorn is a Cambodian Australian filmmaker who shot a documentary about his own family history "In Search of Camp 32". Hom Chhorn talks about his experience in search of Camp 32 (Credit: ABC) He says Camp 32 was not documented and the Khmer Rouge had reasons to hide the camp where even some of their own guards were killed to keep the truth from coming out. Hom Chhorn moved to Australia when he was 13 years old but he was 5 when he and his family were sent to a Khmer Rouge killing centre. Up to 30,000 undocumented people may have lost their lives at Camp 32. Hom Chhorn tells Adelaine Ng he wants to ensure the atrocities there are not wiped out of Cambodia's history books.
Jul
20
Take a visit to Cambodia’s Sweet Spot
ON a sunny weekday in Kep, a seaside village about halfway along Cambodia’s coast, the crab market was heaving. Women in straw hats and rubber boots stood knee deep in the surf shouting out prices, periodically darting into the sea to pull writhing specimens out of wicker baskets. Children of all ages ran through the stalls; it seemed as if the entire town had congregated in this one main square. Nearby, suspended over the water overlooking the South China Sea, rickety open-fronted restaurants were perched on stilts. At one of the smallest, the Seagull, I sat with my son and husband watching wooden fishing boats move slowly along the coastline as the family who owns the spot prepared what would be the finest steamed crab I had ever tasted. Even my one-year-old tucked into the white buttery meat. It was a scene that felt quaintly out of time, made all the more novel because we were somehow able to exist seamlessly within it. No one tried to sell us souvenirs or offer to guide us around town. It was just life as it had always been and always would be. But of course this wasn’t true. While we sat, lucky guests in this rustic tableau, not far away new bridges and roads were being completed; luxury resorts, casinos and golf courses mapped out; shopping malls planned. All this in an area of Cambodia occupied by the Khmer Rouge as recently as 1995. Like so many places that have dropped from, and re-emerged in, the traveler’s gaze, this area of southwestern Cambodia is in the midst of a now-familiar cycle. First come the backpackers, lured by tales of simple coastal villages and untouched island beaches. Next come the pioneering hoteliers, establishing in-the-know outposts of taste and luxury. Finally the big money arrives and, with it, the big plans. Right now the area around Kep is still in that traveler’s sweet spot — mostly itself, but with roads and a few boutique hotels here and there for those who want them. Yet as I would see over the course of two weeks, change is afoot. The crowds will surely be coming, but before they do I wanted a chance to see it for myself. JUST a few hours from Phnom Penh, the country’s capital, Kep started out as a stylish retreat for the French in the 1920s, and by 1960 was called the St.-Tropez of Southeast Asia (Kep-sur-Mer), with modernist colonial villas built along the coast and weekenders arriving in vintage convertibles. When the Khmer Rouge set up camp here in the 1970s the French beat a retreat, and the villas fell into disrepair. In the last five years, however, a number of these structures have been turned into boutique hotels — properties like Villa Romonea, which opened in 2010, and Knai Bang Chatt, which opened a few years before. Villa Romonea was the dream second home of a Khmer woman who built the house in 1968 with the help of a famous local architect, Lu Ban Hap. It was the last villa built before the war, and the owner and her husband, a pharmacist, were killed in the early days of the Pol Pot regime. Now British developers have taken over. The six-room hotel with its saltwater infinity pool and tropical grounds is representative of the kind of small-scale enterprises that have been spreading across southwestern Cambodia. Many are run by foreigners who discovered the area early on and wanted an excuse to stay. Jef Moons, Knai Bang Chatt’s Belgian owner, first saw Kep in 2003 while on a vacation. He then proceeded to buy a Le Corbusier-influenced villa, which he restored initially into a vacation home and then, in 2006 — a hotel. “I first fell in love with the people in Cambodia,” Mr. Moons said, “but also with the nature. It still feels remote.” Over the course of my stay last year, I tried out both hotels. Each, set along the tranquil rocky coast, proved difficult to leave. One could camp out for days, sitting at waterfront tables watching the boats pass by and taking brief strolls into town. They were also incredibly good spots to be with a baby; everyone from cooks to hotel managers treated my son like a visiting celebrity. But I was eager to explore the surrounding countryside, in particular the inland region to the northwest and the beaches and islands up the coast — areas, I had been told, whose futures were already being plotted by Chinese, Russian and Cambodian conglomerates eager to make their mark. Our first trip was to Kampot, about an hour away. One can arrange to hire a car and driver but we decided to rent motorcycles. After leaving the baby in capable hands at Knai Bang Chatt, we sputtered along, passing countless oxen knee deep in rice paddies, bustling markets and clusters of little villages made up of traditional stilt houses. Decades-old Toyota Camrys seem to be the local car of choice (I noticed one with California plates), which shared the road with an assortment of scooters, bikes and vans that double as buses, not to mention the water buffalo, chickens and pigs that shuffled about amid the traffic. In Kampot, a quiet city set alongside pepper plantations and forested hills, we drank coffee at one of the cafes that have sprouted in the crumbling 1920s verandas that front the lazy Praek Teuk Chhu River. Kampot was once one of the country’s most important ports, and is still the center of Cambodia’s pepper production; its streets are lined with turn-of-the-century colonial buildings, now mostly in disrepair. As we sat watching boats make their way along the river, we were again struck by the startling lack of hawking here — especially compared with many tourist towns in Vietnam and Thailand. Another observation: There were few people in their 40s, 50s and 60s. The reason for this speaks to the horrifying fact that between 1975 and 1979 a fifth of the population was wiped out under the regime. The Khmer Rouge endured in Kampot through much of the 90s, much later than other parts of the country, and almost every person I met lost at least one close family member or friend. ONDINE COHANE travels frequently to Southeast Asia. A version of this article appeared in print on March 4, 2012, on page TR1 of the New York edition with the headline: Cambodia’s Sweet Spot.
Jul
19
Cambodia’s tourism growth rate slows
BANGKOK: Arrivals from Thailand and Laos gained the highest growth rate in May of all Cambodia’s tourist suppliers according to the country’s latest tourism report. Released by the Statistics and Tourism Information Department of the Tourism Ministry, the report showed a slowdown in travel from Thailand during May when compared with April (+165.2%). April was packed with holidays and that attracted more travel to Cambodia from neighbouring markets, but Thailand still delivered a massive 97.3% (12,974) growth rate in May as diplomatic relations between the two countries improved. Arrivals from Laos almost doubled with a growth rate of 99.7% representing 18,990 visits. In April,there were 12,721 visits from Laos an increase of 69.8%. For the five-month period, arrivals from Thailand and Laos improved 88.8% and 87.4% respectively. They ranked fifth and fourth suppliers in term of numbers. Overall, Cambodia welcomed 233,220 visitors during May, an increase of 22.6%. Looking at the January to April figures, the growth slowed down slightly compared to the first four months bringing the average growth down from 27.1% to 26.3%. The accumulated arrivals were 1,505,734. Besides Thailand and Laos, arrivals from the Philippines also showed impressive gains after the start-up of the first air link (Cebu Pacific) between the two countries (Manila-Siem Reap) 19 April. Arrivals jumped 60.4%, while in May, due to 52.2% increase, Philippines moved into the top supply list. The top three suppliers remained the same — Vietnam, South Korea and China, but the growth rate slowed down in May for Vietnam and South Korea from around 30%, last month, to 12.3% and 11.5% respectively. Arrivals from China were still robust at +35%. Among the top 10 markets, only Taiwan showed a decline (-5.5%). The surge in trips from neighbouring countries was also reflected in a rise of land arrivals. In May, trips registered at overland checkpoints accounted for 54.3% (126,637). In terms of regions, the Middle East recorded the strongest growth of 54.9%, but the number was still small; only 700 visitors and it was followed by the largest market, Asia and the Pacific, +25% (116,707); Americas, +17.9% (16,188);Europe, +11% (29,061) and Africa, -9.4% (374). Several countries in Europe reported declines, including the UK that dipped -6.5%. Germany recorded a significant improvement of 24.7%. The overall growth of 11% was largely due to the Russian market that improved by 52.5%. Siem Reap welcomed 121,799 tourists, or 52.2% of the total, improving 5.8%. Phnom Penh and other destinations tallied 111,421 tourists with a surge of 48.4% over the same period in 2011.
Aug
04
The whiff's return in triumph
The ‘Whiffs’ are back in Siem Reap for the third time. They’re performing at the Victoria Angkor Resort hotel on Monday evening, where their performances have become an anticipated favorite, and one must ponder the question of what is this odd relationship all about. The Whiffs are of course the quirkily-named Whiffenppofs, the oldest collegiate a cappella group in the US. The group is an ultra-American tradition that dates back over a hundred years, having been formed in 1909, and was – and continues to be – spawned at that core American institution, Yale. So why does a group like this successfully and repeatedly perform in Siem Reap? Is Siem Reap besotted with the Whiff’s, or are the Whiffs besotted with Siem Reap? Apparently, it’s a little of both. The group is certainly a draw card at Victoria, hence the return performances. And David Martinez, the Whiff’s world tour manager focusing on Africa and Asia, says Siem Reap is a draw card for the group. He tells Insider, “The stop in Siem Reap has actually become a highlight of our world tour over the last few years. Our relationship with the Victoria Angkor Resort and Spa has remained strong, and the wonderful accommodations are a great launching point. “The opportunity to visit Angkor Archaeological Park is one that we can't imagine giving up, and the food in Siem Reap has actually become a legendary part of the stop among successive classes of Whiffs as well.” The Whiffs are here as part of another of its traditions, a world tour. Each year, fourteen of the best male singers in Yale's senior class are chosen to be members of the Whiffenpoofs, and then each May the singers and their entourage embark on a three-month international tour. Past tours have visited Mexico, Brazil, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, China, India, South Africa, Kenya, Egypt, France, Greece, Israel, and of course Cambodia – three times. The group also performs in the US in concert and on special occasions, and has made TV appearances on Saturday Night Live, The West Wing and The Sing Off. Each year the group supports and donates to a cause, and this year it’s performed for the benefit of the Elizabeth Glazer Pediatric AIDS Foundation, dedicated to eliminating pediatric AIDS, and The Trevor Project, America’s leading provider of crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBTQ youth. The group’s repertoire is reasonably diverse, containing traditional Yale songs, American golden-oldies, and a spattering of relatively recent material including The Drifter’s On Broadway, Paul Simon’s The Boxer, and Stevie Wonder’s You are the Sunshine of My Life. No Sex Pistols but. And yes, they do sing When the Saints go Marchin’ In. The Whiffenpoofs perform on Monday August 6 at the Victoria Hotel. Welcome cocktails from 7-8pm. BBQ buffet dinner and performance, only $26 per person, taxes not included. Be there or be deprived.
Aug
30
Angkor Golf Resort signs MoU with Tourism Malaysia
Malaysia tourism and travel agency officials have signed a memorandum of understanding at the Angkor Golf Resort in Siem Reap to boost golf tourism in Malaysia and Cambodia. Signatories to the MoU were Sao Ratha, marketing manager of Tourism Malaysia; Ng Eu Shen, general manager of Liberty Golf Services; Candra Tanpatti, general manager of PSD Travel; and Adam Robertson, general manager of the Angkor Golf Resort. The main understanding of the agreement is to lay the foundations for a closely coordinated and phased process on cross-marketing and promotion of Cambodian and Malaysian golf destinations. According to Adam Robertson, this essentially means that more “brand awareness” of Cambodian golfing will be developed in Malaysia. “In return, there will be more visibility for Cambodians and expatriates to take their golf vacation in Malaysia,” Robertson added. He said Kuala Lumpur-based Liberty Travel was “looking at promoting Siem Reap as an alternative golf destination to corporate golf planners and blue-chip companies for a truly unique golf experience.” There are about 400,000 golfers in Malaysia, at least 100,000 of whom take a golf holiday each year, and last year Liberty Golf Services sent about 300 golfers to the Angkor Golf Resort. “This figure should increase with the co-operation of Liberty, based in KL, PSD, based in Siem Reap, and a world-class golf course in the Angkor Golf Resort,” Robertson said. Initially, Cambodia has more to gain than Malaysia from the deal in terms of visiting golfers, but this will level out as golfing catches on in the Kingdom. “It is estimated that there in the region of 2000 golfers in Cambodia,” Robertson said. “Although golf here is in its infancy, there is scope for those wishing to play in Malaysia to do just that. PSD Travel can provide tailor-made golf packages here in Cambodia.”
Sep
10
Angkor Wat receives $250k for preservation
Temple conservation projects are thriving as Angkor Wat nears its 20th anniversary of its listing as a UNESCO World Heritage Site later this year, heritage representatives said yesterday. “I could not imagine that after almost 20 years I would see this same level of enthusiasm and dedication,” said UNESCO country director Anne Lemaistre after representatives from the Cambodian Apsara Authority and UNESCO’s Cambodia office agreed to put US$250,000 toward ongoing preservation of the world-famous temple complex. This agreement will initiate phase two of a repair and maintenance project started in 2005 by an Italian government-funded team that has worked on temples in the area since 1994. Deputy Prime Minister and Apsara National Authority President Sok An said after the signing that $200,000 will come from the Italian government, and $50,000 will come from the Cambodian government. The project will repair the flood-damaged west embankment of Angkor Wat’s moat and a staircase by the moat, said Valter Maria Santoro, head of Italy’s temple maintenance technical mission. Santoro headed to Siem Reap as soon as the meeting ended to continue what Lemaistre called “a life-long commitment”. Lemaistre said she has seen such engagement from all of Angkor Wat’s restoration teams, which according to Sok An have come from 14 countries and 28 organisations to work on more than 60 projects since 1993. “It’s really a partnership now,” Lemaistre said, noting that the addition of Cambodian experts to the project “increases the ownership of Cambodia”. Lemaistre praised Italy for its commitment in the face of its financial crisis, though Santoro noted that their contributions have decreased in recent years. According to Sok An, Cambodia is more than ready to host the 37th annual meeting of the World Heritage Committee next year.
Aug
30
Chinese firm plans tourism investment in Cambodia
PHNOM PENH -- China's Hainan Ruijin Investment Holding Group planned to invest in rice plantation, cow farm and tourism development in Cambodia, the group's chairman Pan Xiaoping said Wednesday. Pan said during a meeting with Heng Samrin, president of Cambodia's National Assembly that his company decided to establish an overseas branch office in Cambodia to focus on the three projects. Pan did not say when the projects will be started. Heng Samrin pledged full support for those projects, which he said will be good to boost the development of Cambodia's economy. "Foreign investment is a key factor to accelerate economic development in Cambodia," he said.
Sep
10
Party over for Cambodia's daytime discos
The Ministry of Tourism has issued a nationwide directive to stop clubs and discos from operating in daylight hours because of the huge number of social problems associated with irregular partying hours. During a Phnom Penh Municipal Hall meeting on Monday, Governor Kep Chuktema issued his own enforcement directive that any clubs or discos opening during the day will be immediately shut down by City Hall. Phnom Penh Municipal Hall spokesman Long Dymang said that Chuktema was responding to the Ministry of Tourism directive on Monday when he ordered police, military police and other officials in all districts to ensure that clubs and discos open no earlier than 6pm. “Most people who go to nightclubs or discos in the daytime are secondary and high school students, and some also are university students,” Dymang pointed out. The venues’ practice of opening during the day caused students to cut class and encouraged general social disorder, he said. “I don’t know which district has the most discos, but Daun Penh has many discos open during the day,” he added. Tourism industry department director Prak Chandara confirmed yesterday that his ministry had recently issued a directive calling for the daytime closure of clubs and discos across the country. “The directive is in the process of nationwide implementation. There are a lot of problems involved with this case,” he said, declining to comment further. Ministry of Tourism officials told the Post in June that there were 376 karaoke parlours, 79 discos, 187 massage parlours and 97 beer gardens in the country.
Aug
08
Asian tourist numbers up, profits stagnant
The growth in international tourists visiting Cambodia is almost 27 per cent that of the numbers seen during the first six months of 2011, according to tourism officials who are predicting that the growth may be 25 per cent at the end of this year. Visitors coming to Cambodia during the first six months of the year numbered 1,756,652, increasing 26.8 per cent compared to the same period in 2011, when only 1,385,029 visited the Kingdom. Tourism Minister Thong Khon said the tourism situation in the Asia Pacific in general and ASEAN in particular is better than other areas, which is not only better for the region but means that Cambodia no longer suffers from a low season in terms of tourist numbers. “Previously, in rainy season it was considered a low season tourism but no longer because when it rains in Cambodia, in Europe it is the hot season,” he said. The growth in tourism numbers was the result of an increase in the number of direct flights from China and Korea, good internal security, broad promotion, and strengthening tourism services, he said. The minister expects that the increase in tourists to Cambodia may be from 20 per cent to 25 per cent by the end of this year when compared to the same period last year.
Jul
07
The first Marine Protected Area is created by Cambodia
Cambodia will begin the creation of its first Marine Protected Area (MPA) this year, covering some 300 square kilometres of coral-rich seas around islands of Koh Rong and Koh Rong Samloem in the Gulf of Thailand. This follows a successful two-year scientific survey of the area by Coral Cay Conservation. Announcing this, the UK NGO said it would continue to work closely with the Government of Cambodia, project partners and local stakeholders, to assist in the development and management of the project. Photo © Coral Cay Conservation Over the past two years, volunteers have collected the information needed to provide a scientific basis for the creation of a large-scale, multiple-use MPA around the islands. The managed area will include a wide diversity of habitats rich in coral reefs, mangrove forests and seagrass beds, in addition to the upland rainforests found on both islands. The project is receiving funding from the Blue Moon Fund, with further support from Cambodian partners, and Flora and Fauna International. Coral Cay said the next steps are to continue to monitor the marine habitats and work with local partners, communities and the private sector to ensure that a consensus is reached to support different conservation management zones and encourage the development of low-impact tourism initiatives. Survey results Coral Cay’s Head of Science, Jan-Willem van Bochove, who presented results from the scientific survey, said it was an honour to be working with such a conservation-minded government.”The MPA set to be implemented later this year will help secure some of Cambodia’s most precious reef systems and hopefully create the momentum for the establishment of further MPAs throughout the region.” In his report van Bochove stressed the importance of continued monitoring of reef health on all sites around Koh Rong in the coming years. “What is needed now is to conduct regular monitoring activities along permanent stations. This information will provide important feedback on the success or failure of the MPA to protect coral reefs and associated habitats. It will also allow for adaptive management practices to be implemented if needs be. Photo © Coral Cay Conservation He said one of the key factors to be addressed in the next decade will be minimising the impact of human stresses to allow the reefs to recover from the mass coral bleaching event that took place in the summer of 2010. “It will be important to reduce the undue stress and preserve the existing diversity. The proposed multi-use MPA will provide some level of protection to the reefs but care must be taken to ensure appropriate zones are applied to the correct areas around the island. He said it was imperative that land developers and others involved consider the impact that the developments will have on the reefs. “Increased sediment runoff, pollution, trash and boat activity may all impact the reefs reducing their viability and overall health. This was not only important for local communities who depend on the reefs for food but also for the tourist companies who will rely on the attraction of the reefs as a pull for clients.” In light of this, he said it would be useful to conduct a monetary evaluation of the coral reef resources around Koh Rong in order to provide an economic value for the significant ecosystem services they provide. The next steps would be to develop a multiple-use zones, including no-take, recovery, recreational, mooring and limited fishing areas, using the information gathered by both Coral Cay Conservation and Marine Conservation Cambodia.
Sep
15
Cycling rally between Thailand and Cambodia to raise funds for a hospitality school in Siem Reap
SIEM REAP- On the occasion of the tenth anniversary of L’Ecole Paul Dubrule, the school has organized in collaboration with ACCOR Group a cycling rally which will take about 50 participants for a 3-day ride from Bangkok to Siem Reap. This will be the perfect opportunity for all participants to commemorate the 12,000-km odyssey accomplished on a bicycle 10 years ago by the school founder, Paul Dubrule (former ACCOR Founder) for the opening of the School back in 2002. At the time, Mr. Dubrule rode his bike from Paris to Angkor… This event also allows the school to raise funds in order to pursue the development of its project in Cambodia and gives a chance to many Cambodians every year to study Hospitality and Tourism in excellent conditions (300 students planned for the academic year 2012-2013). Preliminary target before the rally starts on October 19th is to collect 5000 $. Support is crucial for the further development of the school, which was one of the first in Cambodia to provide to any students world-class facilities and international education. Interested participants can look at the website www.siamtosiem.com for further information on this exceptional event. To follow the preparation, the initiative group opened also a facebook link on the website; there is also a direct link for people only interested by making a donation at the Fundraising page “Team Ecole Paul Dubrule” under www.fundraiseonline.com.au/teamecolepauldubrule. Every single donation (starting at 25$), every name, every message left on our School page are all means to encourage the school team organizing the ride. L’Ecole d'Hôtellerie et de Tourisme Paul Dubrule’s campus is composed of three buildings covering over 2,000 square meters. Located 4 km from the heart of Siem Reap, our installation includes a professional pedagogical kitchen, a professional pedagogical pastry and bakery workshop, a educational restaurant open to the public, a fully equipped front & back office, 4 training rooms, classrooms, a computer room, a library containing more than 1,000 books and Internet access, a conference room, student and staff restaurant, and a cutting-edge digital language laboratory offering students the benefit of the most up-to-date foreign language training available in Siem Reap. The school can be visited by tourists and visitors to meet with students, stay in its training hotel and also enjoy food prepared by students.
Sep
06
Citizen Seng
I looked up from my barbecue to watch the waves crashing on the reef. A mini-bus drew up and slowed down. The driver tooted his horn and the passengers waved and shouted a greeting. It was not for me however. "Cola Chanta!!" they shouted. The object of their attention smiled and waved back from her barbecue stall, next to the roundabout at Korotogo on the Coral Coast. "See you later friend!" she responded. Chanta Seng owns and operates her barbecue stall, working with other women from Korotogo. The stall is very popular, both with locals in Korotogo and Sigatoka as well as those who are regular on the Suva/Lautoka route and find her roadside cafe, across the road from the beach a wonderful spot to enjoy a lunch time barbecue or hotdog or an evening plate of palau. For Chanta, Korotogo is home. It is a far cry from how her life began. Chanta was born in a refugee camp in Thailand to Cambodian parents who had fled the violent and oppressive regime of Pol Pot, made famous in the film, "The Killing Fields". The family had lost everything - their land, home, possessions under the regime. Her family returned to Cambodia in 1992 when the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) was established to ensure implementation of the Agreements on the Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia Conflict, signed in Paris on 23 October 1991. The mandate included aspects relating to human rights, the organization and conduct of elections, military arrangements, civil administration, maintenance of law and order, repatriation and resettlement of refugees and displaced persons and rehabilitation of Cambodian infrastructure. Interestingly, a number of Fijians served in UNTAC. For Chanta and many Cambodians, their nation was born in 1992. As a result of living the first 11 years of her life as a refugee, Chanta was illiterate, even in her own language of Khmer. The family, having lost everything under the regime settled in Pursat, a rural area where most people survive on subsistence crops and live in poverty. She did not even have access to education as culture dictated that the males of the family receive priority in education, even if they are younger than their sisters. Little Chanta began her new life in Cambodia selling fruit on the street or in the market, to earn money for her family. It is not only a difficult life for women and girls in Cambodia, it is also very dangerous. Trafficking or slavery of women and girls is rife in Cambodia. Cambodia is a source, transit, and destination country for human trafficking. The traffickers are reportedly organized crime syndicates, parents, relatives, friends, intimate partners, and neighbours. Cambodia has a problem of sex tourism involving children. Some children are sold by their own parents. Others are lured by what they think are legitimate job offers like waitressing, but then are forced into prostitution. Children are often held captive, beaten, and starved to force them into prostitution. (Read more at http://www.uri.edu/artsci/wms/hughes/cambodia.htm) You can imagine how difficult it must have been for this young woman who knew nothing of the world, let alone Fiji, to travel thousands of kilometres to this island nation. In Fiji she is one of only 4 Cambodians living in the country. Sitting at Chanta and her husband's house in Korotogo, I hear laughter coming out of the kitchen where my wife and Chanta are catching up. I remember that when my wife and I met Chanta in 2003 she was incredibly shy. When we would visit her and her husband she would hide in the room because she was embarrassed at not being able to speak English. Now she expresses herself freely and passionately. Chanta is now a Fijian. She is proud of not only her blue passport but of her voter registration card. For her Korotogo is home. She goes to all the events in the koro, drinks yaqona with the women and on weekends her barbecue stall is a local hangout. Earlier this year, when she left to visit her sick sister in Cambodia, the women of the village sat her down and told her that Korotogo was her home and that she was one of them. Back at the barbecue stall, one of Chanta's friends, Bulou, says something to her in Nadroga dialect and then tells me, "she's going to speak Nadro soon; and Hindi too." Chanta and another friend Sila both laugh loudly. The night Drue Slatter won the Hibiscus crown, the women gathered at the home of one adopted daughter of Korotogo to celebrate the victory of another. Chanta's story echoes that of many who have struggled and overcome obstacles. Her story resonates with that of the Girmitiyas and others who found in Fiji not only a new life but a new culture of deep understanding, acceptance and love for the other. In a globalised world, many of our Fijian brothers and sisters struggle to find acceptance and a sense of belonging in the countries in which they settle. Here in Fiji, despite all our differences and difficulties - there is still openness, and an acceptance of the other. Yet it goes beyond mere acceptance. Perhaps it is because deep down we realise that we are all just people trying to live life - to love, to work, to find happiness and make a home for ourselves and our children and be part of a community. That is at the heart of all our actions. That perhaps is the core of our common humanity. "Simplicity, Serenity, Spontaneity." Rev. James Bhagwan is an ordained minister of the Methodist Church in Fiji and Rotuma, currently a Masters of Theology student in Seoul, Sou
Jul
26
Coral reef areas to establish in Cambodia
Cambodia's first Marine Protection Area will be established around two emerging tourist destinations, Koh Rong and Koh Rong Samloem islands, a British conservation group has announced. NGO Coral Cay Conservation said last week that it has been invited to map out a 300-square-kilometre MPA by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. The country’s rich coral reefs, which flank Preah Sihanouk province’s sandy coastline and feed the area’s vibrant marine life, could vanish within a decade if action is not taken now to conserve them, according to the group’s scientists. The reefs protect and provide livelihoods for thousands of people living along the country’s shores, CCC Head of Science Jan-Willem van Bochove said. When healthy, they were worth a hefty US$130,000 to $1.2 million per hectare, per year, based on such coral reef-derived benefits as fisheries, coastal protection, tourism and other livelihood benefits. Coral species previously unheard of in Southeast Asia have been discovered by the team, which could create more dive and tourism interest in the area, but they were now in danger of being depleted, he said. “White, sandy beaches, created by parrotfish grazing on the coral, would slowly melt away, and visitors would only see rocks covered in seaweed. “Losing these reefs would mean robbing Cambodia’s people of one of nature’s most precious gifts. “Strong political action is needed now – areas must be set aside for conservation, where only limited human interaction is allowed within delicate environments.” The MPA would involve designating different zones, creating a continuous scientific monitoring survey and engaging with local fishermen. The group conducted initial assessments in 2009, with a multiple-use fisheries management plan drawn up. The MPA would be active in three years. Overfishing, pollution, sedimentation and re-suspension of sand from dredging had hurt the reef, ripping coral apart, as did the mass coral bleaching across the Gulf of Thailand in the summer of 2010, when high sea-surface temperatures lingered over a longer than usual period. In addition, private fishing industry heavyweights trawling around Cambodia’s biggest port, at Sihanoukville, which brought $14 million into the country in the first half of this year, could plague the project, van Bochove said. “It will definitely have an impact, although we haven’t been able to quantify it – the sediment stirred up by the trawlers smothers and kills the coal.” Head of the Fishery Office in Preah Sihaouk province, Doung Sam Ath, said all relevant departments were aware of the project, but that the MAP was not in place yet. The office could not confirm whether it would place restrictions on fishing companies around Sihanoukville.
Sep
11
ASEAN nations promote tourism in city
According to organizers, Cambodia and Myanmar will introduce their heritage tourism products, while the products of Vietnam and Laos focus on sea tourism and ecotourism respectively. The four countries will bring to the expo their typical products and jointly promote to attract international tourists. Nguyen Van Tuan, general director of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), said at a press conference in HCMC on Thursday that the tourism ministers of the four countries would meet at the expo to discuss tourism cooperation. After that, mayors of cities in the Greater Mekong Sub-region, including Phnom Penh, Vientiane, Yangon, Bangkok and HCMC, will also meet in the city and promote tourism cooperation between the four countries and the Mekong Sub-region with specific activities to create competitiveness in the area. “Through previous travel expos, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar have had several joint tourism promotion programs. But now we want to expand the scale and cooperate with countries of the Mekong Sub-region to create a greater competitiveness,” said Tuan. The expo will take place at Saigon Exhibition and Convention Center in District 7 from Thursday until next Saturday. According to organizers, the expo will feature 233 booths of travel firms and hotels from 19 nations and 26 local tourism promotion agencies. Around 200 customers from 33 markets will buy international tourism services and meet partners at the expo. In addition to meetings for travel firms, the expo will include programs for tourists.
Jul
31
Cambodian Minister of Tourism Receives VCFA Delegation
Cambodian Minister of Tourism H.E. Thong Khon received here recently a 20-member delegation of the Vietnam-Cambodia Friendship Association (VCFA) to Ho Chi Minh led by its President Mr. Truong Minh Nhut. During the meeting, Mr. Truong Minh Nhut sought Cambodia’s support and cooperation to successfully organize a four-day business forum in Cambodia in October, 2012. The VCFA president also expressed his pleasure to see the on-going cooperation between Vietnam and Cambodia in tourism, trade and culture as well as in social sectors, adding that he would bring some 200 Vietnamese businessmen to the upcoming forum. For his part, H.E. Thong Khon voiced his full support, saying that Cambodia is ready to cooperate with the Vietnamese side for the successful upcoming event. The members of VCFA delegation were the former Vietnamese experts who helped and supported Cambodia during the 1980s.
Aug
13
Phnom Penh with Mekong river
A boat travels along the Mekong river in Phnom Penh on August 10, 2012. Written off as a failed state after the devastating 1975-1979 Khmer Rouge regime and several decades of civil war, Cambodia has used garment and footwear exports and tourism to help improve its economy, but remains one of the world's poorest countries with around 30 percent of its 14 million people living on less than a dollar a day
Jul
26
Transport Ministry to launch new Thai - Cambodia rail route in 2013
He said that the construction plan is a part of the policy to make Thailand and Cambodia become better connected by land, rail and water transport. The Transport Minister noted that the new rail track will also strengthen the link between the 2 countries and Vietnam. After completion, the entire route will enable passengers and goods to travel from Bangkok to Ho Chi Minh City, via Aranyaprathet, Poipet and Phnom Penh. Meanwhile, Sa Kaeo Governor Sanit Naksuksi said that the Province is planning to open a new border checkpoint by the end of this year, to help alleviate the traffic flow at the Aranyaprathet -Klong Luk checkpoint, where 12,000 people pass through each day. He said that the heavy traffic of people has made goods transport to start only after 10 a.m. According to Mr. Sanit, the total trade value at this checkpoint is worth nearly 40 billion baht, or almost half of the country's total border trade value of 80 billion baht
Jul
09
Bangkok is Asia-Pacific's top destination city
Bangkok ranks third in the Global Top 20 Destinations in terms of both numbers of international visitors and spending, according to the latest MasterCard Global Destination Cities Index. Despite sluggish global economic growth, the number of people travelling abroad continues to increase, according to Yuwa Hedrick-Wong, MasterCard Worldwide's global economic advisor. Total visitor numbers is projected to increase 5.7% from 174.9 million to 184.9 million, while total cross-border spending will rise 10.6% from US$217.8 billion (6,752 billion baht) to $241 billion (7,471 billion baht). London is the world's most popular destination; the UK capital is expected to welcome 16.9 million travellers throughout this year. Paris came in second with 16 million visitors. Bangkok is the third top destination for the second consecutive year. The total number of international visitors grew 6.5%, from 11.5 million in 2011 to 12.2 million this year so far. The fourth city is Singapore with 11.8 million visitors, while the fifth is Istanbul with 11.6 million visitors. For the world top 20 destination cities by visitor spending, London is again in pole position. Visitor spending grew 10.3% in 2011 to $21.1 billion (654 billion baht), followed by New York at $19.4 billion (601 billion baht) and Bangkok, which moved up by one rank, displacing Paris. MasterCard forecasts that tourist spending in Bangkok will rise 16.6% to $19.3 billion (598 billion baht). In fourth place is Paris ($17.8 billion, or 552 billion baht), while one place lower is Singapore ($12.7 billion or 394 billion baht). "Visitors tend to stay longer once they get there, and they spend more as a result," said the researcher. When segmented into regions, the research found the city that leads the Asia-Pacific region in terms of both total number of visitors and visitor spending is the Thai capital. "Bangkok is again the number one destination city in Asia, a reflection of its strong and abiding appeal to tourists from the rest of the world," he stated in the research. The top five origin cities of tourists heading to Bangkok are Tokyo, Singapore, Hong Kong, Seoul and Kuala Lumpur. For visitor spending in the city, the highest spender per visit is from Hong Kong ($2,401, or 74,431 baht) followed by those from Tokyo ($2,265, or 70,215 baht). In comparison, visitors from Seoul, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur spend some $1,404 (43,524 baht), $1,039 (40,579 baht) and $773 (23,963 baht) per visit, respectively. In addition, MasterCard found a rise in cashless payments with many international travellers opting to do electronic transactions rather than using cash. "The trend is a response to an increasing demand for safe, simple and smart payments, and highlights the rising importance of cashless commerce for both business and leisure travel," Hedrick-Wong said. New bus routes in pipeline The Transportation Ministry and Cambodia's Ministry of Public Works and Transport recently signed a Memorandum of Understanding to offer public buses from Bangkok to Phnom Penh and Bovet, the border town to Ho Chi Minh City. Under the agreement, the Transport Company in Thailand will provide the bus link from Aranyaprathet to Poipet in Cambodia, while a public bus operator in Cambodia will connect the service from Poipet to the last station at Bovet. The service is scheduled to be launched in August. According to Transport Minister Jarupong Ruangsuwan, the co-ordination will facilitate not only travellers between Thailand and Cambodia, but also extend to visitors to and from Vietnam. The ministry is also in discussions with its Cambodian counterpart to extend the railway service from Aranyaprathet to Poipet. Jarupong said the project may start next year. Airlines update - Nok Air is offering a special promotion at 1,339 baht net allowing passengers to book and pay for tickets at 7-Eleven convenient stores nationwide. Seats, however, are limited and available for some routes excluding flights operated by Nok Mini, Tigerline Travel and the coordinated routes with Lomprayah, a high-speed ferry operator in the South. Tickets must also be purchased at least seven days before the departure date. The campaign runs until June 30 for the travel period from Monday-Sept 30. Visit www.nokair.com for more details. - AirAsia has reduced its daily flights between Bangkok and Colombo, Sri Lanka to three days a week. The airline started the service on March 1, but due to lower than expected demand it has adjusted the frequency to Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. "The change in the operating schedule of our flights between Bangkok and Colombo is a result of our route strategy realignment as we aim to add more flights to our popular routes with high demand," said Thai AirAsia CEO Tassapon Bijleveld. Passengers who have purchased tickets can call AirAsia at 02-515-9999 to move their flights, get a full refund or keep the credit for the future use at the airline's website (www.airasia.com). Hotels update - Centara Hotels & Resorts will open its first two properties in Sri Lanka this year. First is Centara Passikudah Resort & Spa Sri Lanka. Located on the long stretch beach at Passikudah, the hotel will feature 126 rooms including family residence and suites, restaurants, a bar lounge, Spa Cenvaree, fitness centre, children's club and meeting facilities. The other hotel is Centara Ceysands Resort & Spa located on Paradise Island at Bentota. The resort offers 166 rooms and suites, restaurants with dinner cruise service, a spa and a children's club. Both of the resort hotels will be operated by Centara under a management contract and will be part of the company's core four-star properties. - Best Western International has kicked off a new Facebook contest. Called "Flip for Fun", the contest encourages its fans to keep the Best Western Asia & Middle East logo as their profile picture for a whole week to stand a chance to win a weekly Best Western Travel Card worth $100 (3,100 baht).
Aug
21
Ladyboy revue gets upscale venue
Construction still under way at the Rosana Broadway ladyboy cabaret theatre. Photograph: Peter Olszewki/Phnom Penh Post Construction is almost finished on a lavish new theatre being built on National Road Six, just past Phsar Leu, which will house an extravagant Bangkok-Pattaya-style ladyboy cabaret. For the past month a troupe of about 70 ladyboys has been rehearsing intricate dance moves for the show in the ultra-modern, well-fitted-out theatre, in readiness for the opening next month. Shows will be scheduled daily, and the theatre will become a big employer for the ladyboy community. Insider attended a rehearsal last Thursday, with a choreographer working with the troupe, fine tuning the moves for the show which will be called Rosana Broadway. Seating is western-style plush with cup holders built into the arm-rests of seats, and the theatre is equipped with air-conditioning and state-of-the art sound systems. About seventy dancers were doing their thing at the rehearsals, but Vibol Anon Panhabot, the assistant sales and marketing manager, explained that the number of dancers in the opening show may vary from the rehearsal and may be more or slightly less. No expense seems to have been spared in the construction of the theatre to permanently house the lady boy revue extravaganza. The theatre is owned by Siem Reap Group Co Ltd, and general manager Atth Saengchai told Insider that the project, five years in the planning and organisation, is backed by a consortium of investors. Opening night has been slated for September 1. But Atth Saengchai said that quality and class is his prime consideration, and he will delay the opening if necessary, if construction of the theatre isn’t fully completed or if, in his assessment, the entertainment is not quite right and requires more rehearsal. He also said that the show itself varies, according to the nationality of the group in attendance in the nights. The show that a predominantly Cambodia audience will see will vary to the show that’s staged for a Chinese or Vietnamese audience. He also stressed the show itself will be wholesome in nature, pointing out that concerned Siem Reap authorities had to be assured that there’d be no nudity or lewdness in the show before authorisations to go ahead were granted. The show is very much modeled on the lavish revue-style shows that have achieved fame in Bangkok and are billed as family entertainment. For example, Bangkok.com describes the ladyboy show performers as, “Fascinating and highly artistic performers,” who captivate audiences with, “Their charm, unique creativity and flawless female impersonations. A ladyboy show promises an evening of polished and most enjoyable entertainment for the whole family.”
Sep
27
Training needed for tourist industry
Representatives of Cambodia’s booming tourism industry yesterday called on the Asian Development Bank to provide funding for workforce training in the sector. During the meeting at the Cambodia Chamber of Commerce, tour operator Ho Vandy, who also co-chairs the Tourism Working Group in the Government-Private Sector Forum, said representatives of various tourism-related associations had asked the ADB for help in technical and vocational education and training. He said that by 2015, all ASEAN countries would be part of one community, which would cause increased competition, and human resources were the main factor in addressing this competition. “We propose professional training and real skills for tourism-related business.” Ang Kim Eang, president of the Cambodia Association of Travel Agents, said training was important because Cambodian university courses had not yet met the needs of tourism services. Education specialist Swetal Sindhvad, of the Asian Development Bank, said that although the ADB had signed a memorandum of understanding with the Economy and Finance Ministry that focused on workforce training designed to respond to the need for skilled labour in the private sector, the ADB had not set a budget or given priority to any particular sectors. “We are trying to identify what is the area of the project, and then we will work with the government on the amounts,” Sindhvad said.
Sep
13
Human remains found at Cambodian pagoda
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, Sept. 12 (UPI) -- Construction workers at a Buddhist temple in Cambodia have unearthed human bones officials say could be the remains of victims of the Khmer Rouge. Eighteen skulls appeared to have been violently shattered, the Phnom Penh Post reported. Workers at the Wat Kesararam pagoda in the town of Siem Reap said arm bones were found bound together with rope and leg bones locked together with iron cuffs. Chief monk Sambath Ly Ye said the temple had been built on a former Khmer Rouge execution site. Human bones had been discovered at the pagoda in the past several years, he said, many buried with handcuffs. The remains are kept in a small cottage behind the temple. A construction worker said more bones were first discovered last week, and many skulls and bones, "some already rotten," were found this week after a few feet of topsoil was removed to build living quarters for the monks. Work at the site has now stopped. Van Than Peou Dara, the deputy director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, said the center's research had found the land on which the pagoda is now built had been a security office, prison and killing site during the Pol Pot regime. Siem Reap District Governor Tep Bun Chhay said the deaths also could have occurred in the Lon Nol era. Some 24 killing sites were known to exist in the province, he said, where an estimated 44,258 people were believed to have died.
Jul
02
Come to Siem Reap and discover interesting features related to travel as well as the movies
Hotel de la Paix, which is shortly to close its doors and re-emerge next year as a Park Hyatt hotel, has been immortalised in a Singapore-made art film, I Have Loved, directed and written by Elizabeth Wijaya and Lai Weijie. The film, produced by 13 Little Pictures in Singapore, was shot entirely on location in Siem Reap and many local landmarks are included, including Hotel de la Paix, and of course the temples are given a starring role. According to the director's statement, the film features, “The splendor and illusion of the grand and cold Hotel de la Paix as a modern temple for privileged pilgrims gestures towards Resnais’ Last Year in Marienbad.” 120629_sr03b Not sure exactly what that means, but hey it sounds good. As for Siem Reap itself, the director’s statement says, “The landscape and architecture of Siem Reap and the Angkor temples are also characters in this film that explores contradiction on different levels. The town of Siem Reap, compact and yet filled with contradictory building styles and transient tourists, is a metaphor for the frazzled yet searching and hopeful minds of the characters.” The director’s statement also says, “The time- weathered temples form the emotional core of the film and visually allude to the ancient human soul – battered yet magnificent before the dust of modernity.” According to the directors; the film’s plot is: “Marie goes to Cambodia in search of a romantic honeymoon but is confronted with the ambiguities of life and struggles with emotions and impulses beyond her understanding. “I Have Loved is an intimate exploration of human consciousness, time and ways of remembering. After the death of her husband, Marie is haunted by an eclipsed memory – she cannot remember a key traumatic event as it happened. Trapped in a Freudian cycle of mourning and repetition, she returns to Siem Reap to remember – so that she may forget.” Director Elizabeth Wijaya told the Sinema website about the inspiration for the movie. She said, “The idea came about from a trip we took in 2008. We went from Siem Reap to Phnom Penh, Sihanoukville, Kampot, Kep, Bokor Hill and back to Siem Reap. We decided to set the feature in Siem Reap as we were interested in the paradoxes and dynamics of the interaction between the town and the millennial-old Angkor temples.”
Jul
31
The town welcome Norwegian teens bring string orchestra back
Katrine Solhaug tunes up in readiness. Photograph: Claire Byrne/Phnom Penh Post A Norwegian mini string orchestra is set to serenade its way across Cambodia over the coming two weeks. The group of Norwegian child musicians and their families were invited by Katrine Solhaug of Babel Guesthouse, who hopes their music will help inspire children in Cambodia. “It all started with my mother,” explains Katrine, “I was sending her pictures of the Apsara dancing, and she asked if they were dancing in silence. I’d never thought to take pictures of the musicians. Once I told my mother about the traditional Cambodian instruments, she said we should plan a trip for her students.” Katrine’s mother, Kjersti Aurbakken, is a teacher of the International Suzuki Method, a way of teaching music that not only creates fluid musicians, but allows them to come together easily with other such musicians from around the world. Aurbakken thought this concept would be the perfect base for the trip with her six students, who together play violin, viola and cello. The group will also be joined by two Suzuki mentors from Hong Kong. While in Siem Reap, the group will go to Sangkheum Children’s Centre for something of a cultural exchange. “The children there will perform the fish dance, the coconut dance, and one other. Then our group will perform the string instruments and show them how they work,” explains Katrine, herself a violinist. “I am very strict on orphanage tourism, but we’ve worked with Sangkheum Centre for a long time. We will go there in two groups so there’s not too many people at once.” Following their visit to the centre, the Cambodian and Norwegian children will join forces with a performance at Babel Guesthouse next Tuesday, July 31. Starting at 6.30pm, the Cambodian children will display their traditional dances, and the Norwegian group – aged between 10 and 15 – will also serenade the crowd. A barbecue will be held afterwards for $5 a head and all are welcome. While in Temple Town, the group will enjoy a schedule of sightseeing, but will still have their instruments in tow. Katrine has organised for the group to play afloat the Tara Sunset Cruise. “It will be great because the people on the boat can listen to them, but the people in the villages around will hear them too.” Following their stint in the Reap, the Norwegian posse will move on to Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville. You may be more used to hearing the ting ting ting of the local musos, but if you happen to hear the sound of strings in the distance, do be sure to go up and say, “Hello”.
Jul
09
Cambodia to move troops
Cambodia is expected to announce the withdrawal of troops from a demilitarised zone near Preah Vihear temple today. The gesture is timed to coincide with the official start of the 45th Asean Foreign Ministers Meeting in Phnom Penh, military sources said. The Cambodian troop withdrawal would represent a positive move towards improved relations between the two governments, observers said. The Preah Vihear temple dispute is the legacy of the Abhisit Vejjajiva administration, and is the only thorny bilateral issue which the current government has had to address, the sources said. Sporadic border conflicts have erupted over the territory near the Hindu temple since Unesco listed it as a World Heritage site on July 7, 2008. Serious clashes took place in February and April last year. Acting on Phnom Penh's complaint, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on July 18, 2011 ordered that Cambodia and Thailand immediately withdraw their troops from a 17.3 square kilometre demilitarised zone near the temple. Cambodia's troop withdrawal announcement is expected to improve the country's image, observers said, as Phnom Penh hosts a series of meetings _ including the 19th Asean Regional Forum and the 2nd East Asian Summit, which will be attended by major global powers including China, Japan, the US and the EU. The current Thai and Cambodian leaders share the view that troops should be moved from the disputed border area at Preah Vihear temple, sources said. Thai diplomatic sources said they were not surprised about the possible troop withdrawal announcement by Cambodia, as it was not supposed to station troops in the area in the first place. Several announcements of troop withdrawals had been made in the past, but in reality they were just redeployments of troops, the diplomats said. Sources said Thai troops also adopted similar tactics. The sources said that as a face-saving measure, the two sides could have implemented their joint demining programme in the area as a pretext for troop withdrawals. The ICJ had also ordered both parties to allow Asean to send Indonesian observers to the area to monitor a ceasefire. However, to date, neither Cambodia nor Thailand have withdrawn their troops from the demilitarised zone, and Indonesian observers have not been allowed to gain access to the area. Cambodia last week accused Thailand of violating the ICJ's ruling by laying barbed wire inside the demilitarised zone. The charge came two weeks after the countries submitted their final explanations to The Hague-based ICJ on June 21 clarifying their respective stances on Phnom Penh's request last year for the court to interpret its June 15, 1962, ruling on Preah Vihear temple. In a note sent to the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh on Wednesday, the Cambodian Foreign Ministry accused Thai troops of laying barbed wire north of the entrance of Preah Vihear on June 23-25 despite its protests. Two gunshots were also heard from Thai positions on the night of June 26. Thai soldiers also laid more barbed wire in the area on the morning of June 30, the Cambodian Foreign Ministry said. Cambodia's deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Hor Namhong also sent a letter of complaint on Wednesday to Philippe Couvreur, registrar of the ICJ, accusing Thai soldiers of provoking tensions and adversely affecting the implementation of the ICJ's orders.
Aug
04
Cambodia Marks “Chol Vossa” Festival
Chol Vossa (enter rainy season) or Rainy Retreat, one of annual religious festivals, begins today in the pagodas throughout Cambodia. In this three-month-long festival, the monks do not leave their pagodas to collect alms as usual. They must remain within the temple compound. Anyway, they can accept the invitation of devotees and travel out at day time, but they can not stay out of the pagoda over night. Generally, Buddhist followers offer Tean Vossa (Vossa candle), a large candle that has to be lighted the whole days and nights during the festival, as well as oil, robes and other food supplies to the monks. Tean Vossa is considered as the light for life, in which the dark part of life would be lightened, guiding a way out toward nirvana. The end of the Rainy Retreat or Chegn Vossa Festival will be also celebrated. This year, it falls on Oct. 30.
Aug
10
Phl team wins Asean quiz
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, Aug 8 (PIA) -- The Philippine delegation won the fifth Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) Quiz in Phnom Penh, Cambodia last week. The Philippines emerged as the winner with a score of 71 points followed closely by Cambodia with 70 points and Thailand with 68 points in the individual country contest, a press statement from the Asean said. The quiz aims to raise Asean awareness, focuses on the people-to-people connection as part of commemorating Asean’s 45th anniversary to promote Asean to its communities. Asean said the quiz used the same theme as Cambodia’s Asean Chairmanship this year, “Asean: One Community, One Identity.” Thirty students representing all ten Asean member-states participated in the individual country and friendly group contests. The students answered questions on many aspects of Asean including its role, history, culture, politics, economy, security and tourism to show their knowledge and understanding of the Asean region. Tough questions, close catch-up matches, yet friendly atmosphere was the scene of this year’s Asean Quiz Regional Competition. The fifth Asean Quiz Regional Competition was organized by the Ministry of Information of Cambodia with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport, and Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts and the Asean Secretariat. The Asean Quiz is a project of Asean Committee on Culture and Information (Asean-Coci) funded by the Asean Cultural Fund to raise Asean awareness among the young generation of Asean citizens.
Aug
11
Traditional Khmer music
Traditional Khmer instrumentalists. Photograph: Ven Sakol/ Phnom Penh Post Traditional Khmer music is very special to the Khmer heritage, used both for entertainment and in traditional ceremonies. Some say it is as valuable as Angkor Wat. For many centuries, Cambodia has been admired for the creativity of its Khmer ancestors. But despite the interest from abroad, the popularity of Khmer traditional music has declined sharply amongst youth in the country. Nhuk Sinat is a Khmer traditional music teacher at Khmer Amatak association and Asia Organization. He said: “The value of our traditional music is comparable to Angkor Wat. It is our national heritage.” Some students are still very proud of the music. Chheang Phirom, 22, a drama student at the Royal University of Fine Arts is one. He said he would love to learn to play Khmer music. “First, I thought it was something that I was made to do. But now, I know that I love Khmer traditional music and want to preserve it.” But despite the willingness of students like Chheang, many young people are less interested. Low pay and lack of jobs discourages people from learning while people who play very well often become buskers in the city. Mr Oun has been a Khmer music player at wedding ceremonies for more than 20 years said he would not teach his children. Some blame the drive to modernisation in the country for indifference towards the music. Yun Theara, deputy director general at the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts said: “Youth are willing to get something and to be modern, and we cannot blame them.” A growing number of Cambodian young people can watch Western or Korean hip hop, films and music on television but there are very few programs that show our traditional music. But we as Khmers have a responsibility to save our heritage. Without the Khmer traditional music, our society will lose a national symbol, and much more besides. So what can we do to preserve it? Yun Thean believes that the merging of ASEAN countries over the next few years means it is important to gather and record tradition. He said: “In 2015, ASEAN countries will merge their culture. That is why we are first gathering and recording our traditional songs to document them. Secondly, we will focus on the media to reach schools and organisations.” “Although youngsters nowadays do not know how to play the instrument, of they want to learn in their old age, they still can learn as long as we have the records.” According to Thong Keo Bunnate, planning officer at Phnom Penh Municipal Department of Education, Youth and Sports, there is a school for learning Khmer traditional musical instrument for those who are willing to learn: the Royal University of Fine Arts. Schools that are under the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports also have the subject in Art Class but students can only learn the theory, rather than the practice. Recognising the problem, the Westline School is preparing to add a new subject about Khmer traditional musical instruments into the school curriculums. Pech Bolene, president of both the Westline School and the Northline School said: “We are going to have this new art class because our traditional songs are melodious and full of meaning, which is so interesting. That is why we want the new generation to know, learn, and preserve our traditional musical instrument.” Some musicians also create new songs by mixing both modern and traditional musical instruments. Pagodas also play a role in preserving our traditional instruments. For example, Teacher Sinat had a chance to study in Phnom Penh because of Reachbo Pagoda that taught him to play musical instruments from an early age. We, as Khmer, have to preserve our traditional musical instruments or to raise awareness of their importance so that we do not lose our precious heritage.
Aug
16
Art Museum to showcase contemporary works from young Cambodian artists in ‘Phnom Penh’
As a part of the NIU Art Museum’s upcoming Southeast Asian Exhibition Suite, “Current Views and Actions: Photography and Performance Documentation from Phnom Penh” showcases contemporary work from young Cambodian artists Khvay Samnang and Lim Sokchanlina. This exhibition will be held from Tuesday, Aug. 28, to Saturday, Nov. 17, in the NIU Art Museum’s Rotunda Gallery. A public reception is scheduled from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 13. Samnang and Sokchanlina are two of the founding members of the artist collective, Stiev Selapak (Art Rebels) and are represented by SA SA BASSAC Gallery in Phnom Penh. Their photography and performance documentation poignantly showcase the societal challenges and unconventional beauty of contemporary Cambodia. Samnang’s Human Nature Series provides an intimate window into the lives and dwellings of tenants of the Bassac Riverfront Municipal Apartments, or “The White Building” in Phnom Penh. In Samnang’s startling portraits, his subjects’ faces are obscured by masks, allowing the revealing nature of the portraits to unfold through the contents of the subjects’ living spaces. In his untitled performance series, Samnang documented the repetitive action of pouring sand over his head in various natural and urbanized landscapes. The significance of his performance art lies in addressing the growing urban developments encroaching around Cambodia’s lake systems, and highlights the devastating changes to the natural and cultural landscape in some of Cambodia’s poorest communities. Often Samnang would wade into heavily polluted waters, risking his physical safety to complete this daring, socially-conscious performance series. Khvay Samnang’s Human Nature Series (2011) Khvay Samnang’s Human Nature Series Sokchanlina’s Wrapped Future series depicts evidence of the rapidly advancing urban development of Phnom Penh; his photographs document the seemingly endless expanses of construction walls cluttering the city streets. Many of the construction projects behind the barriers Sokchanlina photographs have laid waste to some of the city’s most revered architectural icons; others have displaced countless city residents. While Sokchanlina’s images are mysterious and starkly beautiful, his walls elicit feelings of loss and frustration associated with these artificial markers of cultural progress. In Sokchanlina’s performance art piece titled The Rock, the “White Building” makes another appearance in this metaphorical depiction of social struggle. In his piece, Sokchanlina is straining to hold a heavy slab of concrete above his head as he desperately tries to avoid collapsing under the weight and plummeting down a pipe leading into the building. This performance addresses the precarious position of the community as people attempt to shoulder the heavy burdens of rapid urban development, wide-spread eviction and poverty. This piece conveys Sokchanlina’s sober lament: “I think my city is growing up faster than my people.” “Current Views and Actions: Photography and Performance Documentation from Phnom Penh” is offered in conjunction with the Cambodia Studies Conference, planned from Thursday, Sept. 13, through Sunday, Sept. 16, at NIU. Located on the west-end first floor of Altgeld Hall, the galleries are open to the public from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, noon to 4 p.m. Saturday and by appointment for group tours. Exhibitions and lectures are free; donations are appreciated. Pay parking is available in the visitor’s lot on Carroll Avenue and at metered spots in front of Altgeld Hall. Free parking is available Saturdays and during receptions and visiting artist lectures in the lot northeast of Gilbert and College Drives. The exhibition is sponsored in part by the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency; the Friends of the NIU Art Museum; and the Dean’s Circle of the College of Visual and Performing Arts, NIU Foundation.
Aug
11
Cambodia’s Cardamom Mountains, full of secrets
It wasn’t the greatest first impression I’d ever made. Arriving at the small, dusty Cambodian village of O’Key, where dogs scampered around the handful of bamboo houses, I smiled and waved at the mother and daughter sitting in the shade of a banana tree. The young girl stared at me. Then, lip trembling, she burst into tears. Although the mighty jungle-clad temples of Angkor have put Cambodia firmly on the tourist map, very few visitors venture to the country’s remote and mysterious southwest region. Until recently, the Cardamom Mountains were simply off-limits. War raged in these quiet emerald peaks, named for the heady spice that grows here, until the mid-1990s. The area was the last stronghold of Khmer Rouge rebels who retreated here after the 1979 collapse of Pol Pot’s brutal regime. For more than a decade, bloody battles continued to break out between the guerrillas and local villagers. When the guns finally fell silent, the locals had lost everything. Forced to exploit their natural resources to survive, they hunted wildlife and destroyed the forests. But despite their dark past and a back story worthy of the Hollywood treatment, the Cardamoms remain a place of astounding beauty. And with peace has come tourism. Only 1,000 or so travelers a year make the journey to this region, which is a three-hour drive and a two-hour scenic boat ride from the capital, Phnom Penh. Their efforts are rewarded with world-class hiking and local interaction that’s a far cry from the commercialized “cultural” treks found elsewhere in Asia. With the help of the Wildlife Alliance — an American nonprofit organization that works alongside national governments to promote conservation and alleviate poverty in Southeast Asia — the communities here have reclaimed their destiny. Landmines have been cleared, former battlefields have become prime trekking territory, and the men who once fought the rebels now lead guided walks along deserted trails. The women, meanwhile, have opened their homes as guesthouses, with all in the community benefiting from the profits. Elephant tracks One housewife-turned-hotelier is Ming Tha, who proudly showed me into the second bedroom of her humble home, built on wooden stilts, in Chi Phat, the main village in the mountains, where my trekking adventure began. Settling in, I could see Ming below me through the gaps in the floorboards. There she sat, busily picking coriander leaves as dogs and ducks, chickens and children ran around the courtyard. The cicadas sang sweetly as the rain clouds moved in, the heavy droplets falling like bullets on the iron roof. Rat-tat-tat-tat-tat. The next morning, I strolled along Chi Phat’s main road, a ruler-straight avenue where petrol and potent rice wine are sold in identical plastic bottles. My guide from Phnom Penh, Lok, introduced me to Kan at the community center that doubles as the town’s only restaurant. Kan, born and raised in Chi Phat, was to lead our trek. We planned to walk about 22 miles over the next two days, although, with so many trails of varying lengths and difficulty, choosing our route proved to be a challenge. More than 87 miles of trails have been carefully carved through the mountains, with a number of thatched structures erected in clearings for camping in comfort. Well, relative comfort.
Feb
28
Water Festival

A smaller Water Festival is held around Angkor Wat, but for the real thing you’ll have to go to Phnom Penh.

In Khmer the annual Water Festival is called Bonn Om Toeuk. The Water and Moon Festival ushers in the fishing season. It also marks the reversal of the current in Tonle Sap river. Boat races as well as fireworks displays are held at the river.

Date in 2008:
11-12-13 November

More than 300 boats, propelled by precision-trained oarsmen, take part in the annual boat race, the highlight of the Water Festival or Bonn Om Touk. This is one of the major events in the Kingdom which attracts multitudes of people from the various provinces to the capital Phnom Penh.

They arrive by buses, cars, bikes, cyclos, bicycles and even trucks. Many stay over in the city during the three-day festival, lending support to their boat team. Others use this opportunity to explore the sights and sounds of Phnom Penh - for many it is the only occasion to visit the city.

Source: Frizz Restaurant

Aug
28
Korean tourists fuel demand for dog meat in Cambodia
Riding a motorcycle with a cage, Pov Nat scours rural areas for dogs. He pays between 30,000 (US$7.38) and 80,000 riel a head and sells the animals to a butcher in Siem Reap. The 21-year-old native of Kampong Cham province began buying dogs after coming to live with his uncle in Rohal commune in Preah Nethpreah district. "I never thought of this business. I left my hometown to find work. But I don't want to work in Thailand, so I chose this," he said. Pov Nat said he began buying dogs after becoming acquainted with the butcher in Siem Reap. The butcher supplies restaurants catering to tourists from South Korea. "I buy between six and 11 dogs a day and purchases are based on orders from the butcher in Siem Reap," he said. The butcher pays him 16,000 riel a kilogramme for each dog. "Dogs bought from rural areas have good meat. The clients in Siem Reap like it but say the meat is not as delicious as dog meat raised abroad." For now, the only obstacle to supplying Koreans with one of their favorite foods seems to be police manning checkpoints. "They ask me for 10,000 riel when I pass each checkpoint," Pov Nat said. "When I use something to cover the cage, they accuse me of transporting illegal animals. But when I remove the cover, they accuse me of disturbing public order. Then they accuse me of this or that and finally ask me for money." In South Korea, where dogs are farmed, dog meat is typically prepared in a soup known as bosintang. Unlike China, where dog meat is considered a winter dish, dog in South Korea is particularly popular in the hot summer months.
Jul
26
Life still slow in Cambodian beach towns
A ninja delivers a high kick to a cow before punching it in the udder, and the cow, on its hind legs, squirts him with milk. The Cambodians on the bus around us roar with laughter. We're trundling along a two-lane highway in Cambodia's south, heading for the coast. It's sweltering in here, and the American kung-fu pastiche is the only entertainment on board. Outside, we pass statue after statue crowning highway roundabouts, all points of regional pride: a crab, a salt-panning couple, a Khmer princess standing atop a crocodile - and a rhinoceros, whose significance I can't decipher. This wasn't quite how I expected to find Cambodian history, in a country known more for the tragedy of its past than the quirks of its present. While the vast majority of visitors to the country flock to the magnificent temples of Angkor Wat in the West, smaller, quieter beach towns provide just as much of an insight to the Cambodian psyche. Kampot and Kep are two coastal spots that visitors are slowly discovering - with an emphasis on the slow. Life here is not to be rushed. One of Indochina's best-preserved colonial-era towns, Kampot sits by the Teuk Chhou River, its French shophouses casting long shadows in the deep gold light of sunset. It's best enjoyed with a - what else? - Angkor brew at one of the many relaxed waterfront bars, or from a longtail boat puttering out past fishermen returning to town for the night. In the countryside beyond the giant durian that crowns Kampot's largest roundabout lies a patchwork of golden dry-season grasses, white cows, and unexpected red earth thrown up by the ubiquitous motorcycles. We hire a tuktuk for the day and drive out of town and away from its dusty, frontier-like bustle. The region is known for its durian (a tropical fruit infamous for its foul smell), seafood, peppercorn, and salt farms, and we're off to see a quieter side of the country, away from the rapid development of the big cities, with their teetering high-rises, honking traffic and tangled power lines. In the early morning light, we squint out across the blinding salt plain, watching women methodically stamping the clay in preparation for salt collection while quietly chanting. Kampot pepper during the colonial era was a mainstay for the best chefs of Paris, and is still widely exported. We wander amongst the pepper trees, nibbling the small red fruit around the seed, crunching down for the flare of sharp flavour that is a reminder of the tiny grain's potency. Cambodia is racing to catch up to its neighbours after the murderous Khmer Rouge regime froze progress in the 1960s, and it's visible everywhere. Enormous satellite dishes protrude from behind traditional wooden houses, and at temples hidden deep out among farmland, monks chat on mobile phones. And as we travel away from the coast, past tiny villages whose inhabitants stop to watch the occasional tuktuk or moto pass by, we find a group of children who can greet us in several languages. "Hello! Bonjour! Buenos dias!" they crow, clamouring to lead us up the hill, showing off their fathers' plots of spinach and cabbage, telling us they hope to become doctors one day. Kep-sur-mer, an hour east along the narrow coast road, was founded in the early 1900s as a beachside escape for the French and Cambodian elite, and still boasts an elegant waterfront promenade where families gather. Children clamber on the huge crab statue, swinging from its claws. Couples stroll hand in hand in the afternoon sun, looking out across the Gulf of Thailand. The market sells fresh crab and fried fish laid out on large leaves, local women swatting away stray dogs that venture too near. And if Kep still feels too big, Rabbit Island is only 20 minutes away across the water. The main beach boasts still waters, a few bungalows and seafood restaurants, and a green, hilly interior. Chickens run under hammocks strung between palm trees, and it's hard to see why tourists have so far shunned this spot in favour of the louder, sleazier Sihanoukville - although perhaps it's a blessing. Our tuktuk putters along the sun-dappled coast road, curving out along the water, overlooked by ruined 1950s villas. Slowly being reclaimed by the land, these buildings are ravaged by bullet holes, with empty, staring windows and vines creeping along doorways. Once-elaborate brick fences now hold only long grass. Cows graze where once were living rooms, unconcerned. We wander around the front yard of a sprawling mansion our driver tells us once belonged to a Prime Minister. Squatters have moved in, laundry flapping in the yard. A baby's cry drifts from an upstairs window. Through the open front door, we can see a charred grand staircase. Cambodia's bright-seeming present is inextricably intertwined with its past, glimpses of which, like these war-riddled houses, are never far away, kung-fu cows notwithstanding. IF YOU GO There are no direct flights between Australian cities and Phnom Penh. Singapore Airlines (www.singaporeair.com), Malaysia Airlines (www.malaysiaairlines.com), and Thai Airways (www.thaiairways.com.au) all offer flights from major Australian cities to Phnom Penh with one stop; typical travel time via Bangkok is about 12 hours. Kampot is 148km from Phnom Penh and buses depart regularly during the morning for the four-hour trip. Sihanoukville is 105km west of Kampot, and minibus tickets cost about AUD$3. Kep is 25km from Kampot towards Phnom Penh, and a tuktuk day hire costs about AUD$15, depending on your negotiation skills.
Feb
28
ASEAN Tourism Forum 2011 Kicks Off with a Bang in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
exhibited an unprecedented level of grandeur and attracted over 3,000 delegates including tourism ministers, leaders of national tourism offices, travel agents, tour operators, and members of regional and international press corps.

The ASEAN Tourism Forum is a cooperative regional effort to promote the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) region as one tourist destination and the most important activity of the ASEAN tourism cooperation framework. The annual event—held this year from January 15-21, 2011—involves all the tourism industry sectors of the 10 member nations of ASEAN: Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

This year’s forum marked the 30th anniversary of ATF, and Cambodia—the honored host country—made sure the occasion was an utterly unforgettable one. On the evening of the opening ceremony, delegates enjoyed a sumptuous open-air catered dinner on Diamond Island, which was transformed by hundreds of tables bedecked in sheets of golden silk. Once dinner finished, delegates were invited to the show arena, where they were graciously welcomed with speeches by Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo HUN SEN, Deputy Prime Minister Dr. Sok An, and Minister of Tourism Dr. Thong Khon.

After the welcoming speeches, over 600 singers, dancers, and artists from the Ministry of Fine Arts took to the stage, treating delegates to a host of brilliant song and dance acts that showcased both traditional and contemporary art forms. The performances embodied this year’s ATF’s theme—“A World of Wonders and Diversity” perfectly, not only by presenting the incredible diverse offerings of Cambodia, but of all of ASEAN. Highlights of the evening included hundreds of dancers clothed in resplendent costumes acting out the Ramayana, a fashion show featuring stunning Khmer fashions from pre-Angkorian to modern times, and a choreographed end sequence incorporating all the flags of the ASEAN nations. State of the art sound effects and pyrotechnics elevated each performance to a whole new level.

Finally, in a magnificent ending to the ceremony, delegates watched as the Phnom Penh sky was set aglow with an array of multi-colored fireworks that bloomed above the city’s Tonle Sap river. The jaw-dropping display, viewed by participants of the ATL from Diamond Island, lasted a full 30 minutes and made for a remarkably memorable welcome and official start to ATL 2011.

Jul
04
The typical architecture of Khmer pagodas in Cambodia
For the Khmer ethnic people in the Southwestern region, pagodas are considered a special cultural and spiritual space imbued with strong religious faith. As they hold an extremely important position in the Khmer culture, the pagodas are built magnificently, featuring the typical cultural identity and becoming invaluable cultural heritage of local people.
Jul
17
The situation around PREAH VIHEAR temple
Thailand and Cambodia will redeploy an unspecified number soldiers currently stationed in disputed areas around Preah Vihear temple. The move will take place on Wednesday to mark the one-year anniversary of the International Court of Justice's (ICJ) order for both sides to withdraw troops from the area. The two nations' planned troop redeployment was confirmed yesterday by Defence Minister Sukumpol Suwanatat who on Friday accompanied Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to attend talks with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen in Siem Reap. Citing security concerns, ACM Sukumpol did not say how many Thai soldiers were to be redeployed. ACM Sukumpol said the troop redeployment complied with the ICJ's order for Thailand and Cambodia to withdraw their troops from the 17.3 sq km Provisional Demilitarised Zone (PDZ) near Preah Vihear temple. Early last year, Cambodia petitioned the ICJ to interpret its 1962 verdict on the sovereignty of the disputed 4.6 sq km area around Preah Vihear after the two sides engaged in a series of border clashes near the temple. The ICJ, however, has not yet ruled on the petition. In the meantime, it issued the troop pull-out order to quell the armed conflict. ACM Sukumpol said he would preside over the redeployment of Thai soldiers at the Thai-Cambodian border in Si Sa Ket province on Wednesday, while his Cambodian counterpart Tea Bahn would preside over the redeployment of about 485 Cambodian soldiers based at the temple. He said the Cambodian soldiers would be replaced by about 350 border patrol and tourist police. ACM Sukumpol said the redeployed Thai soldiers would be replaced by border police officers under the military's strategic control. He insisted the redeployment is temporary and gave assurances Thailand would not lose any land. ACM Sukumpol said the Democrat Party should not look to criticise the government over the redeployment, but instead recognise that the ICJ's order is being respected. Before the two countries agreed to move some of their soldiers from the PDZ during the Friday's talks in Siem Reap, their senior soldiers had twice met at a Joint Working Group to discuss the ICJ's order. However, they failed to reach a consensus on the issue. Instead they issued an agreement that they would work on a landmine-clearing operation around the Preah Vihear temple. ACM Sukumpol said the two nations' demining squads would meet with one another next week to discuss the operation.
Aug
18
Cambodia Ancient Buddha Statues Found By Bathing Children
Authorities in Cambodia say children bathing in a newly dug pond accidentally unearthed six ancient Buddhist statues believed to be around 1,000 years old. Provincial Culture Department official Prak Sakhon says the statues were found Wednesday in Khleng Por, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of capital Phnom Penh. Sakhon says the statues are believed to be from the ninth to the 12th centuries, with the biggest just over a half-meter (half-yard) tall and weighing about nine kilograms (20 pounds). She said Friday the statues have been moved to a provincial museum while authorities investigate. The pond had been dug recently and the statues were found buried in mud close to its banks. Cambodia is home to a plethora of archaeological sites including the famed Angkor Wat temple complex.
Jul
04
Vietnam-Cambodia tourism is developed day by day
The marker lies on the border between My Duc commune, Ha Tien town in the southern Vietnamese province of Kien Giang and Russey Srok Khang Lech commune, Kampong Trach district in the Cambodian province of Kampot. This is the second time Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and his Cambodian counterpart, Hun Sen, have attended the inauguration of land border markers. These showed the resolve and efforts by both governments in implementing treaties, agreements and deals on border and territorial work, helping the two sides complete all work on border demarcation and marker planting soon. The event also drew the participation of Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Vu Van Ninh and Cambodian Deputy Prime Ministers Men Sam On and Sar Kheng along with senior officials of ministries, agencies and localities of both countries. Addressing the ceremony, Prime Minister Dung stressed the special significance of the inauguration of marker 314. He said the event marks a joint success of the two nations in building a borderline of peace, friendship and cooperation for development. It satisfies fundamental interest and desire of both peoples as well as creates a new dynamic for the two countries to early fulfil all work on land border demarcation and marker planting. The inauguration also facilitates the exchange and economic cooperation as well as creates stability for people in Kien Giang and Kampot provinces in particular and contributes to promoting friendship and comprehensive cooperation, especially in economics, trade, investment and tourism between the two countries’ border provinces in general. Prime Minister Hun Sen said the inauguration of marker 314 is an event of significance. He added that it satisfies both nations’ desires in building a borderline of peace, stability, cooperation and development as well as contributes to promoting cooperation among countries in the Mekong sub-region and in Southeast Asia. He described recent achievements in border demarcation and marker planting work as a new chapter in the history of the two countries’ relations. Vietnam and Cambodia have to date installed 287 border markers and demarcated about 653km of borderline, meeting 76 percent and 51 percent of the total work, respectively.
Sep
28
Japan to build $200 m shopping mall in Cambodia
AEON Mall, a Japan's single-largest shopping mall developer and the largest retailing operator, will invest $200 million to build a four-storey shopping mall here in December, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Tuesday. "It will be the country's largest modern market and the investment will cost more than $200 million," he said during a graduation ceremony of students at the National University of Management. The construction will be begun on December 10, 2012 on the land area of more than 100,000 square meters along the river in the capital's Chamkamon district, he said. The mall will create between 2,000 and 3,000 jobs. The premier said the investment reflected Japanese investors' confidence in Cambodia and it will also contribute to promoting the country's tourism sector. A Japanese senior officer at the AEON Mall-Phnom Penh Branch confirmed Tuesday in a condition of anonymity that the construction will be completed in 2014.
Jul
06
UK looks to boost ties with Cambodia, ASEAN
British Foreign Office Minister Jeremy Browne said Tuesday that the United Kingdom has set its political program to strengthen and expand relationship with Cambodia and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Browne made the remarks during a meeting with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen at the Peace Palace, according to Eang Sophallet, spokesman for Prime Minister Hun Sen. Browne said the UK has laid out a foreign policy to work closely with ASEAN as the ASEAN has been working closely toward a community by 2015, adding that the UK is committed to doubling trade volume with ASEAN in the next five years. On the bilateral relation with Cambodia, Browne pledged to encourage more British investors to Cambodia. Meanwhile, Hun Sen said the UK-Cambodia ties in trade, investment and tourism are very good and hopes to see further growth in these fields in the coming years. According to the British Embassy, currently, over 15 UK companies have set up offices in Cambodia in different sectors including the garment and footwear industry, banking and finance, engineering and architecture, education, hospitality and property services. The UK is the fourth largest investor in Cambodia. According to the report of the Council for the Development of Cambodia, since 1994 to 2011, Cambodia had received the UK's promised investment of $2.4 billion. On the bilateral trade, during the first quarter of this year, the two-way trade was $178 million, up 48 percent compared to the same period last year. Browne arrived here on Monday evening for a two-day visit. His visit is a part of a regional program to Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and China's Hong Kong, according to a press release from the British Embassy in Phnom Penh. He is the first foreign office minister from the current UK government to visit Cambodia, following the Secretary of State for Wales Cheryl Gillan, who was here in May.
Jul
11
1.5 Million Foreign Visitors come to Cambodia in First Five Months of 2012
In the first five months of this year, Cambodia has attracted over 1.5 million foreign visitors, an increase by 26 percent if compared to the same period of last year, show the statistics released recently by the Ministry of Tourism. According to the statistics, from January to May, the Vietnamese tourists ranked first among the top ten foreign visitors to Cambodia with 305,750, up 30 percent; followed by the South Korean visitors with 204,150, up 35 percent; and the Chinese visitors with 132,000, up 33 percent. The Lao tourists came in 4th with 81,059, up 5.4 percent; followed by the Thai tourists with 78,156, up 5.2 percent, the statistics indicate. Some 941,450 foreign tourists visited Siem Reap province, home to Angkor temples, and the Capital City of Phnom Penh attracted 564,283 visitors, the costal areas some 136,254 visitors, and the northeastern provinces 26,573 visitors. Last year, Cambodia received over 2.88 million foreign tourists, generating some US$1.91 billion income.
Aug
21
Puppy love good for salon business
Bathed, dried, draped in a pink outfit with a flower pinned to her head, a month-old poodle is ready for collection from the salon. She belongs to pet lover San Nita, one of a growning number of Cambodians and expats who are spending hundreds of dollars on beautifying their pets. Nita takes her to the salon once a week to be groomed and dressed in clothes and accessories. Adopting pets – especially dogs and cats – is common in the Kingdom, but Phnom Pehn has seen a surge in demand for more elaborate services and treatments ranging from nail trimming and grooming to “dating services”and funeral organisation. Happy Dog Pet Shop in Phnom Penh, one of the city’s most-esablished dog salons, opened in 2009. Today it gets more than 80 clients a week who choose from an a extensive catalogue of treatments and services. According to its website, staff can “find a partner for your pet” or even organise its funeral. A door-to-door service is also available. The treatments are increasingly popular with foreigners, wealthy Cambodians and the growing middle class, according to Sok Chhay, who owns the shop. She said: “The number of customers increases every month. The development of the county has changed people’s perceptions about their standards of living. “Cambodians now tend to understand the importance of pets – not only for guarding houses but also as close companions for people.” Grooming prices range from $10 to $30 depending on the condition of the coat. Most customers are from the middle or very wealthy classes and are indifferent to the cost, she said. but she also gets clients who come from poorer backgrounds. Yang Sokny, who works at Modern Dog pet shop said that her clients bring their pets to the salon several times a week. The Phnom Penh salon opened last year and now attracts than 50 customers each week. “Some of those 50 customers are my regular clients, who bring their pets for grooming up to three times a week,” she said. Most of the pets brought in have been imported from abroad at great expense, and owners want to give them specialist care, she said. Nita imported her poodle, which is worth hundreds of dollars. “Since it’s not a local puppy, I’m not familiar with its needs or way of living, so I have to get advice and service from pet shop,” she said. Seak Keang, who often brings his 10 year-old dog to the salon to be groomed and have its nails trimmed, said the cost is worth bearing if it prevents the dog from getting fleas or ticks. “Better care helps dogs live longer and happier lives,” he said.
Jul
11
Cambodian King Attends the Celebration of Annual Arbor Day
His Majesty the King Norodom Sihamoni plants young tree and offers saplings to a local resident on the celebration of the annual Arbor Day (July 9) held today in Banteay Srei district’s Khunream commune, Siem Reap province. In the meantime, His Majesty called on the Cambodian people in the country to plant trees and prevent forest infractions
Jul
09
Peace pianist to play in Sofitel
Damisch, in town as part of a fundraiser for the Spitler School Foundation, will perform at The Explorer’s Tales Restaurant Lounge at Sofitel. The free performance, titled A Classical Evening, will kick of at 6.30 pm with a drink (note the accent on the singular) and canapés. Kids from the Spitler School will sing songs they learned during English classes. At 7pm, Damisch will take the stage and perform a program including the works of Claude Debussy, Aaron Copland and Frederic Chopin. Damisch is one of those odd people who thrust themselves onto the world stage as part of a lifelong eleemosynary endeavour. He apparently first played the organ at four, performed his first piano concert three years later and orchestrated the first of three musical tours of eastern and western Europe in his teens. He then embarked on career as a personal injury lawyer in the US, a stint as a corruption-busting prosecutor, and three terms as mayor of Northbrook, Illinois. In 2000 he ended a 19 year hiatus and returned to the stage, although reportedly battling stage fright during his first series of performances. In August 2010, Damisch and two of his daughters, Katherine and Alexandra, together known as K, K and A Productions, traveled to Germany and Austria to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the reunifications of Germany. On this trip he is joined by his niece on her debut tour. During his performing years, Damisch has traveled to a bewildering array of countries outside of his homeland, America, and has visited many of these countries several times. His country itinerary includes Austria, Germany, Russia, France, Switzerland, Iceland, England, Norway Japan, Denmark, Luxemburg, Hawaii, Ireland, Israel, Poland, China, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Italy, Egypt, South Korea, Mongolia, and Taiwan. On this tour he will travel to India, Vietnam, Cambodia, Australia, and New Zealand. In Cambodia, his Siem Reap performance is designed to promote the reestablishment of the country’s educational system. He will also perform in Phnom Penh to promote western classical music, but times and dates for the capital were not available at time of writing. Damisch’s appearance in Siem Reap was coordinated by Jim Latt, a senior volunteer coordinator with the Spitler School Foundation. Latt told Siem Reap Insider that the tour came to be because of his past work with an organisation called American Voices, based in Bangkok. He said, “This group brings American culture to developing countries through the performing arts. Mr Damisch contacted my friend with American Voices indicating that he was planning to be in Cambodia and thus began our correspondence. “We thought this would be a unique entertainment opportunity in Siem Reap, and would also afford our foundation some exposure. Secondary to this, of course, is the hope to raise a few funds for the organisation. “We approached Sofitel Angkor Resort with some ideas, and they were very supportive. Many thanks to Sofitel for their generous support of this free concert.” Meanwhile, in on online bulletin on the weekend, the school claimed, “The 2011-12 school year was our most ambitious yet as far as adding programs and increasing our budgets. “With the generosity of many donors, and the skill of our paid and volunteer staff, we were able to launch a comprehensive English program not only at Spitler School, but at Kurata School as well. We were able to continue our scholarship programs for both the 2010 graduates and the 2011 graduates. Our success rate at keeping our graduates moving forward in middle school has been outstanding, and we have already receive commitments that should insure that we will be able to assist our 2012 graduating class as well.”
Jul
09
Bangkok Airways eyes domestic, regional expansion
Bangkok Airways (PG) remains focused on domestic and regional operations as it looks to expand (ATW Daily News, July 5). PG president Puttipong Prasarttong-Osoth told ATW the privately held carrier is “looking at more destinations in Northeast Thailand,” which has smaller, less affluent tourist traffic than the rest of the country. However, he said the region has a large, scattered population that will help build PG’s network. It is also considering flights to Hat Yai in Thailand’s South. The regional emphasis includes expansion in Southeast Asia. PG will soon—“maybe this winter”—fly to the Laotian capital of Vientiane in addition to Luang Prabang, he said. In Myanmar, the carrier will add one more daily flight to Yangon again this winter; next year it hopes to add Mandalay to the roster. Beyond that, PG is also considering Indonesia. Because of this incremental approach, the carrier has no plans to purchase aircraft, although it is considering two Airbus A320s.
Jul
06
Sihanoukville - Beach Resort
'Beach town', 'port community', 'fledgling resort destination' - all describe Sihanoukville, Cambodia's premier beach town. Sihanoukville's white sand beaches and warm Gulf of Thailand waters combine with a laid back, beachy atmosphere to provide a great little tropical getaway. Sihanoukville is a place to unwind by the beach, enjoy the fresh from-the-ocean seafood, take in a snorkeling or scuba trip, and generally slow-down, lay back and chill-out. Sihanoukville has a different look and feel than most Cambodian towns. Constructed as a port city in the late 1950s, the town is much newer, more urban and cosmopolitan than most Cambodian provincial cities. Nowadays, Sihanoukville is as much a beach town as it is a port town, catering to beach-going weekenders from Phnom Penh as well as a steadily increasing number of foreign visitors. Still, the pace of life in Sihanoukville is very relaxed. Cows occasionally wander the main road, outside town foreign faces draw smiles and curious stares, and most of the beaches offer only beach umbrellas, thatched roofed eateries, and a growing number of restaurants, bungalows and hotels. Sihanoukville has a more than ample supply of accommodations, including a 5-star resort complex on Sokha Beach, several mid-range places downtown and at the beaches, a few 'upscale' three-star hotels, and dozens of budget guesthouses, especially on Weather Station Hill (Victory Hill). Sihanoukville Beach Considering the moderate number of visitors to Sihanoukville, the town offers a surprising number and variety of restaurants and bars. Fresh seafood, especially crab, prawns and ocean fish, has always been one of the town's biggest draws, but there is also a wide variety of places offering foreign cuisines - Australian, French, Indian, German, Sri Lankan, British, Italian, pizza places, a couple of western bakeries and even a espresso coffee shop. And these days Sihanoukville offers a pretty good night life as well with a wide variety of bars staying open well into the wee hours, especially on Weather Station Hill, in the downtown area, and the beach bars on Ochheuteal, ‘Serendipity’ and Victory Beaches.
Jul
14
Discover Siem Reap Town
Nestled between rice paddies and stretched along the Siem Reap River, the small provincial capital of Siem Reap Town serves as the gateway to the millennium-old temple ruins of the Khmer Empire. Designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO, the Angkor Archaeological Park encompasses dozens of temple ruins including Bayon, Banteay Srey and the legendary Angkor Wat whose artistic and archaeological significance and visual impact put it in a class with the Pyramids, Machu Pichu and the Taj Mahal. Unlike many other world class monuments, the ruins of Angkor are as yet unspoiled by over-development. This will not be true in a couple of years. Though the major temples are relatively well touristed these days, it is still possible get away from the crowds, to explore the area and discover Angkor. Siem Reap Town is where you will stay during your visit to Angkor. The area has been receiving foreign visitors to the temples for over 100 years. The town is actually a cluster of old villages, which originally developed around individual pagodas, and later overlaid with an French colonial-era center. Note the colonial and Chinese style architecture in the town center and around the Old Market. Nowadays, Siem Reap offers a wide range of hotels, restaurants, pubs and shops including several upscale hotels and dozens of budget guesthouses. Often missed are the many opportunities to experience traditional Cambodia: ‘Apsara’ dance performances, craft shops and silk farms, road tours through rice-paddy countryside, boat trips on the great Tonle Sap Lake to fishing villages and bird sanctuary, and much more.
Aug
31
Tackling tourism issues
Tourism authorities are concerned that the role of Siem Reap’s Cambodian tour guides catering to Korean tourists is being usurped by interpreters, with the tour guides being relegated to mere porters. This is mainly due to the lack of tour guides who can converse in the Korean language, and is just one of a myriad of problems arising out of the rapid increase of tourists at the temples. The issue was raised during the Reinforce Tour Guides meeting at City Angkor Hotel on August 13. A tour guide claimed that Korean interpreters look down on Cambodian tour guides and cited an instance where an interpreter treated a Cambodian guide as a “slave,” and “spoke violently,” wounding the tour guide’s pride. He said Korean interpreters always act as though they are the guides, and make the official Cambodian guides carry the tourists’ stuff, such as water and umbrellas. Tith Chantha, Director General of the Ministry of Tourism, said the solution is down to the actions of the Cambodian guides who need to comport themselves in a manner that will engender respect. But he added that all tour guides must be Cambodian, and not recruited from other nationalities such as Korean. He said, “The government has to protect the rights of Cambodian tour guides by allowing only Cambodian people to work in this career. Interpreters are just people who work temporarily when they are needed. “The Tourism Ministry provides interpreters with legal paperwork to work for only six months to translate what the tour guide has said when there are no Korean-speaking Cambodia guides available.” He added that the problem has been exacerbated by the increase in the numbers of Korean tourists. “We have only 123 Korean-speaking guides,” he said, “And Korean tourists are increasing. We now receive more than 30,000 Korean tourists every year. Sometimes our Korean guides are not available, and then we need help from Korean interpreters.” But he stressed, “Please do not confuse the issue and think that the Tourism Ministry will allow Korean people to work as guides in Cambodia. They are to work as interpreters only. Only Cambodians can work as guides because they know clearly about Cambodian culture and history.” Ngov Seng Kak, director of the Tourism Department in Siem Reap also weighed in, pointing out that there had been a 32 per cent rise in tourism at Angkor in the first six months of this year, compared to the same period last year. He said, “Cambodia still needs to improve human resources in regard to the Korean language, and other languages such as Vietnam and Russian. But we respect our Cambodian guides because only they can describe the truth of our history to tourists.” But the Korean interpreter saga was only a side issue at the seminar. In a long discussion, the Minister of Tourism, Thong Khun explored the major problem that will affect Angkor tourism by 2020 – the ever increasing number of visitors. Cambodia expects visitor numbers to the Kingdom to increase to about 7 million tourists annually, with 4 million visiting Siem Reap Angkor. He said, “There will be 10,000 international tourists and 10,000 local visitors visiting Angkor Wat temple everyday. How can we manage our temple with this massive flow of the tourists in that period? “Recently the Tourism Ministry as well the Apsara Authority have resolved to find the best method to protect our temples.” Meanwhile, the third meeting of the ACMECS Tourism Working Group meeting was held at the Angkor Paradise Hotel on August 14, to discuss the enhancement of the intra-regional cooperation on tourism sector. ACMECS is the economic cooperation framework known as the ‘Ayeyawady-Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy’ of the member nations – Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. The meeting centered on the promotion and advertising of a common tourism-market in the region with the ‘Five Countries, One Tourism Destination’ strategy. This will facilitate tourist transits at international borders and connect flights among the member nations with international flights. Tith Chantha, Cambodia’s Director General of Tourism, said the strategy is a cooperation framework between member countries to exploit diverse strengths and promote balanced development. He said, “We will try to determine how best we can further link up and develop our national and cultural tourism products in an environmentally sustainable and responsible manner by promoting and marketing them to international market. “I am strongly convinced that the sub regional travel facilitation is another key priority for us to tackle for our own citizens and the third nations traveling in our region as we aim to attract more intraregional and international visitors.” He noted that Cambodia and Thailand have embarked on a single visa pilot project, which hopefully will soon be activated. He stressed that intraregional tourism markets are really important, and the increase in visitor numbers from Vietnam, Lao PDR and Thailand is “remarkable.” 1 Response(s)
Aug
01
Examining Phnom Penh's flood-prone architecture
Motorists make their way through a flooded road in front of Phnom Penh's Royal Palace during heavy rains in May. Photograph: Hong Menea/Phnom Penh Post During rainy season, it is typical to see parts of the capital flooded. Floods are a considerable nuisance, negatively affecting people’s business and travel plans. It was with the city’s torrential floods in mind that Fulbright Research Fellow Shelby Elizabeth Doyle, who received her Master of Architecture from Harvard Graduate School of Design, set her research sights on Phnom Penh. In her Fulbright-funded project City of Water: Architecture, Infrastructure and the Floods of Phnom Penh, the architect looks into how the city’s historical design has contributed to its flood-prone state. The research focuses on the relationship between the growth of the city and the existence of water, going back to the days when Cambodia was a French protectorate and urban development was beginning to pick up speed. “I wanted to look at the impact of the French legacy of placing the capital in the Mekong flood plain and how these decisions are impacting the development of the city today,” she said, adding that she also had wanted to look at flood protection measures and the possible effects of filling the lakes. “All of these are the relationships between the city and water.” And while rain is precious in the provinces of agriculture’s dependence on the waters, heavy rain is treated the opposite in the city, where it’s seen as detrimental to urban development. “When people [in the city] think of flood, they think it’s bad,” said Doyle. “But the floods also sustain many livelihoods such as farming and fishing. It is an ongoing challenge to balance the development of the city with the realities of flooding. Hopefully, they can be designed to work together.” Apart from completing her research, Doyle also taught a course in Architectural Design at Limkokwing University of Creative Technology (LUCT). One of the outcomes of the class is the blog futureofphnompenh.wordpress.com - a collection of conceptual and analytical drawings and writings about contemporary urban conditions in Phnom Penh. Doyle said: “Putting together [students’] work on the blog, it is an attempt at capturing and sharing a contemporary moment of Phnom Penh. Things might be lost in the changing of the city, and it is very hard to see them on a map. The city is experienced in perspective so they put photos and videos on the blog to show the experience of the city from street level.” Vanna Pheatravisal, an architecture studies student at LUCT and one of Doyle’s pupils, felt the blog was a way for students to participate in Phnom Penh’s planning and development. “Through the blog, we can expose our ideas and works, like articles and photos, to those who find our work practical and can make a change to the city’s betterment in the future.” Doyle’s research has been ongoing since October 2011 and is expected to be finished by December. It could be a legacy that she leaves behind. “I give away all my work to other people who do research in Phnom Penh. They don’t have to start over again and spend one year to find an AutoCAD [Computer Aided Design] map of the city.” City of Water is not the only work this researcher has been working on in Cambodia. Her previous architectural work has included the design of the Friends Center at Angkor Hospital for Children with Cook+Fox, a New York-based architecture firm. A collection of Shelby’s works can be found on her blog: cityofwater.wordpress.com. “I find it really interesting to try to document a city that is changing so quickly,” Doyle said of her time in Phnom Penh. “Everywhere you go, you can hear construction and see the buildings changing. It is like trying to create a living archive.”
Jul
10
Take a visit to Cambodian and Japanese Museums
Cambodian National Museum and Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, former Khmer Rouge prison (S21), signed here on June 28 a cooperation agreement with Okinawa Prefectural Peace Memorial Museum of Japan. The three-year (2012-2015) deal was signed here by Cambodian National Museum Director Ms. Oun Phalline, representative of Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, and Okinawa Museum’s vice president. On the occasion, Ms. Oun Phalline said under the cooperation agreement, the Japanese side would help train Cambodian human resources, share experiences on documentaries and fund raising, as well as help developing and renovating the two Cambodian museums.
Jul
06
Take a visit to Hotel De La Paix
This is the sort of hotel you either love or hate, thanks to its contemporary design, trendy interiors and minimalist style. We happen to love it, including its open plan bathrooms, its iPods in each room and the cutting-edge cuisine. Traditionalists be warned. With its white, monumental Art Deco-style facade looking as if it's been transplanted straight from Miami, the Hotel de la Paix is breathtaking in its conception. Symmetry rules almost every detail, from the tall entrance doorways reminiscent of the corridors of Angkor, through to the sharp corners and the matching lamps to the small 2nd-floor pool. The rooms are mostly bright with big windows, king-size sleigh beds, rain showers, and vast two-person terrazzo baths that open onto the bedroom. They even come with iPods loaded with lounge music and temple guides. The service can be eager to the point of being annoying, and just occasionally - like when you're sitting in the tubs or the slick Arts Lounge - you may feel that design has triumphed over comfort. Expedia Description: Location. Hotel De La Paix is located in central Siem Reap, close to Angkor Night Market, Pub Street, and Psar Chaa Market. Nearby points of interest also include Wat Preah Prom Rath and Angkor Trade Center. Hotel Features. Dining options at Hotel De La Paix include 3 restaurants. A poolside bar and a bar/lounge are open for drinks. Room service is available 24 hours a day. The hotel serves a complimentary buffet breakfast. Recreational amenities include an outdoor pool, a children's pool, a health club, a fitness facility, and a steam room. The property's full-service health spa has body treatments, massage/treatment rooms, facials, and beauty services. This 4.5-star property offers small meeting rooms, a meeting/conference room, and secretarial services. Complimentary wireless Internet access is available in public areas. This Siem Reap property has event space consisting of banquet facilities, conference/meeting rooms, and exhibit space. For a surcharge, the property offers a roundtrip airport shuttle (available on request). Business services, wedding services, limo/town car service, and tour/ticket assistance are available. Complimentary guest parking is limited, and available on a first-come, first-served basis. Additional property amenities include a coffee shop/café, a concierge desk, and multilingual staff. Guestrooms. 107 air-conditioned guestrooms at Hotel De La Paix feature iPod docking stations and minibars. Accommodations offer city, pool, or garden views. Furnishings include desks and sofa beds. Refrigerators and coffee/tea makers are offered. Bathrooms feature separate bathtubs and showers with handheld showerheads. They also offer makeup/shaving mirrors, designer toiletries, and bathrobes. Wireless Internet access is complimentary. In addition to complimentary newspapers and safes, guestrooms offer cordless phones. 26-inch LCD televisions have satellite channels and complimentary TV Internet access. Rooms also include complimentary bottled water and slippers. Guests may request in-room massages, irons/ironing boards, and wake-up calls. A nightly turndown service is offered and housekeeping is available daily.
Jul
25
Mövenpick Hotels & Resorts in Jordan Earn Green Globe Re-Certification
Green Globe has re-certified all five Mövenpick Hotels & Resorts in Jordan for another year. The hotels all achieved Green Globe certification in 2011 following a detailed audit based on more than 350 standards covering environmental protection, energy and water conservation, social responsibility, employee sustainability and detailed education programmes. The five hotels are the Mövenpick Resort & Spa Dead Sea, the Mövenpick Resort & Residences Aqaba, the Mövenpick Resort & Spa Tala Bay Aqaba, the Mövenpick Resort Petra and the Mövenpick Nabatean Castle Hotel. “Re-certification by Green Globe endorses our on-going commitment to sustainability” said Regional General Manager of Mövenpick Hotels & Resorts in Jordan Peter Hoesli. “We are constantly re-examining our processes and procedures to improve our environmental impact and have implemented extensive trainings across all our hotels, to ensure every employee can play a positive role in sustainable good practice.” The Mövenpick Hotel & Resorts in Jordan use the latest energy and water saving technologies and state-of-the-art waste management as well as comprehensive action to nurture unique environmental and cultural elements in each hotel location. The Green Globe re-certification is another milestone in the history of Mövenpick Hotels & Resorts. By the end of 2012 the upscale Swiss hospitality company aims to become the first hotel company in the world to be fully Green Globe certified. Already all the company’s hotels in the Middle East and Europe have achieved the internationally, independently recognised Green Globe certification and the programme is being implemented across its properties in Asia and Africa
Jul
24
Vietnamese party leader meets Cambodian NA president in Hanoi
HANOI, July 22 (Xinhua) -- Vietnam has attached importance and given top priority to consolidating and developing the traditional relations and all-sided cooperation with the neighboring Cambodia, said General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) Central Committee Nguyen Phu Trong during his meeting with the visiting Cambodian National Assembly (NA) President Heng Samrin here on Sunday. Trong said the bilateral friendship was considered by the two sides as an invaluable treasure that should be well preserved and handed to future generations, for each country's prosperity, and for peace, national independence, democracy and social progress all over the world. Trong spoke highly of achievements that the Cambodian people have recorded in their national construction and development, and expressed his delight at the developing Vietnam-Cambodia relations both in depth and width, and with practical results in all fields. He also highly evaluated results of cooperation between the two countries' national assemblies, and said in the coming time the two legislative bodies should further expand cooperation and exchange experience in law making, supervision and decision, as well as effectively implement agreements signed between the two national assemblies and countries, contributing to further cementing the traditional relations and all-sided cooperation between Vietnam and Cambodia. Cambodian NA President Heng Samrin sincerely thanked the Vietnamese party leader for his warm welcome, saying his visit is of significance in the context that the two countries are celebrating the 45th anniversary of their fully diplomatic ties. He informed the Vietnamese party leader outcomes of talks between him and the Vietnamese NA delegation, confirming that Cambodia will continue to closely coordinate with Vietnam in implementing the agreements and declarations signed during high- ranking visits by the two sides' leaders. The Cambodian people are deeply grateful for the great support and timely assistance that the Vietnamese people had given to the Cambodian people in their fight to defend and reconstruct their country, which will forever be engraved in the history of Cambodia, the Cambodian NA President confirmed.
Jul
26
Satellite venture which help Cambodia TV programe more diversified will be launched
Russian Deputy Minister of Telecoms and Mass Communications Alexey Malinin, left, and Neak Oknha Kith Meng, right, at the Sofitel last night during the soft launch of Russian-Cambodian joint venture OneTV. Photograph: William Kelly A new Russian-Cambodian digital satellite television service plans to have 400,000 subscribers in the next two years with 60 channels in Khmer, English, Russian, Chinese, Vietnamese and other languages. The venture between Russia’s General Satellite and Cambodia’s Royal Group was soft-launched last night at Sofitel, with a planned start-up in September and a system using stored smart cards, descrambler boxes and antennas.
Jul
11
The meetings between U.S. and Cambodia Secretary of State
PHNOM PENH, July 10 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will arrive in Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, on Wednesday afternoon to attend the 19th ASEAN Regional Forum and related meetings, said a press release from the U.S. Embassy here on Tuesday. As scheduled, besides attending ASEAN meetings in Phnom Penh, Clinton will participate in the ASEAN-U.S. Business Forum in Siem Reap province on Friday afternoon. The forum, which will be presided over by Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, will also be attended by Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. Siem Reap, situated some 315 kilometers northwest of Phnom Penh, is the country's largest cultural tourism destination. It houses the Angkor Wat Temples, one of the World Heritage Sites.
Sep
05
Pitu Khosa Rangsay Pagoda is quintessential Khmer
The Pitu Khosa Rangsay Pagoda refl ects over Xang Thoi Lake on full-moon nights In Can Tho City, the Pitu Khosa Rangsay Pagoda (Vien Quang), is a religious haunt of the Khmer community and is one of the most beautiful temples in the delta due to its sophisticated architecture and the spiritual values that it brings. The temple, located at 27/18 Mac Dinh Chi Road, Ninh Kieu District, Can Tho City, is named Chua Sau (After Pagoda) because at that time on the main Hoa Binh Boulevard there stood the Rangsay Muni Pagoda or Chua Truoc First (Pagoda). The pagoda covers 500 square meters and includes many areas such as a sanctum, monk house, gate and bell tower. It has three floors, constructed from reinforced concrete masonry. The four buildings which are decorated with delicate patterns display an Angkor dragon, fairy Keynor, sacred bird Krud, god Hanuman, goddess Teppanom which are majestic. The pagoda gate is built meticulously with elegant carvings on the rooftop with a bas-relief of Buddha and large embossed pillars. To the pagoda, tourists will see many statues of snakes and dragons on the roofs, bird-human Garuda, fairy Kayno and Goddess Reahu on the sanctum or many images of elephants, birds, flowers, clouds as well as legends of Buddha on walls and pillars. The overall architecture whilst keeping with the unique characteristics of Khmer culture has stylized modern harmony between Angkor and Khmer people in the delta. The small alley heading to the Pitu Khosa Rang- say Pagoda in Can Tho City - Photos: Lam Van Son On the way to Sapa Town in the northwest province of Lao Cai, Ta Phin Village located about four kilometers off the center of town is awaiting your presence. Journey to Ta Phin Village Silk village – treasure of Hoi An If you are fortunate enough to take in the splendor that is Hoi An ancient town should not miss a new tour to Lang Lua (silk village). Silk village – treasure of Hoi An Con Co Island – floating green pearl Located close to the mainland, the small island of Con Co off Quang Tri Province has a long and interesting history of its own. Con Co Island – floating green pearl Discover the wonders of nature in Bao Loc Located 16 kilometers from Bao Loc city, through a wide tea farming area is the Dambri Waterfall, the most famous ecotourism site in Bao Loc. Discover the wonders of nature in Bao Loc Historic homes offer tranquil tourist retreat in Nha Trang The coastal city of Nha Trang is flanked by nearly 10km of white-sand coastline, where the clear waters are warm all year round. Historic homes offer tranquil tourist retreat in Nha Trang
Aug
08
More Cambodians Travelling Overseas This Year
PHNOM PENH, Aug 7 (Bernama) -- The number of Cambodia's outbound travellers rose to 389,000 in the first half of this year, according to the Tourism Ministry on Tuesday. Ho Vandy, co-chair of the Government-Private Working Group on Tourism Policy, said that thanks to visa exemption agreements and geographical proximity, most of the Cambodian travellers visited ASEAN countries of Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia. Other destinations were Kunming and Shanghai in China, Hong Kong and Macau, Xinhua news agency reported. Ho attributed the rise of Cambodian outbound visitors to improved standard of living and direct flight connections between Cambodia and the countries visited. A total of 293,100 Cambodians travelled overseas from January to June last year.
Jul
04
Review the charming feature of Krapum Chhouk Temple
Krapum Chhouk Temple is located in Romdos commune, Rovieng district, about 45 kilometers south of the provincial town. The laterite and sanstone temple was built in the late 10th century to worship Brahmanism.
Aug
01
Make a review about Royal Ploughing Ceremony In Cambodia
Although there are various other scientific methods to forecast the weather and to determine harvests, Cambodians have their methods to foretell the future. Through traditional rituals that are often ceremoniously celebrated nationwide, Cambodians are warned of calamities, assured of good harvest and so forth. The Royal Ploughing ceremony, or Pithi Chrat Preah Neanng Korl in Khmer, and the Festival of Water and full Moon Salutation, know as Pithi Bonn Om Touk and Ak Ambok Sampeah preah Kher in Khmer, are such ceremonies. Predictions gleaned from these traditional ceremonies for the coming year are taken very seriously. The Festival of Water and Full Moon Salutation is celebrated usually in late October. Drippings from burning candles predict rainfall distribution to provinces across the country. The Royal Ploughing Ceremony predicts the weather, epidemics and farming conditions. By observing what feed the royal oxen choose after the Royal Ploughing Ceremony, Cambodians believe they can predict a range of events including epidemics, floods, good harvests and excessive rainfall. This year, the Royal Ploughing Ceremony was held on May 12 at the Veal Preahmein Square, situated across the road from the northern perimeter of the Royal Palace. At the end of a symbolic Ploughing procession before His Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk, the royal oxen were relieved of their harnesses and led to seven golden trays containing rice, corn, sesame seeds, beans, grass, water and wine to feed. The royal oxen chose to eat out of only three trays this year and because their feast consisted of varying percentages of rice and corn while they largely ignored the trays of sesame seeds, grass, water and wine, prognostications were as follows: Farmers would enjoy a moderate output for their rice harvest but good yields in secondary crop production, especially corn and beans. Because the royal oxen only sniffed on the tray of water and turned away from the wine, the prediction was made that farmers would not suffer any serious floods. Every year, Cambodian farmers anxiously await the predictions at the end of this ritualistic ceremony, which they observe with strong faith and belief. Most Cambodians today still consult traditional manuals before making any major decisions regarding business matters or meeting important persons, etc. The Royal Ploughing Ceremony has been observed for many centuries at the initiative of an earlier Khmer king who had paid great attention to farming conditions of the people. Traditionally, the Pithi Chrat Pheah Neang Korl is performed in the month of the Khmer calendar and marks the beginning of the rainy season in Cambodia. When asked, most Cambodians stand staunchly by these traditional methods of predicting the future and vouch for their accuracy. It is comforting to believe that the angels are still watching over us. As they say in Cambodia, long live the Khmer traditions. Long Live Cambodia. "When the living relatives offer the food to the spirit, the spirit will bless them with happiness", he added. According to the monk, legend has it that Phchum Ben came about because relatives of King Bath Pempeksa defied religious customs and ate rice before the monks did during a religious ritual. After their death, they became evil spirits. He explained that later when a monk known as Kokak Sonthor gained enlightenment and became a Buddha on earth, all those evil spirits went to ask him "when can we eat?" The Buddha said "you have to wait for the next Buddha in the Kathakot Buddhist realm. In this realm, evil spirits cannot eat." When the next monk, Kamanou, achieved enlightenment and became a Buddha, all the evil spirits came again to ask the same question, and he gave the same answer as the previous Buddha.
Jul
30
Life still slow in Cambodian beach towns
A ninja delivers a high kick to a cow before punching it in the udder, and the cow, on its hind legs, squirts him with milk. The Cambodians on the bus around us roar with laughter. We're trundling along a two-lane highway in Cambodia's south, heading for the coast. It's sweltering in here, and the American kung-fu pastiche is the only entertainment on board. Outside, we pass statue after statue crowning highway roundabouts, all points of regional pride: a crab, a salt-panning couple, a Khmer princess standing atop a crocodile - and a rhinoceros, whose significance I can't decipher. This wasn't quite how I expected to find Cambodian history, in a country known more for the tragedy of its past than the quirks of its present. While the vast majority of visitors to the country flock to the magnificent temples of Angkor Wat in the West, smaller, quieter beach towns provide just as much of an insight to the Cambodian psyche. Kampot and Kep are two coastal spots that visitors are slowly discovering - with an emphasis on the slow. Life here is not to be rushed. One of Indochina's best-preserved colonial-era towns, Kampot sits by the Teuk Chhou River, its French shophouses casting long shadows in the deep gold light of sunset. It's best enjoyed with a - what else? - Angkor brew at one of the many relaxed waterfront bars, or from a longtail boat puttering out past fishermen returning to town for the night. In the countryside beyond the giant durian that crowns Kampot's largest roundabout lies a patchwork of golden dry-season grasses, white cows, and unexpected red earth thrown up by the ubiquitous motorcycles. We hire a tuktuk for the day and drive out of town and away from its dusty, frontier-like bustle. The region is known for its durian (a tropical fruit infamous for its foul smell), seafood, peppercorn, and salt farms, and we're off to see a quieter side of the country, away from the rapid development of the big cities, with their teetering high-rises, honking traffic and tangled power lines. In the early morning light, we squint out across the blinding salt plain, watching women methodically stamping the clay in preparation for salt collection while quietly chanting. Kampot pepper during the colonial era was a mainstay for the best chefs of Paris, and is still widely exported. We wander amongst the pepper trees, nibbling the small red fruit around the seed, crunching down for the flare of sharp flavour that is a reminder of the tiny grain's potency. Cambodia is racing to catch up to its neighbours after the murderous Khmer Rouge regime froze progress in the 1960s, and it's visible everywhere. Enormous satellite dishes protrude from behind traditional wooden houses, and at temples hidden deep out among farmland, monks chat on mobile phones. And as we travel away from the coast, past tiny villages whose inhabitants stop to watch the occasional tuktuk or moto pass by, we find a group of children who can greet us in several languages. "Hello! Bonjour! Buenos dias!" they crow, clamouring to lead us up the hill, showing off their fathers' plots of spinach and cabbage, telling us they hope to become doctors one day. Kep-sur-mer, an hour east along the narrow coast road, was founded in the early 1900s as a beachside escape for the French and Cambodian elite, and still boasts an elegant waterfront promenade where families gather. Children clamber on the huge crab statue, swinging from its claws. Couples stroll hand in hand in the afternoon sun, looking out across the Gulf of Thailand. The market sells fresh crab and fried fish laid out on large leaves, local women swatting away stray dogs that venture too near. And if Kep still feels too big, Rabbit Island is only 20 minutes away across the water. The main beach boasts still waters, a few bungalows and seafood restaurants, and a green, hilly interior. Chickens run under hammocks strung between palm trees, and it's hard to see why tourists have so far shunned this spot in favour of the louder, sleazier Sihanoukville - although perhaps it's a blessing. Our tuktuk putters along the sun-dappled coast road, curving out along the water, overlooked by ruined 1950s villas. Slowly being reclaimed by the land, these buildings are ravaged by bullet holes, with empty, staring windows and vines creeping along doorways. Once-elaborate brick fences now hold only long grass. Cows graze where once were living rooms, unconcerned. We wander around the front yard of a sprawling mansion our driver tells us once belonged to a Prime Minister. Squatters have moved in, laundry flapping in the yard. A baby's cry drifts from an upstairs window. Through the open front door, we can see a charred grand staircase. Cambodia's bright-seeming present is inextricably intertwined with its past, glimpses of which, like these war-riddled houses, are never far away, kung-fu cows notwithstanding. IF YOU GO There are no direct flights between Australian cities and Phnom Penh. Singapore Airlines (www.singaporeair.com), Malaysia Airlines (www.malaysiaairlines.com), and Thai Airways (www.thaiairways.com.au) all offer flights from major Australian cities to Phnom Penh with one stop; typical travel time via Bangkok is about 12 hours. Kampot is 148km from Phnom Penh and buses depart regularly during the morning for the four-hour trip. Sihanoukville is 105km west of Kampot, and minibus tickets cost about AUD$3. Kep is 25km from Kampot towards Phnom Penh, and a tuktuk day hire costs about AUD$15, depending on your negotiation skills.
Aug
20
Discover the highlights of Phnom Penh – Cambodia
Far from the gleaming skyscrapers of modern Southeast Asian capitals such as Bangkok or Kuala Lumpur, Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh is a dusty and edgy yet somewhat enchanting city of crumbling colonial architecture, wide boulevards and chaotic markets. It is gradually modernising, with a few contemporary skyscrapers appearing on the skyline and the popular riverside promenade (Sisowath Quay) now lined with lively cafés, juice bars, hostels, hotels and restaurants – many of them filled with backpackers and other travellers. Despite that, however, Phnom Penh still has an edge and atmosphere found in few other Southeast Asian capitals. Some elements of the city are quite charming, such as the ramshackle market stalls and historic temples, while others can prove to be quite the opposite: tiny children gathering recycling from bins to make a few Riel for their family, and amputee beggars vying for tourists’ pockets. While most visits to the city are trouble-free, always watch your pockets and bags as there is a great deal of poverty in Phnom Penh that gives rise to opportunist theft. At the same time, look after your health by following the usual travel health tips such as avoiding ice in drinks (unless it’s from a trusted source) and always using a good mosquito repellent , particularly from dusk onwards, to protect yourself against malaria and dengue fever. Silver Pagoda at the Royal Palace, Phnom Penh Photo: Kirk Siang on Flickr Silver Pagoda at the Royal Palace, Phnom Penh The main tourist sights of Phnom Penh Dominating the city centre’s sightseeing attractions is the 19th century Royal Palace, including the fabulous Palace Grounds, Silver Pagoda and Temple of the Emerald Buddha. It’s open from 8am, and this is the best time to visit to avoid the heat. You’ll need to wear something decent to cover legs and shoulders, or you can hire a sarong and large t-shirt for a small fee at the entrance. Another central sight is the National Museum of Cambodia, which features an interesting collection of art from Cambodia’s ‘Golden Age’ of Angkor, alongside statues of Hindu Gods, ancient inscribed tablets and prehistoric burial artefacts. At its centre there is a lovely courtyard with a statue of Yama, the Hindu god of death (or the ‘Leper King’) taken from the Terrace of the Leper King in Angkor Archaeological Park. Garden at the National Museum of Cambodia Photo: mookE on Flickr Garden at the National Museum of Cambodia A must-see sight for anyone who wants to better understand Cambodia’s horrific past during the Khmer Rouge’s four-year campaign of terror is the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum. This school, which was converted into the country’s most notorious prison (‘S21′) in 1975, housed more than 14,000 people who were tortured and then killed and buried at the Killing Fields just outside of the city. Only eight prisoners made it out of the prison alive. Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum Photo: timmarec of Flickr Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum You can hire a taxi or tuk-tuk for the 17km trip out of town to the tranquil yet moving Killing Fields of Choeung Ek. A glass-sided Buddhist stupa containing thousands of human skulls lies at the heart of the mass graves that were discovered in 1979. Perhaps one of the city’s most bizarre attractions, which commission-earning tuk-tuk drivers will be quick to tell you about and encourage you to visit, is the Thunder Ranch Shooting Range. Situated near the Killing Fields, it is said to be run by a unit of the Royal Cambodian Army, and for a relatively high fee you can try shooting pistols or machine guns at paper targets. Many tuk-tuk drivers will try to include it in a ‘package’ with the Killing Fields, but if you don’t want to go there just make it clear that you’re not interested. And relax… After a hard day’s sightseeing, treat your aching limbs to a massage – there are plenty of spa places around the main tourist areas, prices are cheap, and the massage is generally very relaxing. This post is brought to you by Gap Year Travel Store – where you can find equipment for backpackers and independent travellers Photo credits: Phnom Penh riverside by judithbluepool, Silver Pagoda by Kirk Siang, National Museum Garden by mookE, Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum by timmarec. This article is originally published at Heatheronhertravels.com - Read more travel articles at Travel Blog Home You’ll also find our sister blog with tips on how to build a successful travel blog at My Blogging Journey
Aug
01
Cambodia's dark tourism trail
An local villager bathes in a flooded wooden area in front of a small brick house which locals say was used to hold the late despot Pol Pot while under house arrest in the former Khmer Rouge stronghold of Anlong Veng. Want to see Pol Pot's grave or his broken toilet seat? How about a visit to the house of a feared Khmer Rouge commander known as “The Butcher”? Welcome to the town of Anlong Veng, a former Khmer Rouge stronghold which hopes to become the next must-see destination on Cambodia's dark tourism trail, but which faces calls not to glorify its role in the country's bloody past. A rectangular mound of earth lined with half-buried glass bottles and protected by a corrugated iron roof marks the spot where Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot was hastily cremated in 1998. Aside from a sign asking visitors to “please help to preserve this historical site” there is no information on offer, leaving Cambodian tourist Pov Dara, 27, to ponder the significance of the low-key grave. “I feel sad for the people but not for him,” she decides, after snapping a photo of her relatives flashing the peace sign. Up to two million people died from overwork, starvation or execution when the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, attempted to create a communist utopia in the late 1970s. His cremation site, which attracts some 10 visitors a day, is one of 14 tourist spots the government intends to “preserve and develop” in northern Cambodia's Anlong Veng. Other places of interest include leaders' old homes and a rusty radio truck used to broadcast Khmer Rouge propaganda. Impoverished Cambodia is no stranger to genocide tourism, with the Tuol Sleng torture centre in Phnom Penh and the nearby Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, where thousands died, among the nation's most popular attractions. But while the focus at those sites is on victims of the 1975-1979 regime, Anlong Veng is populated by one-time loyal Khmer Rouge followers, giving it the feel of a town that has found itself on the wrong side of history. ‘Cambodia's memories are not for sale’ As locals relish the lucrative prospect of welcoming more tourists to the once isolated area, observers stress the need to educate guests about Cambodia's history - and avoid turning the destination into a Khmer Rouge nostalgia tour. To that end, the tourism ministry has teamed up with the esteemed Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which researches Khmer Rouge atrocities. The centre is preparing to publish a guidebook based on the stories of long-time residents and it is training tour guides to provide meaningful information about “what happened and why during the Khmer Rouge regime's final days”, said the group's director Youk Chhang. A museum is also planned. But it is important not to exploit the country's tragic past, he told AFP. Cambodia's memories are “not for sale”, he said. “We have the responsibility to ensure that Anlong Veng is a historical and responsible site to educate the public.” The Khmer Rouge was ousted by Vietnamese forces in 1979, though regime leaders and supporters continued to wage a low-level guerrilla war against the government. Anlong Veng, near the Thai border, was the Khmer Rouge's last rebel centre before the movement disintegrated in the late 1990s. One of the best-preserved visitor sites in town is the lakeside home of late military commander Ta Mok, known as “The Butcher” for allegedly orchestrating brutal massacres that killed thousands, although locals remember him as a generous leader who gave the town a road, a bridge, a hospital and a school. Ta Mok, who briefly led the Khmer Rouge in its final days, was the only rebel who refused to surrender or strike a deal with the government after Pol Pot's death. He was arrested a year later and died in prison in 2006 awaiting trial. His airy house is little more than a shell today, its furniture looted long ago. But several walls are still adorned with colourful yet amateurish murals of temples and a map of Cambodia Ä symbols of Ta Mok's patriotism, according to the site's caretaker San Roeung, himself an ex-Khmer Rouge soldier. “A lot of people here liked Ta Mok. When the enemy came, he took people to safety,” said the 60-year-old, who helped build the house as well as the two cages outside used to hold Ta Mok's enemies. He added that he hoped an influx of visitors would improve living standards for locals, who could “grow mangoes or jackfruit to sell to tourists”. ‘I'd call it the killing camera' Few are more excited about the town's tourism potential than Anlong Veng district deputy governor Nhem En - who was the chief photographer at Tuol Sleng, where he endlessly captured images of inmates awaiting certain death. A Khmer Rouge insider until he defected in the mid-1990s, Nhem En has built up a huge archive of photos, as well as a bizarre collection of keepsakes such as Pol Pot's sandals, his uniform and his shattered toilet seat. Now he is looking for a partner to help set up a private museum to display his treasures, he said, having apparently given up on the idea of selling key items in the hope of earning hundreds of thousands of dollars. “These items might not be worth much financially but, in historical terms, they're invaluable,” he told AFP at his home, after showing some of his favourite possessions. “This camera, if I put it in a museum, I would call it the killing camera,” he said, as he held up a vintage Rolleicord, “because all of the people in Tuol Sleng who came before it died.” Nhem En insists he was not in a position to help any prisoners, all he could do was “follow orders” and “mind his own business”. Tuol Sleng prison chief Duch was in February sentenced to life in jail by Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court, the first person to face justice for horrors committed under the regime. The court is now trying the three most senior surviving Khmer Rouge members, but Nhem En has little interest in the proceedings, preferring to muse about Anlong Veng's nascent tourism industry. The ancient temples of Angkor, which attract more than a million visitors a year, are a mere two-hour drive away, and Nhem En believes that if a fraction of those visitors added Anlong Veng to their itinerary, his town, with its plentiful guesthouses and restaurants, would benefit considerably. “Anlong Veng will not go backwards,” he said, though he emphasised that his own collection of memorabilia is about more than just profiting from his time with the Khmer Rouge. “I'm doing this to make the world understand more about the Khmer Rouge regime,” he said. - Sapa-AFP
Jul
10
PATA Cambodia promotes table tops
PHNOM PENH, 6 July 2012: Pacific Asia Travel Association Cambodia Chapter is inviting tourism players to join its second table-top sales event, 9 August, at the InterContinental Phnom Penh Hotel. The Chapter expects around 60 buyers and 80 sellers to join the second event. The first event attracted just 21 buyers and 16 sellers. Buyers are defined as traditional travel agencies selling outbound tours to Cambodia, or multi-destination tours in the Mekong Region that feature Cambodia. Kuala Lumpur In addition online travel agencies and hotel booking websites that channel hotel bookings to hotels in the region would be included as buyers. The Chapter hopes to use the events to build networking and business opportunities between the various tourism players representing hotels, airlines and specialised travel companies Registration is open now for both sellers and buyers with the fee for buyers set at US$20 for PATA members and US$30 for non-members. Sellers fees depend on the categories: Airlines, hotels, restaurants, spas, transport companies US$50 (PATA members) and US$100 (non-members); tourism organisations, handicraft shops and tour guides US$30 (PATA members) and US$50 (non-members) and co-delegates US$20 (PATA members) and US$30 (non-members). The table-top sale aims to strengthen business relations among tourism entrepreneurs in Cambodia as well as increasing awareness of the various tourism components and the need to work closely together. PATA has been building its presence in the Mekong Region with new Chapters formed recently including one in Myanmar and Laos (still to be officially registered). During the recent Mekong Tourism Forum, committee members from the various Chapters met in Chiang Rai to discuss cross-border co-operation at the private sector level using the PATA platform to improve communications betweeen the Chapter members in the Mekong Region.
Sep
13
Coffee colonialism in Laos
VIENTIANE - It is an increasingly familiar tale in Laos: poor farmers are pushed off their ancestral lands by corrupt local officials to make way for capital-rich, foreign-invested plantation agriculture. But the tenacity of one small group of agrarians who are fighting back has revealed the abuse of power that attends many Lao land dealings, representing a landmark case in the country's often opaque and obscure authoritarian politics. In a classic David versus Goliath struggle, farmers in Paksong, southern Laos find themselves pitted against Singaporean coffee company Outspan Boloven, a subsidiary of agribusiness giant Olam International. The company won a government concession to plant coffee on what the protesting agrarians claim were illegally seized lands. The farmers have staged rare protests in communist-run Laos, bringing national attention to their grass roots plight and perceived high level corruption in the land deal. Puan, a thin, angular-faced man involved in the fight, said during a recent trip to the national capital to air grievances, "We will die for our land." A Vientiane-based Lao lawyer, who declined to be named because he is providing informal legal advice to the group, agrees that violence is often the only recourse for farmers victimized by state-backed land-grabbing. "Maybe some have to die so that the world takes notice of what is happening in this country - the misuse of power, the suppression of protest," he said. A delegation of the aggrieved farmers first came to Vientiane in late February and by several accounts were heavily harassed by officials, forcing them to move between safe houses. An interview on national radio with the group's members is believed to have triggered one popular call-in program's cancellation (see Off the air in Laos, Asia Times Online, February 22, '12). Apart from protests, the group has twice pleaded for intervention with the legal department of Laos' National Assembly, each time presenting detailed dossiers of their claims to the land to the Petitions Office. Both times officials' have made empty promises to investigate the situation, they claim. The Vientiane-based Land Issues Working Group (LIWG), a nongovernmental organization that has supported the case, is known to have mediated with Outspan Boloven representatives and on behalf of the group approached the local Singapore Embassy. Those efforts, however, have so far failed to cool grass roots passions. "We don't want an agreement; we want our land back. They [company representatives] came to the area last week but no one talked to us. They should leave," Puan insisted, the rest of his group nodding in agreement. Profitable brew Lao coffee, like Lao beer, is now internationally renowned. The organic coffee grown by smallholder farmers on the Boloven Plateau commands premium prices in global markets, and has fueled a surge of trendy coffee shops in Lao cities. The rich volcanic soils and conducive climate of the country's southern plateau has recently attracted foreign investors to the organic growing region. In 2010, Sonexay Siphandone, Governor of Champasak province and former Communist Party Secretary, granted Outspan Boloven the use of 150 hectares of prime agricultural land on a 30 year concession basis. Siphandone hails from one of the country's most powerful political families, with known commercial interests spanning hydropower, hotels and land holdings. The concession represented the maximum amount of land that could be legally granted by a provincial authority; larger concession land areas require national level approval. LIWG noted in a report that under such concessions companies often start clearing land after receiving the maximum plots allowed by the provincial government while their request for more land is pending in Vientiane. In the case of Outspan Boloven, LIWG notes, the clearing had been ongoing while national approval was still pending. Over the protests of local farmers, the company expanded its original 150-hectare plantation to more than 1,100 hectares, impinging on over 140 hectares of productive village lands, burning high value trees such as rosewoods and teak, and desecrating graveyards and ancestral shrines in the clearing process, according to aggrieved farmers. Already 1,460 hectares have been planted with coffee, and the company has announced plans to expand its holdings to 3,000 hectares. "Companies often destroy graveyards and shrines to eradicate claims of ancestral ownership and demoralize communities," said Scotland-based filmmaker Serge Marti, drawing parallels between what is happening now in Laos to palm oil development in Indonesia. Video shot in the contested area in Paksong a week before the delegation arrived in Vientiane showed piles of burnt and smoking timber and bamboo clumps. Bare earth exposed by company bulldozers is ringed by openly distraught villagers. "Outspan gave the villagers 20 tons of rice three years ago. That was for over 1,000 people. But in the long run how can the families of Nong Mek, Nong Tua Nong Hin and Nong Tiem [villages] live?" asked the filmmaker who declined to be named for reasons of security. "We will have to send emergency food aid down to the families that are starving." Puan, an unofficial delegation leader, opened a red ledger that accounts for the local losses incurred by the Outspan Boloven plantation: 205 hectares of productive forest, 10 hectares of encroached housing land, 71 hectares of watershed forest and 14 hectares of specialty incense bark trees felled to make way for the Singaporean company's coffee trees. His accounting shows that some 52 families have lost all of their land and income sources, including the uprooting of their own coffee trees. None of the affected families were compensated for the land or their loss of livelihoods, nor were any formal agreements or contracts signed with village leaders, he says. Soon after the agreement with the governor's office came into force, Outspan Boloven brought in tractors and leveled the ground without any local consultations. "They worked day and night. The noise and light did not allow us to sleep," Puan grumbled. "We went out and tried to stop them, but they told us we had no rights anymore as the land had been granted by the governor." Soumpheng, a village head in the area settled by the ethnic Nya Hitun/Yahern minority, takes issue with that interpretation. He says attempts to get an explanation from the local district and provincial offices were met variously with obfuscation, lies and threats. "The land was granted to us by the (former) Royal Lao Government in 1901…The French colonials brought coffee in 1954 [and] later we fought to make them leave our land, just like we fought against the Americans. So we are veterans of fighting and are unafraid," he said. "After the socialist government forbade shifting cultivation, we had no trouble diversifying. We planted lots of commercial trees and other subsistence crops. The money we got enabled us to pay our land tax. We have been awarded certificates of appreciation because we always paid our taxes on time," he added. LIWG's analysis supports the basis of these complaints. "Clearance of crops appears to have taken place before permission was given by village leaders in regard of private and crop-cultivated communal land, although the survey report said that Outspan [Boloven] should obtain permission from village leaders first before clearing." Damage control Olam International, an integrated agricultural produce supply company, is among Singapore's top 40 largest companies, with a multinational presence in 65 countries worldwide. The company claims to be among the world's largest suppliers of coffee, sesame, cocoa, rice, spices, peanuts, cotton and tropical hardwood products, supplying over 11,000 different customers. Coffee from the first harvested Outspan Boloven crop has already been exported to California, according to the company. The company's local office could not be reached for comment, but its central office in Singapore responded to queries about the controversy through Gong Communications, a London-based public relations company. Sara Firouzyar, a Gong Communications representative, said Olam International was concerned about the local protests against the plantation. "We believed in good faith that we had followed national laws and relevant processes," she said. Firouzyar said the company first learned about the protests from LIWG, rather than the subsidiary's representatives, and that an independent three-person team - comprised of one Lao and two Dutch nationals - had since been engaged to investigate and perform an audit on the situation. Firouzyar said that Olam also promised to hold 12 stakeholder meetings, which, if they happen, mused long-time Lao resident Richard Hollis, in an email, "may cast unwanted light on government corruption and ineptitude." At the same time, she maintained that the project was consistent with "Olam's Livelihood Charter", which states the company aims "to bring prosperity to our farming and rural communities. We build long-term relationships based on fairness and trust. We seek to transfer skills and knowledge through partnerships." Olam International declined to respond to how the company would meet the demands of protesting farmers who are fighting for a return of their seized ancestral lands. "We are also actively recruiting a qualified, local community specialist to be based in Laos to ensure that we are able to build strong local relationships going forward," said Firouzyar. At the time of this writing, the composition of those committees was still being negotiated. Some hope that Olam International's apparent willingness to negotiate might provide Lao civil society with a much needed fillip, as well as provide a lightning rod for land rights reform. Laos ranks 158th out of 180 countries surveyed on Transparency International's global corruption perception index, a ranking influenced by a recent surge in official land grabbing. Although not reported in the state-controlled press, land grabbing is fueling rising rural unrest across the country, according to NGOs monitoring the situation. They feel that Governor Siphandone's role in granting the controversial Outspan Boloven concession, as well as similar land concessions he has given in the area to Vietnamese agribusiness investors, should be opened to public scrutiny. Farmers like Puan, however, have lost all faith in official channels for transparency and justice. "This is our dignity and our lives" he said. "We are not afraid to die."
Sep
27
Heed the call of Cambodia
CAMBODIA is emerging as the newest Asian hot spot for Australian travellers, with a 44 per cent rise in the number of Australian visitors in July, compared with the same month last year. And Japan is bouncing back following last year's earthquake and tsunami, with numbers also increasing by 44 per cent in July. Visitors to India rose by 16 per cent, followed by China (up 10 per cent), Singapore (9 per cent) and Taiwan, Hong Kong and Vietnam (8 per cent), Australian Bureau of Statistics arrivals and departures figures show. But, overall, Australia's love affair with Bali continues, with Indonesia still the most popular destination, followed by Thailand. APT sales manager Scott Ellis says travellers are heading to Cambodia because it isn't as commercialised as other parts of Asia. "Our clients are wanting to go and experience the region before it does get commercialised," Ellis says. "Over the last few years, Vietnam has got a lot more popular and Cambodia seems to be following on from there," he says. "Laos will be next - we're doing a few tours that go to Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos now." APT sponsors an orphanage in Siem Reap in Cambodia and Ellis says guests love visiting the nearby school and interacting with the children. "People are loving that responsible side of travel." He says sales to China have also almost doubled this year as more airlines fly there from Australia. "I think people want to go and have a bit of a history lesson." Helen Wong's Tours has also seen interest in tours combining Cambodia and Vietnam soar, with its 15-day Angkor and Vietnam Discovery Tour rising about 50 per cent over the past year. Its 12-day Glimpse of Vietnam is the company's most popular itinerary, but it has also seen a 25 per cent rise in sales for its 17-day Best of Vietnam tour, which includes a train journey to mountainous Sapa in the north, as well as visits to Halong Bay, Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Hue, Hoi An and the Mekong Delta. Accor senior vice-president Paul Richardson says Australians are looking beyond Shanghai and Beijing in China and turning their attention to emerging regional and resort destinations. The company opened the 5-star Pullman in Lijiang in northwestern China's Yunnan province last year, a popular area for tourists on their second or third trip to China. "With narrow, cobbled streets, traditional wooden houses and canals, the city is a charming base," Richardson says. "In nearby areas there are spectacular waterfalls, trekking, Tiger Leaping Gorge and a therapeutic poolside open space." Travel Indochina says more people are booking specialty tours, such as culinary, cycling and family tours or to newer destinations such as Bhutan and Mongolia, especially around festivals and events. The company has a new tour to the little-known mountainous region of Ha Giang in Vietnam. Trafalgar is introducing Asia into its portfolio from next April, with guided holidays to China, Japan and Vietnam. "We know that Asia is perennially popular with Australian travellers ... hence we have responded to consumer demand by introducing the inimitable Trafalgar difference to the region," Trafalgar managing director Matthew Cameron-Smith says.
Jul
03
Iran invites Cambodian PM to attend Non-Aligned Movement Conference in Tehran
The Islamic Republic of Iran on Wednesday invited Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen to attend the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Conference to be held in Tehran in late September, according to officials. The invitation was extended to Hun Sen by Mohammad Ali Fathollahi, special envoy of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, on Wednesday at the Peace Palace, Eang Sophalleth, spokesman for Prime Minister Hun Sen, told reporters after the meeting. Mohammad Ali Fathollahi said currently, there are a lot political events happening around the world and the NAM conference will be used to seek peace and stability for the world. Hun Sen accepted the invitation and promised to join the conference. He said that it was very vital to strengthen the role of the NAM on international arena in order to bring peace and stability to people in the world. Meanwhile, the premier, on the bilateral ties, asked Iran to expand relations and cooperation with Cambodia in the fields of trade and tourism in addition to existing political and diplomatic cooperation.
Jul
18
Colombia tourism uses travel domain
When it was time for Proexport, the official tourism promotion organization for Colombia, to launch its new Internet portal, Colombia.travel, it logically saw the inherent impact that .travel would have as a marketing tool for the world tourism industry. The goal of Colombia.travel is to raise the profile of Colombia as a world tourism destination. With interactive media, multiple languages, and fresh content, the .travel website is a popular Internet website. Proexport and Colombia use .travel in TV commercials, informative mailings, worldwide tourism fairs, posters, shirts, maps, bags, and all other marketing materials. Colombia.travel is THE Internet tool for the promotion of international tourism to Colombia. Colombia is not the only country in South America that has adopted the .travel domain. Argentina.travel and TurismoChile.travel have also recently come on board to join the ranks of many other world destinations. To learn more about the breathtaking beauty of the Amazon, the Carnival festivities of Barranquilla, or the Coffee Triangle, please visit www.Colombia.travel .
Aug
01
A review about Cambodia culture
The lines of culture distinguishing one country from another are blurring. The globalization of technology, information and finance has allowed wealthy countries to export not only their political and economic ideologies to developing countries but their traditions and values as well. The Cambodian government has made aggressive rhetorical efforts to preserve the integrity of traditional Khmer culture, but younger generations are hungry for a change. In a seemingly uphill battle to maintain cultural identity in an increasingly homogeneous global community, one man has made it his mission to preserve the past for future generations. From household items and clothes to jewelry and sculpture, Liv Saa Em's private collection is one of the largest in Cambodia. "It is my favorite thing to do since I was young. I like to keep antiques in my house because my parents bought a lot of antiques from villagers to keep at their house. Upon first glance, Liv Saa Em could be mistaken for an ancient Khmer man in his traditional dress. Ancient relics adorn his house as well, stretching from the front door into the darkest corners. The building is his sanctuary; a place Liv Saa Em says keeps him smiling. Visitors to the house, which doubles as a museum, often have offered the collector money for his goods. But Liv Saa Em's mission is to maintain Khmer culture for Cambodia. His message: History is not for sale. The robbery of Khmer artifacts, for sale to foreign countries, is a rising concern. In efforts to preserve the integrity of Cambodia's tangible history, the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts recently prohibited the exportation of artifacts from Cambodia to Vietnam and Thailand. Liv Saa Em agrees with the act's passage, as he too works to preserve artifacts so that all of Cambodia may enjoy them in years to come. Khmer Silk Khmer silk collection Since the tender age of 13, Liv Saa Em has taken the cue of his parents, who were avid collectors. Now preserving artifacts is not only a hobby--it's a mission. "I'm very upset when I see our artifacts exported to neighboring countries," he said. "We know that they are really Khmer artifacts, but I have no ability to take them back to the country." Even when it is not in transit, safeguarding art is not always easy. Liv Saa Em said artifacts kept in the National Museum cannot be promised security, and his house in Tang Yab, Prey Kabas district of Takeo province is no better. Pieces of history were shattered in 1976 when young Khmer Rouge soldiers destroyed his parents' house and the artifacts in it. Unable to forget the loss, Liv Saa Em has made a conscious effort to buy pieces for his private collection at home. Trading medicine or rice for art, the collector has purchased relics from Takeo, Kampong Speu and Phnom Penh. Now Liv Saa Em's reputation for collecting precedes him, and tourists that visit his home hoping to make a purchase are always denied. "I love Khmer artifacts and I love to keep them forever," Liv Saa Em said. Liv Saa Em's love affair with the past started when he was just a boy. "I wore simple cloth like other people when I was young," he said. But after completing his studies, Liv Saa Em developed a style of his own. Entering adulthood, he wore the ancient Khmer cloth donned by people of the Funan period and shaved his head so that only a tuft of hair sat atop the middle of his crown. Businessmen raised Liv Saa Em, the youngest son of a nine-member family that often dressed in traditional Khmer clothing. He was the most beloved of the lot then. Today he is alone. Liv Saa Em's brothers, sisters and parents perished during the war. Struggling to overcome the loss of his family, Liv Saa Em filled his time honing his skills as a silk maker. He mixes together a rainbow of colors to produce the vibrant fabric that is exported to Japan today and earned him the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts' Award for Best Quality Producing in 1993. His Excellency Nut Narang, the former Minister of Culture and Fine Arts, personally recognized Liv Saa Em as the first successful producer of best quality silk following Pol Pot's regime. His creativity is unceasing. Liv Saa Em rearranges the relics in his house to assume a new look every week. In the afternoon visitors can find the collector sitting amidst his artifacts, which he says are a comfort to him. The house, an increasingly popular tourist destination, has drawn curious visitors from around the country and the world. Movie production companies have made the trip as well, using his traditional house for the backdrop to particular scenes. Liv Saa Em preserves the past to protect the future. Concerned that irresponsible development could damage ancient artifacts, the collector suggested that Cambodia develop a tourism industry based on the riches of Khmer artifacts and temples.
Jul
18
The change of temple fees
SIEM REAP, Apsara National Authority will increase entrance fees at Angkor Wat once a feasibility study has been concluded by tourism experts. Apsara has the exclusive rights to all temple complexes in Siem Reap, but very little is divulged on how much of the fees charged filter through to the local economy. Apsara general director, Bun Narith, said experts were determining if it was feasible to increase entrance fees at Cambodia’s UNESCO World Heritage site. “They are looking at ways to increase ticket sales before providing recommendations to the government, which approves fee increases.” Mr Narith added: “The plan is not to directly increase the general entrance fee of US$20 for a one-day pass, but use the fee structure to steer tourists towards lesser-visited temples in the park to ease congestion and wear and tear at Angkor Wat.” Cambodia Association of Travel Agents president, Ang Kim Eang, said the study was a welcome move as it would look at the largest tourist attraction and the price charged for entrance, which was much lower than fees charged in other heritage sites around the world. However, he cited that a higher entrance fee was not necessary at this time. “We welcome the study, but it should not be used to add a burden on tourists.” The entrance fees to Angkor Wat start at US$20 for international visitors for a one-day pass, US$40 for a three-day visit and US$60 for the entire week. More than 2 million foreign and domestic tourists visit the site in Siem Reap annually. In 2011, the temples attracted 1.6 million foreign visitors, an increase of 23%. They had to pay a minimum of US$20 to tour the complex providing a rough estimate of the gate value for the company that handles the business. The Angkor archeological park is the Cambodia’s largest cultural tourism destination located 315 km from the capital Phnom Penh.
Jul
11
Cambodia bans smoking at famed Angkor temples
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Cambodia is banning smoking at the Angkor temple archaeological site. A government official said Thursday the rule will promote the health and comfort of visitors and prevent forest fires. Tan Sambu said "No smoking" signs will be added and workers will help spread the word under the effort started Wednesday. He is vice secretary general of the Apsara Authority that manages the temples. More than 2 million foreign and domestic tourists visit the site in Siem Reap in the country's northwest annually. The structures were built from the ninth to the 14th century.
Jul
24
Cambodian, UN drug senior officials meet to enhance cooperation
PHNOM PENH, July 23 -- Cambodian and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) senior officials met here on Monday to discuss ways to strengthen and expand cooperation in drug combat. Drug is still a matter of concern to Cambodia as criminals have used and attempted to use the country as a drug transit point and a base for illegal drug production for exporting to the third country, Ke Kim Yan, chairman of the National Authority for Combating Drugs, said in the meeting. However, he said, the country has subsequently smashed down and the perpetrators have been seriously punished in accordance to the law. For instance, he said, on July 14, the drug authority had seized the largest ever drug-production equipment and 19 tons of chemical substances thought to be precursor ingredients for illicit drug manufacturing. He said those equipment and chemical substances in containers were confiscated at the Sihanoukville Autonomous Port as criminals tried to import them to Cambodia. In the meeting, Gary Lewis, UNODC Regional Representative for East Asia and the Pacific, hailed Cambodia for its largest ever drug crackdown. He said that the UNODC will continue helping Cambodia in drug issues including drug rehabilitation project, law enforcement, and equipment and supplies for drug fight. It is estimated that Cambodia has between 5,000 and 6,000 drug users, most of them are youths.
Aug
28
Tackling tourism issues
It’s standing room only at the temples during a typical sunrise crush. Photograph: Dave Perkes/Phnom Penh Post Tourism authorities are concerned that the role of Siem Reap’s Cambodian tour guides catering to Korean tourists is being usurped by interpreters, with the tour guides being relegated to mere porters. This is mainly due to the lack of tour guides who can converse in the Korean language, and is just one of a myriad of problems arising out of the rapid increase of tourists at the temples. The issue was raised during the Reinforce Tour Guides meeting at City Angkor Hotel on August 13. A tour guide claimed that Korean interpreters look down on Cambodian tour guides and cited an instance where an interpreter treated a Cambodian guide as a “slave,” and “spoke violently,” wounding the tour guide’s pride. He said Korean interpreters always act as though they are the guides, and make the official Cambodian guides carry the tourists’ stuff, such as water and umbrellas. Tith Chantha, Director General of the Ministry of Tourism, said the solution is down to the actions of the Cambodian guides who need to comport themselves in a manner that will engender respect. But he added that all tour guides must be Cambodian, and not recruited from other nationalities such as Korean. He said, “The government has to protect the rights of Cambodian tour guides by allowing only Cambodian people to work in this career. Interpreters are just people who work temporarily when they are needed. “The Tourism Ministry provides interpreters with legal paperwork to work for only six months to translate what the tour guide has said when there are no Korean-speaking Cambodia guides available.” He added that the problem has been exacerbated by the increase in the numbers of Korean tourists. “We have only 123 Korean-speaking guides,” he said, “And Korean tourists are increasing. We now receive more than 30,000 Korean tourists every year. Sometimes our Korean guides are not available, and then we need help from Korean interpreters.” But he stressed, “Please do not confuse the issue and think that the Tourism Ministry will allow Korean people to work as guides in Cambodia. They are to work as interpreters only. Only Cambodians can work as guides because they know clearly about Cambodian culture and history.” Ngov Seng Kak, director of the Tourism Department in Siem Reap also weighed in, pointing out that there had been a 32 per cent rise in tourism at Angkor in the first six months of this year, compared to the same period last year. He said, “Cambodia still needs to improve human resources in regard to the Korean language, and other languages such as Vietnam and Russian. But we respect our Cambodian guides because only they can describe the truth of our history to tourists.” But the Korean interpreter saga was only a side issue at the seminar. In a long discussion, the Minister of Tourism, Thong Khun explored the major problem that will affect Angkor tourism by 2020 – the ever increasing number of visitors. Cambodia expects visitor numbers to the Kingdom to increase to about 7 million tourists annually, with 4 million visiting Siem Reap Angkor. He said, “There will be 10,000 international tourists and 10,000 local visitors visiting Angkor Wat temple everyday. How can we manage our temple with this massive flow of the tourists in that period? “Recently the Tourism Ministry as well the Apsara Authority have resolved to find the best method to protect our temples.” Meanwhile, the third meeting of the ACMECS Tourism Working Group meeting was held at the Angkor Paradise Hotel on August 14, to discuss the enhancement of the intra-regional cooperation on tourism sector. ACMECS is the economic cooperation framework known as the ‘Ayeyawady-Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy’ of the member nations – Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. The meeting centered on the promotion and advertising of a common tourism-market in the region with the ‘Five Countries, One Tourism Destination’ strategy. This will facilitate tourist transits at international borders and connect flights among the member nations with international flights. Tith Chantha, Cambodia’s Director General of Tourism, said the strategy is a cooperation framework between member countries to exploit diverse strengths and promote balanced development. He said, “We will try to determine how best we can further link up and develop our national and cultural tourism products in an environmentally sustainable and responsible manner by promoting and marketing them to international market. “I am strongly convinced that the sub regional travel facilitation is another key priority for us to tackle for our own citizens and the third nations traveling in our region as we aim to attract more intraregional and international visitors.” He noted that Cambodia and Thailand have embarked on a single visa pilot project, which hopefully will soon be activated. He stressed that intraregional tourism markets are really important, and the increase in visitor numbers from Vietnam, Lao PDR and Thailand is “remarkable.”
Aug
25
Sihanoukville ... Cambodia’s next travel frontier
Efforts of the Cambodian Ministry of Tourism are starting to pay off after years promoting the country’s beach destination of Sihanoukville as the next travel frontier in Cambodia. A premier beach resort in Cambodia was not what travellers think of when booking a trip to Cambodia, according to Bangkok-based Backyard Travel sales manager Sibylle Rotzler. Until recently, getting to the seaside getaway of Sihanoukville was only accessible by a treacherous four hour drive from Phnom Penh that sees so many accidents that Cambodians usually insist on praying en-route at a temple. Awareness of the destination is growing since accessibility was made easier with scheduled flights to Sihanoukville from Siem Reap that restarted at the end of last year. The area also saw its first ship to cruise the Gulf of Thailand in a decade drop anchor with 1,000 Chinese tourists onboard this year. Marriott is due to open a luxury resort in Sihanoukville next year, featuring an 18-hole golf course and a marina. Meanwhile, construction of a bridge connecting the mainland to an island off the coast was completed last year with the same developer building a luxurious resort complete with a casino in the area. According to official figures, foreign visitors to Cambodia’s beaches grew eight percent to 180,000 people. This growth is expected to increase further after the country’s coastline was admitted to the prestigious Most Beautiful Bays in the World Club last year. However efforts to put Sihanoukville on the map were hindered by attempts to diversify Cambodia’s tourist attractions beyond the Angkor temples and the French colonial capital Phnom Penh. This was stalled further when in late 2008; Cambodia became one of the few countries in the world without its own domestic airline. A refurbishment of Sihanoukville Airport was completed at the end of 2009; however scheduled flights into this airport were delayed by two years. Critics say this was a result of the country’s “so called” flag carrier, Cambodia Angkor Air (that is 49 percent owned by Vietnam Airlines) generating little interest in developing new domestic destinations, instead channelling tourists in and out of Vietnam. Cambodia Angkor Air marketing executive Kloung Sivly said the relaunch of the scheduled flights, that flew 5,741 passengers to Sihanoukville in the first half of this year, fitted well with the government’s plan to promote links to the seaside resort.
Jul
17
In first 5 months, over 1.5 mln foreign tourists visit Cambodia
PHNOM PENH, June 25 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia has attracted over 1.5 million international visitors in the first five months of 2012, up 26 percent compared with the same period last year, the statistics released by the tourism ministry showed Monday. About 941,450 foreign tourists, or 62.5 percent of the total, visited the world heritage site Angkor archeological park in Siem Reap province, which is located about 315 km northwest of the capital city Phnom Penh. During the January-May period this year, Vietnam topped the chart among the top 10 arrivals with 305,750 tourists, up 30 percent, followed by South Korea with 204,150, up 35 percent, and Chinese visitors ranked a third place, with 132,000, up 33 percent. Thai visitors to Cambodia had surged by 89 percent to 78,160 thanks to the improving relations between the two neighbors after tensions over border disputed areas have eased since last July. The report said some 49 percent of the visitors arrived in Cambodia by air, 48 percent by land and the rest by water ways. Tourism industry is one of the four major pillars supporting Cambodia's economy. Last year, 2.88 million foreign tourists visited the country, bringing in a total revenue of 1.91 billion U. S. dollars.
Jul
24
A resort in the clouds
Bokor Mountain, just two hours from Phnom Penh and a towering 1,075 metres above sea level, is a quintessential Kampot experience. These days, in addition to “picnics in the clouds” and pilgrimages to Wat Sampov Pram, locals and tourists have a new destination: the newly built Thansur Bokor Highland Resort. Critics, however, have yet to warm to it. According to one Kampot local: “Bokor Mountain isn’t natural any more because of all the development.” Chansophal Kheng, Thansur Bokor Highland Resort’s marketing director, says the mega-resort is not intended solely as a gaming venue. “It offers a combination of natural beauty and entertainment. Our customers can enjoy the view in addition to other tourist attractions,” Kheng says. Since its soft launch in March this year, Thansur Bokor has been running at full steam, as Kheng explained in an email interview with The Phnom Penh Post’s Lifestyle section. What is the estimated cost of the resort, and how many hectares of land does it occupy? The total land size of the mountain is approximately 140,000 hectares, and it will take time to find out the exact proportion for the development project. Likewise, the development of this mega-size resort will cost no less than hundreds of millions of dollars. What is the price range of the resort rooms? There are three different room types. Prices range from US$65 to US$600 per night, depending on the date of stay and the room type. In your opinion, are tourists heading for the view from Bokor Mountain or its new entertainment venue, the Thansur Bokor Highland Resort? Bokor Mountain has a long and rich history. It was the favourite playground for royalty, socialites and the rich during the French era because of its sheer natural beauty. However, road inaccessibility deterred tourists from travelling there. It became more convenient after the completion of the rehabilitation project, and (continues to attract) thousands of tourists. Although the resort is complemented with a luxury hotel and entertainment venues, the mountain’s natural beauty, its history and year-round cool weather make the experience unique. There are currently five party venues. Are they all in operation right now? Currently, only the Vior Lounge is in full operation; the other venues are still in preparation mode. Other outlets will be completed in a few months’ time. Are the resort’s seven restaurants open for business? Not all of them are fully completed yet. Three of them – the Asian Buffet, the Noodle Bar and the International Buffet – are in full operation, while the rest are expected to be complete in the coming months. Are the chefs internationally or locally trained? The restaurants are intended to provide tourists with the best variety of cuisines and delicacies. Our chefs are a mixture of locals and expatriates – most are international chefs with a wealth of culinary experience. How much can guests expect to pay for dinner at one of the restaurants? There are many restaurants, and the prices differ. Depending on our guests’ choice, dinner could start from roughly US$6 per person. Are there any upcoming wedding celebrations booked at the resort? Not yet. The plan is to promote the resort as a premier wedding celebration venue. Does the resort offer guided tours on Bokor Mountain? A recreation team has been formed to meet the need of tourists seeking guided services. Tours will be conducted of all the historical sites, jungle trekking and, of course, within our properties. The tours are currently being offered in two languages – Khmer and English. The prices vary, depending on packages. In terms of marketing the resort, is there a focus an international audience or domestic travellers? The advertising and marketing activities have been concentrating on domestic tourists. We are now putting in more effort to promote the resort as a new destination for regional travellers. When is the best time for a stay at the resort? We’re still a new destination in the very early stages of operations, so we can’t assess the low or peak tourist season, but weekends are occupied now.
Jul
03
Officials'decisions about resuming slate in Preah Vihear
Senior officials from the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces are scheduled to meet with their Thai counterparts in Phnom Penh tomorrow for a second round of discussions about withdrawing troops from the disputed border areas around the Preah Vihear temple. The three-day meeting of the Cambodia-Thailand Joint Working Group will discuss the execution of last year’s International Court of Justice ruling that both countries withdraw troops from the area around the temple. “We are speeding up the discussion of troop withdrawal [from the Provisional Demilitarised Zone],” said General Neang Phat, who will co-chair the meeting. “Cambodia is ready for the implementation of the ICJ’s order ruled on July 18 last year, but Thailand is still pushing back and forth. We don’t know why.” After Cambodia filed a complaint on the heels of a string of deadly clashes, the ICJ ordered both countries to immediately withdraw troops from the area, and to allow ASEAN observers from Indonesian access to the zone.
Aug
18
Three Cambodian Children Films in the Asian International Film and Video Festival in Japan
Three out of 16 pieces of short film, screened at the Preliminary in-country Contest for the Asian International Children Film and Video Festival to be held in Japan in November, have been selected. The three winning films are the masterpieces of students from Tuol Tompoung and Wat Koh High Schools in Phnom Penh and Hun Sen Sereipheap High School in Takmao, Kandal province. This preliminary contest took place here yesterday at the Cambodia-Japan Cooperation Center (CJCC). According to the Embassy of Japan in Cambodia, the contest is organized by the Embassy of Japan in cooperation with the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports and the CJCC for the purpose of promoting mutual understanding among students in Asia. The selected theme this year is “The Meaning of Life”, said the embassy, stressing that 36 pieces of 3 minutes short film were submitted by students of 8 high schools in and around Phnom Penh. The 3 winning groups in this preliminary contest will be invited to Japan by the government of Japan in November to participate in the final round of the aforementioned festival which will be held in Minami Awaji City, on Nov. 24, it said. High school students selected from Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Chinese Taipei, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Mongolia and Japan are also invited to the festival, it added.
Jul
12
Tourism not hurt by outbreak
Cambodia's tourism sector has emerged from a “mystery disease” scare unscathed, industry insiders said yesterday, although some regional health authorities noted what the World Health Organisation called an outbreak of Enterovirus-71 (EV-71), which has killed at least 52 children in the Kingdom. “The disease has only affected children under the age of 10, so I don’t think this will have much of an affect on the tourists that come to Cambodia,” said Ang Kim Eang, president of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents. Tourism Minister Thong Khon said yesterday health authorities had handled the situation well and the industry had been unaffected. Health departments in Hong Kong and the Philippines have issued notices concerning the Cambodian outbreak. Neither country has warned against travel to the Kingdom. All passengers arriving in the Philippines are being screened. Hong Kong authorities have monitored the outbreak and doctors have been alerted for potential cases, according to a statement from Hong Kong’s Department of Health. “Our position is very much dependent on the WHO position on this disease. Right now, we have not issued a travel warning,” Chris Cheung, a communications officer at the department, said yesterday. The WHO has not issued a warning against travel to Cambodia. The news had not deterred Filipino travellers, K C Vicebo, outbound manager at the Manila-based travel agency Scorpio Travel and Tour, said. Unlike other outbreaks of infectious diseases in the region, EV-71 had flown under the radar of most Filipino travellers in Cambodia, she said. “SARS was scary. It really affected travel to Hong Kong a few years ago. But these days we haven’t seen any kind of reaction here,” Vicebo said.
Aug
08
Vietnamese in Cambodia have chance to watch VTV4 channel
The VTV4 television channel, a unit of Vietnam Television, will air in Cambodia from Aug. 15, in an effort to bring VTV programmes to Vietnamese nationals. The agreement to launch the service was signed between Vietnam Television and Cambodia ’s Royal Media Entertainment Corporation on Aug. 7, under which, VTV4’s programmes will cover up to 70 percent of Cambodia ’s territory. The two sides also agreed to broadcast programmes in the Khmer language to serve those who are speaking the language in daily life. As a joint-venture between Cambodia and Russia, the Royal Media Entertainment Corporation was set up to launch a pay terrestrial digital television service with 60 channels across Cambodia./.
Aug
21
Latest tourist attraction has 'bloody' past
The brilliant green rice paddies of Banteay Meanchey’s Phnom Srok district stretch as far as the eye can see this time of year. Locals are thankful for the bounty, but it’s a gratitude tempered by the painful history of its source – the Khmer Rouge-era Trapeang Thma dam. The construction of the massive dam and its associated canal network transformed the area’s once-volatile agricultural fortunes with the introduction of year-round irrigation. Building it today would cost in the millions, but in the late 1970s, the price was paid in human life. “The authorities celebrate ceremonies every year, especially during the water festival, to dedicate to the spirits of the victims who died during the construction of that dam,” Heng Meng, 34, said as he arranged his fishing net by the edge of the dam. The Khmer Rouge set an untenable rice production target of three tonnes per hectare and devised irrigation systems, like Trapeang Thma – the regime’s largest – to support such production. “My parents told me that during the regime, there were a lot of people who worked to construct the dam. They say the humans looked like ants working here,” Meng said of the tens of thousands of overworked and underfed virtual slaves who built the giant structure using only the most rudimentary tools. “This is a sad place, but now it is a big tourist place,” he said, tightening his red krama before casting his fishing net into the dam. Nearby, groups of jovial youths on school break gather at the water’s edge and crowd around tables at restaurants nearby. Standing in front of her dam-side restaurant, Ou Phav, 57, intermittently turns a chicken over coals for a group of boys as she mixes a fish marinade by hand. For Phav, who was conscripted in a child mobile work unit building the dam – since rehabilitated in a 2004 project backed by the Japanese government and the Ministry of Water Resources – the tourists are a welcome addition to the now-popular picnic site. “We worked hard, but we did not have enough food, not like recently – I can eat whatever I want to eat,” Phav laughed, exchanging a batch of chicken for US$5 to the group of youths. The tiny fish Phav caught from the dam just that day is pounded into a paste. But some 30 years ago, in the wake of the Khmer Rouge regime’s collapse after the Vietnamese invasion, the fishing nets cast near the deep waters of the dam sometimes yielded a far more morbid catch. “They would not find fish, but parts of humans, including their skulls,” she said, attributing the atrocities at the dam to a man called Ta Val, who she remembered being responsible for the construction of the literal pipe dream. According to prosecution documents at the Khmer Rouge tribunal, Ta Val was purged in mid-1977. However, in the nearby village, Kan Sam At, 50, said there was a different leader’s name that struck terror in her heart when she was a child working on the dam. “During that time of the regime, even if I was very sick, if I heard the name ‘Im Chem,’ I knew I had to get better at once and work harder!” Sam At said, recounting watching scores of people marched away daily at 10pm, never to be seen again. “They were mostly from Phnom Penh.” “Now I am not afraid of Im Chem’s name anymore, but I am angry when I hear her name, because during that time we worked so hard and had no food,” Sam At said as she sat under her house, stitching together fishing nets. Im Chem and the crimes that took place at the Trapeang Thma dam are part of the controversial Case 004 at the Khmer Rouge tribunal. Prime Minister Hun Sen has said the case will “not be allowed” to proceed as it involves what he says are “mid-level” Khmer Rouge cadre. Liv Dean, 55, said he hoped the case went to trial so that people would know what happened in the area. “Some people, they do not know the history of this dam, and they think it’s just water from the sea. They don’t believe that it was made by villagers’ hands,” he said, recalling how he himself had been made to haul two to three square metres of earth every day, receiving only two cans of rice for his efforts. “Recently, even though the dam has become a tourism place and the biggest water supply in the area, I do not give thanks to the Khmer Rouge, because I worked hard in that place,” he said.
Jul
13
Visit Cambodian Hotel
Situated on the riverside, the hotel overlooks the three rivers, Mekong, Tonle Sap and Tonle Bassac and within walking distance to the Royal Palace and National Museum. Lying in a pleasant area of Phnom Penh, travelers can tour around the city conveniently from the hotel location. Cambodiana is close to many attractions of Phnom Penh city. The Cambodiana hotel lies within reach of local transportation. This superior hotel can be found at 313 Sisiwath Quay, Phnom Penh, Kingdom Of Cambodia. The only Luxury Hotel Right on the banks of the Mekong River. Only minutes away from the most exciting attractions in Phnom Penh.it is a 25 minute drive from Phnom Penh International Airport (10km). View Map One of Phnom Penh's landmarks, this large international-standard hotel is situated in large grounds fronting the river. There is a variety of room types, including several different styles of suite. Many rooms have superb views over the Tonle Sap River, with the Mekong River in the distance. All rooms are furnished to a very high standard. There are extensive food and beverage outlets, a large swimming pool, tennis courts and gardens. Many rate this hotel as being the best in Phnom Penh. Hotel Cambodiana a new concept in exclusive, personalised luxury accommodation for discerning guests, perfect for leisure or business travelers in search of privacy, relaxation and recreation. Our luxury hotel has 300 rooms and suites with excellent views of the Royal Palace or the historic Mekong River. The 4 star hotel Cambodiana hotel is one of business hotels in Phnom Penh. The hotel offers functional business facilities suitable for business purpose. Phnom Penh is one of popular destinations in Cambodia. The city has earned good reputation from its famous attractions. Travelers can have a resting stay while they are on holiday in Phnom Penh.
Aug
13
Life still slow in Cambodia's beach towns
Cambodia's coastal areas provide just as much of an insight to the Cambodian psyche as the more popular temples of Angkor Wat, writes Neda Vanovac. A ninja delivers a high kick to a cow before punching it in the udder, and the cow, on its hind legs, squirts him with milk. The Cambodians on the bus around us roar with laughter. We're trundling along a two-lane highway in Cambodia's south, heading for the coast. It's sweltering in here, and the American kung-fu pastiche is the only entertainment on board. Outside, we pass statue after statue crowning highway roundabouts, all points of regional pride: a crab, a salt-panning couple, a Khmer princess standing atop a crocodile - and a rhinoceros, whose significance I can't decipher. This wasn't quite how I expected to find Cambodian history, in a country known more for the tragedy of its past than the quirks of its present. While the vast majority of visitors flock to the magnificent temples of Angkor Wat in the west, smaller, quieter beach towns provide just as much of an insight to the Cambodian psyche. Kampot and Kep are two coastal spots that visitors are slowly discovering - with an emphasis on the slow. Life here is not to be rushed. One of Indochina's best-preserved colonial-era towns, Kampot sits by the Teuk Chhou River, its French shop-houses casting long shadows in the deep gold light of sunset. It's best enjoyed with a - what else? - Angkor brew at one of the many relaxed waterfront bars, or from a longtail boat putting out past fishermen returning to town for the night. In the countryside beyond the giant durian that crowns Kampot's largest roundabout lies a patchwork of golden dry-season grasses, white cows, and unexpected red earth thrown up by the ubiquitous motorcycles. We hire a tuktuk for the day and drive out of town and away from its dusty, frontier-like bustle. The region is known for its durian (a tropical fruit infamous for its foul smell), seafood, peppercorn, and salt farms, and we're off to see a quieter side of the country, away from the rapid development of the big cities, with their teetering high-rises, honking traffic and tangled power lines. In the early morning light, we squint out across the blinding salt plain, watching women methodically stamping the clay in preparation for salt collection while quietly chanting. Kampot pepper was a mainstay for the best chefs of Paris during the colonial era and is still widely exported. We wander amongst the pepper trees, nibbling the small red fruit around the seed, crunching down for the flare of sharp flavour that is a reminder of the tiny grain's potency. Cambodia is racing to catch up to its neighbours after the murderous Khmer Rouge regime froze progress in the 1960s, and it's visible everywhere. Enormous satellite dishes protrude from behind traditional wooden houses, and at temples hidden deep out among farmland, monks chat on mobile phones. As we travel away from the coast, past tiny villages whose inhabitants stop to watch the occasional tuktuk or moto pass by, we find a group of children who can greet us in several languages. "Hello! Bonjour! Buenos dias!" they crow, clamouring to lead us up the hill, showing off their fathers' plots of spinach and cabbage, telling us they hope to become doctors one day. Kep-sur-mer, an hour east along the narrow coast road, was founded in the early 1900s as a beachside escape for the French and Cambodian elite, and still boasts an elegant waterfront promenade where families gather. Children clamber on the huge crab statue, swinging from its claws. Couples stroll hand in hand in the afternoon sun, looking out across the Gulf of Thailand. The market sells fresh crab and fried fish laid out on large leaves, local women swatting away stray dogs that venture too near. And if Kep still feels too big, Rabbit Island is only 20 minutes away across the water. The main beach boasts still waters, a few bungalows and seafood restaurants, and a green, hilly interior. Chickens run under hammocks strung between palm trees and it's hard to see why tourists have so far shunned this spot in favour of the louder, sleazier Sihanoukville - although perhaps it's a blessing. Our tuktuk putters along the sun-dappled coast road, curving out along the water, overlooked by ruined 1950s villas. Slowly being reclaimed by the land, these buildings are ravaged by bullet holes, with empty, staring windows and vines creeping along doorways. Once-elaborate brick fences now hold only long grass. Cows graze unconcerned where once there were living rooms. We wander around the front yard of a sprawling mansion our driver tells us once belonged to a prime minister. Squatters have moved in, laundry is flapping in the yard. A baby's cry drifts from an upstairs window. Through the open front door, we can see a charred grand staircase. Cambodia's bright-seeming present is inextricably intertwined with its past, glimpses of which, like these war-riddled houses, are never far away, kung-fu cows notwithstanding. IF YOU GO Kampot is 148km from Phnom Penh and buses depart regularly during the morning for the four-hour trip. Sihanoukville is 105km west of Kampot, and minibus tickets cost about NZ$4. Kep is 25km from Kampot towards Phnom Penh, and a tuktuk day hire costs about NZ$19, depending on your negotiation skills.
Jul
20
Water Festival in Cambodia
Cambodian Water Festival (khmer: Bon Om Touk) has been a most important holiday for Cambodians public holiday calendar. There has been alot of much interest for visitor for not only beauty of Phnom Penh city and but also for boat races on the Tonle Sap and Mekong River and the carnival atmosphere ashore attract millons of people from all over the country. A smaller Water Festival is also held in SIem Reap City, Angkor Wat and some provinces, but for the real thing you’ll have to go to Phnom Penh to enjoy. Bonn Om Teuk lasts three days so that boats from near and far provinces can join the contest. During the festival, Cambodians from across the country gather in Phnom Penh, the capital, to attend and celebrate this festival. Bonn Om Teuk lasts three days so that boats from near and far provinces can join the contest. During the festival, Cambodians from across the country gather in Phnom Penh, the capital, to attend and celebrate this festival. The Water Festival has a long history dating from the Angkor era in the 12th century, under the reign of King Preah Bat Jayvarman VII, when the Khmer Empire occupied and ruled most of the Indochinese Peninsula. The King battled with enemies to defend the Empire as well as to expand the territory. With a very powerful naval force, the King had defeated his enemies at each battle. During water festival there are has more than 500 boats, propelled by precision-trained oarsmen, take part in the annual boat race, the highlight of Festival. Most people arrive Phnom Penh for a visit few day, some people arrive by buses, cars, bikes, cyclos, bicycles and even trucks. Many stay over in the city during the three-day festival, lending support to their boat team. Others use this opportunity to explore the sights and sounds of Phnom Penh – for many it is the only occasion to visit the city. Some people said that the celebration of the Festival is also a thanksgiving to the Mekong River for providing the country with fertile land. People from all walks of life gather on the bank of the Mekong River for days and nights. Click here for more details about Water Festival.
Sep
11
Cambodia’s arrivals improve in July
Tourist statistics in July showed arrivals from Laos to Cambodia almost doubled, while arrivals from Thailand continued to grow at a slower rate. Cambodia’s Statistics and Tourist Information Department, Ministry of Tourism, reported arrivals from Laos grew 94.9% supplying 24,064 visitors to Cambodia during July. The growth rate has skyrocketed over 70% since January this year. As for arrivals from Thailand, the numbers increased significantly by 75.8% to 13,538. However, the growth was slower than June when it doubled over 2011. Over the seven-month period, January to July, arrivals from Thailand and Laos improved 88.8% and 88.5% respectively. They ranked fifth and fourth suppliers to Cambodia’s tourism industry. Overall, Cambodia recorded 284,282 international visitors in July, improving 18.7% year-on-year. The slower growth in July (increasing over 20% for the first six months) pulled the average growth rate down from 26.8% at the end of June to 25.6% at the end of July. Accumulated arrivals stood at 2,040,862. Arrivals from the top three suppliers — Vietnam, Korea and China showed improvement in July though not drastically: +24.1%, +11.1% and +23% respectively. Among the top 10, only Australia in ninth place reported a decline at 6.1% (9,233). Arrivals from the Philippines grew 50% to 60% since the start-up of the first air link (Cebu Pacific) on the Manila-Siem Reap route 19 April. Growth slowed to 15.7% in July supplying 6,090 visitors. By region, all markets reported growth except Africa, which represents a very small share. It declined 21.9% to 348 visitors. Growth from Asia Pacific, accounting for a 78.5% market share, contracted from 33.8% in June to 22.2% in July (223,189). Declines were recorded for Oceanic, -6.3% due to the decrease from two main sullpiers –Australia and New Zealand. Europe recorded a small increase, 8.5% (41,936) as arrivals from several source countries dropped including the United Kingdom ( -7.1%). Russia grew 44%, while Germany, Netherlands and Switzerland also improved, 24.8%, 25.4% and 20.6% repectively. The Americas gained 5.3% (18,039) and the Middle East, +19.3% (679). The surge in trips from neighbouring countries was reflected in a further rise of land arrivals. Overland travel accounted for 55.5% during July recording 154,519 arrivals, while, 44.5% of the total travelled by air. Phnom Penh International Airport welcomed 60,057 passengers (21.1% share), while Siem Reap International Airport welcomed 66,348 (23.3% share). Phnom Penh and other provinces welcomed 140,818 tourists, or 49.5% of the total, improving 20.8%. Siem Reap tallied 143,464 tourists with a substantial increase of 16.7% over the same period in 2011
Jul
31
Cambodia's Undiscovered Temples
The Mekong is a river I have always feared a little—it is sea-like, sinister, inscrutable. It breeds some of the world's largest freshwater beasts: Irrawaddy dolphins, giant catfish, and stingrays. It begins in Tibet and is the earth's most productive freshwater fishery. In November, it turns into a floodplain, and as I crossed it then its waves were thick with rotting flowers and roots and knotted floating grass. Birds swooped around the boat, following it, and their nests could be seen in the tops of drowned trees. After forty minutes, a silhouette came into view as if rising out of this temporary and demented unnatural sea: the forbidding "sacred mountain" of Phnom Da, its tower black against the storm and stark in its enforced solitude. Steps rose up steeply through still-wet jungle. At the top, the Mekong waters appeared on all sides and an imposing brick-and-stone prasat (the Khmer word for a tower or pagoda) stood alone in a froth of wildflowers, its walls dark rust-red and black. Beautiful carvings soared above the doorways, and the chiseled plinths were still firm and elegant. But the prasat itself was clearly empty: looted, or gutted by archaeologists—one never knows in Cambodia. A cowherd stood with his cattle before the main doorway. As I appeared, he simply held out a casual hand and said, “One dollar”—that Khmer refrain which every traveler guiltily repels. With him was a man suffering from some kind of illness, his hands twisted and his eyes lopsided. He seemed to be in informal charge of the shrine within. They watched me silently. Inside, there was a lingam stand (an emblem of the god Shiva) with two bowls of incense sticks, now exposed to the sky: Concentric brick rectangles rose vertiginously upward to an opening through which the rain fell. The tower was engulfed in forest, intimate amid its surroundings, and inaccessible to historical knowledge. The guardian came rolling toward me on his misaligned hips, his hand outstretched. He croaked out a greeting, which sounded like, “B’muray.” “B’muray,” I said. “No,” he repeated. “You Bill Murray. You give me five dollar.” (It is true that there is a resemblance.) For years, and especially when I lived in Phnom Penh, I had been coming to the National Museum and admiring a strange group of statues. They are kept in a gallery to one side, a little ignored, and are unlike any other in Cambodia. Dark green in color, far older than the masterpieces from Angkor Wat which otherwise crowd the museum, these huge pieces possess a style and sexual grace that seem to come from an entirely different civilization. They were discovered in the ruins of Phnom Da in 1935, by Henri Mauger, and were dated to about the sixth century A.D. In the middle was a gigantic figure of Vishnu with eight arms, his hands clutching a flame, an antelope skin, and a flask, and on either side of him two smaller figures of Rama and Balarama. To me, they were the most beautiful and imposing things in the museum, and the most emotionally appealing. And so I had always wanted to get to know the place where they had come from—the remote southern Cambodian province of Takéo. How could a site so unknown have produced art so great? Prasat Neang Khmau, built in the early tenth century, is also known as the Temple of the Black Lady—its name perhaps alludes to Kali, the dark goddess of destruction. The “Phnom Da style” is the most ancient sculptural genre in what is now Cambodia. The ten-foot figure of Vishnu is carved from a single block of sandstone, and only five of his eight hands are still attached to surviving arms. But all of them are carved with finesse, the individual nails carefully delineated. Like a young pharaoh, the god wears a tall cylindrical hat and a folded loincloth. His physique, too—slender and lifelike, with wide shoulders and a little bulging belly fat below the navel—reminds one of Egyptian figures. This is the oldest known Cambodian sculpture. Even the dark-green polished, shiny surface of Vishnu seems different from the texture of later styles. Where do these oval faces, aquiline noses, and almond-shaped eyes come from? Even the tear ducts, the pupils, and canthi of the eyes are perfectly carved. The figure of Balarama, the elder brother of Krishna, whcih stands to the right of Vishnu, is particularly moving. His left eye has been obliterated, but his gentle smile is still intact, as is the symbolic plow he carries. His figure is boyish, tilted at the hips. Rama, meanwhile, holds a tall bow and gazes down at us with a haughty gentility. As an avatar of Vishnu, he is associated with chivalry and virtue. I knew where Phnom Da was on the map—it lies a few miles from the Vietnam border, in the Mekong floodplain. This means that in winter it turns into an island and one has to get there by boat. This was forbiddingly appealing. Since none of the Khmer temples outside the tourist circuit of Angkor Wat are well known, I was well aware that it would be more arduous than simply taking a plane to Siem Reap and staying in yet another Royal Angkor Village boutique lodge with an Anantara spa. But there are only so many times you can walk around Angkor Wat at dawn with fifty thousand Korean tourists, searching for mystical solitude. People said that the temples of Take?o were like Angkor fifty years ago, even if they were nowhere near as grand. It was, I thought, unlikely to be true, but it would be enough for me if they were merely different. When I arrived in the port town of Take?o, the waters were so high that the longtails for hire at the jetties were almost level with the street behind them. Take?o is always a lethargic proposition: a market caked with fruit skins, a few lok-lak restaurants with nightly song and dance, a handful of wretched guesthouses with those balconies of oddly plasticated columns that Cambodians love. They were now milky-brown under storm clouds. The tops of submerged mango trees swarmed with swallows, grasses floating between them. It’s about a fifty-dollar longtail ride to cross this strange landscape that does not promise hospitality. On the far side of it can be found both Phnom Da and a very different place called Angkor Borei, a village in a lagoon with some unusual remains. They lie within an area known as "the cradle of Khmer civilization." Sixteen hundred years ago, Angkor Borei was a huge city named Vyadhapurya, the capital of a state that Chinese chroniclers of the third century A.D. called Funan. In A.D. 240, two Chinese ambassadors named Kang Tai and Zhu Ying visited the kingdom and provided a few fragmented descriptions of it. The Chinese gave the title "Fan" to the Funan kings, so their names have come down to us in Chinese forms—the founder king was known as Fan Shi Man. Funan was the first great state of Southeast Asia—and is also the least known, with much of its architecture having all but disappeared. Photos Photos of Cambodia's Ancient Temples Kenro Izu captures the magic of Cambodia's ancient temples in this gallery of photos and digital extras. As I stood there on top of Phnom Da, I recalled that Rudravarman, the last significant king of Funan, is believed to have built the temple in the sixth century. The prasat, though, is thought to date from the eleventh. It is therefore likely to be a reconstruction of an earlier original. Lower down the hill are five man-made caves filled with Shiva lingams that were used as cremation sites during Pol Pot genocide. Farther down still stands an even more haunting building, a small seventh-century temple known as Ashram Maha Rosei, or the Sanctuary of the Great Ascetic. It is considered architecturally unique in Cambodia because of its use of stone at a time when stone was not readily accessible in the region (most Khmer temples of this antiquity are brick). From Maha Rosei came a magnificent statue of Harihara, a fusion of Shiva and Vishnu, that is now a star exhibit at the Muse?e Guimet in Paris. But today the shrine is empty; its beauty lies in the massive size of its single inner vault and its exterior. The effect is that of a cave holding a single image of a god—such as might be used by an ascetic—and is very like the austere seventh-century temples of Sambor Prei Kuk, a hundred miles to the north. Like Prei Kuk, it is one of the few Khmer temples where you can be alone, undisturbed by a chattering tourist machinery. One thinks of the thousands of people who gaze at the Harihara of Maha Rosei every year in Paris, and of the quiet desolation of the place where it once belonged. A less war-torn land might have been able to keep its treasures. But Cambodia is a looter’s paradise, and its more obscure temples have proved easy prey because they are not guarded. An hour later, I was in Angkor Borei. It is a very different place, soporific and outwardly plain but charmingly approached through narrow, curving waterways overgrown with jungle, where knee-high shrines and upturned boats sit inside the mangroves. These are the ancient, clearly man-made canals of Funan, as far as anyone can tell. Aerial photographs taken by the French geographer and photographer Pierre Paris in the 1930s show that there was once a vast system of these canals connecting Angkor Borei to the Mekong Delta city of O?c Eo, sixty miles away in Vietnam. Funan, after all, was a maritime state controlling the seaborne trade between India and China that hugged the coastlines all the way between the Ganges and the Champa kingdom of Vietnam. Water was its lifeblood. The state declined in the mid sixth century—most probably because improvements in naval technology finally enabled ships to cross open ocean and so avoid Funan’s tax collectors—and was absorbed into the more northerly kingdom of Zhenla. But one of its paradoxes is that its greatest art seems to have come from the very period of its terminal decline. No one knows why. Angkor Borei retains a lost-world atmosphere from its past. The boat dropped me off at a museum on the water, next to a decomposing French mansion of moss-thickened vaults and balconies not dissimilar to some antebellum plantation house. I wandered through the rooms while the curator turned on the fans one by one. “A visitor!” his eyes seemed to cry. “You look familiar,” he said slyly. “I have seen you before.” I prepared my one dollar in my pocket, but it was never asked for. Instead, we went together through the museum. “Have you ever heard of Funan?” he politely inquired. “Never heard of it before.” “Cambodians never heard of it either.” He told me about the Funanese—a mysterious people, a lost people—and showed me exhibits of piled human bones from funerary sites, beautiful pottery and stone friezes depicting Vishnu. Out in the garden stood massive replicas of Funan-era Vishnu and Shiva statues (some of the originals are in Phnom Penh), but they were less interesting to me than the remains of the city walls, which are practically the only thing of brick left of ancient Vyadhapurya. A short ride on a motodop, a hired motorbike, took me to where pieces of the massive brick and masonry walls (parts of it were damaged by the American bombing of Cambodia) stand festering in weeds, wildflowers, and damp, and are happily incorporated into the texture of village life. I thought of the Roman walls in Istanbul, which are similarly neglected and casually worked into the daily life of the city. A bas-relief carving at the late-twelfth-century Ta Prohm temple, whose architecture is considered one of the best expressions of Cambodian baroque (as opposed to Angkor Wat's classical) style. The University of Hawaii and the Cambodian Royal University of Fine Arts have come together in the Lower Mekong Archaeological Project to unearth more of this culture’s remains, convinced that they hold the key to later Khmer culture. All over town, orchards and empty lots and backyards are quietly being dug up. The archaeologists are enticed, no doubt, by Louis Malleret’s famous excavations at O?c Eo in the 1940s, during which he discovered Roman coins. Funan was where the Romans came to trade with the Chinese. It was as far east as they ever got, and maybe they also left their coins and fibulae in Angkor Borei. It’s a strange thought: a Roman of the Augustan empire standing by these same canals, eating a mango. A cultural crossroads, then. But no one knows what the people of this ancient state called themselves. Historians are not sure if they were entirely Khmer. Their writing was Sanskrit, but their enigmatic inscriptions do not refer to a vernacular tongue. What we do know is that although Funan is murkily revealed to us through the Chinese, it was Brahmin Indian emissaries who shaped its Hindu culture. According to one legend, Funan was founded by a Brahmin prince called Kaundinya, who married a local princess named Soma, the daughter of a serpent king, or naga. To Kaundinya, it is said, the kingdom owed its Indian laws, itsSanskrit writing, and its Hindu pantheon. The Indianization of Southeast Asia— which reached its culmination in Angkor Wat—began here, in the watery landscape of the Mekong Delta. I took my boat back to Takéo at dusk. There are few places to stay in town—ten-dollar-a-night guesthouses offering windowless cells to Khmer traveling salesmen—but I found the Meas Family Home Stay, just outside town, run by two Khmer schoolteachers, Siphen Meas and Im Mach. They gladly host Peace Corps volunteers who come here to build toilets for local farmers and the odd wandering archaeologist. Bill Murray, I discovered, had not yet sampled its charms. It was a farm of sorts, with paddies spread around it. I spent much of the early hours awake, listening to night birds, to funereal music rolling out of the darkness, and to the demented Cambodian cockerels that begin their chorus at 1 A.M. A cacophony of pure life, of life before electricity. ("We are being hooked up to the electricity grid next week," Siphen said. "What an unprecedented event!") Yet no one forgets here that this is a wounded land and that the wounds have not yet healed. Earlier, by candlelight, Siphen told me how the Khmer Rouge had murdered her brother back in the 1970s and that the family had discovered this fact only the week before. And so a murder in 1977 had now resurfaced to cast its shadow upon the living. It was a past that was not at all passed. "Forty years after the event, we begin our morning. It's a strange relation to the past, don't you think?" "Perhaps it's a denial." “Yes, it is. This country is only just beginning to get back to its past.” As with the personal past, so with the archaeological. We sat by a large fish pool that had been carved out by a huge American bomb. The Khmer are masters of improvisation. They had also looted most of the temples that lay scattered around the province, and it was a blessing, Siphen had to admit, that so many of the sacred artworks had ended up in the Muse?e Guimet, thousands of miles away. Most had been spirited off to the illicit antiques stores of Bangkok and Cambodia and would never come back. Even the lintels and pieces of lathed columns had been carried away—it was like an army of nocturnal mice nibbling at an unguarded granary. Take?o, she suggested, was too poor not to loot its own heritage. THE FOLLOWING MORNING, I took a car down to the border of Vietnam to visit one of Cambodia’s most remote temples: Phnom Bayong. Route 2, which connects Take?o to Phnom Penh, takes you all the way there. The turnoff for the temple lies off a small side road near the village of Kiri Vong. On this road, schoolgirls in navy skirts were riding their bikes, glancing down at the foreigner sweating in the heat with his can of soursop juice. Their expressions were hard to gauge. There was amusement in their distant and hesitant curiosity, as well as a subtle surprise. The grinning farmers in their pickups looked as if they were armed, and they probably were. It's a lonely three-hour walk up to the summit of the holy hill Bayong, where the temple stands with its views of the flooded Mekong and the mountains of Vietnam. On the way, the footpath winds through towering banyan trees. Music was coming from little radios in the huts of the farmers; in a clearing, dark stones lay underfoot like the threshold of a massive gate that had been torn apart. Black-silk butterflies swarmed across the path. A few Buddhist pilgrims still make their way up the monumental steps that lead to Phnom Bayong, but the site, like so many in Cambodia, is open and wild, unstructured by either tourism or archaeology. It feels religious in a way that a tourist temple never could, but this is also because of its setting. Unled, unguided, you are left to piece it together by yourself. The site itself is heavily damaged, though it is thought to have been built to celebrate a victory of the kingdom of Zhenla over Funan. Halfway up to it, as I slithered along small gullies of rock and mud, tailed by black butterflies, a boy appeared out of nowhere, a kind of Khmer Huck Finn chewing a piece of grass, and suggested that I give him a dollar to avoid getting lost. Because the path was looking less and less like a path, I paid. “Good job, you,” he said grimly. “Otherwise, lost ever so long time.” Places + Prices Where to Stay on Cambodia's Temple Tour Most of the temples in Take?o Province can be reached handily from Phnom Penh. The walk to the summit proved the accuracy of this pessimism. It’s little wonder no one comes here. Surrounded by cliffs and ruined walls, Phnom Bayong is reached by a near-vertical staircase and is infested with murmuring bats. The boy told me that the mountain was sacred and that Buddhist nuns were looking after the ruins. They browsed the jungle surrounding it in search of ingredients used in traditional folk medicines. If I wanted, they would paint spells on my body to protect me from illness. It would be one dollar more. I readily agreed to this and paid up, but instead of visiting the spell-writing nuns, for some reason we ended up trudging down to another little temple nearby, from where the great delta waters could also be seen, a pale-brown brightness reaching to a somberly green horizon. Like Phnom Bayong, it was enigmatic, fragmented in some way, and on the point of disappearing into forest. The Hindu images had long ago been removed. My dollar-sucking guide explained that there were four other temples on the sacred mountain and that there was a Buddhist hermit whom I could meet. The hermit would also paint spells on my body, and they would be even more powerful than the spells painted by the nuns. It would be one dollar more. What about the nuns? I asked. The nuns had run away, he said. They were afraid of foreigners. “Can’t we pay them to come back?” “Pay? They nuns. Come to hermit.” I paid up again, but as with the nuns the Buddhist hermit could not be found, and we ended up wandering all over the mountain as the afternoon waned. No one ever painted any spells on my body, but the boy did tell me the most famous legend of Phnom Bayong, which goes something like this: Once upon a time a king called Preah Bat Bayong Kaur lived on this mountain with his wife, Neang Sak Kra’op (meaning roughly “the lady with perfumed hair”). The nefarious King of Siam—the Thais are always the bad guys in Khmer stories—heard of her beauty and sailed to the mountain in a ship. He threw a party for the queen, and while the Khmer guests were distracted, he made off with her and never returned. Years later, her son, Dey Khley, went in search of her and happened to come across her without knowing who she was. He fell in love with his mother and married her. But when they returned to Bayong, the king recognized his former wife and sentenced his son to build twelve huge ponds. The prince, said the king, could be reincarnated only when the twelve ponds ran dry. But even today they are full of water, and so the luckless son is still waiting in the afterlife for a drought. Thus are punished even the unwitting perpetrators of royal incest. The Cambodian countryside is filled with such myths, which are like the rumors that come out of a past that recent history has all but obliterated. This is a land of submerged memories—a secretive and wary land which is mindful that bad things can always happen again. On the way back to Phnom Penh the next day, I stopped at the magnificent Angkorian-era temple of Phnom Chisor, built in the eleventh century by King Suryavarman I of Angkor. It’s the closest and most forbidding large-scale temple complex to Phnom Penh, apart from the lovely ruins of Ta Prohm on the Tonle? Bati lake. There is a kind of imperial swagger to it, a sense of overarching power. Both Ta Prohm and Phnom Chisor are more spectacular than the older Take?o temples—especially Chisor, with its superb terraces and richly carved reliefs. But now Chisor seemed to me less poignant than mysterious Phnom Da or Phnom Bayong. Two other temples are connected to Chisor by a monumental staircase that winds its way down the side of the mountain, and the whole complex possesses a coherent splendor that Bayong cannot match. Yet Chisor feels more like what one experiences on a larger scale at Angkor. Coming down the enormous staircase, I enjoyed watching the boys playing soccer in a field of motionless cows that seemed not to notice the football flying between their legs. I was glad there weren’t five thousand tour guides ready to explain what this meant. I TOOK MY CAR back to Route 2 and on the way stumbled upon two neglected brick towers that stood at the edge of a modern shrine. They are the remains of a place called Prasat Neang Khmau, or “Black Lady” in Khmer, a tenth-century temple whose name perhaps alludes to Kali, the dark destructive goddess. I knew that from here had come two enigmatic statues that are now also in the National Museum in Phnom Penh. Like the sculptures of Phnom Da, they have fascinated me for years, and when I returned to Phnom Penh I went in to look at them. One is an equine avatar of Vishnu known as Vajimukha, a male body with a horse’s head, and the other is a female divinity of some kind dressed in a fluted robe that is tied above a lustrous, smooth navel. Her head is missing, and her surface is now a dark-jade color. They stand in the same room as the great pieces from Phnom Da, and although they are from a later century, they have the same archaic otherness about them. They are more beautiful, more human somehow than the masterpieces of Angkor that occupy the foreground of our perceptions of Cambodia. And like the place from which they were torn long ago by French experts, they are something of a quiet secret—a civilization within a civilization, waiting to be rediscovered when Cambodia can finally afford the splendid luxury of memory.
Aug
31
Cambodia hosts ASEAN garment, textile exhibition
Garment and textile products from Southeast Asian nations were on display here on Wednesday evening, aiming at further promoting business opportunities, Cambodian Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh said. Organized by Cambodian Ministry of Commerce in cooperation with the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia, the ASEAN Garment and Textile Fair 2012 will be held until Sept. 1 at the Angkor Coex Exhibition Hall. "The event is to promote garment and textile businesses between ASEAN nations as well as with other ASEAN dialogue partners," the minister said at the opening ceremony, which was attended by all ASEAN Economic Ministers, and Chinese Minister of Commerce Chen Deming, Japanese Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yukio Edano as well as South Korean Minister for Trade Bark Taeho. All the ministers are in Cambodia to attend the 44th ASEAN Economic Ministers Meeting and related meetings. He said that the fair was also an opportunity for the manufacturers to exchange ideas and seek business partners. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
Aug
03
Cambodian Cooking Class this Thursday
Every first Thursday of each month South East Asian Cultural Heritage & Musical Performing Arts (SEACHAMPA) will be hosting Southeast Asian cooking demonstrations at Cova Hotel in Little Saigon. You will be able to assist in preparing for the food as well as taste what you have prepared. Date: Thursday, August 2nd Food: Cambodian food – fried fish with mango Times: 6:30-8:30 p.m. Location: Cova Hotel 655 Ellis Street Rooftop Terrance 8th floor Donation: $20 pre-paid, $25 cash at the door What to bring: Apron For pre-paid donations of $20 please rvsp to seachampa@gmail.com or call (415) 286-2291 for more information.
Jul
31
Discover Cambodia cuisine
Be prepared to be surprised at Cuisine Wat Damnak, a contemporary Cambodian restaurant in Siem Reap that has entirely transformed native dishes seen on the streets into haute cuisine. aving earlier eaten nom banh chok—a Cambodian dish of rice noodles with a thin curry gravy ladled onto it—at a local market after trooping through muddy walkways displaying squirming, bloody fish, the nom banh chok at Cuisine Wat Damnak was almost unrecognizable. It had a different and rather elaborate description on the menu: “Mekong langoustine in light curry and coconut broth, fresh rice vermicelli and local crudités.” Essentially it was a sophisticated version of nom banh chok—with the broth tasting richly of shrimps, and the dish topped with expertly-seared mini lobsters and a borrowed French element, crudités, or sliced raw vegetables. Decadent, but delicious. The dish was a showcase of how Cuisine Wat Damnak has created a distinctive identity for itself. Native Cambodian ingredients are used in an entirely different way, some staple dishes are given a fresh spin, and everything is served progressively in courses. “I like to see the food I am serving as Cambodian food with a modern French sensitivity,” chef Joannes Riviere says. Cuisine Wat Damnak The dining room at Cuisine Wat Damnak. The restaurant doesn’t offer a fixed menu—it only lists two degustation menus, one with five courses (US$17) and the other with six (US$24), which change every week. On the day of this reporter’s visit, the Mekong langoustine with rice noodles was the fourth dish in the six-course tasting menu. Mr. Riviere says the restaurant is set up around the idea of showcasing Cambodian produce, which is “nowadays a very common thing in restaurants in France and all over the world.” The former executive chef of acclaimed Hotel de la Paix’s Meric restaurant, who first came to Cambodia as a volunteer cooking teacher in 2003 and ended up staying in the country, decided to set up Cuisine Wat Damnak in 2011. He chose to focus on Cambodian cuisine after he noted that Western produce in Cambodia is often of very average quality. “On the other hand there are plenty of excellent fishes, amazing aromatic plants and unseen vegetables just outside of Siem Reap, waiting to be used. Cambodian cuisine naturally became an obvious choice,” he says. Among the several dishes served during this reporter’s visit, a starter of seared beef tenderloin stood out for its seemingly random mix of ingredients. Pinkish beef slices were plated with a surprising addition of beef jerky that was grilled with—and tasted strongly of—fish sauce, tendrils of young morning glory, wild mango kernel seeds and drizzled with “oyster sauce.” The dish boasted a burst of flavors that showed how Mr. Riviere’s French culinary influence has fused comfortably with the Cambodian ingredients, though it was a pity that the star of the dish—the beef—was overwhelmed by the supporting elements. One of the mains—black sticky rice porridge with quail and fish fillet—was similar to a risotto, another dish that displayed a masterful blend of traditional Cambodian ingredients presented in a Western way. Another main—braised pork—looked absolutely unassuming. But it turned out to be the best dish of the night. The star anise and caramelized palm sugar used in the fragrant dark braising liquid had seeped into the tender pork and lotus root pieces, and a piece of deep-fried crispy pork shank topped the dish, adding a crunchy texture. And with its focus on showcasing produce, Cuisine Wat Damnak is an exclusive to Siem Reap. Mr. Riviere is adamant that his restaurant simply can’t be replicated elsewhere. “I think we are successful because of the quality of the ingredients,” he says. “Without that our food would be very ordinary. If we move overseas then it would not work anymore.” Cuisine Wat Damnak is located between Psa Dey Hoy market and Angkor High School, Wat Damnak village, Sala Kamrek Commune in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Open Tuesday to Saturday from 6.30 p.m. till 9.45 p.m. (last order). For reservations, call +855 (0)63 965 491 / +855 (0)77 347 762 or email info@cuisinewatdamnak.com.
Jul
21
Thailand, Cambodia pull back from temple
Thailand and Cambodia have pulled back their troops from the disputed border area around Preah Vihear, a ninth-century Hindu temple. Bangkok and Phnom Penh have been at a standoff around the 900-year-old temple in the Dangrek Mountains on the Thai-Cambodia border for several years and several military confrontations. The International Court of Justice ruled in 1962 that the temple -- since 2008 a World Heritage site -- was on Cambodian land. However, some access to the mountaintop site passes through Thai territory, a route that Thai troops occasionally seal off. The recent agreement to withdraw troops is "the first step" in following the International Court of Justice's order in July last year, a report in The Bangkok Post said. The court, which sits in The Hague, agreed on a vote of 11-5 that Thailand and Cambodia should immediately withdraw troops from the disputed area and for the area to become a temporary demilitarized zone. The ICJ will make its final ruling on ownership likely late next year, the Post said. Thailand's troop withdrawal and deployment of two companies of border patrol police officers were overseen by Defense Minister Sukumpol Suwanatat and Army Chief Prayuth Chan-ocha. The border patrol will monitor nearly 7 square miles declared a demilitarized zone by the ICJ and of which just less than 2 square miles are disputed. The Post quoted Sukumpol as saying he hoped Cambodia will adhere to the ICJ ruling. "If they are gentlemen, they must honor the agreement," he said in response to reports that Cambodian soldiers remain in the disputed area posing as civilians. Sukumpol also said that the troop pullback was an indication that Indonesia had lost territory in the disagreement. "We are not at a disadvantage," he said. Earlier this week Cambodia pulled back nearly 500 troops and replaced them with 255 police. "It's an appropriate time to implement the ICJ's verdict," Cambodian Defense Minister Tea Banh said during the exit ceremony on the Cambodian side. But Tea also warned "full peace has not been ensured," the Post reported. Fighting has flared in the area within the past several years, notably in October 2008 when two Cambodian troops died and seven Thai troops were wounded in an hourlong gun battle. The clashes have been condemned by the United Nations and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, to which Thailand and Cambodia belong. Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa is in Cambodia this week as part of mediation efforts by the government of Indonesia, which also is a member of ASEAN.
Sep
28
Tourists flock to Angkor Wat
Approximately 1.3 million tourists travelled to the World Heritage Site through the first eight months of the year, a 31 percent rise compared with 1.04 million during the same period in 2011. The majority of visitors are from neighbouring Asian countries, with South Korea, Vietnam, China, Japan and Thailand constituting the top five source markets. According to a report by the Siem Reap provincial tourism department, Angkor Wat received 238,400 South Koreans, up 41 percent compared with the same period last year; 163,055 Vietnamese, down 13 percent; 110,500 Chinese, up 47 percent; 86,850 Japanese, up 16 percent; and 79,035 Thais, up 184 percent. The rise in Korean and Chinese tourists is attributed to improved air connectivity, while the quelling of last year’s Cambodian-Thai border dispute has prompted resurgence in travel from Thailand.
Jul
03
Changing images of Cambodia will be shown in hotel
When it comes to promotion, Siem Reap photographer Peter Oxley thinks in big picture scenarios. Hence his latest exhibition, simply titled Peter Oxley at the FCC: Images of a changing Cambodia, is being promoted in a big way – his photos have been blown up to epic proportions and displayed in a bold hard-to-miss manner across the front of FCC Angkor. Oxley says that FCC Angkor general manager Douglas Moe invited him to hold the show at the hotel, and then Oxley suggested mounting enlarged photos on the hotel’s façade. He tells The Insider, “Actually I came up the idea and put it across to Douglas. I agree – the display is certainly eye-catching.” The exhibition itself, which runs until July 15, isn’t your normal exhibition in that it isn’t new: it’s a follow-up to the five-month long exhibition of Oxley’s work held recently at the Angkor National Museum, and is a culled-down version of the museum show. “The images are basically the same, with a smaller selection at the FCC,” Oxley says, “The theme too is the same – images of people in every day life which are disappearing as Cambodia changes rapidly.” Oxley himself isn’t the normal sort of expat photographer resident in Cambodia: he mostly avoids the abstractionism, and eschews the “usual dark images,” of poverty, orphans and landmine victims etc. Instead he opts to photograph normal scenes, especially of what he calls “bucolic Cambodia.” Many of the scenes he captures are fast disappearing, such as buffalo carts and roadside stalls selling gasoline from Johnnie Walker bottles. As the ‘slogan’ for the FCC exhibition states: “Now you see it, soon you won’t.” Oxley captures these scenes in a rich realism that causes some detractors to dismiss him as a “chocolate box scene” purveyor. I nterestingly, Oxley says he is influenced by late last-century photographers who have become classicists of the modernism movement, the photographers that indeed helped establish photography as an art form. Of his photographic inspirations, Oxley says, “Probably for this series and portraiture in general, the early American photographers, Paul Strand and Dorothea Lange. Not only were they great photographers, they also had a social conscience and were pioneers in the field of documentary photography. I also love the images of Andre Kertesz.” A press release compiled for the FCC Angkor exhibition describes Oxley as a “people’s photographer,” and claims that, “Oxley shows in his images a unique talent for bringing out the inner person.” But attention is also drawn to “a certain note of melancholy and sadness in Oxley’s scenes of the beautiful Cambodian countryside. These scenes are fast disappearing.” Indeed the press release waxes lyrical and says, “In a sense, Oxley’s images of Cambodia are reminders of his native England and the monumental and irreversible change it underwent in the onslaught of the Industrial Revolution. “In Oxley’s images one detects a poetry that harks back to the Romantic Poets, who ‘mourned’ the passing of ‘ye olde England’ as Wordsworth’s vision of the pastoral countryside carpeted by ‘a host of golden daffodils’ became blighted by chimneys spewing black smoke and noxious fumes.” Brit-born Oxley, who graduated from university as a geologist, is a character in himself, having lived in Japan for nigh on 30 years where he worked in advertising with Standard Advertising, Inc and in publishing with The Japan Times, while pursuing his personal interest in photography as an autodidact. In 1992, he got a lucky break as a photographer – a motor sports shoot for Nissan Motor Company, which resulted in his racing pictures being published in double-page spreads in Time and Newsweek. During his Japanese period he had several exhibitions. Just a Moment showed at the Tokyo City Club; Passenger was on show at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan in Tokyo; and Zen, A Personal View showed at the Kodak Photo Salon in Tokyo. In the Philippines, an exhibition titled Manila: Chapter 1 showed at the Ayala Museum. Oxley also published a book titled Matsuri - Call of the Gods. Matsuri festivals are one of the most photographed aspects of Japanese culture but Oxley opted not to show festive scenes; instead he focused on the people taking part in the festivities and their emotions, an attempt to reveal the ‘honne’ (inner self) of the Japanese psyche. He also produced a black-and-white folio of Philippine movie stars, styled like classic Hollywood glamour shots, for the fiftieth anniversary of ABS-CBN, the Philippines’ major TV and publication conglomerate. The project came about after a proposal made by Oxley and his creative partner, Filipino-writer Virgil Calaguian. The photos were published in the flagship publication of the network. Oxley moved to Siem Reap in 2008 and together with partner Virgil opened the Cockatoo Nature Resort guesthouse which is now up for sale because Oxley says he’s putting the emphasis back on his photographic pursuits, with Myanmar firmly on the agenda.
Jul
02
Magic Cambodian temples except from Angkor Wat
At the turn of the millennium, when Cambodia was still reeling from decades of civil war, one could spend hours walking around Angkor Wat Archaeological Park without seeing a single foreigner. But Cambodia today -- and the 12th-century temple complex that sits at its geographic, historic and spiritual heart -- is awash with tourists. More than 640,000 visited in the first three months of 2012, with archaeologists claiming the UNESCO World Heritage Site is being loved to death. Yet there are dozens of Angkor-era temple complexes in Cambodia that receive a fraction of the visitors Angkor Wat gets, some of which you can have all to yourself. These are four of the most impressive. Phnom Chissor Start training now. To get to the top of Phnom Chisor, visitors have to climb 412 steps. Set on a hill not far from Phnom Penh, with knockout views of the fertile deltas and emerald green rice fields of Cambodia’s deep south, this small but impressive Hindu temple predates Angkor Wat by 100 years. It’s also where the party scene in Matt Dillon’s 2002 thriller "City of Ghosts" was filmed. The old monks who live here are especially friendly, as are the neighborhood kids who’ll gladly take you down the ancient staircase to see the ruins of two additional sandstone temples built on the flats. Getting there: Hire a taxi and driver for a half-day trip to Phnom Chissor for about US$20. Alternatively, hire a moped for US$5 a day and follow Highway No, 2 south to Takeo. Turn left just before the 52-kilometer mark and follow the dirt road for four kilometers to the base of a hill. Entrance fee is US$2. More on CNNGo: 12 stylish boutique hotels in Cambodia Sambor Prei Kuk The centerpiece of Sambor Prei Kuk is a gigantic three-sided, serenely smiling face, much like the one adorning the famous Bayon temple of Angkor Wat. The site of the ancient kingdom of Chenla, this 1,400-year-old city is home to a whopping 140 temples and monuments. Without the maintenance crews that sanitize Angkor Wat, the square stone walls, shiva lingmans, lion sculptures and octagonal towers of Sambor Prei Kuk are fighting a losing battle against the jungle. But that adds to the rawness of exploring it and also keeps the masses away. For those seeking an Indiana-Jones experience in Cambodia, Sambor Prei Kuk is it. Getting there: The nearest town, Kampong Thom, lies roughly half way between Phnom Penh and Siem Reap. Motorbike taxis from Kampong Thom’s central market take about two hours to reach the ruins 30 kilometers to the north. Expect to pay US$5-10 per person. Koh Ker Until 2004, Koh Ker was extremely difficult to reach, but a road linking it to Siem Reap has put it on the map. Built in the 10th century, this lost city was the Angkorian kings' last seat of power before they relocated to Angkor Wat and met their demise. There are about 50 temples at Koh Ker, most of which remain ensconced in jungle. The two most impressive are Red Temple, named after the color of the bricks and home to King Jayavarman IV’s old thrown room; and Kohmpang (Prasat Thom), a dazzling 65-meter-high semi-pyramidal temple structure and replica of mythical Mount Meru. Getting there: Kok Ker lies 130 kilometers north of Siem Reap. Taxis charge anywhere from US$50-100 for a day trip, with fares depending on the state of the vehicle. Air-conditioning, four-wheel drive and working suspension cost more but are definitely worth it. Entry is US$10. There are a few basic food stands in front of Prasat Thom here but no accommodation, so you'll need to bring a tent or hammock if you want to stay the night and get the most out of the arduous journey. More on CNNGo: Sustainable luxury on Song Saa Phreah Vihear The 900-year-old Preah Vihear has belonged to Cambodia since a 1962 World Court ruling, but ownership remains disputed by many Thais. Atop a 525-meter-high cliff in the Dangkrek Mountains demarcating the border between northern Cambodia and Thailand, Preah Vihear (or Prasat Phra Viharn to the Thais) is claimed by the governments of both countries. Their war of words escalated into a troop buildup when the site received UNESCO World Heritage Listing in 2008 and tourists were banned from visiting. The most recent hostilities in 2011 saw a wing of the main temple destroyed by artillery fire. While the situation remains tense this year, Preah Vihear is once again open to visitors. Built between the 9th and 12th centuries, its stone buildings and courtyards are spread across several levels interconnected by ancient stairways. They lead to an eagle’s nest precipice, where the view into Cambodia seems to stretch out forever. Getting there: Preah Vihear lies 200 kilometers north of Siem Reap. The going is slow, so you may want to stay the night at a guesthouse in the nearby town of Anlong Veng. When your taxi reaches the bottom of the cliff, you’ll need to pay US$5 at the ticket. The fee includes box a motorbike ride up the steep winding road to the temple. Sourced: cnngo
Sep
18
New push for tourism cooperation
With the aim of attracting 25 million international visitors from 2013 to 2015 to Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam (CVLM) the respective ministers of tourism pushed for greater cooperation in developing the region’s tourism sector on Friday, according to the Vietnamese Communist Party official news outlet. At a conference held in Ho Chi Minh City, the ministers also planned for at least four million “exchange visitors” between the four countries, Sai Gon Giai Phnong newspaper reported. Ang Kim Eang, president of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents, said increasing tourists visiting the region is possible. “Cambodia alone plans to attract 4.5 million international visitors in 2015,” he said. The four countries have around 10 World Heritage sites, adding that they attract tourists from all over the world, he added. Visiting tourists these days try to see more than just one country and Vietnam Airlines plans a new flight route between Saigon and Jakarta, promoting to travel between the two ASEAN countries, Ang said. Poev Ponarak, managing director of Asia Corner Travel, which mainly works with European and American tourists, said CLMV's goals are laudable, but he still sees the region’s limited infrastructure as a hindrance. “I think we still need many more years to develop the tourism services,” he said. At the conference, the ministers also reviewed the implementation of the Ministerial Joint Statement on CLMV tourism cooperation signed in 2010. According to ASEAN tourist statistics, 81.2 million tourists visited the ASEAN region in 2011, compared to 73.6 million in 2010.
Sep
10
Cambodia, UNESCO sign agreement to continue safeguarding Angkor Wat Temple
P The Government of Cambodia and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) on Thursday signed an agreement on safeguarding of the Angkor Wat Temple, one of the World Heritage sites. The deal was inked between Sok An, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister in charge of the Council of Ministers, and Anne Lemaistre, UNESCO Representative to Cambodia. The two-year phase II project will be focused on the restoration of an extension span of the moat embankment at the Angkor Wat Temple, said Rome University's Professor Valter Maria Santoro, head of the Italian technical mission for stone consolidation in the temple. Speaking after the signing ceremony, Sok An said that the second phase project will cost 250,000 U.S. dollars including 200, 000 U.S. dollars granted by Italian government and 50,000 U.S. dollars by Cambodian government. He said that Italian government, through UNESCO, has involved in helping safeguard the Angkor Wat Temple since 1994. "The continuous support signifies a further cooperation among Cambodia, UNESCO and Italy," he said. Sok An said currently, Cambodia has been collaborating with 14 countries and 28 international teams in implementing over 60 different projects to preserve, safeguard and develop the temple. Anne Lemaistre said, "UNESCO is proud to help Cambodia in the preservation and conservation of the World Heritage site of Angkor. " Angkor archeological park was inscribed in the World Heritage list on Dec. 14, 1992. It is the country's largest cultural tourism destination; it is located in Siem Reap province, some 315 kilometers northwest of Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia. The site had attracted 1.06 million foreign tourists in the first six months of this year, up 35 percent compared with the same period last year, according to the latest figures from the Tourism Ministry.
Aug
16
Tourism project puts temple on road to recovery
Walking the vine-wreathed paths of Banteay Chhmar, a 12th-century temple near the Thai border that some call the “second Angkor Wat” feels like sneaking into a renowned historical site after the tour guides and the tourists have all gone home. The pervasive silence can strike a first-time visitor as odd, given that the temple is open to anyone who embarks on the trip. But it is far from abnormal, say members of the Community-Based Tourism project in Banteay Chhmar village, an initiative supported by the group restoring the temple, Global Heritage Fund. Hampered by its isolation and working on a shoestring budget, the project has made slow, but steady, progress since its inception five years ago. The number of sightseers goes up and down. “Some days, one person will sit alone in the temple, some days, there is a group, and some days, no one visits the temple,” says the local director, Tath Sophal, while balancing himself against scaffolding on top of a section of ruins. “The tourists who want to visit here, they always ask when they email, ‘What about the road?’ he said. That road, a 69-kilometre sun-baked stretch of potholes, is a turbulent, two-hour ride from sleepy Sisophon town in northwestern Banteay Meanchey. And that’s without inclement weather. When the potholes collect water, as they have a habit of doing during the rainy season, the moist clay soil creates muddy, slippery impasses. Towards the end of last year, when the country experienced major flooding, four or five tour groups cancelled their visits. Although inaccessibility is a problem tourism infrastructure and the financial benefits that go with it have been growing year after year. In 2007, when the program was established, 281 people visited Banteay Chhmar, which archaeologists believe was built by King Jayavarman VII during the Angkorian period. The temple, though in disrepair, retains ornate bas-reliefs carved into walls depicting military confrontations between ancient Khmer soldiers and Cham armies. The first year, tourists only spent around $3,000. Through a number of expanded activities, the project boosted revenue and took in $10,000 last year. In the period of January through July of 2012, visitors and profits were up 25 per cent, Sophal said. Even the forbidding road that everyone emails about is getting a long overdue makeover, courtesy of the Asian Development Bank. Construction should be finished by the end of 2013. The project trained tour guides in English, introduced scenic ox-cart rides and offered cooked meals at the office. Tourists can also sleep over at “homestays,” in which four families have refurbished parts of their residences as modest guest houses. “I like hosting the tourists when they come here,” said Siem Seiv, 64, who arrived in the dusty and placid area of 1,200 families in 1993, after spending time in a Thai refugee camp following Khmer Rouge rule. Siev and his family partitioned off a half the second floor, two bedrooms in total, for overnight guests. “So we are like one family together,” Siev said. Although he makes about $400 a year from the homestay, it’s not enough, he says, explaining that he farms for extra income. Most of the tour guides have two, or even three, jobs because giving tours is not steady full-time work. Peat Pel, 38, is a guide, a moto taxi driver, a traditional music teacher and a farmer. He needs the extra work to help raise his two kids. He’s been taking intensive English classes for the past year as part of an agreement with tutors in Siem Reap. Learning English will help him be a better guide, he says. But first, more tourists need to come.
Jul
31
Phnom Penh Municipality Encourages People to Do Cycling
At least 300 cyclists cycled in Phnom Penh on Saturday last week to encourage Phnom Penh residents to work together for a clean city. Speaking to cyclists who are sportsmen, government officials, students, etc., Phnom Penh Governor H.E. Kep Chuktema said the event is aimed to promote clean city, clean environment as well as to encourage people to do sport. The event is also to mark the 25e anniversary of CITYNET, an international organization which is committed to work towards sustainable urban development in the Asia-Pacific region, he said. Phnom Penh Municipality has become a member of CITYNET since 2002.
Aug
31
Cambodia Seeks International Protection Against Replica of Angkor Wat Temple
Cambodia is currently working with World Intellectual Property Organization to prevent the foreign replica of Angkor Wat Temple, a World Heritage Site in Siem Reap province, some 350 kilometers northwest of Phnom Penh capital city, according to local media reports. “We are working with WIPO to protect our ancestors’ heritage,” H.E. Dith Tina, Undersecretary of State for Commerce said on Tuesday at a press conference. “We have the obligation to protect through legal mean and negotiations,” he said. “Any replica of the Angkor Wat Temple will adversely affect Cambodia’s economy and culture.” In March, India announced its US$20-million plan to build a replica of Cambodia’s UNESCO World Heritage Site, Angkor Wat Temple, in the eastern state of Bihar. Angkor Wat, which is Cambodia’s national symbol, was built in the early 12th century by King Suryavarman II.
Aug
30
Cambodia hosts ASEAN garment, textile exhibition
Garment and textile products from Southeast Asian nations were on display here on Wednesday evening, aiming at further promoting business opportunities, Cambodian Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh said. Organized by Cambodian Ministry of Commerce in cooperation with the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia, the ASEAN Garment and Textile Fair 2012 will be held until Sept. 1 at the Angkor Coex Exhibition Hall. "The event is to promote garment and textile businesses between ASEAN nations as well as with other ASEAN dialogue partners," the minister said at the opening ceremony, which was attended by all ASEAN Economic Ministers, and Chinese Minister of Commerce Chen Deming, Japanese Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yukio Edano as well as South Korean Minister for Trade Bark Taeho. All the ministers are in Cambodia to attend the 44th ASEAN Economic Ministers Meeting and related meetings. He said that the fair was also an opportunity for the manufacturers to exchange ideas and seek business partners. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
Jul
16
Let's find a resort in the clouds
Bokor Mountain, just two hours from Phnom Penh and a towering 1,075 metres above sea level, is a quintessential Kampot experience. These days, in addition to “picnics in the clouds” and pilgrimages to Wat Sampov Pram, locals and tourists have a new destination: the newly built Thansur Bokor Highland Resort. Critics, however, have yet to warm to it. According to one Kampot local: “Bokor Mountain isn’t natural any more because of all the development.” Chansophal Kheng, Thansur Bokor Highland Resort’s marketing director, says the mega-resort is not intended solely as a gaming venue. “It offers a combination of natural beauty and entertainment. Our customers can enjoy the view in addition to other tourist attractions,” Kheng says. Since its soft launch in March this year, Thansur Bokor has been running at full steam, as Kheng explained in an email interview with The Phnom Penh Post’s Lifestyle section. What is the estimated cost of the resort, and how many hectares of land does it occupy? The total land size of the mountain is approximately 140,000 hectares, and it will take time to find out the exact proportion for the development project. Likewise, the development of this mega-size resort will cost no less than hundreds of millions of dollars. What is the price range of the resort rooms? There are three different room types. Prices range from US$65 to US$600 per night, depending on the date of stay and the room type. In your opinion, are tourists heading for the view from Bokor Mountain or its new entertainment venue, the Thansur Bokor Highland Resort? Bokor Mountain has a long and rich history. It was the favourite playground for royalty, socialites and the rich during the French era because of its sheer natural beauty. However, road inaccessibility deterred tourists from travelling there. It became more convenient after the completion of the rehabilitation project, and (continues to attract) thousands of tourists. Although the resort is complemented with a luxury hotel and entertainment venues, the mountain’s natural beauty, its history and year-round cool weather make the experience unique. There are currently five party venues. Are they all in operation right now? Currently, only the Vior Lounge is in full operation; the other venues are still in preparation mode. Other outlets will be completed in a few months’ time. Are the resort’s seven restaurants open for business? Not all of them are fully completed yet. Three of them – the Asian Buffet, the Noodle Bar and the International Buffet – are in full operation, while the rest are expected to be complete in the coming months. Are the chefs internationally or locally trained? The restaurants are intended to provide tourists with the best variety of cuisines and delicacies. Our chefs are a mixture of locals and expatriates – most are international chefs with a wealth of culinary experience. How much can guests expect to pay for dinner at one of the restaurants? There are many restaurants, and the prices differ. Depending on our guests’ choice, dinner could start from roughly US$6 per person. Are there any upcoming wedding celebrations booked at the resort? Not yet. The plan is to promote the resort as a premier wedding celebration venue. Does the resort offer guided tours on Bokor Mountain? A recreation team has been formed to meet the need of tourists seeking guided services. Tours will be conducted of all the historical sites, jungle trekking and, of course, within our properties. The tours are currently being offered in two languages – Khmer and English. The prices vary, depending on packages. In terms of marketing the resort, is there a focus an international audience or domestic travellers? The advertising and marketing activities have been concentrating on domestic tourists. We are now putting in more effort to promote the resort as a new destination for regional travellers. When is the best time for a stay at the resort? We’re still a new destination in the very early stages of operations, so we can’t assess the low or peak tourist season, but weekends are occupied now.
Jul
21
Will sports tourism succeed in ‘sleepy’ Ternate?
Meet Flordeliza Presnillo-Liza to friends—a sign language interpreter who works for TV-5. She is into water sports, organizing events for this field and doing online sales marketing for kayaks and other sports water equipment. Liza has among her clients and friends physically impaired people, specifically deaf-mutes. These include seven young people: Carol, Weng, Joshua, George, the twins Zhalbee and Jinri, and George. One fine day Liza agreed to a suggestion that the seven participate in Kayak Explore, an event of the Philippine Kayaking Association held recently in Ternate, Cavite. Except for Weng, all were first-time During dinner on the eve of the competitions, the deaf-mutes addressed the group, rapidly using their hands to convey their pleasure and excitement at being participants in the event. We, of course, applauded them, but then were told by Liza that we should show our appreciation by clapping the way the handicapped do – by raising, shaking and wringing our hands together. The seven were—in a way—the stars of Ternate-Maragondon Kayak Explore, the first of its kind this year. (The second leg will be held in Masinloc and Candelaria, Zambales, on Sept. 22-23.) The starting point of the race was at the budget Ternate Beach Resort, where drinking and smoking are not allowed because one of the co-owners is a Protestant pastor. There is one family room good for seven persons, while a cottage cluster-type of accommodations were being constructed at the time of our visit. So we slept in the open-air cabanas or in tents, with beddings mercifully supplied. Les toilettes are common. The resort lies at the mouth of Manila Bay and, weather permitting, you can see Corregidor and its cluster of isles a few nautical miles away. The sand in the resort (and much of Ternate) is brown. “This is not Boracay, this is not Palawan,” declares Andrea Camara—Didi to friends— PKA secretary-general. “But we have a natural environment where you can enjoy the simple pleasures—like kayaking, fresh air, the sound of waves. It’s so near Manila yet so different, seemingly so far.” She adds, “I heard invalids regain their strength when they come to the waters here.” Viewed from a cruising ship, this part of Cavite is indeed attractive, for it is ringed by sea cliffs and vegetation. Historic In olden times, Ternate used to be a port of call of the balangays of our forefathers, not to mention the Mardikas, Portuguese seafarers who according to lore brought their dances to the area. There is also the Ternate-Maragondon Ecopark, one of the largest and cleanest rivers in Cavite. “We want to help the ecotourism of the town,” Didi concludes. “The provincial authorities want to develop the tourism potential of the town, especially water sports. Our dream is for people to come to Ternate for kayaking, for water sports.” That dream will hopefully be realized in the future, so that the somnolent fishing town of Ternate will not rely solely on upscale resorts like Puerto Azul (said to be a Korean playground now) and Caylabne Bay Resort (reportedly due for renovation or improvements) for is tourist trade.
Sep
26
Cambodia set for VN culture celebration
HA NOI (VNS)— A Viet Nam Culture Week with a series of cultural and arts activities will take place in Cambodia next week to celebrate the 45th anniversary of the two countries' friendship. An art performance by both Vietnamese and Cambodian artists will open the week on Monday night and continue on the next night at the Charktomok Theatre, Phnom Penh. A similar performance will take place in Battambang Province. As part of the event, a photo exhibition, Viet Nam – The Nation and People, will open on Wednesday, with 80 photos depicting the landscape, natural heritage, and daily life of Vietnamese people, as well as the relationship between Viet Nam and Cambodia in the fields of culture, sports and tourism. Most of the photos have been provided by the Vietnam News Agency. Handicraft and fine arts products from Vietnamese craft villages such as Chu Dau and Bat Trang will also be on display. Also on Wednesday, Viet Nam will officially hand over a newly constructed theatre and circus pavilion to Cambodia. The construction of the 1,018-seat complex started in July 2011 using non-refundable financial assistance from the Vietnamese Government. A large-scale circus performance by artists from Cambodia, Laos and Viet Nam, including 60 circus workers from the Viet Nam Circus School, will take place to celebrate its inauguration. — VNS
Aug
25
Travel Pulse Videos Highlight Mekong River Cruise: AmaLotus Sets the Pace for Vietnam-Cambodia River Cruise Vacations
In September 2011 AmaWaterways launched a second ship on the Mekong River, AmaLotus, and it immediately was recognized as the most luxurious ship on plying the waters between Vietnam and Cambodia. Travel Pulse, a vast information travel online network for travel industry pros, recently released four videos interviewing guests and crew about the experience of cruising on the Mekong River aboard the AmaLotus. Accommodating 124 passengers, the ship's interior areas are largely built with rich teak wood and the décor combines Colonial elegance with regional Khmer accents. The staterooms include comfortable sitting areas, individually controlled air-conditioning, a mini-bar, safety deposit box, robes and slippers, and a luxurious bathtub (Jr. Suites/Suites). During the dignitary filled maiden voyage in September 2011, Simon Marks, a free-lance journalist based in Cambodia, went on board the AmaLotus in Phomh Phen and interviewed AmaWaterways President and Co-Owner Rudi Schreiner, Chairman and Co-Owner Jimmy Murphy and AmaWaterways Australian partner APT President Geoff McGeary. A feature article about the ship, the river cruising industry in Southeast Asia and the future of this rapidly growing sector of the tourism business around the world was published in the International Herald Tribune/New York Times a few months later. AmaLotus features ultra-spacious 624-sq. ft. Suites; ten Jr. Suites at 290 sq. ft. and standard staterooms at 226 sq. ft., with 90 percent of her staterooms boasting outside balconies. Public areas include a main restaurant serving Asian and Western specialties; Saigon Lounge; Gift Shop; Fitness Center, Spa, plus a swimming pool and bar on the Sun Deck. The ship also features a fully English-speaking sta?. On November 8, AmaWaterways was featured in an article published by the International Herald Tribune, the Global Edition of the New York Times. Written by Simon Marks, Executive Editor at The Cambodia Daily and free-lance reporter for the International Herald Tribune/New York Times, it provides an interesting look at the booming river cruise industry in Cambodia and Southeast Asia. When he saw an Internet news release from AmaWaterways' Los Angeles PR firm, generated through Expert Click's NewsReleaseWire service, about the impending launch of AmaWaterways' second ship on the Mekong, the AmaLotus, he saw an opportunity for a business story on a topic he had been wanting to write about. In early August, Simon Marks contacted Promotion in Motion about going aboard the new ship during the dignitary filled inaugural cruise to gather information for an article. On September 15, after a host of back and forth communications, he found himself on the AmaLotus, while moored in Phnom Penh, for a tour of the new ship and a chance to sit down with AmaWaterways' Chairman and co-owner, Jimmy Murphy, President and co-owner, Rudi Schreiner and Geoff McGeary, owner of the APT Group, an Australian travel company and partner of AmaWaterways. With tourism on the rise from river cruising, in Southeast Asia generally and Cambodia specifically, the AmaLotus launch provided Marks an ideal chance to delve into AmaWaterways' Mekong operations and the river cruise industry around the world. The New York Times.com online edition, entitled Arriving at the Temples of Angkor Aboard a Luxurious River Cruise Vessel, appeared on November 7 while the International Herald Tribune print edition appeared the next day under the headline Cruising the Rivers of Cambodia in Luxury While Basking in Pool and Spa. Simon Marks was thoroughly impressed by the AmaLotus, telling Promotion in Motion "it is the most luxurious ship on the Mekong, that is for sure" The first portion of the story, quoted below, reflects that and sets the stage to explore AmaWaterways and the global river cruise industry. PHNOM PENH — Gliding through the water almost soundlessly, the ship drifted toward a small landing stage and quickly threw down the gangplank. An elderly man in swimming trunks lounged next to the boat's swimming pool. Another sipped from a glass of whiskey as he watched the city approach from his private balcony. The cruise ship AmaLotus offers luxuries like spa treatments, a gym and a swimming pool. This was no ordinary vessel. Unlike the more traditional fishing boats and ferries that ply the waterways of Southeast Asia, the AmaLotus, a cruise ship that began operating in September, contains luxuries like spa treatments, a gym and a swimming pool. At 92 meters, or 302 feet, in length and capable of holding 124 passengers, the AmaLotus is one of the latest cruise ships to start ferrying tourists between Siem Reap in Cambodia and Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam on the Tonle Sap and Mekong rivers. After that Marks went into how river cruising had only recently come to the Mekong after growing dramatically in Europe over the last ten years. He quoted an official from CLIA, the Cruise Lines International Association, who said that "the river cruise industry is growing fast worldwide as baby boomers in United States, Europe and Australia enters retirement and looks for new travel experiences" After the Rhine-Main Canal in Southern Germany was completed in 1992, linking the Rhine and Danube Rivers together, a new era of European river cruising was launched. As the new millennia began AmaWaterways, founded in 2002, began building ships for North American consumers with more amenities and bigger staterooms and it has been growing exponentially ever since. Big ship cruisers, having exhausted all their options, flocked to river cruising and, for the first five years, 80% of AmaWaterways' clients were of that ilk. Jimmy Murphy, Chairman and co-owner of AmaWaterways, has said more than once on radio shows that he was right about river cruising for the wrong reason, at least initially. Based on 50 years in the tourism industry, as founder of Brendan Vacations in the late 1960s, Murphy surmised that river cruising would be popular and that those who had grown weary of coach touring would be AmaWaterways' client base. Instead they got the big ship cruisers and then word began to spread, with millions more still unaware of the nature and history of the current river cruising trend. Focusing on the Cambodian tourism industry, Marks noted that it has increased to 2.5 million annually, from 1.5 millions, in the last seven years and that the "large waterways make the country a natural fit for companies on the hunt for new markets" Rudi Schreiner, President and co-owner of AmaWaterways, told Marks that "for us, it's an upscale market" AmaWaterways, based out in Los Angeles, has a 50 percent stake in the AmaLotus along with Indochina Sails, a Vietnamese cruising company. He went through the AmaWaterways pricing during low and high season and then moved on to environmental issues and the hiring of locals to work on the ships. The article reported that river cruising in Cambodia isn't a year round industry since ships can reach Siem Reap, the northern most destination for AmaWaterways in Cambodia, only between September and January "when the water level in the Tonle Sap, the largest freshwater lake in Southeast Asia, is high enough to let them pass." Using diesel engines has raised concerns of pollution that AmaWaterways and other companies are seeking to confront, but progress is slow and "there is still a long way to go until standards reach those being enacted in Europe." With 70 percent of Cambodia's total protein intake through its fish, it is vital to keep the waterways from becoming polluted through the "release of nitrogen oxides, produced when diesel fuel is burned, can lead to acidification in water and soil." The last issue was that money spent in Cambodia on tourism enhances the local population. AmaWaterways Chairman and co-owner Jimmy Murphy noted that this "is one of the hard parts: making sure that tourists arriving in Cambodia—that the money they spend works its way down." Marks, keenly tuned into the Cambodian business scene, wrote that with 57 people working on board the AmaLotus only ten were from Cambodia, although they were making considerably more than the national average. He sees huge potential for the river cruise industry in Southeast Asia and thus a boom for Cambodia as aging baby boomers from Western countries begin to travel more. Simon Marks finished his fine article with a quote that goes to the heart of the river cruising demographic: "The type of customers you find on here are quite interested in learning things," said Geoff McGeary, the owner of APT Group, an Australian travel company that has a share in AmaWaterways. "They haven't come on this trip to lie on their back in the sun. They're out to see things and learn things while they still can." About AmaWaterways AmaWaterways is celebrating its 10th Anniversary by looking back on an award winning 2011 which saw their fleet expanded to 14 of the most luxurious river cruise ships in the industry. In 2012 they will add the AmaCerto, with a host of amazing new design features, and the Zambezi Queen, which will ply the waters of the Chobe River in the Chobe National Park during AmaWaterways African Safaris and Wildlife River Cruises. While adding new ships every year, AmaWaterways is always retrofitting existing ships with the latest amenities, upgrades and inventions. With a commitment to bring the best in river cruise vacations, AmaWaterways' has always and will always lead the way in unparalleled on-board services that are constantly fine-tuned for the highest customer satisfaction. These factors, combined with a slate of new itineraries and specialty programs such as extremely popular Wine River Cruises, which were launched in 2010, had made AmaWaterways the front runner in this burgeoning new segment of the travel business. Over the years AmaWaterways garnered a number of Magellan Awards from Travel Weekly, picked up an Award of Excellence form Luxury Travel Advisor, a Cruise Passenger Readers Choice Award in Australia for Best River Ship and was recognized for its Twitter account that put AmaWaterways on the list of "The Top 25 Online Cruise Vacation Influencers" by Influencers in Travel. Award-winning AmaWaterways provides luxurious, all-inclusive river cruise vacations on the world's great waterways. Founded in 2002 by cruise industry pioneer Rudi Schreiner, cruise line executive Kristin Karst and Jimmy Murphy, founder of Brendan Vacations, AmaWaterways operates its innovative, custom-designed vessels on the Danube, Rhine, Main and Mosel rivers in Europe; the Volga-Baltic Waterway in Russia and the Mekong River in Vietnam and Cambodia. The AmaWaterways fleet in Europe features amenities such as spacious staterooms with French balconies or revolutionary "Twin Balconies"; plush down bedding, marble-appointed baths; complimentary high-speed Internet and Wi-Fi; first-run hit Hollywood movies; complimentary wine, beer and soft drinks with dinner, complimentary bottled water; gourmet dining in multiple venues (AmaBella); nightly entertainment; complimentary small group shore excursions tailored to passengers' desired walking pace; guided bicycle tours and much more. In 2011 AmaWaterways introduced the new 161-passenger AmaVerde in Europe, the newly-redesigned 212-passenger AmaKatarina on the Volga-Baltic Waterway in Russia and the new 124-passenger AmaLotus on the Mekong River in Vietnam and Cambodia, increasing its luxurious fleet of river cruise vessels to 14 after the 2012 addition of the AmaCerto and Zambezi Queen. AmaWaterways Included Features: 7 Nights Deluxe Cruise Accommodations in an Outside Stateroom; Most staterooms with large French Balconies;Jewish Heritage Tours with specialized guides; Daily Sightseeing Program as outlined in the Itinerary; Infotainment System in all Staterooms with Free Internet, Hollywood Hit Movies, Music Library and English Language TV Stations; Terry Bathrobes and White-on-white plush Bedding in all Staterooms; Superb Dining with all Meals included on board; Free-flowing Red & White Wines from Europe's great Wine Regions, beer and soft drinks with every Dinner on board the Ship; Bottled Water in every stateroom replenished daily; Cocktail Reception, Welcome Dinner & Captain's Gala Dinner; Special Highlights including Folklore, Dances, Lectures, Theme Dinners, onboard Music Performances and afternoon & evening Piano Music; Use of Bicycles to explore on your own; Services of a Professional Cruise Manager; All English Language on board in a non-smoking Environment (smoking permitted only on the Sun Deck); All Transfers included with the Purchase of Cruise, Land & Air package; All local Taxes
Aug
16
ACMECS Tourism Working Group Meeting Held in Siem Reap
The 3rd Meeting of ACMECS Tourism Working Group was held in Siem Reap on Aug. 14 to continue developing and improving the tourism cooperation among the member-countries – Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam. Attending the meeting were H.E. Tith Chantha, Director-General of the Ministry of Tourism of Cambodia, the representatives from the member countries and from the concerned ministries and agencies. ACMECS is the economic cooperation framework called the “Ayeyawady-Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy” joined by Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam. The meeting was focused on promoting and advertising a common tourism-market in the ACMECS region through the implementation of the “Five Countries, One Tourism Destination” strategy. With the strategy, H.E. Tith Chantha said, tourist transits across the international borders of the ACMECS would be facilitated and the flights among the ACMECS countries with the international flights would be connected. The Royal Government of Cambodia regards the tourism area as “Green Gold”, a priority area to contribute to the socioeconomic development, job creation and income increasing, thus helping alleviate poverty in the country.
Jul
17
UNESCO launches handbook for Cambodian journalists in reporting food security, nutrition
PHNOM PENH, June 25 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) on Monday released a bilingual handbook teaching Cambodian journalists how to report news relevant to food security and nutrition. The Khmer and English guidebook highlighted the general concept of food security and nutrition in simple language for journalists and policy makers to understand, Anne Lemaistre, director of UNESCO in Cambodia, said at the book releasing. "The handbook will serve as an essential tool to help guide and enhance the journalists' knowledge for accurate reporting and advocating issues such as child mortality, children and women's health, nutrition and food security," she said. "Also, it will allow policy makers to access a wide variety of resources and information to guide them on key issues and to lead them to important information sources." Child malnutrition is one of the biggest health problems that Cambodia is currently facing, according to the U.N.'s Fact-Sheet Report for Cambodia in 2011. The country is among the 20 worst countries globally for child malnutrition, estimating that malnutrition is implicated in more than 6,400 Cambodian child deaths annually. For the maternal nutrition, the report said that malnutrition is considered the underlying cause in 20 percent of maternal deaths, accounting for nearly 300 maternal deaths annually in Cambodia. Speaking at the event, Information Minister Khieu Kanharith said that the handbook will partly contribute to help Cambodia in achieving the Millennium Development Goals in eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, reducing child mortality, and improving maternal health.
Jul
31
More Foreign Tourists Visit Preah Sihanouk Province
More and more multi-foreign tourists arrive in Preah Sihanouk province. In the first six months of this year, 539,139 local and foreign tourists have visited Preah Sihanouk province, up by 115,726 if compared to the same period of 2011.
Jul
11
Boutique hotels in Cambodia rises
An increasing number of boutique hotels are appearing in Cambodia and attracting foreign investment, insiders say, including a US$2 million investment in the Governor’s House, a newly opened, 10-room boutique hotel in Phnom Penh. The number of boutique hotels in Cambodia has increased rapidly, particularly in Siem Reap, Luu Meng, president of the Cambodian Hotel Association and owner of the Almond Hotel, says. High-end tourists such as actors, actresses and other wealthy tourists who like quiet, family-style places usually stay at boutique hotels, Ang Kim Eang, president of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents, said. Belgium investor Alain Garnier, founder and CEO of the Governor’s House, said that he invested $2 million in the boutique hotel that soft-launched on Saturday evening, while the grand opening is scheduled for September this year. He invested up to $500,000 in the construction and completion of the building, but spent approximately $1.5 million on the furniture, interior design, and several imported antiques. Other botique hotels spend between $3,000 and $8,000 per room on decorations and equipment, while Garnier spent much, much more, he said. “There is about $200,000 in every room,” he said, adding that prices start at $180 to $420 per room for the soft launch, but the price is scheduled to increase to three or four times the current price in the near future, he said. The 10-room Little Garden boutique hotel, in Phnom Penh, achieves an approximate 60 per cent occupation rate in the low season and an 80 per cent rate in high season, its owner, Pich Pisey, says.
Jul
30
Big rise in Vietnamese tourists to Cambodia
Cambodia saw a large increase in the number of Vietnamese tourists visiting the country in the first five months of this year, to about 305,000. According to statistics released by Cambodia’s Ministry of Tourism on June 25, almost 1.5 million overseas holiday-makers arrived in the country during this period, a year on year increase of 26.3 percent. Of this number, 1.1 million tourists were from Asian Pacific nations. Tourism is one of Cambodia’s key economic sectors and makes a substantial contribution to the country’s GDP, which has helped to ensure a stable economic growth in the country over recent years. Last year, almost 3 million overseas tourists travelled to Cambodia, including 600,000 from Vietnam. The Angkor Wat temple complex in Siem Reap province, the Royal Palace in Phnom Penh and the beaches in Kongpong Som province are now popular destinations in Cambodia, attracting large numbers of tourists./.
Aug
06
Khmer New Year 2012 and History
For 2012 the Khmer New Year Days fall on the 13, 14, and 15 of April. It marks the end of Buddhist year 2555 and the start of new year 2556, the year of Dragon. The first new year day is on Friday April, 13, 2012. The new year angel of this year is Kemira Tevy (កិមិរា​ទេវី), the sixth daughter of Kabil Moha Prum. She wears a hairpin of violet flower, carries a sword on right hand and a zither (ពិណ) on left hand. She rides water buffalo as vehicle.The special offering for Kemira Tevy is banana (chek namva). So this year the banana price on the market is going to rise in a few days before new year arrived. Because every house will need banana for offering to new year angel. Kemira Tevy arriving on April 13, time 07:11 pm. So everyone house must be ready with the offering table and be gathered burning the incense sticks to welcome and make praying to new year angel for a happiness and successful coming year. History of Khmer New Year All nations in the world celebrate new year every year with different date and preparation according to their traditional cultures. Cambodia people also celebrated new year every year since ancient time. It’s among biggest and colorful celebrations of the year. Khmer new year or in Khmer ‘Chol Chnam Thmey’ means ‘entering new year’. And ‘Suo Sdey Chnam Thmey’ for ‘Happy New Year’. During Angkor era, Khmer celebrated new year based on the lunisolar calendar. According to Chinese diplomat, Zhou Da Guan who visited Khmer empire in 13th century recorded that Khmer celebrated new year in the tenth month of Chinese calendar in the year of his visit, which fell on December or January of Gregorian calendar. And the first month of lunisolar calendar is Mekasay (មិគសិរ) which also falls on end of December or January. After Angkor period, the new year celebration date has been changed, because Cambodians use both lunisolar and solar calendar. The current new year celebration date was determined based on solar calendar, which typically falls on April 13th or 14th of the Gregorian calendar. And this date is set as official new year days for Cambodians today. Khmer New Year Legend Cambodian practice the tradition and reinforce their beliefs about heaven, earth, and hell, good and bad karma, in which the result people got is from their deeds in their previod life. And so this life of living they shall do many good deeds for the next better life. There is a legend related to Khmer new year, that people believe that every new year there is one new angle come to take care the earth and its people. The legend goes that… Once upon a time there is a young man named Dhammabal Koma (ធ្មបាលកុមារ) who is a son of a rich man. Dhammabal Koma has finished his study of the three Vedas and also can speak the language of all birds. His talent and knowledge made him to be famous through out the area. One day, Kabil Moha Prum (កបិលមហាព្រហ្ម), who is the king of heaven heard about the cleverness of Dhammabal Koma and wanted to challenge him a test of intellectual ability by asking him to solve three riddles within seven days time. The reward of his winning is the king of heaven will cut off his own head and if Dhammabal Koma could not solve the riddles, he must also cut off his head too. After six days of considering and finding the answers to the King of Heaven’s riddles, Dhammabal Koma has no any sign about it. He was hopeless and thought that he would have to suffer his life for the King of Heaven tomorrow. So he decided to walk into deep forest and kill himself for his ashamedness. After a long distance of struggling in the forest, Dhammabal Koma arrived a big palm tree. Too tired, he fall asleep under the tree. While he was not deeply in sleep, he accidentally listened to the conversation of a vulture couple. The female vulture was enquired her husband about their food for tomorrow, and the male vulture replied that they will have Dhammabal Koma’s flesh for many days. Because he will not be able to solve the riddles. Curiously, the female vulture asked what the riddles were and her husband replied: 1. Where is the charm in the morning? 2. Where is the charm in the afternoon? 3. Where is the charm in the evening? The male vulture then continues to tell his wife the answers: 1. In the morning, charm lies on people’s face as they wash their face before starting a new day. 2. In the afternoon, charm is on people’s chests as they bathe to cool their body from the afternoon heat. 3. In the evening, charm is at people’s feet as they clean their feet after a full day of work and get ready for bed. After listened to the conversation of the vulture couple, Dhammabal Koma quickly recovered from tiredness and rush back to his palace waiting for the King of Heaven to answer his riddles. As promised, Kabil Moha Prum cut off his own head for he have been defeated. But before doing so, the King of Heaven call his seven daughters to him and advised that his head cannot be dropped down on earth or ocean, if not the earth would be destroyed in fire. His head must be putting on a platter and his daughters must take turn to carry his head for ceremonial circle around mount Someru every year during the Sangkran date, to bring happiness and good weather to the earth, before bringing to keep in Kuntheakmali (គន្ធមាលី) temple in heaven. Angel of New Year From this legend, Cambodian believe that every year on the first day of the new year or Sangkran day, there is a new angel comes down to earth (for ceremonial circle around mount Someru of Kabil Moha Prum’s heat). Each angel carries different items, has different vehicle and favor on different foods. The uniqueness of each angel are recorded in Moha Sangkran written by Hora (astrologer). So there will be different new year offerings every year. Depend on which day of the week that the new year falls, determine which angel being the angel of the new year. Below are the list of seven angels and their characteristics. Sunday angel is Tungsa Tevy (ទុង្សា​ទេវី) as the oldest daughter of Kabil Moha Prum, wears a ruby neckage, a pomegranate flower hairpin. She carries a disc (ច័ក្រ) on the right hand and on her left hand holding a shell (ស័ង្ខ). Fig fruit (ផ្លែល្វា) is her favorite food. Her vehicle is garuda (គ្រុឌ). Monday angel is Koreak Tevy (គោរាគ​ទេវី) wears Angkeabos flower hairpin. She carries a sword (ខ័ន្ធ) with her right hand and a cane (ឈើច្រត់) at the left. She rides a tiger and oil is her favorite food. Tuesday angel is Reaksa Tevy (រាក្យសា​ទេវី) wears lotus flower hairpin. She drinks blood. In her hands are a trident (ត្រីសូល៍) at right, and a bow (ធ្នូ) at left. Her animal is a horse. Wednesday angel is Mondar Tevy (មណ្ឌា​ទេវី) wears a Champa flower hairpin. Her weapons are a needle on right hand, and a cane on left. She drinks milk and rides a donkey. Thursday angel is Keriny Tevy (កិរិណី​ទេវី) wears a hairpin of Mondar flower. Beans and sesame are her favorite foods. On her right hand carries a harpoon (កងេ្វ) and on left hand a gun. Her vehicle is elephant. Friday angel is Kemira Tevy (កិមិរា​ទេវី) wears a hairpin of violet flower. She prefer banana as offering. She carries a sword on right hand and a zither (ពិណ) on left hand. She rides water buffalo as vehicle. Saturday angel is Mohurea Tevy (មហោទរា​ទេវី) wears a hairpin of Trokeat flower. She favors on deer meat. Her weapons are a disc (ច័ក្រ) and a trident (ត្រីសូត៍). She rides a peacock. Khmer New Year Celebration In the ancient time, the new year was celebrated for one month, 15 days before the new year day and 15 days after. During this time people relax and enjoying time together with relatives and villages. Nowadays, in some provinces of Cambodia, people still celebrate new year in such a long time. In the city, the new year is celebrated within three days only. And it’s the national holiday, all public and private sector are closed. Usually a week before the new year days, Monks are invited to perform a Buddhist ceremony at home, in which people believe that it’s to chase away the misfortunes and miserableness of the old year and asking for blessing of the coming new year with happiness and prosperity. People prepare their house by cleaning or new painting the wall, changing new curtain, replacing new furniture, kitchen wear which are broken. People make themselves new clothes. All these are activities to refresh the bad feeling in the old year and hoping for a good coming year. During the three days of new year, offerings for welcoming new year angel are prepared on a table placed in front of the house door. The offering included a pair of slathor (made of young banana stem, decorate with flower, betel leaves, areca nuts), cakes, fruits, water and drinks, flowers. Especially the food which is the favorite of the new year angel is a must have. If the angel drink blood, people would offer red syrup instead of blood. If in any year that the new year falls on Friday, Kemira Tevy, she prefer banana. Then in that year, the price of banana would go up twice, as everyone need banana as angel offering. The time of the new year angel coming is always different from each year. People based on the time written in Moha Sangkran which is calculated by Hora (astrologer). When it’s the time, at the offering table, people started to light candle and burn incence sticks, praying to the new year angel for health, happiness and wealth. And they will pray like this in the 2nd and 3rd days too, but in the morning or at night. Traditionally, Khmer new year is celebrated within three days. Day one is called Moha Sangkran (មហាសង្រ្កាន្ត), day two is called Vonnabot (វណបត), and day three is Lerng Sak (ឡើងស័ក). On these three days, pagodas are decorated with colorful religious plags. The pagoda management team prepare some spaces for traditionals games and dancing for villagers enjoy such as Teanh Prort, Vai Ka om, Chol Chhuong, Bos Ang Kunh, Leak Kansaeng, Sdach Jorng, Klaeng Jab Kon Morn, etc. On these three days, in the morning people prepare food offering for the monks in the local pagoda. They wearing beautiful traditional dress and gathering at the pagoda. This is to let their ancestors to celebrate the new year with them and also for getting the blessing from ancestors. After that people building sand hill with in the pagoda complex. People believe that building sand hill can help them release from sin which they had accidentally did in this life. In the evening, monk is invited for preaching in the Preah Vihea, and mostly only old people would join this ritual. At night, after finished preaching ceremony, there are various activities for young people such as play traditional games, traditional dancing, or watch Khmer drama (ល្ខោន). According to the tradition of a good Khmer child being, son and daughter must prepare foods and other offering included money for their grandparents and parents and go with them to pagoda. As this is a very good deed, that children should do, so that they will get a lot of merits from the blessing of their elderly. They also have new clothes as gift for their elderly. They also doing charity to the poor. Khmer new year is also a good occasion to visit relatives. In the countryside, people make num ansom, Cambodia sticky rice cake as a ceremony cake and giving away as gift for visitors, whom visited them. On day three, there is bathing the Buddha statues ceremony. They can join the ceremony at the pagoda or bath for their Buddha statue at home. This is to clean away all the dusts which are believed as bad things and asking for good things indeed when the Buddha statue are cleaned with perfume water. At home young people also bath for their grandparents, parents. This is for the deeds of parents which deserve the children gratitude.
Aug
08
A new biking tour through Cambodia has been opened
PHNOM PENH- If a visit to the historical temples of Angkor Wat is a must-do in Cambodia, there’s more in the small Kingdom than just Siem Reap and the famed Angkor temples. Specialist of bike tours around Asia, Spice Roads recently set up a new bicycle tour to peaceful beaches, lesser-known temples and jungle trails throughout Cambodia. At the same time, travellers will be initiated to the unpretentious rural Khmer way of life. The new four-day Cycling Cambodia’s Pepper Route tour meets in Phnom Penh but quickly escapes south to a countryside of green rice fields that contrast with a bright blue sky, creating a priceless piece of art by nature. Visiting a lake where locals picnic, a silk weaving village and a pepper plantation are part of the way to interact with Khmers who aren’t jaded by tourists. On the way, groups will visit the old colonial coastal town of Kep with its unique French and Asian atmosphere and the laid-back riverside town of Kampot. Around the small town grow pepper. Smell of the plant might only be surpassed by the flavours emerging from tasty pepper crab, a specialty dish of the area. The ride ends up at Bokor National Park with a panoramic view of the Gulf of Thailand. This 190-km ride is a mixture of tarmac and dirt roads, mostly flat except for the last day in Bokor National Park. Cycling Cambodia’s Pepper Route includes bike rental, accommodation, meals, water and snacks during the ride. The tour departs from Phnom Penh every Saturday with a minimum of 2 adults. Spice Roads also offers now two shorter excursions from Phnom Penh for mountain bikers to Kirirom National Park. This plateau is about 700m high, enough altitude for pines to grow, giving it a different feel from the country’s typical tropical jungle. Being only a two hour drive from Phnom Penh, the area is a favourite spot for local mountain bikers who have developed numerous trails and even a race course for competitions. Riders can go for the day on the Mountain Bike Kirirom’s Jungle Trails tour or spend the night at a community based tourism home-stay on the Kirirom Explorer tour. On the 2-day tour, riders will get a lift on the bamboo train before they cycle through the Cambodian countryside on the first day and hit Kirirom’s trails the next day. On both tours the riding will involve a 22 km climb to a lake where there’s time to cool down (or the option to transport up) and then an adrenalin-pumping 26 km on single track trails through forests, streams and waterfalls. When bikers do see the van again, it will be time to clean up and head back to Phnom Penh. Both tours have guaranteed departures with a minimum of 2 adults.
Aug
21
How to avoid getting mugged in Siem Reap
Getting mugged is not the most pleasant experience. One minute you’re cycling home, the five minutes between now and your bed, your most pressing challenge. The next you’re screaming your neighbours' names into the dark night, hoping someone will wake up to let you into your house. Your keys are gone for one, as is perhaps cash, a phone, a camera. And that’s just if you’re lucky enough not to be hurt. I recently became the newest member of a growing club in Siem Reap, a group who over the past few months have had purses pinched after dark. Apart from the hassle of dealing with cops (though the good-folks at the Immigration Police did process my report in double-quick time) and the insurance company, and of course losing your stuff, the violation is probably the worst aspect. Cycling home after dark isn’t quite the stress-free experience it once was. I’m pretty freaked out cycling at night on my own, I’m constantly paranoid I’m being followed, and my back goes up at the feeling of a moto driving too close behind. Luckily after living here for a year, it hasn’t spoilt this place for me. I know it’s a few bad eggs in an ocean of wonderful ones. But that may not be the way of thinking for the countless tourists who, in town for a matter of days, have had their bags snatched and their valuables taken. I’m writing this, not because I need your sympathy – I got that in bucket loads (thanks Mum! thanks neighbours! thanks friends!) I’m writing it to raise public awareness on the issue. I was fully aware that muggings were on the rise. I had stopped bringing my bag out most nights, had left my cards at home and didn’t carry cash. But of course, we all have to go about our daily business, and of course, on that night, I happened to have all the things I need for my daily business in the ill-fated bag. So how can this be stopped? Well the Immigration Police seem to be taking it more seriously, and will escort anyone home at their request. Friends International is now selling basket covers, a must-buy that doubles up as not only a safety measure but a stylish addition to your bike as well. And vigilance, that’s all we can do. My muggers were two guys on a moto, both untypically, wearing helmets. They were driving slowly behind me, waited until the road darkened, came up on the grass verge on my inside, and within a second, my bag strap – which was across my body – had snapped and they were gone. My in-hindsight-advice is this. Try to get their number plate, pull over under a light if you think you’re being followed, and whatever you do, don’t try to hold on. You’ll feel better about your lost possessions in the morning, but you won’t feel better about a broken bone or a cut up face. We may also discourage these guys from their unsavoury work by carrying fewer valuables, keeping the police phone number to hand, and watching out for dodgy characters on the way home. In the meantime, my friends are planning a sting. It involves wigs, handbags, and a pile of dung. If that doesn’t discourage any would-be muggers reading this, I don’t know what will.
Jul
24
Temple tantrum in Cambodia
PHNOM PENH - If the Mahavir Mandir Trust, an India-based religious organization, has its way, a massive replica of Cambodia's Angkor Wat temple will grace the banks of India's Ganges River. The ancient temple' second coming, divined to be the largest Hindu shrine in the world, will, however, rise amid a flurry of diplomatic complaints and hurt Cambodian feelings. On March 5, a spiritual ceremony to purify the land on which the temple will stand in India's Bihar province was held, and construction is scheduled to begin in April, according to Acharya Kishore Kunal, the Mahavir Mandir Trust's secretary. He said the massive replica, which is designed to be larger than the original Angkor Wat, will be built out of "admiration for the Cambodian people." "To me, this is the most marvelous monument ever made by mankind," Kunal said. "I just want to make the largest Hindu temple in the world. My competition is not with Cambodian culture, it's with the Hindu religious structure." Cambodian officials have nonetheless taken spirited affront, arguing that the Indian organization has no right to copy Angkor Wat's original design without Phnom Penh's permission. Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Koy Kuong said its embassy in New Delhi is assessing the situation and that if his government's permission is not granted "they have to stop". Kuong said New Delhi has yet to respond to his government's complaint. "I was angry and surprised," said Phay Siphan, the Cambodian government's Council of Ministers' spokesman. "Angkor Wat is [our] nation's spirit, the picture is on our flag. Angkor Wat is Cambodian sovereignty, it should not be replicated." He compared the project of to a form of imperialism, similar to when various European countries took possession of historic and often religiously significant artifacts from the rest of the world. "We fight against replication ... We want to get rid of this idea," he said. "They should leave us Angkor Wat, it's unique in this world." Erected in the 12th century by Khmer King Suryavarman II, Angkor Wat and its surrounding sites are sometimes referred to as the largest religious monument in the world. Built originally as a Hindu temple, Angkor Wat was later used for Buddhist worship after Cambodia's monarchy converted to Buddhism several centuries later. Both Buddhism and Hinduism owe their spiritual roots to ancient India. Nowadays, the temple - a United Nations' World Heritage Site - is central to Cambodia's national identity and is the country's biggest money-making tourist attraction. Grassroots Cambodians, the majority of whom are Buddhist, have echoed the government's displeasure with the replica plans. "I am just disappointed because I want Angkor Wat to be the only one in the world," said Seang Nara, a Phnom Penh-based law student. "I don't want Angkor Wat [to be] stolen by another place." "No tourists will come to Cambodia. They will go to India because [the temple] there will be new and bigger than in Cambodia," said Ly Srun Chhay, a 20-year-old university student in the national capital. Certain academics view the ownership controversy through a wider historical lens. Sombo Manara, the deputy chairman of the history department at the Royal University of Phnom Penh, said he sees India's interest in Angkor Wat in a positive light, comparing the planned replica to a Cambodian franchise that will become popular outside of the country. "Before we thought that all culture - like Brahmanism and Buddhism - came from India to Cambodia. But now why don't we feel happy that our Cambodian culture is spreading back to India?" he asked. "This is the first time that they copy from Cambodia ... Why don't we feel happy with that?" Manara noted that India was the first country to send official aid to Cambodia after the end of the Khmer Rouge period, including funds to finance Angkor Wat's restoration. He believes the planned replica will likely fall short of the original temple's grandeur and fine point detail, including the over 3,000 reliefs of Apsaras, or female spirits, carved into Angkor's stone walls. "If a replica is built, it's still not the same as [the original] in Cambodia. Of course the world is competition - we have to attract our tourists by the original name," he said. "The face [of the Apsara] is not an Indian face, it's a Cambodian face. So can the Indians replicate that?" Mahavir Mandir Trust's Kunal concedes there will be several significant differences. For instance, the replica will not include the original's outer structures and moat - the water pools in front of the temple's main entrance that give it much of its charm. Kunal said the replica structure will have either more or fewer than the original Angkor Wat's 13 towers because the number is considered inauspicious in India. The India-based version will also be built from different materials. While the 12th century original was made from huge blocks of stone, the Angkor Wat of 2012, or the Virat Angkor Wat Ram Mandir, will be constructed from concrete and granite, Kunal said. "I'm ready for any change, any suggestion if there's any problem," he said. "I'd like to make sure there's no controversy with good wishes from the people of Cambodia." He says the replica, which will rely on donations for its financing, will take approximately 10 years and cost around US$20 million to build. Mahavir Mandir Trust has created a Facebook page and blog to promote the project. Critics in Cambodia, however, have raised questions about the India group's commercial rather than spiritual motivations, particularly considering Kunal has never personally visited Angkor Wat. "I wanted to visit during [my] June vacation, but now I'm slightly scared because there are many types of people," he said. "Some people [in Cambodia] want to throw their shoes on me."
Aug
10
Cambodia's airports too pricey for AirAsia
While AirAsia, one of the world’s largest low-cost airline, is gearing toward an expansion in the region, the company’s chief executive said that serving Cambodia was expensive due to high airport fees. Airport charges are high and restrictive, as are over-flight fees, compared to other countries in the region – a factor that will influence the company’s decision whether to increase flights and destinations in the Kingdom. “I’ve always had a bit of a problem with airports in Cambodia,” Tony Fernandes, AirAsia’s group CEO, said Tuesday at the launch of its ASEAN headquarters in Jakarta. “But I know the Cambodian government is looking at it right now, because when they did those airports, there were no low-cost carriers.” Aviation authorities in Cambodia could not be reached yesterday. After 10 years of focusing on the Malaysian hub in which it started, the company will turn expansion efforts toward reaching a wider set of ASEAN destinations, specifically those in the region’s largest market, Indonesia. The new HQ launch came on the eve of so-called “ASEAN Day”, marking the 45th anniversary of the economic bloc’s establishment. Fernandes called Indonesia the “heart of ASEAN” and said attempts to grow further beyond the borders of its 10 member states, home to 690 million people, would come only after continued development within. “When I started, everyone was talking about India and China. But we were looking at ASEAN,” he said, framing the carrier as an “ASEAN company”. There is still room for growth in Cambodia, Fernandes noted. AirAsia will meet with Cambodian government officials at the end of August or the beginning of September to further address problems that might stymie growth in air travel. He also expressed interest in Cambodia’s Sihanoukville airport, which sees little activity outside of charter flights. “You have a fantastic airport in Sihanoukville where very few airlines are flying to right now. That would be an airport we’re interested in developing,” Fernandes said. AirAsia is in talks with Indonesian carrier Batavia, but the government may review the proposed acquisition. The airline encountered regulatory problems in Vietnam last year during an attempted joint venture with VietJet. The deal was subsequently called off. The Bursa, Malaysia-listed company has joint ventures in Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand. AirAsia Bhd closed up about 0.3 per cent yesterday at 3.7 ringgit (US$1.2). While AirAsia flights from Cambodia are limited to Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur, efforts to enhance regional tourism have benefited the Kingdom indirectly, said Meng Hient, a Cambodian Association of Travel Agents member and owner of Exotissimo Travel Group. “They don’t seem to be very active in Cambodia, but on the outside they are doing a lot to promote their destinations in the region,” he said. This is bringing tourists to ASEAN, many of whom will pass through Cambodia at some point during their journey. The lower ticketing prices have indeed allowed for lower-income groups to travel between ASEAN states, Meng Hient said. The point was emphasised by Fernandes on Tuesday. At a time when Asia’s economic spotlight seems fixed on China, AirAsia’s ASEAN business has brought increased connectivity to the region, Mohan Gunti, a member of Cambodia’s Tourism Working Group, said recently.
Jul
11
Cambodia's Prime Minister with Closing Ceremony of Tourism Annual Meeting
Cambodia’s Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen addresses the audiences while he was presiding over here on Wednesday the closing ceremony of the Ministry of Tourism Annual Meeting to review the achievements of 2011 and the first six months of 2012 and set forth new goals for the 2nd semester of 2012 and 2013.
Aug
07
August pilot program extends hours of ticket sales
From the beginning of August, BART and MyTransitPlus are teaming up with a pilot program to extend the operating hours of the MyTransitPlus kiosk at the Walnut Creek BART station on Tuesdays and Thursdays in August. The pilot program will help evaluate the need for early morning service at the ticket sales and exchange kiosk. During the pilot program the hours of operation on Tuesday and Thursday will be 7 a.m. to 10 a.m.; 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. The hours of operation on Monday, Wednesday and Friday are from 1:30 pm to 3:30 pm and 4 p.m. to 7p.m. MyTransitPlus kiosks are located in the downtown San Francisco BART stations: Embarcadero, Montgomery, Powell Street and Civic Center; and the Richmond, Coliseum, Bay Fair and Walnut Creek BART stations.
Jul
20
Destin-Nation Cambodia: Treating Wounds Outside the Temples
Tourists come to Cambodia to see the temples at Angkor Wat. Yes, some people make it down to the beautiful coast or even out to the pristine islands in the Bay of Thailand, but thanks to a lack of infrastructure (and imagination) this country has remained a one trick pony. And what a trick it is. Angkor Wat, which is perhaps most familiar to Westerners as that beautiful place Angelina Jolie destroyed in Tomb Raider, doesn't disappoint. The ancient Hindu and Buddhist temples here are intricately carved, incense cloaked and filled with orange-clad monks. It is no wonder that Siem Reap, the city that services the temples, is becoming an increasingly popular tourist attraction. Unfortunately, the chronically poor Cambodians who have been eagerly anticipating the flow of tourist capital into their pockets for the last decade are still waiting and will likely have to continue waiting for some time. Even as Asian tourists flock to their beautiful religious sites by the busload, Cambodians have woefully few ways to profit from a tourist trade controlled by foreigners. Further exacerbating the problem are the numerous questionable charities that solicit funds from travelers: Donations evaporate into thin air and the needy do not receive any help. Visitors to the temples at Siem Reap, the capital of Phnom Penh, and the beautiful Bay of Thailand coast who want to help Cambodia, a country still dealing with the scars of a horrific Communist experiment, will have to be careful. In the last few years, investigators discovered that at least two charities using tourist volunteer labor to help poor children were being run by pedophiles and that a handful of other charities really weren't charities at all. Determining which organizations are real and which are not is difficult because many of the would-be experts, the workers at large international charities, are in the country on short term contracts and lack expertise. All things considered, it would be best for volun-tourists to stay on, or pretty near, the beaten track. Charity here can also be about the decisions travelers make. Cambodians are trying to build a tourist infrastructure that will bring much-needed money into the country, but many industries are struggling to get off the ground because, thanks to the purges of Pol Pot, there are few experts left in the service industry. Tourists who frequent training restaurants and hotels will be doing a good thing and will likely have more intimate and positive interactions with the people looking after them. One more piece of advice for the philanthropic: Splash out. Cambodia has its own currency, but over 90% of the money in circulation in the country is in U.S. dollars and everything, specifically hand-crafted goods, is cheap. Getting money to artisans or even merchants is a good deed. Getting to Cambodia is shockingly easy. Flights from California through Taipei or Seoul on Eva Airways and Air Malaysia typically cost $1,600 and very cheap flights on discount carrier AirAsia connect Phnom Penh to Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur.
Jul
10
Cambodia, the host of Maritme dispute
PHNOM PENH - Efforts to ease tensions in the South China Sea will dominate this week's Asian security dialogue in Cambodia, analysts say, while the US will be at pains to stress it seeks cooperation with China. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton joins the ASEAN Regional Forum in Phnom Penh on Thursday, a few days after foreign ministers from across Southeast Asia open proceedings, with counterparts from China, Japan, the Koreas and Australia also set to attend. Friction over competing claims in the South China Sea promises to be the hot button issue as the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) holds talks on Monday -- before opening meetings to include all 27 invited countries. Manila is leading a push for ASEAN to unite to persuade China to accept a "code of conduct" (COC) in the sea, where tensions have flared recently with both Vietnam and the Philippines accusing Beijing of aggressive behavior. China prefers to deal with the claimants individually as it seeks to extend its writ over the resource-rich and strategically important area. "This is make or break time for ASEAN members," said Carl Thayer, a politics professor and Southeast Asia securities expert at the University of New South Wales in Australia. "They have set this month as their self-imposed deadline to come up with a draft COC. There could be progress." China, Taiwan and ASEAN members the Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei and Malaysia have overlapping territorial claims in the South China Sea, home to vital shipping lanes and believed to be rich in oil and gas deposits. China recently angered Vietnam by inviting bids for exploration of oil blocks in contested waters, sparking protests in Hanoi earlier this month, while Beijing and Manila are locked in a tense standoff over a disputed shoal. At their last summit in April, ASEAN countries were divided over when to include Beijing in discussions about the draft code of conduct, leading to a "big disagreement", Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said at the time. But the bloc is still hoping to reach an agreement with China by the end of the year, 10 years after first committing to creating a legally binding framework for resolving disputes. US assistant secretary of state for East Asia, Kurt Campbell, said late last month he saw momentum on the issue after noticing "an increase in diplomacy" between ASEAN and China on a potential code of conduct. The US recently expanded military relations with the Philippines and Vietnam, and the strategic rivalry between Washington and Beijing will be "the elephant in the room" this week, according to Ernie Bower of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. Amid concerns that the US's renewed focus on Asia could antagonize China ahead of a leadership transition this year, Clinton is expected "to downplay US-China friction", Bower said. Instead, she will "be at pains to advance US-China cooperation as a main foreign policy objective", agreed Thayer. With that in mind, Clinton may be less outspoken on the South China Sea issue than she was at a regional summit in 2010, when she angered Beijing by saying the US had a "national interest" in open access to the sea. "Don't look for fireworks from Secretary Clinton in Phnom Penh," said Bower. "Look for quiet strength, behind the scenes support for ASEAN positions... but nothing overt or muscle-heavy from the United States." Clinton will also want to reassure Asian counterparts that the US is committed to the region and is not just seeking to counter China. "Secretary Clinton will endeavor to advance a raft of proposals to underscore that the US has much broader interests in Southeast Asian than military rebalancing," said Thayer. Her efforts will start even before she arrives in Cambodia, with a quick visit to Hanoi, where she will meet with US and Vietnamese business representatives, and a stop-off in Laos, where she will become the first top US diplomat to visit the communist-run country in 57 years. After the security forum concludes, Clinton will lead a large US delegation to a business forum in Cambodia's tourist hub of Siem Reap on Friday. ASEAN comprises Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam -- a grouping of nearly 600 million people from disparate economic and political systems. The bloc has often been dismissed as a talking shop but it has assumed new strategic importance in light of Washington's foreign policy "pivot" to Asia and the economic rise of China in recent years.
Jul
25
Tek Bunvy best of all in Siem Reap show
Phnom Penh representative Tek Bunvy walked away with the best physique honours in the Angkor Bodybuilding Association’s (ABBA) second annual competition that concluded late Saturday evening in Siem Reap’s Angkor Century Hotel. Competing in the over 70 kilograms category, the 1.74-metre-tall Bunvy got the judges’ nod for his impressive muscular proportion and symmetry to score over two local favourites Heng Bunneang and Mam Langdy. As many as 22 bodybuilders from Siem Reap, Battambang and Phnom Penh took part in this day-long event, which was spread over three categories. The highlight of the show was the presence as special guests of two internationally acclaimed bodybuilders Jonas Younes Laroussi and Maria Ingelis Carsward who posed to the delight of hundreds of spectators. The day’s cultural show included a Bokator exhibition and Cambodian and Korean dance performances. “Some of the participants in each category have the potential to compete in international events although they need to learn more about secrets on how to prepare themselves to win a competition,” said Jonas Younes Laroussi, who finished third in the IBBF Classic last year. Meanwhile, the ABBA is contemplating a Health Fitness Fair to raise awareness among the public. According to ABBA President David a fair like this would provide an opportunity for the public to know more about health products, health services and fitness facilities in Siem Reap and Phnom Penh.
Jul
20
Discorver Phnom Penh city in Cambodia with new features
You’ll find it hard to forget and, like many, you’ll also struggle to leave. It’s an addictive, unique and vibrant city. Phnom Penh Accommodation Bars & Nightclubs Getting To & From Restaurants Travel Costs & Tips Trips Around What To Do The sites to see during the day are memorable lessens in history, and the restaurants, bars, and nightclubs in the evening are always very hard to walk away from. Located near the conjunction of the upper Mekong, Tonle Sap, Bassak and lower Mekong rivers, the city has been the capital of Cambodia for the majority of time since Angkor was finally abandoned in the 15th century. Today, with a population of around 1.5 million, the bustling South-East Asian city continues to be at the epicenter of Cambodian economic, cultural and political life. Due in large part to its charm and glorious architecture, Phnom Penh was even given the title of the Paris of the Orient in the 1960’s and, thanks to its lack of skyscrapers today, it is still renowned for its traditional Khmer and French colonial buildings, colourful roof tiles, Royal Palace and Silver Pagoda, monuments and, of course, the spectacular riverfront. And it doesn’t just stop there, there are masses of good value hotels, guesthouses and restaurants, and captivating bars and nightclubs spread throughout the city. Plus, with daily domestic flights to Siem Reap, Battambang, Rattanakiri and Stung Treng, and international airline companies flying to the capital from most South-East Asian cities, Phnom Penh now serves as a great gateway travel hub. In short, visitors just keep on coming to Phnom Penh. Once you’ve visited, you’ll fully understand why.
Jul
30
Toyota Concert Tour 2012 To Be Held in Phnom Penh This Evening
The Toyota Concert Tour 2012 will be held here this evening at 08:00 p.m. at Chaktomuk Conference Hall. The concert will be performed by the Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra (VNSO) under the baton of Japanese conductor Honna Tetsuji. This event is part of the activities to commemorate the 45th anniversary of Cambodia-Vietnam diplomatic ties. The Toyota Concert 2012 has been touring Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam from July 24 to Aug. 6. According to the schedule, after being performed in Vientiane, Laos on July 24, the concerts will take place in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on July 28, in Ho Chi Minh,Vietnam on Aug. 1, and in Hanoi,Vietnam on Aug. 5-6.
Aug
10
Samdech Chea Sim Celebrates “Chol Vossa” Ceremony
Cambodia’s Senate President Samdech Akka Moha Thamma Pothisal Chea Sim celebrates “Chol Vossa” (enter rainy season), a religious ceremony, at his residence in Phnom Penh on Aug. 8 by offering Vossa candles and food stuff to 12 pagodas in Phnom Penh and Kandal province.
Feb
28
Book collection to debut on Hanoi millennium celebration

Book CollectionThe “1,000-year-old Thang Long-Hanoi” book collection, key projects to celebrate the millennium anniversary of the capital city has been implemented by the Hanoi Publishing House (HPH) since September 2006.

The collection covers various fields, including geography, socio-economics, literature, history and culture.

At present, the HPH is speeding up the compilation of the books in order to complete the collection before the millennium anniversary. To date, 21 book titles have been published.

In addition to the specialised collection, the publishing house has also released 25 book titles about Thang Long-Hanoi for local libraries and high schools in Hanoi. Five e-books about the capital city will be also published on the occasion.

The project will also collect and systematise documents about Thang Long-Hanoi in Vietnam and foreign countries in order to build a database on Thang Long-Hanoi’s civilisation. The collection and systematisation process is expected to be completed in June this year.

Earlier, the People’s Committee of Hanoi City has launched a campaign to seek valuable and rare books and documents about Thang Long-Hanoi and 412 valuable sets of documents have been collected so far.

Jul
20
Get information about Blue Lime Hotel in Cambodia
Location: Blue Lime Is Located In Phnom Penh, Close To National Museum Of Cambodia, Royal Palace, And Silver Pagoda. Nearby Points Of Interest Also Include Independence Monument And Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum. Hotel Features. Blue Lime Features A Restaurant And A Poolside Bar. Room Service Is Available During Limited Hours. A Complimentary Breakfast Is Served Each Morning In The Pool Bar. Recreational Amenities Include An Outdoor Pool. Complimentary Wireless Internet Access Is Available In Public Areas And The Hotel Has An Internet Point. For A Surcharge, The Property Offers A Roundtrip Airport Shuttle (Available On Request). Additional Property Amenities Include A Garden. Guestrooms. 23 Air-conditioned Guestrooms At Blue Lime Feature Minibars And Coffee/Tea Makers. Bathrooms Feature Showers And Hair Dryers. Wireless Internet Access Is Complimentary. In Addition To Desks And Safes, Guestrooms Offer Direct-dial Phones. Televisions Have Cable Channels. Rooms Also Include Complimentary Bottled Water And Ceiling Fans. Guestrooms Are All Non-smoking.
Aug
07
Cambodian village shuns ‘cursed’ land
Prey Veng province in south eastern Cambodia has an expanse stretching one and a half hectares and is deserted. No animals are grazed and no harvests are reaped. No villager will step foot on the grass. In a country where so much land is the subject of dispute, a superstition dating back hundreds of years means local people in Ram Check village in Prey Chhar commune have left more than two acres untouched. They believe any man or animal who treads on it will be struck by lightning. Sek Kheang, the chief of Prey Chhar commune, said that the legend stems from an historical family conflict several hundred years ago over ownership over the land.According to the legend, two siblings fought over ancestral rights to the land. The older sister, Mummy Chhe, argued with her younger brother, whose name is not known. They took the argument to court but were unsatisfied with the outcome of the trial and, to resolve the dispute swore before Nak Ta, the spirit that tradition holds has power over the land. As punishment for their greed, the spirit cursed them and sent them both mad. Villagers have blamed frequent lightning strikes in the area on the ancient dispute, saying that the spirit is alive and the land has been left unused. Local man Kheang said he was not sure if the story was true, but that it had been passed down the generations since before he was born. He said that even when the Khmer Rouge brought in tractors, they had to turn back and the land was deserted due to frequent lightning strikes. He said: “When the tractors were forced to deforest the land in order to farm, all the tractors had flat tyres due to lightening strikes.” He added that in 2002 a foreign construction company was introduced in the area to dig up the soil and build the National Road Number 1, the route which connects Phnom Penh to Vietnam. The job, he says, was abandoned when the company heard about the superstition and abandoned the village. Sam Nang, a villager living nearby, said he believed that any animal that set foot on the land would also be struck by lightning. “I knew from hearing about the past that lightning would strike many animals to death when they entered there too.”
Aug
17
Preah Vihear to get new border crossing
The Cambodian government is seeking a new international border checkpoint in Preah Vihear province to link with Thailand’s Ubun province, officials say. Preah Vihear provincial governor Um Mara said officials from both countries had met to examine the possibility of opening a new international checkpoint. “These days, this gateway is open only two days a week, but we want it to become an international checkpoint that is open every day of the week,” Mara said. There is no scheduled deadline to open the new international checkpoint, to be named Anses, because discussions are still in the early stages. “We are preparing the infrastructure there first, but the opening date is unknown at this time,” Mara said. When the gateway becomes an international checkpoint, it will allow more goods to be transported through, and tourism in the province would soar as a result. Kong Vibol, director of the Tourism Department in Preah Vihear province, said the Preah Vihear temple was only a 60-kilometre drive from Anses. Ho Vandy, co-chair of the Tourism Task Force of the Government-Private Forum, said he welcomed the news. Opening the gateway would open the area up to the tourism industry, as associations have suggested since March, 2008.
Aug
08
Cambodia's outbound tourists increase by 33% in H1
The number of Cambodia's outbound travelers had seen a significant rise of 33 percent to 389,000 in the first half of 2012 from only 293,100 during the same period last year, according to the statistics of the Tourism Ministry on Tuesday. Ho Vandy, co-chair of the Government-Private Working Group on Tourism Policy, said Tuesday that most Cambodian visitors have traveled to ASEAN countries thanks to visa exemption agreements and geographical proximity and others have visited China including Hong Kong, Macau, Kunming, and Shanghai. Among ASEAN member states, they prefer to go to Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia, said Ho Vandy, who is also the president of World Express Tour and Travel Company. He attributed the rise of Cambodian outbound travelers to improving cost of living of Cambodian people and direct flight connections between Cambodia and those countries. Cambodia has the population of 14.5 million. By the end of 2011, Cambodian per capita GDP (Gross Domestic Product) was $911, according to a report of the finance ministry. However, there is a wider income gap between the rich and the poor.
Jul
30
Tour pro to tee it up at AGR
A hard-nosed professional in an amateur event? That exciting prospect will be a reality when the fourth Angkor Amateur Open tees off at Siem Reap’s popular Angkor Golf Resort on August 3. Cambodia’s only amateur event is whipping up global interest as far away as Australia to the Mountain Kingdom of Nepal. Foreign entries may touch a new high in a field of 80 that is expected to line up for the three round event winding up on August 5. Some of the competitors may have to rub shoulders with Asian Tour professional Chris Rodgers. He will be competing for prize money against those in Division A. This is the organisers' idea of firing up the competition. “I am delighted to be returning to Siem Reap and to participate in this year’s Angkor Amateur Open. It is one of my favourite destinations and AGR is in the top few courses in Asia. I hope the amateurs will go easy on me! But looking forward to the challenge of taking on some of the best amateurs in Asia,” said Chris Rodgers, accepting the invitation. A seasoned professional that he is, Chris Rodgers, will also conduct a golf clinic at the AGR Driving Range on the opening day before the start of the event. The clinic is open to all competitors before their first round tee off. An attractive array of prizes will be on offer for the winners with companies such as Johnnie Walker, Blackberry, Vietnam Airlines, Taylor Made and Tiger Beer all contributing. “We are delighted with the response from our friends representing companies involved in this year’s tournament. The prizes they have very generously given are as good as any Amateur tournament in Asia," the General Manager of AGR Adam Robertson told the Post yesterday. "I know we will have an exciting climax on August 5.” According to the organisers, all entrants will receive a player participation pack worth US$120 consisting of a quality golf shirt, cap and golf towel from Fenix Golf. The Amateur Open could well be a perfect dress rehearsal for a far bigger show Angkor Golf Resort will be hosting a month later. The legendary Sir Nick Faldo will once again team up with AGR, which carries his imprint as a designer, to bring the six-time major winner’s global golf development program to Cambodia for the first time. The entries are now open for the two-day inaugural Cambodian leg of the Faldo Series to be played at the AGR from September 11. Open to boys and girls aged 12 to 21 of all nationalities, the Cambodia Championship will be played over two rounds on the Faldo-designed course on which this season’s Asian Tour Handa Faldo Cambodian Classic was staged. With the field divided into four age-groups – two for boys and two for girls – the winners will qualify for the seventh Faldo Series Asia Grand Final, to be hosted by Faldo at Mission Hills Golf Club in southern China next March. The 2012-2013 Faldo Series Asia schedule features a record 18 tournaments in 15 countries, including four in mainland China and others in the Philippines, Chinese Taipei, Vietnam, Hong Kong, Singapore, Brunei, Cambodia, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Malaysia, Japan, Indonesia and Thailand. The Faldo Series Asia is supported by major partners ISPS, Mission Hills and The R&A, official golf wear partner UFL and official suppliers Taylor Made and Tricor. It is endorsed by both the Asian Tour and the Asia Pacific Golf Federation. Established in 1996, 38 Faldo Series tournaments now take place in 28 countries worldwide with more than 7,000 golfers participating each year. Past winners include Major champions Rory McIlroy and Yani Tseng.
Sep
13
Raffles Hotel Le Royal Phnom Penh
For most tourists, a trip to Cambodia begins and ends in Siem Reap. While the amazing history of Angkor Wat is certainly a must for every traveller to see at least once in a lifetime, Cambodia is a country on the rise with appeal in other parts of the country as well. The capital, Phnom Penh, is experiencing rapid growth; for now, the low-rise cityscape is punctuated by only a few skyscrapers, but this will change as time goes on. Travellers who are looking for an Asian experience recalling a more relaxed pace of life in the less frenetic times will enjoy a stay at Raffles Hotel Le Royal, Phnom Penh's premier hotel. The Raffles expertise in recreating the genteel ambience of times past is especially appropriate in this city, and the property is certainly an excellent base for exploring such sights as the National Museum Of Cambodia, the Royal Palace, the Silver Pagoda, and Wat Phnom, located just a few hundred metres from the hotel. Phnom Penh's lively riverfront restaurant and bar scene is close enough to be convenient but far enough not to be disruptive when at home in the hotel. Now supplemented by a wing added in the 1990s, the original building's historic Personality Suites are named for other famous guests who have visited, including Mrs Onassis, French writer André Malraux, Charles de Gaulle, and Somerset Maugham. Regardless of location within the hotel, all accommodation reflects the history of the city in a chic and comfortable style. First opened in 1929, Raffles Hotel Le Royal has seen some of the world's most famous people pass through its doors. One of them was Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, for whom the hotel's signature drink, the Femme Fatale, was invented. A special set of glasses with a unique shape was created for the Femme Fatale, which is a blend of champagne, cognac, and creme de cassis; the hotel's legendary Elephant Bar still serves the drink in glasses of the same shape used for Femme Fatales and no other drink. Another US First Lady recently stayed at Raffles Le Royal, though in her capacity as US Secretary Of State, Hilary Clinton had less time for sightseeing than did Jackie O. No one should pass up a visit to Raffles' spa to take up the opportunity for a Khmer massage, which incorporates pressure-point stimulation into a treatment that also includes gentle stretching and muscle movement that leaves the beneficiary with surprising reinvigoration. Follow up a spa treatment with a fine dining experience at Le Royal, the hotel's deluxe restaurant, where the finest in Khmer and European cuisine is served to guests. Khmer cuisine is a superb balance of distinctly fresh and flavoursome ingredients. As in Thailand, Cambodia has a special cuisine reserved for the royal family, and Le Royal is the only restaurant in the country authorised to prepare royal cuisine for its guests. Less formal but no less appealing is Café Monivong, where a bountiful buffet breakfast is served each morning. Lunch and dinner are also served here, though the Sunday Personality Brunch is perhaps the most famous of its meals.
Aug
28
Preah Vihear temple dispute
Tom Blass discovers that maps should never be relied upon to provide a definitive description of a boundary, especially when dealing with the Preah Vihear temple complex dispute Even before it flared up again in 2008, the Preah Vihear temple dispute between Cambodia and Thailand was used by students of international boundaries as a text book example of a number of important principles. Perhaps the most important of these was that maps should never be relied upon to provide definitive descriptions of boundary – especially where those maps have been drawn up by people living on one side of the border. The second, scarcely less important principle is that the longer a government tacitly or implicitly acknowledges an asserted boundary, the harder that boundary becomes to challenge. Since the temple dispute became ‘live’ again, a number of significant new principles could be added to the pair above. One is simply the importance of recognising the interconnectedness between territory disputes and a host of other issues, relating not only to bilateral relations but also to domestic politics and the state of the economy. Others are that governments do not always have the ability to resolve potential border flashpoints – if they did, then why haven’t they done so already? – and that definitive rulings by international tribunals cannot always provide a cure-all for disagreements between neighbours. The Preah Vihear temple complex, perched atop a cliff in the Dangrek Mountains which divide Thailand and Cambodia, has been a place of veneration for both the Thai and the Khmer people for nine centuries. The travails involved in reaching it – in combination with its religious significance and artistic merit – have long made the temple an obvious place of pilgrimage. But its location did not become a bone of contention until the governments of French Indochina (part of which is today’s Cambodia) and the Kingdom of Siam (now Thailand) agreed in 1904 to establish a commission for the purpose of delimiting their shared border. The commission reached its conclusion amicably, agreeing that the watershed of the Dangrek mountain range should define the boundary, and subsequently officials from the Indochinese side – some of whom had been members of the mixed commission – drew up a map in which Preah Vihear lay on the Indochinese side. At the time, the Siamese government accepted this map in good faith; crucially, a Siamese monk even accepted an invitation to visit the temple as a guest of the French Indochinese government. After all, the commission had met in a collegiate spirit, and no cause for concern was evident until it transpired that the map did not accurately define the watershed – had it done so, the temple would have lain on the Siamese side of the border. In the mid-1950s Thailand occupied the temple; Cambodia, protesting, took the case to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague. In its judgment, published in 1962, the court found that the map was not of itself binding, agreeing with Thailand that the initial depiction of the watershed, and hence the boundary, was erroneous. But the court went on to say that since the Siamese authorities had ‘accepted the map without further investigation, [they] could not now plead any error vitiating the reality of their consent,’ and furthermore that they had already passed up several other opportunities in which to raise the matter. Preah Vihear, declared the ICJ, would remain in Cambodia. Boundary disputes have a habit of flaring up when least expected. In July 2008, Cambodia successfully managed to have Preah Vihear included on the UNESCO World Heritage list, with an incendiary effect on Thai national sentiment. Initially, the Thai government had supported the submission, and for a time the two administrations worked together on a plan whereby a buffer zone around the temple would be regarded as Thai but ultimately administered jointly. Such an arrangement would have in effect made the temple a Cambodian ‘enclave’ within Thailand. But opposition MPs decried the government’s failure to support what they described as Thailand’s sovereign interests, and relations between the two countries became heated. Troops built up on both sides of the border and a skirmish in October 2008 led to casualties on both sides. In the event the immediate situation was diffused; but the numerous dawns which have since risen over the temple complex have proved to be false, and as of January 2010 this potential conflict seems to be moving away from, not toward, a peaceable and long-lasting solution. There is no doubting the depth of genuine national feeling keeping the issue on the burner. For many Cambodians, the temple represents a vestige of a Khmer kingdom which was once very much more extensive than it is now; whereas Thais see the 1962 ruling as a perpetuation of an injustice made against them by a former, albeit neighbouring, colonial power. But there are a number of other contexts to consider. Thailand’s unsettled political situation certainly has a bearing: Preah Vihear is a useful stick with which the opposition can beat the ruling regime. That Cambodia has appointed former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra to the post of special economic adviser can only be seen as a further complication. And then there is the issue of the Overlapping Claims Area (OCA), a 27,000 square-kilometre area in the Gulf of Thailand that has consistently evaded the imposition of a bilaterally-agreed maritime border between Cambodia and Thailand. Like Preah Vihear, the OCA is at once technically complicated and highly sensitive to changes in political temperature – both issues are capable of upsetting each other’s apple cart. Yet there remains hope that the temple dispute can be resolved. In October last year, the Cambodian government supported a Thai suggestion that the dispute should be submitted to ASEAN for arbitration, which would be an interesting test of the organisation’s capability as a forum for dispute resolution – cynics might argue both that ASEAN has typically shied away from overtly political acts which might upset regional relations and that Cambodia and Thailand have already sought the assistance of a third party (in the form of the ICJ). Other people’s disputes are always so much easier to solve than one’s own. But a long-lasting solution must inevitably take account of the shared and respective histories of both nations. In 2008 something along these lines was almost achieved; nonetheless, any agreement will remain vulnerable to attempts on either side to whip up xenophobic sentiments for political advantage – patriotism, as Dr Johnson pointed out, is the last refuge of a scoundrel. Preah Vihear remains an interesting case against which to test another pithy aphorism: Robert Frost’s observation that there are ‘no bad fences, only bad neighbours.’ The Thais and the Khmers are bad neighbours. While they have avoided outright war in the modern period, they remain suspicious of each other, and the potential for mutual recrimination is high. Also, and unfortunately, the ‘fence’ itself is a bad one, and the situation as a whole underlines the way in which poorly demarcated boundaries can become flashpoints capable of souring relations if given the opportunity to do so. Perhaps the greatest hope resides in the thought that if both parties value Preah Vihear as highly as they profess to, then they share a greater sense of communality than they realise. A more likely prediction, however, is that ‘the temple case’ will remain on the syllabus of students of boundaries for a long time to come.
Jul
17
EGYPTAIR receives 80th aircraft
EGYPTAIR welcomed the newest Boeing 737-800 to its fleet which now consists of 80 modern aircraft . Onboard the maiden flight from Seattle was humanitarian shipment sent by the Egyptian-American Scientists and Engineers Association. Capt Hossam Kamal, EGYPTAIR HOLDING Chairman & CEO said “the arrival of our 80th aircraft comes concurrent with EGYPTAIR’s 80 anniversary in 2012, the matter which confirms that EGYPTAIR is an important part of the Egyptian modern history, thus, we all care for dedicating all our capabilities for serving the Egyptian society and to participate in the charitable initiatives done by the expatriate Egyptians.” Kamal added “in spite of the hardships that the company faced during the last period, EGYPTAIR could overcome the furious competition and continued its fleet modernization plan in addition to performing its national role in serving the national economy” From his side, Capt Ayman Nasr, EGYPTAIR AIRLINES Chairman & CEO, declared that “EGYPTAIR gives due importance to performing social responsibility towards the Egyptian people which comes from the faith that huge economic entities have national duty towards their societies. From this view, EGYPTAIR, for the second time, transported humanitarian aids aboard one of its newest aircraft, which were donated by the USA-based Egyptian-American Scientists and Engineers Association. A part of these donations was delivered on the 79th aircraft received in 11 February, 2012.” “EGYPTAIR transported this time 5 tons of aids donated by the Egyptians working in Northern West of American and Canada and other multinational companies. The shipment consisted of specialized scientific books sent as courtesy to the Engineering and Medicine faculties in Cairo University in addition to a number of various cloths donated to Resala Charity Association which will receive the shipment for distribution”. Eng Hatem Ayyad, the president of the Egyptian-American Scientists and Engineers Association thanked EGYPTAIR and the team work that helped in transporting these shipments. Ayyad said “The national company, EGYPTAIR, has always been providing full support to the national efforts.” He added “this project was not to come to light except with the honest support of EGYPTAIR officials, especially, Eng Hussein Massoud who adopted this project while he was chairing EGYPTAIR HOLDING.” EGYPTAIR now has 19 Boeing 737-800 which provides 160 seats with many electronic and entertainment facilities for the customers. The Boeing 737-800 is a medium range aircraft operating on the European, Middle Eastern and African routes and this supports these destinations and provides more facilities to the customers flying aboard EGYPTAIR.
Aug
21
Film maker who forged "golden cinema" age dies
Leading figures from Cambodia’s film industry will pay tribute today to Yvon Hem, one of the country’s most distinguished film-makers, who passed away over the weekend at the age of 75. Hem, one of the last remaining directors from the “golden age” of Cambodian cinema between 1960 and the early 1970s, played a crucial part in the development of the Cambodian film industry. He also produced the first feature-length film after the Khmer Rouge years, during which soldiers killed his wife and four children. Contemporary film-makers, as well as members of Hem’s family, will give talks today at Phnom Penh’s Bophana Centre, recalling his life and work. During the “golden age”, more than 400 films were released. Hem made more than a dozen before the Khmer Rouge came to power in 1975 and all artistic work in Cambodia ground to a halt. Nearly all of the stars from the era were killed, and many movies were lost. Some of Hem’s films can still be found on VHS in the markets of Phnom Penh. The Bophana Centre will screen one every afternoon from August 17 to 24. Chea Sopheap, a research assistant at the centre, said: “He contributed to the development of the film sector in Cambodia right from the very beginning. “Moreover, he was friendly and happy to share his experience with the new generation.” Hem got his start in the movie business as a teenage production assistant on French director Marcel Camus’ L’oiseau de Paradis (Bird of Paradise) in 1963. The film starred his sister Nary Hem, and the two of them started their own production company with their brother after filming wrapped. Its name was Baksey Thaansuo, Khmer for “bird of paradise”. Their first feature film was a version of the Reamker, a Cambodian epic poem based on India’s Ramayana epic. Dr Tilman Baumgärtel, an expert on Southeast Asian cinema from the Department of Media and Communication at the Royal University of Phnom Penh, praised a man who was both brilliant and personable. “Yvon Hem was among the most technically accomplished film-makers of the Golden Age, and ran his own company. “While many of his films are clearly influenced by theatre, he was able to come up with some really inspired cinematography and some special effects that impressed the audience. He was also one of the best and most accommodating sources on Cambodian cinema. He came from a upper-class family, and he had a certain sophistication.” As well as hosting talks tomorrow and screenings next week, the Bophana Centre will exhibit letters from film-makers and stars who worked with Hem, including correspondence with Davy Chou, the French-Cambodian film-maker whose work has been shown at film festivals around the world. Meta House will screen his 1968 classic Enav and Bospa next Sunday. Meta House founder Nico Mesterham said: Yvon Hem was one of the most important film-makers in Cambodian history – creative and innovative to the max. Younger generations here must study his work carefully; they can learn a lot from him.”
Jul
17
UNDP backs Cambodian youth photo contest
Young Cambodians passionate about photography and social issues will now have a chance to bring the two together, through a photo-story contest organised by the Royal University of Phnom Penh’s Department of Media and Communication (DMC) with support from the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). The contest, which will run from July 13 through to July 18, has as its main theme the issue of “sustainable development” and was created to raise awareness of the upcoming 2012 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Organisers hope to involve the Kingdom’s youth in creating social content, and to offer a space for sharing and learning. “Photo is a powerful tool to send messages,” said project co-ordinator Tith Chandara, “because it can tell a million different stories based on the viewers’ interpretations.” The main theme of “sustainable development” has been broken down into sub-topics such as agriculture, climate change, water resource and sanitation, tourism, sustainable forests and land use, and economic growth and development. According to Hing Phearanich, a climate change policy analyst with the UNDP, the contest’s chosen topic is a way to reaffirm Cambodia’s commitment to sustainable development following a number of world conferences and summits. “With the theme [sustainable development] chosen for the photo contest, youth as participants can get a closer perspective of the topic and turn their hobby of taking photos into something useful,” Said Hing Phearanich. To be eligible for the contest, participants must be between 16 and 30 years old. Several criteria will be used to judge the photos – among them the participant’s social media savvy, since going to the final stage involves sharing photos on social networks and blogs as a way of spreading discussion of the issue. “We don’t want youth to join the contest with only an intention of winning the prize,” Tith Chandara said. “We want them to initiate something new and share among their network.” Ly Sokha, a student at the Royal University of Agriculture who attended a contest orientation workshop over the weekend, said she was interested in participating as a way of expressing and sharing ideas on sustainability issues, particularly around agricultural development. “I am rather happy to be able to join the contest although I don’t know if I will win the prize,” Sokha said.
Jul
18
The appearance of Dara Airport Hotel lands at Ratana Plaza
A new hotel serving the Phnom Penh International Airport opened on July 1 at Ratana Plaza on the left off Russian Boulevard just before Hanoi Road on the way to the airport from central Phnom Penh. The Dara Airport Hotel has 155 rooms with a fifth-floor reception, swimming pool, bar and spa. A 60-room second addition to the hotel on an adjacent street, with 11 long-stay apartments, in a building along with a restaurant and a branch of Canadia Bank is scheduled to open in November. When the adjacent addition is opened, the hotel’s total room count will be 226. General Manager Pierre Bernard, who formerly worked at the Cambodiana Hotel and the Independence Hotel in Sihanoukville, says one of the best features of the hotel is the fifth floor open area where guests can relax in the open air, adjacent to the lobby. “The advantage is to be close to the airport,” Bernard said. The hotel is part of the Ratana Plaza complex, which houses a Lucky supermarket, Lucky Burger, iOne computers and a number of other shops. An opening promotion rate of $55 per night is being offered for single rooms, $60 for double. The rates will later increase to $80 plus, and $90 for a deluxe room. The suites, with living rooms, couches and big screen televisions, start from about $200. The hotel’s restaurant is called Blue Sky and has Western, Khmer and Chinese menus. The Attitude Lounge is located adjacent to the fifth floor rotunda and reception area. Bernard said the hotel would focus on corporate clients. “We already have guests, a majority of them are corporate from the government and factory sector,” Bernard said. “We are close to the golf course and the Cambodia Country Club,” he said.
Aug
18
UN program helps indigenous Cambodian artisans
Indigenous communities are the archetype of sustainable societies, having historically evolved and thrived in various ecosystems. However, as the modern industrial world continues to flourish, indigenous people have been struggling to overcome hardships it has brought upon them. The depletion of their land and natural resources has forced them into crippling poverty as they face the growing free market. Not only is their property threatened, but their cultural traditions are as well. In 2009, four United Nations agencies, UNDP, UNESCO, ILO, and FAO, along with various local organizations, launched an initiative called the Creative Industries Support Programme (CISP). The purpose of CISP is to help indigenous people of Cambodia obtain entrepreneurial knowledge regarding things such as marketing and quality control, exhibition, and costing and consignment skills. By honing these business skills, the indigenous artisans are able to sell their handicraft products to the public. Overall, CISP hopes to “revive Cambodia’s cultural assets and create jobs, spur economic growth and reduce poverty by developing the country’s creative industries.” So far, CISP has been quite successful in their mission. Within the past three years, over 800 indigenous artisans have been trained and their products are continually gaining appeal. According to a recent UNDP report, product sales between October 2010 and March 2011 increased by 18 percent as opposed to the same period in 2009. Sales growth, however, does not merely depend on tourism attraction; for the program to function, effective organizational strategies must be implemented. In response to this demand, CISP works to build a market network and strives to produce high quality merchandise in a timely manner, as dictated by the buyer. The market consists of products that tend to be smaller and lighter; notebook and laptop covers, shopping bags, and wallets are some of the more popular items, and are woven in the traditional manner. “There is a need of adaptation of produced crafts to tourists’ needs and constraints,” said UNESCO’s Blaise Kilianto MediaGlobal. “Crafts that used to be everyday tools can become souvenirs. The fact that these crafts are made according to traditional technique allows for the preservation of indigenous traditional know-how, which gives added value to the products.” The indigenous population of Cambodia is, as Kilian describes, “the poorest of the poorest,” and is struggling to adapt to the modern world. Customarily, indigenous people make their living off their land, which until recently was relatively separated from the rest of the world. This land gave them food security, biodiversity, the power to bargain, and the ability to govern themselves. They benefited from non-timber forest products, but the prevalent deforestation has been detrimental to the wildlife population, and increased climate change. As the progressive economic system has grown, encouraged by the mindset of nation-building and development, the indigenous territories have been targeted by businessmen who see opportunities to commercialize the land. Many indigenous people lose their land to loan or contract farming schemes, often selling goods through third parties who take the majority of profits and leave little for them. “They live off small agricultural activities and by selling their labor to plantation owners, and are now faced with constant pressure from the outside,” Kilian stated. Consequentially, the indigenous people are marginalized, and their traditional livelihood practices such as cultivation of forest areas and pastoralist activities, are viewed as opposing development and obsolete. In addition to losing precious resources and income, the marginalization has resulted in a considerable loss of culture. CISP works to preserve the traditional knowledge that is left. “Although their performing arts, basket and textile weaving or pottery making skills have survived, the indigenous people generally don’t have entrepreneurship skills and therefore have a hard time with costing, pricing, marketing and negotiation,” Kilian explains. The program even contributes to the empowerment of women. Focus groups conducted by CISP have shown that since women are able to generate an income, they are seen as having more importance within their households. With this program, the indigenous people are able to regain bargaining power, strengthen their economic and social position, and do not have to bend to the fluctuating market prices, allowing for there to be hope for a reconciliation between Cambodia’s indigenous people and the developing world.
Jul
26
Cambodia keen to expand ties with Bac Ninh
Cambodia wants to tighten cooperation in many fields with Vietnam, including the northern province of Bac Ninh, to deepen solidarity and friendship between the two countries. Cambodian Permanent Deputy Prime Minister-cum-Minister of National Assembly – Senate Relations and Inspection Men Sam An made the statement at a meeting with Nguyen Nhan Chien, Chairman of the Bac Ninh provincial People’s Committee in the province on July 24. Men Sam An said it is the third time she has paid a working visit to Bac Ninh province, which was set under a cooperation agreement between the two Government Inspectorates to mark the 45 th anniversary of the two countries’ diplomatic ties. She said she hopes Cambodia will continue receiving Vietnam and Bac Ninh province’s assistance in corruption prevention, meeting citizens and settlement of complaints and denouncements. Chairman Chien briefed the guest of the local socio-economic situation over the past 15 years. With geographical and economic advantages, Bac Ninh has become one of the most developing localities nationwide with the presence of major international investors. By giving administrative reform a top priority, the province was placed second in the provincial competitiveness index out of the top ten provinces nationwide. He also shared the province’s experience in inspection, meeting citizens and handling complaints and denouncements./.
Jul
25
Vietnam, Cambodia boost ties on government inspection
The Vietnamese Government Inspector General Huynh Phong Tranh met with Cambodian Ministry of National Assembly and Senate Relations and Inspection (MONASRI) delegation in capital Hanoi on Monday. During the meeting, Vietnamese Government Inspector General Huynh Phong Tranh briefed the Cambodian delegation on Vietnamn socio-economic situation in the first six months of 2012, and shared experience in inspection work to deal with complaints about corruption and directions for the second half of the year. The visit of Cambodian MONASRI delegation showed the friendship cooperation between the two inspection branches, laying the foundation for the implementation of cooperation agreements between the two sides, Tranh said. Men Sam An, head of Cambodian MONASRI delegation thanked Vietnamese Government Inspection sector for helping Cambodia in personnel training, saying that the visit would be a good opportunity for the two sides to exchange experience in inspection work, contributing to strengthening bilateral friendship between Vietnam and Cambodia. In 2006-2011 period, the Vietnamese inspection sector held six training courses for Cambodian inspectors. Vietnam and Cambodia established diplomatic relations in 1967. The bilateral economic, trade and investment cooperation has developed rapidly. It reached a turnover of 2.8 billion U.S. dollars in 2011 and is expected to hit 5 billion U.S. dollars in the next five years.
Jul
26
CBRE regional boss calls on promotion of Cambodian beaches to Angkor Wat visitors
The regional manager of the world’s largest property group says the islands off the cost of Sihanoukville in the Koh Rong Archipelago could become for Cambodia what Phuket is for Thailand. David Simister, Chairman of CBRE Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia, said the Cambodian government should promote visitors from Angkor Wat extending their time in Cambodia to enjoy the beaches and islands along the southern coast. “I do think one area the government should stimulate is the linkage between Angkor Wat, Phnom Penh and the coast,” said Simister, who was in Cambodia on November 25 for a valuation conference and to join a party in celebration of the opening of Mekong Gardens serviced apartments. “We’ve advised several people on projects down there, including Song Saa Island,” Simister said. “We believe in its connectivity, transportation and the right level of hotel rooms.” Simister said if only 10 per cent of Angkor Wat visitors chose to visit Sihanoukville “you could triple spending in the country. Most Angkor Wat visitors will spend more time in a neighbouring country than Cambodia, principally to sit on the beach.” Simister says Cambodia is like Thailand was in the late 1980s. “I think Cambodia is one of the fastest growing economies and there are a lot of parallels to when I started in Bangkok in 1988. At that point on the skyline the tallest building was Bangkok Bank, and we were in a building where you had to queue 30 minutes to get into the lifts, first generation high rise office building.” “Since then there are hundreds of high rise buildings, and we’ve been involved with most of the leading ones. In Cambodia, CBRE is the sole leasing agent for Vattanac “which is a solid and visible sign of real progress, and a new level of grade-A accommodations”, he said. Simister said he was pleased CBRE had been appointed as property manager to Phnom Penh Tower, the newest skyscraper to be available for office leasing on the Phnom Penh landscape. Another of CBRE’s clients is Mekong Gardens, which Simister describes as a “soft space with very beautiful natural settings on the Mekong and facilities that rival many hotels in terms of pool and deck area”. Simister first came to Cambodia in 1993. “We like to go into emerging economies early. While we may do jobs for foreign investors, we believe our true client base is working with local developers and using our international connections. Our strength is the right people in the business and having our place in the local market. We’re here to seize the opportunity, not waiting for an appointment and then start thinking how to resource it.” Simister said he remembers the UNTAC elections and the “tremendous buzz” about Cambodia in 1993, even though the very few restaurants at the time didn’t have matching silverware. “We treat this emerging market seriously.”
Sep
14
Human remains found at Cambodian pagoda
PHNOM PENH, Construction workers at a Buddhist temple in Cambodia have unearthed human bones officials say could be the remains of victims of the Khmer Rouge. Eighteen skulls appeared to have been violently shattered, the Phnom Penh Post reported. Workers at the Wat Kesararam pagoda in the town of Siem Reap said arm bones were found bound together with rope and leg bones locked together with iron cuffs. Chief monk Sambath Ly Ye said the temple had been built on a former Khmer Rouge execution site. Human bones had been discovered at the pagoda in the past several years, he said, many buried with handcuffs. The remains are kept in a small cottage behind the temple. A construction worker said more bones were first discovered last week, and many skulls and bones, "some already rotten," were found this week after a few feet of topsoil was removed to build living quarters for the monks. Work at the site has now stopped. Van Than Peou Dara, the deputy director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, said the center's research had found the land on which the pagoda is now built had been a security office, prison and killing site during the Pol Pot regime. Siem Reap District Governor Tep Bun Chhay said the deaths also could have occurred in the Lon Nol era. Some 24 killing sites were known to exist in the province, he said, where an estimated 44,258 people were believed to have died. Read more: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2012/09/12/Human-remains-found-at-Cambodian-pagoda/UPI-13521347451053/#ixzz26PROUU00
Aug
10
Chinese firm plans investment in Cambodia's agriculture, tourism
China's Hainan Ruijin Investment Holding Group planned to invest in rice plantation, cow farm and tourism development in Cambodia, the group's chairman Pan Xiaoping said here Wednesday. Pan said during a meeting with Heng Samrin, president of Cambodia's National Assembly that his company decided to establish an overseas branch office in Cambodia to focus on the three projects. Pan did not say when the projects will be started. Heng Samrin pledged full support for those projects, which he said will be good to boost the development of Cambodia's economy. "Foreign investment is a key factor to accelerate economic development in Cambodia," he said.
Jul
28
Cambodia's Undiscovered Temples
The Mekong is a river I have always feared a little—it is sea-like, sinister, inscrutable. It breeds some of the world's largest freshwater beasts: Irrawaddy dolphins, giant catfish, and stingrays. It begins in Tibet and is the earth's most productive freshwater fishery. In November, it turns into a floodplain, and as I crossed it then its waves were thick with rotting flowers and roots and knotted floating grass. Birds swooped around the boat, following it, and their nests could be seen in the tops of drowned trees. After forty minutes, a silhouette came into view as if rising out of this temporary and demented unnatural sea: the forbidding "sacred mountain" of Phnom Da, its tower black against the storm and stark in its enforced solitude. Steps rose up steeply through still-wet jungle. At the top, the Mekong waters appeared on all sides and an imposing brick-and-stone prasat (the Khmer word for a tower or pagoda) stood alone in a froth of wildflowers, its walls dark rust-red and black. Beautiful carvings soared above the doorways, and the chiseled plinths were still firm and elegant. But the prasat itself was clearly empty: looted, or gutted by archaeologists—one never knows in Cambodia. A cowherd stood with his cattle before the main doorway. As I appeared, he simply held out a casual hand and said, “One dollar”—that Khmer refrain which every traveler guiltily repels. With him was a man suffering from some kind of illness, his hands twisted and his eyes lopsided. He seemed to be in informal charge of the shrine within. They watched me silently. Inside, there was a lingam stand (an emblem of the god Shiva) with two bowls of incense sticks, now exposed to the sky: Concentric brick rectangles rose vertiginously upward to an opening through which the rain fell. The tower was engulfed in forest, intimate amid its surroundings, and inaccessible to historical knowledge. The guardian came rolling toward me on his misaligned hips, his hand outstretched. He croaked out a greeting, which sounded like, “B’muray.” “B’muray,” I said. “No,” he repeated. “You Bill Murray. You give me five dollar.” (It is true that there is a resemblance.) For years, and especially when I lived in Phnom Penh, I had been coming to the National Museum and admiring a strange group of statues. They are kept in a gallery to one side, a little ignored, and are unlike any other in Cambodia. Dark green in color, far older than the masterpieces from Angkor Wat which otherwise crowd the museum, these huge pieces possess a style and sexual grace that seem to come from an entirely different civilization. They were discovered in the ruins of Phnom Da in 1935, by Henri Mauger, and were dated to about the sixth century A.D. In the middle was a gigantic figure of Vishnu with eight arms, his hands clutching a flame, an antelope skin, and a flask, and on either side of him two smaller figures of Rama and Balarama. To me, they were the most beautiful and imposing things in the museum, and the most emotionally appealing. And so I had always wanted to get to know the place where they had come from—the remote southern Cambodian province of Takéo. How could a site so unknown have produced art so great? Prasat Neang Khmau, built in the early tenth century, is also known as the Temple of the Black Lady—its name perhaps alludes to Kali, the dark goddess of destruction. The “Phnom Da style” is the most ancient sculptural genre in what is now Cambodia. The ten-foot figure of Vishnu is carved from a single block of sandstone, and only five of his eight hands are still attached to surviving arms. But all of them are carved with finesse, the individual nails carefully delineated. Like a young pharaoh, the god wears a tall cylindrical hat and a folded loincloth. His physique, too—slender and lifelike, with wide shoulders and a little bulging belly fat below the navel—reminds one of Egyptian figures. This is the oldest known Cambodian sculpture. Even the dark-green polished, shiny surface of Vishnu seems different from the texture of later styles. Where do these oval faces, aquiline noses, and almond-shaped eyes come from? Even the tear ducts, the pupils, and canthi of the eyes are perfectly carved. The figure of Balarama, the elder brother of Krishna, whcih stands to the right of Vishnu, is particularly moving. His left eye has been obliterated, but his gentle smile is still intact, as is the symbolic plow he carries. His figure is boyish, tilted at the hips. Rama, meanwhile, holds a tall bow and gazes down at us with a haughty gentility. As an avatar of Vishnu, he is associated with chivalry and virtue. I knew where Phnom Da was on the map—it lies a few miles from the Vietnam border, in the Mekong floodplain. This means that in winter it turns into an island and one has to get there by boat. This was forbiddingly appealing. Since none of the Khmer temples outside the tourist circuit of Angkor Wat are well known, I was well aware that it would be more arduous than simply taking a plane to Siem Reap and staying in yet another Royal Angkor Village boutique lodge with an Anantara spa. But there are only so many times you can walk around Angkor Wat at dawn with fifty thousand Korean tourists, searching for mystical solitude. People said that the temples of Take?o were like Angkor fifty years ago, even if they were nowhere near as grand. It was, I thought, unlikely to be true, but it would be enough for me if they were merely different. When I arrived in the port town of Take?o, the waters were so high that the longtails for hire at the jetties were almost level with the street behind them. Take?o is always a lethargic proposition: a market caked with fruit skins, a few lok-lak restaurants with nightly song and dance, a handful of wretched guesthouses with those balconies of oddly plasticated columns that Cambodians love. They were now milky-brown under storm clouds. The tops of submerged mango trees swarmed with swallows, grasses floating between them. It’s about a fifty-dollar longtail ride to cross this strange landscape that does not promise hospitality. On the far side of it can be found both Phnom Da and a very different place called Angkor Borei, a village in a lagoon with some unusual remains. They lie within an area known as "the cradle of Khmer civilization." Sixteen hundred years ago, Angkor Borei was a huge city named Vyadhapurya, the capital of a state that Chinese chroniclers of the third century A.D. called Funan. In A.D. 240, two Chinese ambassadors named Kang Tai and Zhu Ying visited the kingdom and provided a few fragmented descriptions of it. The Chinese gave the title "Fan" to the Funan kings, so their names have come down to us in Chinese forms—the founder king was known as Fan Shi Man. Funan was the first great state of Southeast Asia—and is also the least known, with much of its architecture having all but disappeared. Photos Photos of Cambodia's Ancient Temples Kenro Izu captures the magic of Cambodia's ancient temples in this gallery of photos and digital extras. As I stood there on top of Phnom Da, I recalled that Rudravarman, the last significant king of Funan, is believed to have built the temple in the sixth century. The prasat, though, is thought to date from the eleventh. It is therefore likely to be a reconstruction of an earlier original. Lower down the hill are five man-made caves filled with Shiva lingams that were used as cremation sites during Pol Pot genocide. Farther down still stands an even more haunting building, a small seventh-century temple known as Ashram Maha Rosei, or the Sanctuary of the Great Ascetic. It is considered architecturally unique in Cambodia because of its use of stone at a time when stone was not readily accessible in the region (most Khmer temples of this antiquity are brick). From Maha Rosei came a magnificent statue of Harihara, a fusion of Shiva and Vishnu, that is now a star exhibit at the Muse?e Guimet in Paris. But today the shrine is empty; its beauty lies in the massive size of its single inner vault and its exterior. The effect is that of a cave holding a single image of a god—such as might be used by an ascetic—and is very like the austere seventh-century temples of Sambor Prei Kuk, a hundred miles to the north. Like Prei Kuk, it is one of the few Khmer temples where you can be alone, undisturbed by a chattering tourist machinery. One thinks of the thousands of people who gaze at the Harihara of Maha Rosei every year in Paris, and of the quiet desolation of the place where it once belonged. A less war-torn land might have been able to keep its treasures. But Cambodia is a looter’s paradise, and its more obscure temples have proved easy prey because they are not guarded. An hour later, I was in Angkor Borei. It is a very different place, soporific and outwardly plain but charmingly approached through narrow, curving waterways overgrown with jungle, where knee-high shrines and upturned boats sit inside the mangroves. These are the ancient, clearly man-made canals of Funan, as far as anyone can tell. Aerial photographs taken by the French geographer and photographer Pierre Paris in the 1930s show that there was once a vast system of these canals connecting Angkor Borei to the Mekong Delta city of O?c Eo, sixty miles away in Vietnam. Funan, after all, was a maritime state controlling the seaborne trade between India and China that hugged the coastlines all the way between the Ganges and the Champa kingdom of Vietnam. Water was its lifeblood. The state declined in the mid sixth century—most probably because improvements in naval technology finally enabled ships to cross open ocean and so avoid Funan’s tax collectors—and was absorbed into the more northerly kingdom of Zhenla. But one of its paradoxes is that its greatest art seems to have come from the very period of its terminal decline. No one knows why. Angkor Borei retains a lost-world atmosphere from its past. The boat dropped me off at a museum on the water, next to a decomposing French mansion of moss-thickened vaults and balconies not dissimilar to some antebellum plantation house. I wandered through the rooms while the curator turned on the fans one by one. “A visitor!” his eyes seemed to cry. “You look familiar,” he said slyly. “I have seen you before.” I prepared my one dollar in my pocket, but it was never asked for. Instead, we went together through the museum. “Have you ever heard of Funan?” he politely inquired. “Never heard of it before.” “Cambodians never heard of it either.” He told me about the Funanese—a mysterious people, a lost people—and showed me exhibits of piled human bones from funerary sites, beautiful pottery and stone friezes depicting Vishnu. Out in the garden stood massive replicas of Funan-era Vishnu and Shiva statues (some of the originals are in Phnom Penh), but they were less interesting to me than the remains of the city walls, which are practically the only thing of brick left of ancient Vyadhapurya. A short ride on a motodop, a hired motorbike, took me to where pieces of the massive brick and masonry walls (parts of it were damaged by the American bombing of Cambodia) stand festering in weeds, wildflowers, and damp, and are happily incorporated into the texture of village life. I thought of the Roman walls in Istanbul, which are similarly neglected and casually worked into the daily life of the city. A bas-relief carving at the late-twelfth-century Ta Prohm temple, whose architecture is considered one of the best expressions of Cambodian baroque (as opposed to Angkor Wat's classical) style. The University of Hawaii and the Cambodian Royal University of Fine Arts have come together in the Lower Mekong Archaeological Project to unearth more of this culture’s remains, convinced that they hold the key to later Khmer culture. All over town, orchards and empty lots and backyards are quietly being dug up. The archaeologists are enticed, no doubt, by Louis Malleret’s famous excavations at O?c Eo in the 1940s, during which he discovered Roman coins. Funan was where the Romans came to trade with the Chinese. It was as far east as they ever got, and maybe they also left their coins and fibulae in Angkor Borei. It’s a strange thought: a Roman of the Augustan empire standing by these same canals, eating a mango. A cultural crossroads, then. But no one knows what the people of this ancient state called themselves. Historians are not sure if they were entirely Khmer. Their writing was Sanskrit, but their enigmatic inscriptions do not refer to a vernacular tongue. What we do know is that although Funan is murkily revealed to us through the Chinese, it was Brahmin Indian emissaries who shaped its Hindu culture. According to one legend, Funan was founded by a Brahmin prince called Kaundinya, who married a local princess named Soma, the daughter of a serpent king, or naga. To Kaundinya, it is said, the kingdom owed its Indian laws, itsSanskrit writing, and its Hindu pantheon. The Indianization of Southeast Asia— which reached its culmination in Angkor Wat—began here, in the watery landscape of the Mekong Delta. I took my boat back to Takéo at dusk. There are few places to stay in town—ten-dollar-a-night guesthouses offering windowless cells to Khmer traveling salesmen—but I found the Meas Family Home Stay, just outside town, run by two Khmer schoolteachers, Siphen Meas and Im Mach. They gladly host Peace Corps volunteers who come here to build toilets for local farmers and the odd wandering archaeologist. Bill Murray, I discovered, had not yet sampled its charms. It was a farm of sorts, with paddies spread around it. I spent much of the early hours awake, listening to night birds, to funereal music rolling out of the darkness, and to the demented Cambodian cockerels that begin their chorus at 1 A.M. A cacophony of pure life, of life before electricity. ("We are being hooked up to the electricity grid next week," Siphen said. "What an unprecedented event!") Yet no one forgets here that this is a wounded land and that the wounds have not yet healed. Earlier, by candlelight, Siphen told me how the Khmer Rouge had murdered her brother back in the 1970s and that the family had discovered this fact only the week before. And so a murder in 1977 had now resurfaced to cast its shadow upon the living. It was a past that was not at all passed. "Forty years after the event, we begin our morning. It's a strange relation to the past, don't you think?" "Perhaps it's a denial." “Yes, it is. This country is only just beginning to get back to its past.” As with the personal past, so with the archaeological. We sat by a large fish pool that had been carved out by a huge American bomb. The Khmer are masters of improvisation. They had also looted most of the temples that lay scattered around the province, and it was a blessing, Siphen had to admit, that so many of the sacred artworks had ended up in the Muse?e Guimet, thousands of miles away. Most had been spirited off to the illicit antiques stores of Bangkok and Cambodia and would never come back. Even the lintels and pieces of lathed columns had been carried away—it was like an army of nocturnal mice nibbling at an unguarded granary. Take?o, she suggested, was too poor not to loot its own heritage. THE FOLLOWING MORNING, I took a car down to the border of Vietnam to visit one of Cambodia’s most remote temples: Phnom Bayong. Route 2, which connects Take?o to Phnom Penh, takes you all the way there. The turnoff for the temple lies off a small side road near the village of Kiri Vong. On this road, schoolgirls in navy skirts were riding their bikes, glancing down at the foreigner sweating in the heat with his can of soursop juice. Their expressions were hard to gauge. There was amusement in their distant and hesitant curiosity, as well as a subtle surprise. The grinning farmers in their pickups looked as if they were armed, and they probably were. It's a lonely three-hour walk up to the summit of the holy hill Bayong, where the temple stands with its views of the flooded Mekong and the mountains of Vietnam. On the way, the footpath winds through towering banyan trees. Music was coming from little radios in the huts of the farmers; in a clearing, dark stones lay underfoot like the threshold of a massive gate that had been torn apart. Black-silk butterflies swarmed across the path. A few Buddhist pilgrims still make their way up the monumental steps that lead to Phnom Bayong, but the site, like so many in Cambodia, is open and wild, unstructured by either tourism or archaeology. It feels religious in a way that a tourist temple never could, but this is also because of its setting. Unled, unguided, you are left to piece it together by yourself. The site itself is heavily damaged, though it is thought to have been built to celebrate a victory of the kingdom of Zhenla over Funan. Halfway up to it, as I slithered along small gullies of rock and mud, tailed by black butterflies, a boy appeared out of nowhere, a kind of Khmer Huck Finn chewing a piece of grass, and suggested that I give him a dollar to avoid getting lost. Because the path was looking less and less like a path, I paid. “Good job, you,” he said grimly. “Otherwise, lost ever so long time.” Places + Prices Where to Stay on Cambodia's Temple Tour Most of the temples in Take?o Province can be reached handily from Phnom Penh. The walk to the summit proved the accuracy of this pessimism. It’s little wonder no one comes here. Surrounded by cliffs and ruined walls, Phnom Bayong is reached by a near-vertical staircase and is infested with murmuring bats. The boy told me that the mountain was sacred and that Buddhist nuns were looking after the ruins. They browsed the jungle surrounding it in search of ingredients used in traditional folk medicines. If I wanted, they would paint spells on my body to protect me from illness. It would be one dollar more. I readily agreed to this and paid up, but instead of visiting the spell-writing nuns, for some reason we ended up trudging down to another little temple nearby, from where the great delta waters could also be seen, a pale-brown brightness reaching to a somberly green horizon. Like Phnom Bayong, it was enigmatic, fragmented in some way, and on the point of disappearing into forest. The Hindu images had long ago been removed. My dollar-sucking guide explained that there were four other temples on the sacred mountain and that there was a Buddhist hermit whom I could meet. The hermit would also paint spells on my body, and they would be even more powerful than the spells painted by the nuns. It would be one dollar more. What about the nuns? I asked. The nuns had run away, he said. They were afraid of foreigners. “Can’t we pay them to come back?” “Pay? They nuns. Come to hermit.” I paid up again, but as with the nuns the Buddhist hermit could not be found, and we ended up wandering all over the mountain as the afternoon waned. No one ever painted any spells on my body, but the boy did tell me the most famous legend of Phnom Bayong, which goes something like this: Once upon a time a king called Preah Bat Bayong Kaur lived on this mountain with his wife, Neang Sak Kra’op (meaning roughly “the lady with perfumed hair”). The nefarious King of Siam—the Thais are always the bad guys in Khmer stories—heard of her beauty and sailed to the mountain in a ship. He threw a party for the queen, and while the Khmer guests were distracted, he made off with her and never returned. Years later, her son, Dey Khley, went in search of her and happened to come across her without knowing who she was. He fell in love with his mother and married her. But when they returned to Bayong, the king recognized his former wife and sentenced his son to build twelve huge ponds. The prince, said the king, could be reincarnated only when the twelve ponds ran dry. But even today they are full of water, and so the luckless son is still waiting in the afterlife for a drought. Thus are punished even the unwitting perpetrators of royal incest. The Cambodian countryside is filled with such myths, which are like the rumors that come out of a past that recent history has all but obliterated. This is a land of submerged memories—a secretive and wary land which is mindful that bad things can always happen again. On the way back to Phnom Penh the next day, I stopped at the magnificent Angkorian-era temple of Phnom Chisor, built in the eleventh century by King Suryavarman I of Angkor. It’s the closest and most forbidding large-scale temple complex to Phnom Penh, apart from the lovely ruins of Ta Prohm on the Tonle? Bati lake. There is a kind of imperial swagger to it, a sense of overarching power. Both Ta Prohm and Phnom Chisor are more spectacular than the older Take?o temples—especially Chisor, with its superb terraces and richly carved reliefs. But now Chisor seemed to me less poignant than mysterious Phnom Da or Phnom Bayong. Two other temples are connected to Chisor by a monumental staircase that winds its way down the side of the mountain, and the whole complex possesses a coherent splendor that Bayong cannot match. Yet Chisor feels more like what one experiences on a larger scale at Angkor. Coming down the enormous staircase, I enjoyed watching the boys playing soccer in a field of motionless cows that seemed not to notice the football flying between their legs. I was glad there weren’t five thousand tour guides ready to explain what this meant. I TOOK MY CAR back to Route 2 and on the way stumbled upon two neglected brick towers that stood at the edge of a modern shrine. They are the remains of a place called Prasat Neang Khmau, or “Black Lady” in Khmer, a tenth-century temple whose name perhaps alludes to Kali, the dark destructive goddess. I knew that from here had come two enigmatic statues that are now also in the National Museum in Phnom Penh. Like the sculptures of Phnom Da, they have fascinated me for years, and when I returned to Phnom Penh I went in to look at them. One is an equine avatar of Vishnu known as Vajimukha, a male body with a horse’s head, and the other is a female divinity of some kind dressed in a fluted robe that is tied above a lustrous, smooth navel. Her head is missing, and her surface is now a dark-jade color. They stand in the same room as the great pieces from Phnom Da, and although they are from a later century, they have the same archaic otherness about them. They are more beautiful, more human somehow than the masterpieces of Angkor that occupy the foreground of our perceptions of Cambodia. And like the place from which they were torn long ago by French experts, they are something of a quiet secret—a civilization within a civilization, waiting to be rediscovered when Cambodia can finally afford the splendid luxury of memory.
Aug
11
Mekong river, Phnom Penh
A boat travels along the Mekong river in Phnom Penh on August 10, 2012. Written off as a failed state after the devastating 1975-1979 Khmer Rouge regime and several decades of civil war, Cambodia has used garment and footwear exports and tourism to help improve its economy, but remains one of the world's poorest countries with around 30 percent of its 14 million people living on less than a dollar a day. (AFP Photo)
Jul
21
Cambodia’s ‘orphan tourism’ sparks concern
SIEM REAP, July 27, 2011 - Pictures of hundreds of former volunteers line the walls of a muddy courtyard in Cambodia's tourist hub of Siem Reap, their faces once familiar to the orphans playing there but now long gone. The colourful gallery at the Acodo orphanage illustrates a growing trend of holidaymakers donating their time and skills to children in the impoverished country — but experts fear they could be doing more harm than good. Marissa Soroudi, a student in her 20s from New York, is one of the many volunteers teaching English at Acodo, near the famed temples of Angkor and home to more than 60 orphans between the ages of three and 18. The young American, who pays $50 a week to work at the orphanage, plans to stay for a few days before travelling on but she knows it is tough on the children to watch volunteers like her come and go. “There are so many people volunteering that it’s kind of like, one leaves and another swoops in,” she said. “They say better not to talk about it with them. Don’t say ‘I’m leaving in a week’, don’t do any of that because then they get upset. Better to just not come.” Short-term volunteers may have good intentions, but childcare experts say they are putting some of the most vulnerable children at risk. “Constant change of caregivers gives emotional loss to children, constant emotional loss to already traumatised children,” Jolanda van Westering, a child protection specialist at the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) told AFP. “And the constant exposure to strangers poses risks of harm, of violence and abuse, because we know that oftentimes volunteers come to an orphange without having their backgrounds checked.” As the gateway to the ancient temples of Angkor — which attract more than a million visitors a year — a steady stream of tourists passes through the sleepy riverside town. And many want to do more than just sightsee in one of the region’s poorest nations. On noticeboards in hotels, cafes and souvenir shops, wide-eyed children stare from posters for schools and orphanages, encouraging travellers to donate time and money for their particular cause. “Visitors see some poverty and they feel bad about it,” said Ashlee Chapman, a project manager with Globalteer, an organisation that matches volunteers with local organisations. “They want to do something,” she adds, saying they might visit a children’s project for a few hours, donate money and toys, “take a holiday snap and feel that they’ve contributed.” As the so-called volunteer tourism sector flourishes, so too does the number of institutions housing children. In the past six years, the number of orphanages in Cambodia has almost doubled to 269, housing some 12,000 children, according to UNICEF. Friends International, a local organisation that works with marginalised urban children and youths, says tourism has contributed to the increase. Visiting orphanages has become a tourist “attraction” in big cities like Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, said Marie Courcel, alternative care project manager at Friends International. That in turn encourages the institutionalisation of youngsters, many of whom are very poor but actually have at least one living parent, she said. Only one in 10 of the orphanages are funded by the state, the rest rely on charitable contributions to survive. At Siem Reap’s Acodo, huddled with the children in the shade of the only tree, Soroudi organises the afternoon activity. Following her lead, the orphans make headpieces out of grass and add licks of paint to green and yellow conical hats, costumes they will wear in that evening’s traditional Khmer dance show. The daily half-hour event attracts a tourist crowd who thank the young performers with donations of money. Van Westering said she worried about the dangers for children who are expected to raise funds for their care by begging or putting on shows for tourists. “They have to do their best and they hear that also if they don’t there isn’t enough money for their care,” said Van Westering. “You can just imagine what that does to children to live in that kind of insecure environment.” Her advice to tourists pondering a brief working stint at an orphanage is simple: “Don’t go. Give blood, support a community-based organisation that provides day activities for a child but where the children go home at night.” Betsy Brittenham, an interior designer in her 50s from Arizona, and her 15-year-old daughter Alex are spending three weeks as volunteer teachers at one such place, the Grace House Community Centre, where the children return to their families each evening. The mother and daughter team, who planned their trip months in advance, say volunteering at a reputable centre is a chance to make a difference in a country with fewer resources and opportunities than their own. Like the volunteers at Acodo, Betsy pays for the privilege of working on her holiday but she sees no downsides to the experience. “When you volunteer like this you’re bringing your money and you’re making tremendous strides and teaching their children,” she said. “It’s something you can’t put a price on.”
Aug
10
A newly discovered killing field?
There are not many places on the planet where villagers can stumble upong mass graves by accident. But Cambodia, the scene of a mind-bogglingly violent communist takeover in the mid-1970s, is one of them. According to the Associated Press, excavation teams notified by locals in northwestern Cambodia have unearthed 20 skulls from a newly discovered mass grave. That's 20 skulls discovered as of this report. They may very well find more. A Cambodian expert quoted by the AP cites that, in that area alone, at least 35,000 died during the Khmer Rouge's horrifying 1975-1979 reign. In total, nearly two million died from killing or malnutrition from the cabal's bid to install an anti-modern, agrarian-centered communist utopia. If excavators do find the remains of thousands more beneath this newly discovered site, it will be interesting to see whether officials open the area up to the viewing public. In an odd twist of history, foreign tourists now flock to this former hell on earth to walk among the so-called "Killing Fields," a major mass grave near the capital where clothing fragments and bone shards still fleck the ground. (Though the subject matter is unsettling, the site offers a well-designed and tastefully rendered self-guided tour.) This macabre fascination with Cambodia's bloody history -- along with resorts, temples and wild nightlife -- actually plays a role in drawing tourists. They are now are arriving in record numbers: according to the China Daily, Cambodia's tourism is up a full 27 percent compared to last year's first half.
Jul
07
Cambodia To Attract 7 Million Foreign Visitors By 2020
Cambodian Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen has underlined the country’s tourism development and promotion goals. “Tourism is Cambodia’s green gold,” said the Cambodian premier at the recapitulative meeting of the Ministry of Tourism held here yesterday at Chaktomuk Conference Hall. On the occasion, Samdech Techo Hun Sen gave key recommendations to the Ministry of Tourism and other relevant institutions in order to ensure Cambodia’s sustainable tourism development including strengthening the quality of tourism products and services, creating new tourism products, organizing tourism events, strengthening human resource, attracting more direct flights from ASEAN, ASEAN+3, Europe, etc. According to the Ministry of Tourism, in the first five months of this year, Cambodia received around 1.5 million foreign tourists, up 25 percent if compared to the same period of last year. In 2012, some 3.3 million international visitors are expected to visit Cambodia, and this figure will reach 3,8 million in 2013, and 4.5 million in 2015. By 2020, it is estimated that the country would attract 7 million foreign tourists, generating US$5billion revenue and creating some 800,000 jobs.
Jul
12
Hillary arrives in Cambodia for ASEAN meetings
PHNOM PENH, July 11 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, on Wednesday afternoon to attend the 19th ASEAN Regional Forum and related meetings. As scheduled, the Secretary of State will attend the ASEAN-U.S. Ministerial Meeting, the 19th ASEAN Regional Forum, and related meetings. She will also meet with Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen at the Peace Palace. In addition, she is scheduled to participate in the ASEAN-U.S. Business Forum in Siem Reap province on Friday afternoon. The forum, presided over by Hun Sen, will also be attended by Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. Siem Reap, situated at some 315 kilometers northwest of Phnom Penh, is the country's largest cultural tourism destination. It houses the Angkor Wat Temples, one of the World Heritage Sites.
Aug
16
Upswing in tourists equals more operators
The number of tour operators registered with Ministry of Tourism increased by more than 10 per cent in the first half of this year compared to last year due to an upswing in the number of tourists visiting the Kingdom, insiders say. Figures from the tourism ministry showed newly registrated tour companies reached 568 companies in the first six months while the figures for last year were only 516 tour companies, for the same period. Among those companies last year, 403 were head offices and 113 branches in the provinces. Head offices increased to 459, but the brances decreased by 4 in the first six months of 2012. Prak Chandara, director of the Tourism Industry Department of the Ministry of Tourism, said the increase in the number of tour companies resulted from an increase in the number of tourists visiting Cambodia. “Registration increased because they are seeing more tourists come through,” he said. Among those companies, 205 companies, which are members of Cambodian Association of Travel Agents (CATA), have 76 branches in provinces, mostly in Siem Reap province. Ang Kim Eang, president of CATA, agreed with Prak Chandara and said some newly established companies were preparing themselves for the ASEAN Economic Community in 2015. "When the ASEAN Economic Community comes into force in 2015, there would be an increase in the easy circulation of goods, but tourists from the region as well", he said. “This is good preparation for Khmer tour operators,” he said, adding: “I think that some companies will be ready to open branches in other countries by 2015.” Phoan Sopheak, tour operator at Angkor Seventh Travel company in Phnom Penh, said he saw the numbers of tourists increase considerably in recent months, particularly in Siem Reap where there were crowds of tourists, even thoughout the rainy season.
Jul
23
Cambodia seeks more cooperation on heritage
The cooperation on heritage between Laos and Cambodia should be continued, while Cambodia is seeking to learn from Laos, regarding its successful cultural heritage management. Cambodian Deputy Ministrer of Culture and Fine Arts Mr Khim Sarith expressed the opinion during his call on the Lao Minister of Information, Culture and Tourism Prof Dr Bosengkham Vongdara at the ministry in Vientiane on Friday. “We have successfully implemented the memorandum of understanding we signed in the past, so we should continue the cooperation,” he said. Prof. Dr Bosengkham Vongdara ( right ) welcomes Mr Khim Sarith. Cambodian Deputy Minister of Culture and Fine Arts Mr Khim Sarith led his delegation to visit Laos last week, aiming to hold discussions with relevant Lao officials on heritage management, especially the management of historical museums. According to delegation, there have been more than 400 ancient sites uncovered in Cambodia, but the country is facing challenges in management due to a shortage of human and financial resources, so the ancient artefacts are at risk of being looted. “Our countries should exchange our experience and expertise in this area, and discuss ways to solve the problems relating to the preservation of heritage” Mr Sarith said. Recently, Cambodian archeologists discovered an ancient yacht containing a number of ancient artefacts last year, which are estimated to date back to the 15th or 16th century. Despite the fact that the country has a large number of ancient sites, there are only ten museums in Cambodia, while there is talk of establishing a sea museum in Koh Kong province. Mr Sarith said the Lao government structure confines the management of information, culture and tourism to one ministry, which is convenient and allows for effective heritage management. He highlighted the differences betwe en Cambodia and Laos, where in Cambodia if the Ministry of Culture and Fine-Arts uncovers any artefact or ancient site, the ministry has to seek permission from the Ministry of Information before publication is made. Prof Dr Bosengkham Vongdara briefed the delegation on the division of cultural heritage management responsibilities and cooperation among authorities at all levels in Laos, believing the current structure has allowed for successful management of heritage issues. Meanwhile, he expressed the pleasure of the Lao side that further cooperation between the two neighbouring countries will continue in this area. “We give importance to cooperation with Cambodia, so we are pleased to continue it, and I will encourage my ministry's International Cooperation Department to look into the details of the cooperation,” Prof Dr Bosengkham said.
Jul
16
Religion and Belief, feature tourism attraction
Theravada Buddhism is the religion of virtually all of the ethnic Khmers, who constitute about 90% or more of the Cambodian population. Buddhism originated in what are now north India and Nepal during the sixth century B.C. Theravada Buddhism is a tolerant, non-prescriptive religion that does not require belief in a supreme being. Its precepts require that each individual take each individual take full responsibility for his own actions and omissions. Buddha Buddhism is based on three concepts: dharma (the doctrine of the Buddha, his guide to right actions and belief); karma (the belief that one's life now and in future lives depends upon one's own deeds and misdeeds and that as an individual one is responsible for, and rewarded on the basis of, the sum total of one's acts and act's incarnations past and present); and sangha, the ascetic community within which man can improve his karma. The Buddhist salvation is nirvana, a final extinction of one's self. Nirvana may be attained by achieving good karma through earning much merit and avoiding misdeeds. A Buddhist's pilgrimage through existence is a constant attempt to distance himself or herself from the world and finally to achieve complete detachment, or nirvana. The fundamentals of Buddhist doctrine are the Four Noble Truths: suffering exits; craving (or desire) is the cause of suffering; release from suffering can be achieved by stopping all desire; and enlightenment Buddha hood – can be attained by following the Noble Eightfold Path (right views, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration), which constitutes a middle way between sensuality and ascetism. Enlightenment consists of knowing these truths. The average layperson cannot hope for nirvana after the end of this life, but can by complying, as best he or she is able to, with the doctrine's rules of moral conduct-hope to improve his or her karma and thereby better his condition in the next incarnation.
Aug
27
La Paix’s art shows live on
Café de la Paix’s assistant curator Savann Oun is thrilled that there’s still room for art displays. Photograph: Claire Byrne/Phnom Penh Post Hotel de la Paix’s Arts Lounge may have closed, but the work of the hotel’s art program lives on. When the new Café de la Paix opened its doors, its dedicated followers (me included) came flocking like caffeine-starved zombies. There were many notable similarities: much of the seating remained unchanged, the light fittings, the door handle and the food counter remained, as did those cute napkin holders with the magnets. The pizza, the ice-cream, the coffee, and the cakes were still stocked. In fact the whole café had just been transplanted to a new venue. But there was something else distinctly reassuring for fans of all things de la Paix; some of the hotel’s favourite artists were present with their work adorning the walls. Rafael Winer, Oeur Sokuntevy, and Vincent Broustet, la Paix veterans, and Soun Seney and Chhom Channa, some of Cambodia’s brightest new talents, are all given wall space in the new café. “Hotel De La Paix was one of the biggest promoters of art in Siem Reap,” says la Paix’s assistant curator Savann Oun. He says when he and Sasha Constable, the hotels art curator heard the hotel was closing, they wanted to find an alternative venue. But when it was decided that the café would reopen, they were happy to be able to exhibit there. Savann, an artist in his own right, says the artists were chosen by him and Sasha as favourites who had previously exhibited with the hotel over the past year, or who were on the books as potential exhibitors. Winer’s fashion photography was an integral part of the Eric Raisina exhibition earlier this year, and his latest collection at the café shows unique shots from his travels in Myanmar. Oeur is one of the Kingdom’s most acclaimed young artists, and Savann describes her work as an exploration of freedom, while Broustet, whose work sold out at the final la Paix exhibition, Seven, continues his experimentation with velvet as a canvas, this time using oil paints, creating “a reflection of the moon on water” according to Savann. Chhom and Soun are both graduates of Phare Ponleau Selpak, where Savann himself studied. Chhom’s beautiful and highly detailed tree close-ups show the often overlooked elements we miss when in search of the bigger picture. Soun, also an art teacher, has more abstract acrylic paints in a series called Rain, exploring the link between freedom and privilege. Savann, originally from Battambang, is a sought-after man, even aside from his curating projects. He will have an abstract photography exhibition in September, he teaches at Green Gecko and the Landmine Museum, and has invitations to lecture and teach workshops abroad. But, despite the closure of de la Paix, he’s not tempted to jump ship. “I love Siem Reap and I am the only Cambodian curator here. Battambang and Phnom Penh have many, but I am the only one here who is from Cambodia. I have a lot of concepts and I want to promote Cambodian artists. I want to meet them, and encourage them.”
Sep
08
ASEAN needs to double efforts to realize a community
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) needs to double its efforts on its way to build a community by 2015 and the participation from private sector is indispensable to fulfill this goal, officials and experts said Friday. Prof. Hidetoshi Nishimura, executive director of the Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA), said ASEAN is aiming to establish a single market and production base in 2015. To achieve this, improving connectivity is one of the key elements and the bloc should accelerate internal consolidation. Addressing the symposium, Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Hor Namhong said they have only more than two years to realize the ASEAN Community by 2015, and that ASEAN's physical, institutional and people-to-people connectivity should be given priority in guiding regional integration process. "Ensuring the smooth free flow of goods, services and people by that timeline will be a real challenge," he said. ASEAN needs to work more closely with its dialogue partners to secure additional resources besides the last year's ASEAN infrastructure Fund of 500 million U.S. dollars for ASEAN Connectivity, he said. "The success of ASEAN Community can't rely only on the endeavors of the ASEAN governments, but also on the active participation of the private sector as well as that of our dialogue partners," he said. "ASEAN must be more integrated, more relevant, both politically and economically, where the private sector acts as an important engine of growth and development." Hor Namhong said that to realize the ASEAN Connectivity, Cambodia is currently developing its physical and institutional connectivity and enhancing various economic corridors. "We should make a strong effort to have an efficient land transport system, for instance, the Singapore-Kunming Rail Link," he said. In term of soft infrastructure, more actions need to be pushed, such as accelerating the development of ICT infrastructure through ASEAN Broadband Corridor and reducing transaction costs across the border through Transport Facilitation Agreements, he added. Speaking on behalf of ASEAN Secretary General Surin Pitsuwan, who failed to attend the forum, Lim Chze Cheen, head of ASEAN Connectivity Division of ASEAN Secretariat, said there is still a lot of work to be done to move integration and cooperation forward. He said with enhanced connectivity, ASEAN with its market of more than 600 million people will become more attractive to foreign investors and lay strong foundation for future economic growth. "Infrastructure development will open up less-developed areas to trade, investment, and tourism, and further narrowing our development gap," he said. While there is strong commitment to ASEAN Connectivity by the bloc's leaders, resource mobilization poses a daunting challenge, he said, adding that the Asian Development Bank estimated that ASEAN will require infrastructure investment of about 600 billion U.S. dollars over the next 10 years, translating into about 60 billion U.S. dollars a year. "ASEAN connectivity will never be fully achieved if we rely on government efforts alone. Private sector can assume an immense role in this task," he said. The two-day symposium was organized by the ERIA and was attended by officials from ASEAN member states, ASEAN dialogue partners, international organizations and private sectors. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
Jul
26
Cambodia's endangered music genres need to be preserved
An areak ensemble records at Cambodian Living Arts' studio. Areak is an endangered musical style traditionally used during spiritual healing ceremonies. Photograph: supplied In past generations, Cambodians believed their illnesses were caused by spirits, and that only spirits themselves could cure them. To summon healing spirits, a person would lend his body and serve as a medium during a ceremony, where the otherworldly beings were lured with food, alcohol, and a particular style of music known as areak. Nowadays, with most people turning to treatments at hospitals rather than through spirits, the areak musical tradition has come close to extinction. As part of an ambitious recording project, non-profit cultural organisation Cambodian Living Arts (CLA) has now begun to record areak in an effort to preserve its legacy, together with three other traditional musical forms: Smot chanting, kantaoming funeral music, and classical wedding music. Originally, CLA only intended to record the latter three forms after launching a project earlier this year meant to preserve musical forms in danger of extinction. But in the process of locating “living masters” – elderly musicians who survived the Khmer Rouge genocide and are among the only experts in their art forms – CLA stumbled upon a previously unknown areak ensemble in Kampong Speu province. Seeing that this form had not previously been recorded, CLA coordinators decided to incorporate it into the on-going project. “We’ve found some masters. They are quite old and even sick,” said Marion Gommard, the Communications Manager at CLA, of the elderly musicians. “This archive project is about preserving the traditional arts, so they can pass their knowledge to the next generation.” While CLA has compiled master recordings in the past, the current archiving project, sponsored by the US Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation, is its most ambitious yet. It may take up to one year to complete, according to Gommard, and has so far included recording sessions in both the masters’ hometowns and at CLA’s Phnom Penh studio. The organisation hopes to issue a total of 4,000 CDs by the end of November. Chhuon Sarin, the technical program coordinator at CLA, said that although some traditional musical styles are still played in Cambodia, many have not been recorded. Styles such as areak, whose popular use is in slow decline, are most at danger of disappearing. After all, if people don’t turn to spirits for cures, they will no longer need this style of music. “In the past, people were Hindu, and they believed in curing patients with spirits. To bring spirits, music played a very important role,” said Sarin. “Spirits also have their ranks. The higher ranking spirits prefer a music ensemble with up to 10 drums ... So the music is slightly different from one place to another.” Mao Yin, 68, from Preah Khe village in Kampong Speu province, is an areak master. His ensemble, which has five musicians and one singer, has a repertoire of approximately 25 songs, all of which will be recorded by CLA. The musical instruments that they perform include tro ou (half violin and half guitar), chapei (a long necked two-string guitar), a traditional drum and a pei or flute. “When I was young, areak was so popular,” said Mao Yin. “When we used to host areak music to bring spirits to cure a patient, the relatives of the patient would share food for the ceremony.” Despite its waning popularity in the era of hospitals, however, the master says the spiritual music is not yet fully extinct. “Now, some people who cannot get their sickness cured at a medical hospital come to seek spiritual treatment, so they still hire our ensemble to perform music sometimes.” While areak is generally known by Cambodians around the country, kantaoming funeral music has survived only in Kampot and Siem Riep provinces, according to Sarin. Different from the conventional Buddhist chanting still used at funerals, kantaoming is traditionally performed at a funeral with musical instruments. Sarin believes that this particular musical style is not well known because people in most of the Kingdom stopped performing it for a long time. Khem Sokha, 56, belongs to a five-man kantaoming ensemble that CLA established contact with in Sre Pong Ruong village, Kampot province, and which is also part of the recordings. “When I was very young, I always heard elderly people ask their children to host kantaoming music for their funeral when they died,” said Khem Sokha. “People in my village still hire my ensemble to perform up to two days of the funeral. But in other places, they have already given up this music.”
Jul
24
French-Cambodian artist returns to roots
French-Cambodian artist Fonki has returned to his roots with a locally made documentary set to capture the artist’s work. Born in France and raised in Montreal, Fonki, 22, has remained connected to his Cambodian roots. Visiting Cambodia for the first time when he was four, his earliest memories reflect the stark difference between life in the country during the UNTAC era and the present day. “It’s peaceful here [Cambodia] now. When you walk along the street, there is no violence,” he said. The documentary, operating under the working title Wet Paint, aims to inspire people of all ages and bolster the popularity of street art within a community still largely wedded to classical art forms. “It is our challenge to make the elderly understand what we [the young generation] are doing,” said Fonki. “Each generation communicates in their own different way. If the documentary helps us find a common cause, it would be a magic touch that inspires all generations.” The entire production is a self-organised project, with funding received from family, friends, and an arts outfit in Canada. Despite the hardships of working with limited resources, the young artist maintains: “When you want to do something, there is always a way. There is no excuse. You can build something out of your energy.” The setting of the documentary will move from Montreal to Cambodia, where Fonki will introduce his art to the public. The art works to be included in the film are inspired from the detailed bas-reliefs of the Angkor temples and a mélange of street art from other countries. In the previous visit to the kingdom, Fonki contacted the Bophana Centre and the Cambodian Film Commission, receiving technical assistance and information about the current contours of Cambodian society. “Talking to them, my crew and I got more knowledge of what is happening here,” he said. “It has helped us to understand the sense of being in Cambodia.” The film will be produced with Khmer, French and English versions. “Because street art is on the street, and the street is for everyone. There is no discrimination as long as they all find the same inspiration,” he explained.
Feb
28
A VND100,000 trip to Giang Dien Waterfall


Giang Dien waterfallFirst, you catch bus No.12 at Ben Thanh Bus Station at Cong Xa Paris Roundabout in HCMC’s District 1 with the fare VND15,000 per person to go straight to the gate of Giang Dien Fall Ecological Tourist Park. Second, you have to buy an entrance ticket for VND35,000 for an adult or VND25,000 for a child. Along the way to the waterfall there are trees, flowers and green lawns planted carefully. Those create beautiful scenery and fresh air for a day to relax. In order to get to the waterfall, you can walk one kilometer or catch an electronic train for VND10,000 per person one way.

With an area of nearly 68ha, the park is ideal for camping over the weekend, especially in the hot and muggy weather. If you want to save money, prepare food at home, bring cooking devices to make a barbecue and enjoy a happy time with friends and relatives. Giang Dien has camping areas and also rents tents for VND100,000 and VND120,000 or you can use a canvas on the green lawns along the way to the fall.

In the summer, everyone wants to bathe in the sea or soak the body in a waterfall to escape the heat and enjoy cool water. In addition to swimming under the waterfall, tourists can rent a single or a double bicycle to go around. Single bicycles rent for VND10,000 each and double bicycles for VND20,000 each for 45 minutes. It is a kind of entertainment loved by the young. Two people can also rent a boat to enjoy Heart Lake for VND30,000 per hour.

You can have a place to relax on the weekend and enjoy a natural friendly atmosphere but at a low cost.

Jul
21
Temple fees in Cambodia may rise
SIEM REAP, 17 July 2012: Apsara National Authority will increase entrance fees at Angkor Wat once a feasibility study has been concluded by tourism experts. Apsara has the exclusive rights to all temple complexes in Siem Reap, but very little is divulged on how much of the fees charged filter through to the local economy. Apsara general director, Bun Narith, said experts were determining if it was feasible to increase entrance fees at Cambodia’s UNESCO World Heritage site. “They are looking at ways to increase ticket sales before providing recommendations to the government, which approves fee increases.” Mr Narith added: “The plan is not to directly increase the general entrance fee of US$20 for a one-day pass, but use the fee structure to steer tourists towards lesser-visited temples in the park to ease congestion and wear and tear at Angkor Wat.” Cambodia Association of Travel Agents president, Ang Kim Eang, said the study was a welcome move as it would look at the largest tourist attraction and the price charged for entrance, which was much lower than fees charged in other heritage sites around the world. However, he cited that a higher entrance fee was not necessary at this time. “We welcome the study, but it should not be used to add a burden on tourists.” The entrance fees to Angkor Wat start at US$20 for international visitors for a one-day pass, US$40 for a three-day visit and US$60 for the entire week. More than 2 million foreign and domestic tourists visit the site in Siem Reap annually. In 2011, the temples attracted 1.6 million foreign visitors, an increase of 23%. They had to pay a minimum of US$20 to tour the complex providing a rough estimate of the gate value for the company that handles the business. The Angkor archeological park is the Cambodia’s largest cultural tourism destination located 315 km from the capital Phnom Penh. The temple was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1992.
Jul
19
Art therapy eases pain
When the well known Russian millionaire and notorious child abuser Alexander Trofimov was again recently accused of sex crimes with under age boys and girls in Sihanoukville province, more posters, banners and stickers about child protection were disseminated to raise awareness of the crime. Now, a non profit organization in Sihanoukville known as ‘Let Us Create’ has found that art can be a therapeutic way to help children who have been abused as well as a way to warn others of the risks they face at the hands of abusers. ‘Let Us Create’ has 160 beach children being trained at their center and they have helped to reduce the number of beach child-vendors who sell the children to paedophiles. “The majority of children are the beach kids who work from morning until late night,’’ says Leah Kidd, Program Manager of ‘Let Us Create.’ “Sometimes they don’t go home at night because they need to earn money for their family. I cannot speak for the children themselves, but I imagine they are very tired. They have to work so hard.’’ Every day, children at the beach try to sell souvenirs such as necklaces, bracelets or fireworks to tourists and although the vast majority of visitors happily buy their knick-knacks, the young people can be vulnerable to tourists who would abuse them. According to Eve Sao Sarin, the director of M’Lop Tapang, non profit organisation working on child protection issues based in Sihanoukville, there are about 700 children working on the streets and beaches of the province. His organisation manages to take some children away from work through education, but many more children are still hawking souvenirs. “Some children earn from $10 to $20 per day. So sometimes it’s hard for us to take them away from the beach because they rely on the money,” Eve Sao Sarin said. The M’Lop Tapang organisation believes that awareness is the best way to protect children from abuse, so Sarin’s organisation cooperated with other non profit organisations to run a campaign that required all Tuk Tuk drivers, motor taxi drivers and hotel owners to keep their eyes on the beach children, especially when they engage with tourists. ‘Let Us Create’ shares M’Lop Tapang’s difficulties in removing children from their work on the beach, even when free lessons are on offer. What Leah can do is not just to offer free education to the children, but also to provide some financial support to their families, so their parents can afford to allow them to attend the art classes. Mostly foreign artists teach the children draw or to use acrylics and they can paint whatever they want to. Beyond the skills of painting, Leah believes art is like therapy to help heal the problems of some of the children. This art class can help them to express their feeling, so their sorrow will be released. “These children came from the poor background. I guess they are the poorest children,” Leah said. Through the arts, they are able to express their feeling of sadness, feeling of loneliness or feeling of joy. It helps them deal with negative emotions. ‘Let Us Create’ sells the paintings created by the children at its gallery of the same name in Sihanoukville.’ Chab Chamreoun, the president of the ‘Let Us Create,’ notes that the paintings sell well, especially in the dry season. Beyond therapy, the paintings can be sold. Two years ago, some paintings were shown in Australia and many sold there too. Last year, paintings were also exhibited at a gallery in Siem Reap province. On July 23, a series of paintings named ‘Entitlement to Freedom’ will be displayed in Phnom Penh at the Botanic Café. Chab Chamreoun wants people to appreciate the children’s paintings rather than their background.
Jul
26
One tourist killed dozens injure in Cambodian bus crash
A Russian tourist died and dozens of foreign nationals were injured after a bus carrying 46 people overturned in southern Cambodia, local media reported Wednesday. The accident happened late Tuesday after the bus blew a tyre while travelling between the coastal resort town of Sihanoukville and Koh Kong town, which borders Thailand. Minister of Tourism Thong Khon confirmed a Russian woman had died, but denied media reports that other passengers had been critically injured. 'The hospital in Koh Kong is looking after them - most of them were evacuated to Thailand,' he told dpa on Wednesday, adding that four Cambodians were also injured. 'All the injured are not (in) so serious (a condition).' Thong Khon said he did not have information to hand on the nationalities of those involved. The driver of the Paramount Angkor Express bus reportedly ran away after the accident. The Cambodia Daily newspaper said the company's buses had been involved in four accidents last year that killed four people. Its sister company was involved in seven crashes in which six people died. Cambodia's roads have improved markedly in recent years, but driving standards remain poor. More than 1,800 people died in traffic accidents last year, a fourfold increase in a decade.
Sep
18
A Visit to The Killing Fields and Tuol Sleng Museum
The stifling humidity levels and dark clouds hovering menacingly in the sky threatened to deliver one of Phnom Penh’s famous rain deluges during the wet season. I picked the wrong day to hop in a tuk-tuk and venture outdoors, stuck in traffic for more than 20 minutes. An endless sea of trucks, tuk-tuks, and cars attempted to weave around each other while honking horns, with a solitary uniformed officer trying to maintain control of traffic and enforce road rules. But his whistling and animated hand gestures came to no avail, and he resembled a conductor struggling to keep in time with his orchestra. For a brief moment, I considered hopping out and going to the local market, but I had a date with Cambodia’s violent past and backing out was not an option. My destination was The Killing Fields, a lasting legacy of the auto-genocide planned and executed by the Khmer Rouge and its psychotic leader Pol Pot. In four years, up to 1.7 million (some estimates put the death toll at 2.5 million) people were executed or starved to death between 1975 and 1979. Officially known as the Cheoung Uk Genocidal Centre, The Killing Fields is a shocking reminder of the Khmer Rouge’s rampage. Back then, the international community was locked out and unable to intervene until the Vietnamese Army invaded in 1979. Nowadays it is a must-see destination for international and domestic visitors, an essential component in understanding Cambodia and its people. It has also been referred to as genocide tourism, a dose of shock therapy and sympathy, without wearing physical scars. Outside the front gates, the driver said to me “You have fun today.” I smiled and thanked him. He must have taken enough people here and be well drilled. I did not tell him that I had lived in the countryside for a few months. To him, I was another gawking tourist. My stomach churned once I walked under the entrance gates, a sign of intimidation. A group of men in the distance spotted me, and one man instantly decided that I would be his prey. He had broad shoulders and moved like a predator. I froze, wondering if I had looked at him the wrong way. Was he a plainclothes police officer or a gangster, I asked myself? In Phnom Penh, anything is possible. Making a hasty exit was not an option; I thought I was going to crap my pants. Destiny had cast the dice; life would end the grounds of a mass slaughter. My uneasiness subsided only when the man faced me and shook my hand. There was no smile, however. “Welcome to the Killing Fields. The Khmer Rouge killed my parents here. Today I will show you where.” With that sentence, Sroun gestured for me to step where he stood. I was unprepared for his next question, “Why did you come here today?” I opened my mouth but nothing came out. He did not wait for me to answer. “If you feel any pity, then don’t. If you are not sure why you came here, then please leave because you won’t learn much. My English is not good like yours, but the books you have read about how many people die (sic) in Cambodia cannot tell you about life. That is what I offer you.” For somebody who claimed not to speak English well, he certainly used the power of direct language effectively, much better than me. Pointing into the distance, he said, “You see here, many people come because they watched movie ‘The Killing Fields’. It makes them cry.” He clenched his fist and beat it on his chest. “Not me,” he said. “Bad man not let me go. But maybe one day, I will get out.” The ‘bad man’, he said, was Pol Pot. Sroun made his living as a guide, and also drove motorcycles at night to make ends meet. His family came from Phnom Penh, making them prime targets for the Khmer Rouge, but avoided giving away too much about his family. “Not in the mood today. Friendships take long time, take little steps first,” he explained. As for speaking about his own time growing up, he said that it had too many bad memories, adding only that the Khmer Rouge robbed him of his adolescence. It seems that too would have to wait. What I had come to learn about living in Cambodia is that there is plenty of time, and schedules are made to be broken. So I would have to be patient. “You don’t need my life story…yet.” Everywhere we walked were open pits that looked like bomb craters. Prisoners from the nearby Tuol Sleng Prison would be chained together, lined up and beaten with clubs before being shoved and buried inside the graves. More than 120 graves exist across the Killing Fields. Recent rains had resulted in sparse patches of grass growing across the pits. Every time I passed a grave, it spooked me. Every crunching noise sounded like a bone; any dampness on the ground felt like puddles of blood, not rain. My eyes darted everywhere as I moved slowly. Sroun noticed my anxiety. “Are you scared?” he said with a sadistic grin. I nodded. There was no way I could pretend to show any macho tendencies. I focused on the butterflies patrolling the air as if they were on patrol. They too could sense I was out of place. What could I ask Sroun that he would be prepared to talk about? I turned to Sroun and asked him how he felt about being a guide here. Sroun’s eyes bulged wildly. “Look at what Pol Pot gave us. Bad man (Pol Pot), he say Cambodia will be world’s strongest country thanks to revolution, but he make Cambodian kill Cambodian. Why? Cannot imagine.” “Did you know of families that were killed?” I asked him. “Yes. Here, everybody knows someone who lost family or knew somebody killed by the Khmer Rouge,” Sroun answered. He told me told me of one family who was exterminated. The parents, he said, were accused of stealing food and confessed in a self-criticism session, part of the daily brainwashing routine to love Angka. “Khmer Rouge say to us, ‘You don’t need parents, only Angka.’” “What was your secret in surviving?” I quizzed. “(To) shut up. Look when they say, speak when they say, breathe when they say,” Sroun said. Learning to be dumb takes more skill than being smart. When we reached a spot not far from the watchtower which provided power to inflict electric shocks on inmates of Tuol Sleng Prison, Sroun paused for a moment, then squatted on his knees. “This is where I found my parents,” he said. “They were buried with many others.” He cannot recall the year they were killed because he was separated from them. “Too long ago. But in 1980, I volunteer to dig up bodies.” I asked how they died. “Hit many times with big stick all over body and left to die,” he retorted. Sroun did not know he had dug up his parents’ bones until tests came back confirming the bones were the remains of his mother and father. They were more among more than 20,000 people to meet a similar fate. I wanted to know what went through his mind at the mind and how he reacted. “When the Khmer Rouge ran Cambodia, we were not allowed to cry. I never express my feelings, or I would be dead,” Sroun admitted to me. “So I said nothing. But many years later, Kofi Annan (former Secretary-General of the United Nations), asked me, ‘how can Cambodian kill Cambodian?’ That is when I learned how to cry.” As he said these words, a sense of relief came over me. Maybe I had broken the ice with him, and we could converse. But as we headed to a building which housed the skulls of thousands of victims bludgeoned to death, Sroun’s eye bulged a second time; he had spotted somebody holding a skull with a large crack on top, posing with the peace symbol as his friends took photos. As the skull passed into the hands of a group member, who then planted a kiss on the skull’s cheek, Sroun he exploded in a rage of English and Khmer words. He had clearly been angered by what he saw. The offending group member caught kissing the skull bowed his head in shame and held out the skull for Sroun to collect and return to its rightful spot. His companions had already left and he ran off to join them. Once Sroun had returned, he returned in a huff and spat on the ground. “Fuckers,” he said. “I hope they got their blood money’s worth.” For all I know, that skull could have belonged to his mother or father. Now was probably not the right time to ask Sroun about his opinion of Pol Pot, but I took a chance. “David, I am angry that he got away. I want him to tell me why he killed so many Cambodians. But he escaped. When Saddam Hussein died in Iraq, I cheered because the Iraqi people got to see justice. I looked at Saddam on television and saw the body of Pol Pot. And Saddam’s death made me smile because I imagine Pol Pot hanging. Everyone was hostage to that bad man.” It seemed fitting that the last words I heard from Sroun were part of his trademark phrase that described a leader who must count among the world’s most brutal dictators. With a promise to share more about his life on a second visit, we shook hands again. I offered Sroun money for donating his time, but he refused to accept the cash, saying that if money could not bring his parents back, he did not want my money. And with that, he returned to his quarters. But my day was not complete. It was time to take the march and absorb the grotesque images spread across the vast lands of an abandoned high school turned into a death factory. Known as S-21, the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum is a memorial for men, women and children held in inhumane conditions. Meticulous records of more than 16,000 prisoners are kept on premises, along with more than 10,000 identity photos. Classrooms became torture chambers, displaying leg shackles, water board apparatus, and diagrams and models of how confessions were extracted demonstrating how interrogations and tortures were carried out. Outside the building, a sign warning prisoners of the expected behavior is a cruel commemoration of the interrogator’s limitless powers to inflict pain for even the slightest indiscretion. Visitors are warned not to smile, speak loudly, laugh, take photographs or film footage did not stop visitors from following these rules. But anybody spending only a few hours breathing in the horrors of the decaying building would not be water-boarded, given electric shocks or strapped in shackles. The building’s perimeter is still surrounded by razor wire. I joined the line, shuffling between rooms as the floor made a whooshing sound with each footstep. Any other noise would attract an unwanted gaze. Everybody was in a trance, carefully studying graphic images. I closed my eyes and felt the whips slicing the air hard enough, causing it to bleed. The thought of screams and cries of mercy from inmates freaked me out, as I am sure it did to others as well. Nobody dared try and hurry the line’s progression of the line. This is a building capable of spooking even the hardened individual. But as I neared the boards which showed the identification photos of each prisoner, it became too much for one elderly woman. She fell to her knees and began screaming hysterically, begging to get out. We all froze, ill-equipped to handle such an emergency. Two employees who arrived also watched the woman wail. They too stood motionless, unsure of what to do. Everybody felt sorry for the woman but did not intervene. It took several minutes before she was calm enough to be led away. To me, it seemed like being a part of a funeral procession. I heard the sobbing of some people in line; they were clearly distressed, if not overwhelmed. I wondered if it was going to affect me too. Two images—a young woman holding a newborn baby, who looked much older than her age would have suggested, and an old man with his brains hanging out of his skull, finally eroded my courage. A sickening sensation came over me and then I collapsed. It took me a few minutes to come around and realize what had happened. “Wake up! Are you alright?” is the first sentence I remember hearing upon regaining consciousness. With a head that felt like concrete and wobbly legs, I lacked the strength and balance to sit up properly, so I lay on my back and resigned to being the circus freak. Curious on-lookers huddled together, wondering what had just taken place. They were eagerly anticipating my first words. I managed to slur one sentence; “I was sick near The Killing Fields”, hardly a profound statement. As I made my way back to base later that afternoon, I remember the driver trying to convince me to go shooting AK-47s at an undisclosed location for the cost of one dollar per bullet. But in my woozy state, I said that I had seen enough horrors for the day. Genocide tourism offered an escape clause allowing me to make a hasty exit if I could not handle traumatic visions from Cambodia’s darkest days.
Jul
16
Royal Ploughing and special features
Although there are various other scientific methods to forecast the weather and to determine harvests, Cambodians have their methods to foretell the future. Through traditional rituals that are often ceremoniously celebrated nationwide, Cambodians are warned of calamities, assured of good harvest and so forth. The Royal Ploughing ceremony, or Pithi Chrat Preah Neanng Korl in Khmer, and the Festival of Water and full Moon Salutation, know as Pithi Bonn Om Touk and Ak Ambok Sampeah preah Kher in Khmer, are such ceremonies. Predictions gleaned from these traditional ceremonies for the coming year are taken very seriously. Royal Ploughing The Festival of Water and Full Moon Salutation is celebrated usually in late October. Drippings from burning candles predict rainfall distribution to provinces across the country. The Royal Ploughing Ceremony predicts the weather, epidemics and farming conditions. By observing what feed the royal oxen choose after the Royal Ploughing Ceremony, Cambodians believe they can predict a range of events including epidemics, floods, good harvests and excessive rainfall. This year, the Royal Ploughing Ceremony will be held on May 9 at the Veal Preahmein Square, situated across the road from the northern perimeter of the Royal Palace. At the end of a symbolic Ploughing procession before His Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk, the royal oxen were relieved of their harnesses and led to seven golden trays containing rice, corn, sesame seeds, beans, grass, water and wine to feed. The royal oxen chose to eat out of only three trays this year and because their feast consisted of varying percentages of rice and corn while they largely ignored the trays of sesame seeds, grass, water and wine, prognostications were as follows: Farmers would enjoy a moderate output for their rice harvest but good yields in secondary crop production, especially corn and beans. Because the royal oxen only sniffed on the tray of water and turned away from the wine, the prediction was made that farmers would not suffer any serious floods. Every year, Cambodian farmers anxiously await the predictions at the end of this ritualistic ceremony, which they observe with strong faith and belief. Most Cambodians today still consult traditional manuals before making any major decisions regarding business matters or meeting important persons, etc. Royal Ploughing The Royal Ploughing Ceremony has been observed for many centuries at the initiative of an earlier Khmer king who had paid great attention to farming conditions of the people. Traditionally, the Pithi Chrat Pheah Neang Korl is performed in the month of the Khmer calendar and marks the beginning of the rainy season in Cambodia. When asked, most Cambodians stand staunchly by these traditional methods of predicting the future and vouch for their accuracy. It is comforting to believe that the angels are still watching over us. As they say in Cambodia, long live the Khmer traditions. Long Live Cambodia.
Feb
28
Photos on Vietnam’s former capitals exhibited


photos on Vietnam's former capitals exhibtionThe exhibition, running until April 23, is part of activities to welcome the national commemoration of Hung Kings death and the 1,000th founding anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.

After being displayed in the Hung Temple, the photos will be showcased at Hoan Kiem Lake in downtown Hanoi on the occasion of the millennium anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.

Aug
06
Thai Cambodian border crowded with holidaymakers
SRISAKET, 2 August 2012-The atmosphere on the Thai-Cambodian border in Phusing district, Srisaket province has been electrifying as many Cambodian nationals are making their way across the border to shop for alms giving items on the occasion of Buddhist Lent Celebration tomorrow. According to the report, the weekend market is the main attraction for Thai and Cambodian residents around the border. A group of 31 Harley drivers, also known as Big Bike, have also gotten together to embark on a trip to Cambodia this morning; their final destination is Nakorn Wat temple. Their journey is hoped to help promote Thai and Cambodian relations. They will also meet with Cambodian bike lovers. According to one tour agent, after the troops have been withdrawn on both sides of the border, local tourism has now returned to its glorious days again. He added later that the long weekend has drawn many holidaymakers from Thailand to cross over to Cambodia to visit Nakorn Wat temple; vice versa, many Cambodians have also entered Thailand to shop for items needed for the Buddhist holidays.
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