Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Gov’t backtracks on rally ban

 CNRP supporters rally through the streets of Phnom Penh on Monday
After days of defiance from the opposition against a ban on public assembly, the government issued orders yesterday for opposition rallies across the country to be allowed to go ahead, officials said.
Tep Nytha, secretary-general of the National Election Committee (NEC), said the body and the Interior Ministry had sent letters to provincial and municipal governors calling on them not to stand in the way of rallies or marches by the Cambodia National Rescue Party.

“This letter, we decided on just now, and we have started to send it [to the provinces]. Based on this letter the governors will make it easy [for the CNRP to march],” Nytha told the Post yesterday.
The CNRP “asked the Ministry of Interior for permission to march in some provinces, and [the ministry] sent the letters to those provinces. It means that the ministry allows the [CNRP to] march, but it must cooperate,” he said, referring to orders that include limiting the numbers of supporters rallying.

Nytha added that officials in Phnom Penh had also been asked not to interfere in opposition rallies.
Officials from the Interior Ministry could not be reached for comment.
Bans on public rallies had previously been announced for the duration of the campaign period, which ends on May 16.

The CNRP has also defied orders to refrain from verbally attacking the Cambodian People’s Party. But Nytha said such attacks would continue to be tolerated as long as they did not get personal.
“If [any party] criticises the political platform of the [opposing] party it is [allowed] . . . but no insulting of individuals,” he said.

Addressing a crowd of about 2,000 supporters in Kampong Chhnang yesterday, CNRP leader Sam Rainsy slammed the CPP for the corruption and poverty that exist under its rule.
“Our youth have seen that our country’s current leaders are very weak because [Cambodia] nowadays, under the ruling of the Cambodian People’s Party, is the poorest compared to neighbouring countries, [and the] most corrupt,” he said.“Our Khmer children have gone to Thailand for jobs because Thailand is prosperous . . . [Only the CNRP] is arranging . . . for all Cambodian children to have proper jobs. [Cambodian children] do not need to leave the country to work for pay in Thailand.”The CNRP is set to rally in Phnom Penh today.

‘The 23’ put police on trial

 Defendant Chan Puthisak outside Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday. Puthisak is one of 23 people on trial after being arrested in garment protests in January
Each of the 23 defendants who testified yesterday on charges linked to the garment protests in early January denied involvement in the violent demonstrations, while many said police beat false statements out of them.On the second full day of proceedings for the trial of nearly two dozen people, judges and attorneys in two Phnom Penh Municipal Court rooms completed questioning of all but three defendants. The cases are scheduled to continue at 8am on May 20.

“The 23”, as they’ve come to be known on social media and in public rallies in support of them, were all arrested in early January in a violent crackdown on garment protests that were sparked by the government announcing in late December a lower-than-desired rise in minimum wage to $95.
Ten of the defendants were arrested on January 2 outside the South Korean-owned Yakjin garment factory, when protesters blocked a national road. The next day, the rest of the group was swept up as part of a crackdown in which military police fired on an unruly demonstration outside Phnom Penh’s Canadia Industrial Park on Veng Sreng Boulevard, killing at least four people.

No one has been arrested or brought to court over the shootings.
After the crackdown, the majority of defendants spent nearly four months in jail before all had their first day in court on April 25, though much of it was procedural. Proceedings yesterday, however, involved far more testimony, most of which conflicted with official accounts.
“They arrested me while I was riding to Svay Rieng province to bring clothes to my wife, who just delivered our baby,” said Ros Sophoan, 25, a garment and construction worker arrested on January 3. “After arresting [and beating] me, police ordered me to run; police ran after me and beat me again, like an animal.”

Shortly after proceedings began yesterday, prosecutor Top Chhun Long grilled 34-year-old defendant and motodop Chea Sarath, asking him why police found petrol on him when they arrested him on Veng Sreng Boulevard after midnight on January 3; he presented a glass bottle filled with petrol in a large zip-lock bag as evidence.Chhun Long read an excerpt from the police report submitted to the court – and signed by Sarath – that concluded he was one of the people who intended to throw Molotov cocktails at authorities. “[Sarath] received a bottle of gasoline from a group of demonstrators with orders to throw it at police,” Chhun Long read aloud.
Sarath testified that police actually arrested him at a nearby petrol station as he filled his motorbike tank. Allegedly beaten at the scene and again at the police station, Sarath signed the police report to avoid another assault, he said.
Supporters of the 23 men on trial yesterday show their support outside Phnom Penh Municipal Court
Supporters of the 23 men on trial yesterday show their support outside Phnom Penh Municipal Court. Pha Lina
 
When one of Sarath’s defence attorneys asked her client about his injuries, Judge Leang Sarath ordered her to stick with questions related to the charges. All the defendants are facing charges ranging from inciting violence to aggravated intentional violence.Like Chea Sarath, 17-year-old Yon Sok Chea asked the court to use his direct account of events in the early hours of January 3, rather than the contradictory police report, after Chhun Long inquired as to why Sok Chea said he saw nobody throwing rocks at police.

One of two defendants who received bail, Sok Chea said police broke his hand when they detained him as he stood in front of a residential building watching the chaos with about 10 others. “While arresting me, police used electric batons and beat my arm and head,” Sok Chea said.
In courtroom two, where the testimony from some of the defendants arrested during the demonstration outside the Yakjin garment factory was heard, one suspect also said evidence had been falsified.

During proceedings for those 10 defendants, Sokun Sombath Piseth, 31, a networking officer at the Center for Labor Rights of Cambodia, said he believed a photograph purporting to show him leading a group of protesters in front of the factory was doctored.
Despite defence attorney Sam Sokong’s objection to the new evidence, which he was unaware of being entered into court yesterday, Judge Keo Mony allowed prosecutor Ly Sophanna to use the picture.

“I recognise it’s me in this photo, but I don’t recognise the whole photo; I think it’s been edited with Photoshop,” Sombath Piseth said in court, pointing out that the photo had no timestamp.
Three of the defendants in the Yakjin trial have yet to testify, including Independent Democracy of Informal Economy Association president Vorn Pov, but Judge Sarath heard from all 13 arrested on Veng Sreng, and two police officials on the victims list.

A separate case involving two people arrested during a November march-turned-riot supporting a strike at SL Garment Processing wrapped up yesterday. A verdict in that case will be read May 30.
Kim Rithy, deputy chief of the capital’s Prampi Makara district police intervention unit, and Lay Vin, deputy chief of the district police’s public order unit, each said they suffered injuries at the hands of Veng Sreng demonstrators.

Rithy, who said he suffered permanent damage to his eye from a projectile, is suing for 40 million riel ($10,000). Vin, who said protesters dropping objects from a building injured his shoulder and legs, is demanding 20 million riel ($5,000).Pointing out that demonstrators early on January 3 used high-powered flashlights to blind police and quickly blocked roads with trucks, Vin said the tactics did not appear to be the work of amateurs.

Bus company sues strikers

 Employees of the Phnom Penh Sorya Transportation bus company protest for better working conditions at a bus station in the capital last month
After grappling with weeks of on-again, off-again strikes, the Phnom Penh Sorya Transportation bus firm has filed complaints against 20 former employees for incitement, making threats and using the company uniform without permission.General manager Chan Sophanna said yesterday that the company filed the complaints to Phnom Penh Municipal Court late last month.

“We sued them for using our company uniform to protest and destroying our company honour, incitement and making threats,” he said. “They not only illegally used the company uniform, but also threatened other staff that refused to join with them.”
More than 60 workers went on strike on April 3 ahead of the Khmer New Year holiday. Following negotiations, Sorya brought most workers back by agreeing to end an unpopular policy of fining drivers who transport people or goods without a ticket.

But – led by holdouts, workers who changed their minds about returning and those protesting against the laying off of some employees after the first strikes – protests flared back up after Khmer New Year. The demonstrations cooled when the Arbitration Council stepped in to mediate the dispute.
Sambath Vorn, a representative for the newly conceived bus union, said yesterday that only his vice president, Yem Kuyba, and an activist, Thun Visal, have been summonsed to appear on Friday. Both were fired by Sorya.Vorn also dismissed the allegations about threats and incitement.
Kuyba, the vice president, said yesterday that he might request a suspension of the hearing due to a scheduling conflict.

“The company fired me, but I did not accept. So I’m still company staff and I still have the right to wear the uniform,” he said.Vorn said he and a company representative will meet on Thursday with the Arbitration Council. He added that he is confident about the case, saying nothing wrong or illegal occurred.“We just demanded more wages, [better] working conditions and the reinstatement of 20 drivers,” he said, referring to the people who were fired in addition to 12 others the company says quit.“We will gather and protest again if we do not get justice from the Arbitration Council.”

Where a nation kept its tryst with destiny

What began as a rather dispiriting journey turns into an awe-inspiring voyage into one of the most glorious chapters in the nation's history for Bui Quynh Hoa as she visits the mountainous Dien Bien Province.
Dien Bien Phu victory, General Vo Nguyen Giap, Mong women
Bad old days: War veterans sit on the bunker of Christian de Castries in Dien Bien Province. 
In poor health and low spirits, I began a long, arduous trip to the north-west mountainous province of Dien Bien on a wet, muddy, and overcast Sunday.
I had been suddenly appointed to reinforce the team, replacing a colleague after her last minute withdrawal. There was immense pressure to dole out good stories for the newspaper's special Outlook magazine's issue to mark the 60th anniversary of Dien Bien Phu victory. I was further stressed out as it was quite a task to make good, last-minute arrangements both at home and office while I was away. Sitting in a car the whole day for the 500 kilometre-long, winding ride to the high mountainous area further tested my patience, and the news of a colleague's husband being involved in a car accident during a working trip to a highland area did not help matters.
"Don't worry about the weather, I'm sure it'll be fine when we reach Dien Bien," our driver Nguyen Quang Hiep assured us.
Dien Bien Phu victory, General Vo Nguyen Giap, Mong women
Breathtaking: The Pa Khoang River is a site of extraordinary beauty at dusk. 
The thick misty curtain eventually got thinner and the sky cleared as the sun shone again. I do not recollect when I stopped worrying and started enjoying the trip. It was breath-taking to watch the scenic mountainous slopes covered with white-coloured flowers of the ban trees in full bloom. The fresh and slightly nippy spring weather, picturesque and tranquil landscapes of the rice fields and houses on stilts, images of goats being grazed by ethnic boys walking uphill at a leisurely pace, and the bright smiles of Thai boys and girls who were on their way to a local market, made my trip truly worthwhile. I quickly forgot all my tiredness and the carsickness experienced by my colleagues and started to explore the historical and scenic land, a city of more than half a million people.
If one is interested in history and is keen to visit an old battlefield, Dien Bien is a perfect destination. Much has been written about the military base of Dien Bien Phu. The extraordinary military strategy, incredible feats of bravery, and transformation of national identities deserve nothing less.
In the late 1953 and early 1954, the French deployed 21 battalions with 16,200 troops, supported by three artillery battalions (one engineering battalion, one tank company, and one air squadron) in the valley of Dien Bien Phu. All the French paratroopers and 40 per cent of their crack mobile force in Indochina were stationed there. These forces were positioned in three sub-regions, North, Centre, and South, with 49 fortified camps. Thus, Dien Bien Phu was transformed into the most powerful complex of entrenched fortifications in Indochina during that period.
Dien Bien Phu victory, General Vo Nguyen Giap, Mong women
Things to sell: Ethnic minority women on their way to a local market.
After 56 days and nights of bloody conflict, the Vietnamese army, led by General Vo Nguyen Giap, one of the greatest generals of Viet Nam, recorded a historic victory on May 7, 1954, 60 years ago, over a much better-equipped and well-trained French expeditionary army. The victory is not just a vivid manifestation of the giant leaps taken by the Vietnamese army, but an everlasting testament to Vietnamese ingenuity, courage, and determination.

"Talking about Dien Bien Province, we can't help mentioning about its complex of historical sites, including the formal Command Post of Gen Vo Nguyen Giap, a French stronghold in Hill C1 (Eliane 1), the French posts on Hill A1 (Eliane 2), the bunker of Christian de Castries, and strongholds on C2, D, E (Dominique). The other noteworthy sites were Doc Lap (Gabrielle) and Him Lam (Beatrice) hills, Muong Thanh Airport, Dien Bien Phu Museum, Dien Bien Phu Victory Monument, and Dien Bien Phu Martyrs' Cemetery," said Pham Van Hung, the director of Dien Bien Province's Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism."These are our key tourist sites, which are of keen interest to both the local and foreign tourists," he added.

"I'm very pleased to join a delegation of 800 Dien Bien Phu soldiers and other veterans to congregate at the former battlefield to pay tribute to the nation's war martyrs and legendary General Vo Nguyen Giap on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Dien Bien Phu victory," said Vuong Van Tan, the director of the D-Media joint-stock company.
"I'm very proud of our country's history," he ecstatically proclaimed.
"In my opinion," said Nguyen Danh Loi from the State Bank of Viet Nam, "General Vo Nguyen Giap was a saint who had been sent to earth to save our nation."
"I can't imagine how President Ho Chi Minh and General Vo Nguyen Giap managed to keep the soldiers' spirits going strong to overcome the numerous challenges faced in such poor conditions to gain a monumental victory at the Dien Bien Phu battlefield, which shook the entire world 60 years ago. Without President Ho, Gen Giap, and other talented Vietnamese commanders and brave soldiers, I wouldn't be standing here to witness the changes of present day Dien Bien Phu, our country would have never become reunified and independent," remarked Loi.Standing atop Hill A1, veteran Lam Manh Phan from Hoa Binh Province agreed that the wild land has a new shape that he could not recognise when he first came here. He expressed his pleasure to see how the area has changed.

In addition to its historical potential, Dien Bien has also attracted scores of visitors for its scenic landscapes and ecological tourist sites, including Pa Khoang Lake, Muong Phang, and Muong Nhe primeval forests, Pa Thom and Tham Bang grottoes, Pha Din Pass and Shan Tuyet century-old tea tree area. Tam Van Citadel, Fief of Hoang Cong Chat, Muong Luan Water Fall, Nam Rom River, and Uva Mineral Spring are also popular destinations.

"I've been here for four days, and now, I have to return back to my daily life in the city. But surely, I'll come back to visit the Muong Nhe ecological tourist site," D-Media director Tan said.
"The cold fresh air in this area is so great," said State Bank's Loi. "I like the primeval and peaceful landscapes here, and also the ethnic people. Thai and Mong women here look very attractive in their traditional costumes."Visiting Dien Bien during the season of full-blooming ban flowers, I could not help but take photographs with the white flowers, which are symbolic of the alluring land. I want that gentle image of ban flowers saved in my photo albums to cherish as vivid memories of field trips during my journalism career and also my youth.

To ethnic people in the north-western part of Viet Nam, ban flowers with their soft fragrance and green heart-shaped leaves are a symbol of purity, beauty, and immortal love.
"Dien Bien becomes more beautiful and romantic when spring comes with blooming ban trees. The number of visitors to the regional province has increased considerably, especially in this season," noted Thai guide Ca Thi Minh.

Dien Bien is also famous for its intangible, unique and cultural value coming from 21 ethnic groups, including Thai, Mong, Kinh, Kho Mu, Tay, Nung, Cong, Si La, Giay, Lao, Dao, Ha Nhi, and Xinh Mun. Many local festivals are held year-round, such as the Ban Phu citadel festival, which commemorates hero Hoang Cong Chat who was a leader of an uprising in the 18th century and two Thai commanders, Ngai and Khanh; or the Xen Ban ceremony to pray for a bumper crop and a happy year.

Xoe hoa and sap dances of Thai, pan-pipe dance of Mong, and lam vong dance with gongs of Lao also feature typical cultures of the ethnic people in the north-west region.
People here are also very simple, truthful, and friendly. Though they lead difficult lives, they do live a simple and happy life without ambitions and scrambling for fame and wealth.
"If you do not sample some some specialities, especially nam pia (a kind of sauce made from provender in digestion in the small intestines of buffaloes or goats, you have not really visited Dien Bien and the north-western region," asserted our guide and driver Hiep.
"Mong's fresh vegetables, grilled stream fish, ban flower salad, dishes made from hill goats, chicken, and pigs raised by the locals, cham cheo, which is made from 14 aromatic herbs growing on the high north-western region, Mong's apple wine, chit worm wine, Dien Bien rice, Yen Chau mango, Cao Phong orange, and Shan Tuyet tea are also specialties that you must try," he recommended.
Dien Bien Phu victory, General Vo Nguyen Giap, Mong women
Natural bouquet: Dien Bien becomes more beautiful during the spring season when ban flowers bloom. 
"The daily life of the residents in Dien Bien Province has considerably improved since the historical victory," claimed Lo Van Bien, the Party's Secretary of Muong Phang Village, Dien Bien Province's Dien Bien District."In the past, we used to face hunger. Rice was replaced with corn, sometimes for many months at a stretch. But now, we don't have to worry about food. Our children go to school. I'm glad to see my village grow," Bien added.

According to the Dien Bien Province's Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, in ten years from 2004 to 2013, the number of visitors to the province has increased rapidly, from 178,000 to 380,500, of which foreign tourists increased from 10,000 to 66,750, and the total income generated from tourism has also risen from VND30.4 billion (US$1.5 million) to nearly VND434 billion ($21.1 million), respectively.

"It is estimated that with several events lined up to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Dien Bien Phu victory, the number of visitors to the province will increase to 440,000 this year, thereby contributing VND540 billion ($26.5 million) to the province's budget from tourism and services," reported Mua A Son, the chairman of Dien Bien Province's People's Committee.

According to Hoang Thi Diep, the vice head of the Viet Nam Administration for Tourism, the complex of historical relics in Dien Bien plays an important role in strengthening and developing tourism not only for the province, but also for the country. Exploring the values of these historical relics will help visitors, especially youngsters, to better understand the nation's history, educate them about patriotism, revolutionary traditions, and the great accomplishments of their previous generations.

"Dien Bien should strengthen co-operation relations with the neighbouring north-west provinces, Ha Noi, and other major cities to develop its tourism potential and turn it into a tourism hub in the northwest region," emphasised director Hung of Dien Bien's department of tourism.
"Creating more tourism options, increasing tour guides' and tourist managers' skills, and improving tourism service quality are of paramount importance. If we can maintain a balance by preserving the historical values, retaining our 21 ethnic cultures together with developing our tourism potential, Dien Bien can become a key centre of historical and ecological tourism, and culture in the northwest region," Hung said.Dien Bien is so great that it has left a strong, lasting impression on me. I have to thank my colleague who gave me the opportunity to discover and develop a passion for the epic land. Bidding adieu, I promise to visit again in the near future.