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  • Protests Greet Hun Manet in US

    Dozens of Cambodian-American Long Beach residents protested in front of a restaurant over the weekend against Prime Minister Hun Sen’s eldest son, Hun Manet, on the first day of his trip to North America. Observers said that the protest has the hallmark of the opposition to discredit the Royal Government.

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  • Beachfront Evictions Begin In Sihanoukville

    Authorities in Sihanoukville followed through with their long-threatened eviction of vendors from the end of the popular O’Chheuteal beach on Saturday afternoon, demolishing nearly 100 structures along the 2 km strip known locally as Ariston. Officials said buildings on nearby O’Tres beach would be next, but did not say exactly when the demolition might begin.

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  • Deported Spanish Activist Gets Tourist Visa; Return Uncertain

    Environmental activist Alex Gonzalez-Davidson, who was deported in February last year, has been granted a one-month tourist visa through the Foreign Ministry’s online “e-visa” service, but an immigration official said yesterday that it was unlikely he would be allowed to use it.

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  • Ambassador Charged, Jailed for Vast Corruption

    Suth Dina, who rose through the ranks of the Foreign Ministry to become Cambodia’s top diplomat in South Korea in 2014, continued his fall from grace on Thursday as he was imprisoned on charges of corruption and abuse of power, according to his lawyer and the Anti-Corruption Unit (ACU). Mr. Dina was arrested on Monday afternoon after being summoned to the ACU’s headquarters and remained in the unit’s custody until Thursday morning, when he was sent to the Phnom Penh Municipal Court.

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  • Businesswoman Accused of Forging Land Titles

    Seang Chan Heng, general director of the Heng Development Company, was tried in absentia by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday on charges of forging land titles to illegally sell 147 hectares of land in Kampong Chhnang’s Relear Pha-ear district in 2007. Ms. Chan Heng, 49, was charged with “forgery of public documents, and use of forged public documents” under articles 626, 627 and 628 of the Penal Code, Judge Long Kesphirum said, reading from the complaint against her.

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  • Rainsy accuses CPP of fearing strong unions

    Self-exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy late on Wednesday night likened the Cambodian People’s Party-led government’s unease with a strong union movement to Soviet fears of the non-violent rise of the Polish trade union Solidarnosc, or Solidarity, which unseated a repressive Soviet-backed regime in the late 1980s. Writing on his Facebook page, Rainsy said the government’s passing of the trade union law and violent backlash at protesters on Monday were emblematic of the current regime’s fear of a worker’s movement “fighting for freedom”.

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  • Probe Into Justice Minister Possible, ACU Chief Says

    The Anti-Corruption Unit has not yet opened an investigation into Justice Minister Ang Vong Vathana’s secretive offshore holdings, but the unit’s chairman said on Thursday that a future probe could not be ruled out. “It’s not just wet—it’s saturated,” ACU Chairman Om Yentieng said wryly of widespread media coverage of news that Mr. Vong Vathana had been a stakeholder in a now-defunct company based in the British Virgin Islands. “We have heard it.”

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  • UN to Assist NEC Ahead of Elections

    The United Nations is ready to cooperate with and support the National Election Committee (NEC) with additional aid, providing it submits a written letter of intent to the UN’s office in the country. The decision was made yesterday after a meeting at the NEC head office between UN Assistant Secretary-General Miroslave Janca, Shin Umezu, the official in charge of political affairs in the Asia-Pacific region, and NEC chairman Sik Bunhok.

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  • ‘Very Slow’ Ministers Move Out

    The two ministers who were publicly scolded for their “very slow” work by Prime Minister Hun Sen in February both gave up control to their successors at a pair of handover ceremonies in Phnom Penh on Wednesday as part of a cabinet reshuffle approved by lawmakers on Monday. In a speech that proved humiliating for Agriculture Minister Ouk Rabun and Public Works and Transport Minister Tram Iv Tek in late February, Mr. Hun Sen gave them both an unofficial F-grade for what he called their sluggish performance and hinted at the shakeup to come.

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  • Heat, fumes to blame for Battambang mass fainting

    Thirty footwear factory workers fainted at the Aerosoft Summit Footwear factory in Battambang province yesterday due to poor ventilation, overwork and unusually hot weather. Sampov Loun district deputy chief Ly Rom said that 29 women and one man felt nauseous and had headaches before collapsing around lunchtime.

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  • NGOs vow to continue union law opposition

    Following the passage of the controversial trade union law on Monday, international rights groups say they will continue to oppose the legislation, which will now move to the Senate for approval. Human Rights Watch and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Parliamentarians for Human Rights both called the passage of the law a setback for workers’ rights in Cambodia; with the latter saying the government failed to “conduct genuine, inclusive public consultations”.

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  • Suth Dina expected to appear in court today

    The parents of Cambodia’s ambassador to South Korea, Suth Dina, yesterday made a public appeal to Prime Minister Hun Sen, as their son, who is accused of corruption, prepared to spend his third night in custody ahead of a likely court appearance this morning. Dina was taken into custody on Monday by the Anti-Corruption Unit, whose president, Om Yentieng, says the body has been probing a raft of complaints against the envoy.

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  • Saphea blames Vun for Assembly attack

    Kong Saphea, one of two CNRP lawmakers severely beaten outside parliament by a pro-ruling party mob last year, yesterday suggested senior CPP lawmaker Chheang Vun may have organised the pair’s assault, after Vun made comments appearing to shift the blame for the attack to the victims. The public war of words erupted after Vun, a Cambodian People’s Party spokesman, said Saphea and Nhay Chamroeun, who were set upon as they attempted to leave the parliament on October 26, would have avoided the attack if they had not chosen to leave the assembly.

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  • Capitol Bus brawl duo given bail before trial

    The Phnom Penh Municipal Court granted bail yesterday to Capitol Bus Company driver Norn Vanna and Cambodian Labour Confederation member Ros Siphay, who were arrested after striking drivers were brutally attacked by a tuk-tuk union in early February. The men, who are charged with intentional violence, aggravation against authorities and blocking traffic, were released yesterday. Requests to drop the charges were denied, said defence lawyer Kim Socheat. “I think it will be fair for my clients only when the case is closed and they are freed,” Socheat said.

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  • Russia Claims Cambodia Failed To Notify of Embezzler’s Arrest

    Cambodian officials have not informed Russian authorities about the arrest of a wanted embezzler in Sihanoukville last month, despite apprehending him at their request, Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Wednesday. Acting on a months-old arrest warrant from the Appeal Court, police in the seaside city arrested Russian national Vladimir Batalin, 37, on the afternoon of March 28 and later transferred him to Phnom Penh. According to the warrant, he has been wanted in his home country for “cheating a company of money” in 2007 and 2008.

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  • Court Releases Activist, Former Capitol Tours Bus Driver on Bail

    Former Capitol Tours bus driver Nan Vanna and labor activist Ros Siphay were released on bail Wednesday, nearly two months after they were arrested for taking part in a demonstration against the company during which protesters were attacked by a mob of angry tuk-tuk drivers. Ros Piseth, an investigating judge at the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, said the men had been released on bail after assuring court officials that they would appear at the court when called.

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  • Drivers Released, but Boycott Continues

    Two former Capitol Tours bus drivers who have been in jail since early February were released on bail yesterday afternoon after fired bus drivers resumed their protest in front of the company’s office near Orussey Market yesterday morning. The group reiterated calls for the public to boycott the bus service.

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  • PM nixes airport expressway, citing construction concerns

    In what appeared to be yet another sweeping gesture to address public concerns, Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday announced the cancellation of plans to build a multimillion-dollar expressway leading to the Phnom Penh International Airport, a plan that officials had hoped would reduce mounting traffic jams in the capital. The premier said the project would not proceed given the difficulties surrounding the expressway’s construction and asked the eight communities opposing the project to stop their protests and withdraw their demands for a public forum on the issue.

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  • Sar Kheng Urges New Minister to Reconcile Land Disputes

    Interior Minister Sar Kheng urged the new minister of land management, urban planning and development, Chea Sophara, to cut down on land disputes involving poor and indigenous families during a handover ceremony yesterday, casting a wary eye toward the national elections in two years’ time.

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  • New minister vows to tackle land registration

    The new minister of Land Management, Urban Planning and Construction, Chea Sophara, should strive to resolve the country’s land disputes and expand land registration services, his outgoing predecessor Im Chhun Lim said during a handover ceremony yesterday. The appointment of Sophara, who was previously the Minister for Rural Development, to the new position was part of a ministerial reshuffle approved by the National Assembly on Monday.

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