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  • Youth Forum Discusses ‘Responsible’ Social Media Use

    More than 100 young people gathered yesterday in Phnom Penh to discuss the benefits and pitfalls of social media in Cambodia. At the youth forum, which focused on “Politics in the Digital Age”, youths, monks, politicians and NGO leaders spoke about the increasing importance of social media and its role in influencing political debates.

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  • Workers Sent to Court Over Strikes in Bavet Economic Zones

    Four workers were questioned at the Svay Rieng Provincial Court on Sunday for allegedly participating in violent protests that effectively shut down factory operations in two special economic zones (SEZs) in Bavet City last week, according to officials. Tep Phalla, an administrator at the court, said the four workers were sent to the court by provincial police on Sunday morning following protests in the Manhattan and Tai Seng SEZs that resulted in some 30,000 workers being sent home on Thursday and Friday.

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  • CNRP ends boycott, makes quiet return to NA

    Ending their almost two-month boycott of parliament, opposition lawmakers yesterday joined their ruling party counterparts at the National Assembly in unanimously passing three laws. The plenary session, attended by 68 Cambodian People’s Party parliamentarians and 34 from the opposition Cambodia Nation Rescue Party, was by and large routine, though one CNRP lawmaker complained about being warned by his leaders not to engage in debate to ensure a peaceful session.

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  • Adhoc Coordinator in Banteay Meanchey Summoned to Court

    An Adhoc human rights activist based in Banteay Meanchey province was summoned to the provincial court to clarify his involvement in protests earlier this week. The court order, issued by provincial court judge Phann Van Roth, called Sum Chankea, provincial coordinator for local rights group Adhoc, to the court to discuss his role in “protests.” The summons fails to identify which protest, as there were multiple in the province last week.

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  • Unionists continue to seek overseas support

    Independent unions continued to lobby for changes to a controversial trade union bill yesterday, while a promised government committee to “immediately” examine the law has yet to materialise. The independent union representatives held a meeting with US Embassy personnel yesterday to discuss their concerns about the law, which they say will give the Cambodian government too much authority to effectively blacklist independent unions.

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  • Ministry: Stop Mocking LGBT Community

    The Ministry of Information has written to media outlets imploring presenters and artists alike to stop mocking members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community just to gain popularity. According to the letter sent out on Monday, certain presenters and artists have ridiculed the LGBT community in order to break into the entertainment industry, often taking what they consider “jokes” too far.

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  • Organiser Arrested over March

    The organiser of a protest by community members who face eviction from their homes to make way for a railway project in Banteay Meanchey province was detained yesterday after demonstrators burned an effigy and dragged its decapitated body through the streets. About 50 protesters marched through the border town of Poipet dragging the dummy, which was painted in fake blood with the words “corrupt officials abuse citizens and create injustice”, said Vorn Vann, 36, one of the demonstrators.

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  • Cambodian’s Attitudes Toward LGBT Surveyed

    The attitudes of Cambodians who claim to support lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT) people are often very similar to those who identify as opponents of LGBT rights, according to a new report released on Monday by the local NGO Rainbow Community Kampuchea. The report, conducted by social research agency TNS, is based on information gathered in eight focus groups as well as face-to-face interviews with 478 LGBT people and 1,085 straight people in Phnom Penh and 10 provinces.

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  • Unions Eye Draft Law Changes

    A group of more than 20 independent union groups has released a revised version of the changes it wants made to the trade union law after the controversial draft legislation was finally released in full to the government last month. Until that point, unions had been in the dark about what the draft legislation actually contained.

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  • Human Rights Day Peaceful as Gov’t Talks Khmer Rouge

    Citizens defied a ban from City Hall and marched through Phnom Penh on Thursday to mark International Human Rights Day, which passed with no violence as authorities peacefully shunted the demonstrators around the city.

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  • LGBT groups call for greater acceptance

    The rights of LGBT people took centrestage at an event to celebrate Human Rights Day at the FCC mansion in Phnom Penh yesterday. Organised by NGO CamAsean, which advocates on behalf of marginalised people, the morning conference included a rap performance by lesbian and transgender teenagers, and an exhibition of photos and films featuring the lives and struggles of LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) people. “Today is all about marginalised people,” said CamAsean facilitator Kong Yara. “We have representatives here from LGBT communities, sex workers, drug users and people living with HIV.”

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  • Parties meet amid tension

    Leaders from the CPP and CNRP yesterday met face-to-face for the first time since the eruption of Cambodia’s ongoing political crisis, agreeing on a four-point joint statement emphasising the so-called culture of dialogue. After weeks of strained tensions amid what has been labelled a state-sanctioned “crackdown” on the opposition party, Interior Minister and Cambodian People’s Party senior official Sar Kheng and Cambodia National Rescue Party acting president Kem Sokha met for about 40 minutes at the National Assembly.

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  • Draft Union Law Still Deeply Flawed: Report

    The International Trade Union Confederation is “deeply concerned” about the latest draft of the Trade Union Law and vows to oppose it “vigorously” if approved as is, despite significant concessions the government has made to labor interests.

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  • Human rights in Cambodia

    Amid the high-profile human rights violations and chaos that characterise the current political climate in Cambodia, it may seem somewhat bizarre that we observe a national holiday in honour of International Human Rights Day. The 67th commemoration of the adoption of Universal Declaration of Human Rights, however, provides a fitting opportunity to reflect on the past, present and, most importantly, the future of human rights in the Kingdom.

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  • Activists call for change at Cambodia human rights rally

    In a statement released Thursday, the Cambodian Center for Human Rights lamented what it said was a “deterioration of an already dire human rights situation in the country.” It cited the passage of “a number of repressive laws that violate international human rights standards,” including the NGO and telecommunications laws. “These laws serve to significantly restrict fundamental freedoms, such as freedoms of expression, association and assembly,” the organization said, adding that “human rights violations take place in Cambodia against a backdrop of complete impunity.”

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  • Meeting on Monk’s Defrocking Ends in Chaos

    A meeting at Phnom Penh’s Wat Stung Meanchey over accusations that a monk at the pagoda threw Buddha statues into a garbage-filled pond descended into chaos on Monday afternoon as his interrogators attempted to stop his supporters from entering the main temple where the monks had gathered. On Saturday, senior monks at the pagoda in Meanchey district decided to defrock longtime resident Kim Seila, 52, following allegations from fellow monks that he had thrown about 10 artifacts, including Buddha statues, into the filthy pond.

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  • ‘Door closed’ for Rainsy, says Namhong

    Minister of Foreign Affairs Hor Namhong said after a meeting with US Ambassador William Heidt yesterday that the “time was over” for opposition leader Sam Rainsy to retract comments that are the subject of an outstanding defamation sentence. “I had kept the door open for … Sam Rainsy to give him the ability to be free from punishment,” Namhong told reporters. “But I think that the time is over [for Rainsy] because of his insolent and twisted [words].” Rainsy was convicted in absentia of libel after he had alleged in 2008 that Namhong had committed crimes while jailed by the Khmer Rouge at the Boeung Trabek prison camp in the late 1970s.

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  • Rainsy says removal ‘insult’ to King

    More than a month since he last stepped foot in Cambodia, opposition leader Sam Rainsy on Sunday once again took to Facebook, decrying the decision to strip his lawmaker status as “an insult to the King”. The Cambodia National Rescue Party president faces three separate legal cases, widely considered politically motivated, and has opted for self-imposed exile in Europe, despite an initial pledge to return.

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  • CNRP Lawyer Argues For Attempted Murder

    A lawyer for CNRP lawmakers Nhay Chamroeun and Kong Saphea, who were severely beaten on October 26 in front of the National Assembly, filed a new complaint with the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Monday asking that those arrested for the crime be charged with attempted murder.

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  • Foreign Minister Defends Government to US Ambassador

    Foreign Affairs Minister Hor Namhong on Monday once again defended recent legal actions and political moves against the opposition CNRP, and admitted to personally pushing for the enforcement of a years-old defamation and incitement sentence against CNRP President Sam Rainsy. Speaking with reporters after his first meeting with the new U.S. ambassador, William Heidt, the minister said he told the envoy that there was nothing political about Mr. Rainsy’s 2011 conviction over claims he made that Mr. Namhong had been a Khmer Rouge collaborator.

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