COVID-19: Daily Cases Drop Significantly to 232 This Morning

Cambodia this morning reported only 232 new cases of COVID-19, a sharp decrease from 978 cases yesterday, according to a press release of the Ministry of Health.
Of the new cases, 45 were imported and the rest were connected to the Feb. 20 community outbreak, pointed out the same source, adding that the national counts rose to 112,883, including 19,028 imported cases.
But the number of new deaths remain high, at 17, while 556 more recovered cases were recorded; bringing the total death and cured cases in the Kingdom to 2,336 and 103,383, respectively.
The first COVID-19 case was detected in Cambodia in late January 2020 in Preah Sihanouk province. The confirmed cases have surged quickly this year due to the Feb. 20 incident.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodia Exports Over 410,000 Tonnes of Milled Rice in First Nine Months

Cambodia shipped 410,698 tonnes of milled rice to foreign markets during the first nine months of this year, a decline of 15.97 percent compared to the same period last year, generating almost US$350 million as income.
The figures were shared this morning by H.E. Veng Sakhon, Minister of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries.
Cambodia’s milled rice was shipped to 53 countries around the world, and China remains the biggest market buying 203,279 tonnes, up 31,383 tonnes or 18.26 percent.
The rest were 22 countries in Europe, seven countries in ASEAN, and 23 other destinations, and 59 companies have engaged in the milled rice exports, he added.
During the period, Cambodia exported more than 2.52 million tonnes of paddy rice worth nearly US$430 million to Vietnam, a year-on-year increase of about 81.23 percent or 1,130,957 million tonnes.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodian Court Sends CNRP Activist to Prison After He Returns From Thailand

A Cambodian court on Friday ordered an opposition party activist detained after he returned from exile in Thailand, sending him to Prey Sar Prison in the capital Phnom Penh to face charges of conspiracy and incitement, Cambodian sources say.
Tum Bunthorn, a former commune councilor for the banned Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), was arrested on Wednesday, a month after returning to his home from Thailand in order to live with his family, his wife Sieng Leng told RFA’s Khmer Service.
Sieng Leng said she has not been yet been told of formal charges filed by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court against her husband, but called his arrest politically motivated and unjust.
“I am asking the court to release him so that he can regain his freedom. He needs to feed his children and family,” she said.
Tum Tunthorn was a member of a CNRP musical group that had performed songs criticizing the government of long-ruling Prime Minister Hun Sen, and was jailed for two months in 2019 on charges of incitement amid a wave of arrests of other opposition party activists and politicians.
Fearing further harassment by authorities, he had fled to Thailand following his release.
Speaking to reporters on the Telegram messaging service, Phnom Penh Municipal Court spokesman Plang Sophal said that Tum Bunthorn had been arrested based on a warrant issued after his sentencing in absentia on Dec. 30 to a prison term of two years and eight months for actions “seriously affecting social security.”
Tum Bunthorn’s detention came as the Phnom Penh court questioned a land-rights activist, Lak Kien Ving, who was arrested this week after being summoned to appear at the court, according to his wife, Orn Chantho.
Armed police stormed her house after Phnom Penh deputy prosecutor Mut Dara issued a warrant on Wednesday requesting Lak Kien Ving to come to the court to be questioned over his role in a land encroachment case, she said.
The warrant gave Lak Kien Ving, a resident of Prey Nop district in Sihanoukville, a month in which to appear before the court, but authorities acted quickly to take him into custody, violating the warrant’s own provisions, she said.
Lak Kien Ving’s arrest was not carried out according to law, because the court itself had given him 30 days in which to appear, said Am Sam Ath, deputy director of monitoring at the Cambodia-based rights group Licadho.
Arrests of activists and opposition party members often surge after exchanges of rhetoric between Hun Sen and acting CNRP president Sam Rainsy, who now lives in exile in Paris, Am Sam Ath said.
“In my own observations, I have seen that even when arrest warrants are issued, the authorities often won’t make arrests except in times of political tension. So these arrests have more to do with politics than the law,” he said.
More than 90 political opposition figures and social and environmental activists have been arrested in Cambodia in recent years on charges of “incitement and conspiracy,” sources say.
Also on Friday, the Phnom Penh Municipal Court dropped ten arrest warrants issued against former CNRP youth workers now living in South Korea after one youth leader, Yim Sinorn, wrote to Hun Sen to ask his intervention in the proceedings against them.
The warrants had been issued on charges of conspiracy and incitement over the announced return, later abandoned, to Cambodia by CNRP acting president Sam Rainsy from exile in 2019. On receiving Yim Sinorn’s appeal, Hun Sen forwarded his letter to Cambodia’s Ministry of Justice and the court withdrew the warrants.
Separately, New York-based Human Rights Watch expressed concern over what it called the “repeated harassment” by Cambodian authorities of independent journalist Youn Cheav, who faces a lawsuit filed by Defense Minister Tea Banh because of his reporting on issues of corruption, land grabs, and threats by authorities in southwest Cambodia’s Koh Kong province.
”The persecution of local online reporter Youn Cheav shows how the Cambodian government is systematically silencing the few independent journalists and media outlets left in the country,” said HRW Deputy Asia Director Phil Robertson in a statement Thursday.
“Using the excuse of fighting so-called ‘fake news’ and disinformation, the government is resorting to criminal prosecutions in Cambodia’s politicized court system to target independent journalists based on bogus allegations,” Robertson said.
US lawmakers call for sanctions
Cambodian activists and opposition figures this week applauded the bipartisan passage by U.S. lawmakers on Tuesday of legislation calling for sanctions on Cambodian officials found responsible for suppressing political opposition in the authoritarian Southeast Asian country.
Titled the Cambodia Democracy Act of 2021, H.R.4686 would bar entry to the United States by senior Cambodian officials deemed responsible by the U.S. president for having “directly and substantially undermined democracy in Cambodia.”
The bill if signed into law by the U.S. president would also restrict financial transactions and freeze assets held in the United States by targeted Cambodian officials.
Speaking to RFA, Voeun Veasna—a forest activist who fled Cambodia and now lives in Thailand—said that the bill if made law will benefit victims of government persecution in Cambodia and force Hun Sen to engage in talks with the CNRP to improve human rights and democracy.
“As an activist, I urge Hun Sen to stop being stubborn and return to negotiations for the sake of peace in the nation,” he said.
Another CNRP activist, Leng Sotheary, said though that the proposed law will only embarrass Hun Sen on the international stage. “And when Hun Sen gets angry, he arrests even more activists and puts them in jail,” she said.
Chhim Phalvorun, spokesman for Cambodia’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) said however that the bill is being used by the United States as a device to undermine what he called Cambodia’s position of neutrality in the competition between the U.S. and China, Cambodia’s powerful northern neighbor and supporter.
“The U.S. legislation is just the title of a song,” he said. “In fact, it is only a political tool for the U.S. to use against China, using Cambodia as a pretext.”
Cambodia’s Supreme Court dissolved the CNRP in November 2017, two months after arresting its president Kem Sokha over an alleged plot to overthrow the government. Scores of supporters of the group have since been incarcerated, awaiting a tortuous legal process made slower by COVID-19 restrictions.
The move came amid a wider crackdown by Hun Sen on the country’s political opposition, independent media, and NGOs that allowed the CPP to win all 125 seats in parliament in a July 2018 election and drew U.S. sanctions and the suspension of trade privileges with the European Union.

Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036Radio Free Europe–Copyright (c) 2015. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Countries Have $385 Billion In ‘Hidden Debts’ To China, Study Finds

A new study found under-reported debts of at least $385 billion owed by different countries to China in the past two decades, and that one-third of projects under the Belt and Road Initiative have run into major implementation problems.
The hidden debts, which slipped through the scrutiny of international lenders such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and credit rating agencies, mean borrowing countries may have to repay more than they think.
The findings are from a four-year study by AidData, an international development research lab based at William & Mary’s Global Research Institute in the United States.
“Chinese debt burdens are substantially larger than research institutions, credit rating agencies, or intergovernmental organizations with surveillance responsibilities previously understood,” the study said.
The reason is an increasing number of deals struck not directly between governments through central banks but through often opaque arrangements with a range of financing institutions, hence “the debt burdens were kept off the public balance sheets.”
The study said that nearly 70 percent of China’s overseas lending “is now directed to state-owned companies, state-owned banks, special purpose vehicles, joint ventures, and private sector institutions in recipient countries” rather than sovereign borrowers which are central government institutions.
According to Brad Parks, AidData’s Executive Director and a co-author of the report, “the hidden debt problem is getting worse over time.”
Most of the hidden debts occurred in projects under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), China’s ambitious international development program and President Xi Jinping’s brainchild. It was launched in 2013 under the original name One Belt One Road.
The study also found that 35 percent of the BRI infrastructure project portfolio has encountered major implementation problems—such as corruption scandals, labor violations, environmental hazards, and public protests.
‘Loanshark practices’
AidData studied 13,427 China-funded projects across 165 countries worth $843 billion over an 18-year period and found that the average government “is under-reporting its actual and potential repayment obligations to China by an amount that is equivalent to 5.8 percent of its GDP.”
Collectively, these under-reported debts are worth approximately $385 billion.
Forty-two developing countries, including Laos, Papua New Guinea, the Maldives, Brunei, Cambodia and Myanmar, now have levels of public debt exposure to China in excess of 10 percent of GDP, the study said.
The authors of the study said that Beijing has used debt rather than aid “to establish a dominant position in the international development finance market. Since the BRI was introduced in 2013, China has maintained a 31-to-1 ratio of loans to grants.”
Beijing’s lending to low- and middle-income countries is provided on less generous terms than loans from other lenders and multinational creditors.
“A typical loan from China has a 4.2 percent interest rate and a repayment period of less than 10 years,” compared to a typical loan with a 1.1 percent interest rate and a repayment period of 28 years from countries like Germany, France or Japan.
“This is quite comparable to loanshark practices at the global level,” said Soumya Bhowmick, associate fellow at the Observer Research Foundation in Kolkata, India, who was not involved in the study.
“This is particularly worrisome because countries which are grappling with the double whammy of high public external debt, as well as high volumes of debt owed to China, highlight the precarious situation of their own public finances,” he said.
However, as developing countries are desperate to find money to finance their infrastructure projects, they seem to have no choice but reach out to Chinese lenders whose favorite risk mitigation tool is collaterization, or the use of the borrowing country’s valuable assets or natural resources.
Laos, for example, had to sell part of its national electricity grid to China in 2020 in exchange to debt relief from Chinese creditors.
Laos’ overall level of debt exposure to China is equivalent to 64.8 percent of its GDP, including 35.4 percent of GDP worth of hidden debt that comes with the China-Laos railway mega project, according to the study. The $6 billion dollar railway is due to open in December.
‘Implementation problems’
The Philippines, too, had to place national assets as collateral in a 2018 loan agreement with China to finance a large irrigation project dubbed the Chico River project.
“Beijing is more willing to bankroll projects in risky countries than other official creditors, but it is also more aggressive than its peers at positioning itself at the front of the repayment line (via collateralization),” AidData said.
Forty of the 50 largest loans by China were collateralized and China has rapidly scaled up the provision of loans to resource-rich countries that suffer from high levels of corruption.
Corruption scandals, labor violations, environmental hazards, and public protests have blighted BRI projects, the study found.
A part of a project to build the East Coast Rail Link connecting Kuala Lumpur and Kota Bharu in Malaysia, funded by China Eximbank, was cancelled in 2018 after allegations of artificial cost inflation and corruption.
BRI infrastructure projects are also taking substantially longer to implement. A project to build Vietnam’s first elevated railway line in Hanoi suffered from years of delay and a budget ballooning by 60 percent.
“Host country policymakers are mothballing high-profile BRI projects because of corruption and overpricing concerns, as well as major changes in public sentiment that make it difficult to maintain close relations with China,” explained Brooke Russell, an associate director at AidData and one of the other co-authors of the report.
China’s foreign ministry said in a statement cited by Reuters that since its launch, the BRI had “consistently upheld principles of shared consultation, shared contributions and shared benefits.”
Currently, China is outspending the U.S. and other major powers by more than 2-to-1 on overseas development. In an average year during the BRI era, China spent $85 billion on their overseas development program as compared to the U.S.’s $37 billion.
Authors of the study, however, warned that China would soon face higher levels of competition in the global infrastructure finance market.
At a meeting of the G7 industrialized nations in June, the U.S. and its allies announced a spending plan to rival China’s influence called Build Back Better World (B3W) which promises to fund global infrastructure projects that are financially and environmentally sustainable.
The E.U. recently also announced its Global Gateway Initiative which analysts say is likely to collide head-on with the BRI.
“It remains to be seen if ‘buyer’s remorse’ among BRI participant countries will undermine the long-run sustainability of China’s global infrastructure initiative, but clearly Beijing needs to address the concerns of host countries in order to sustain support for the BRI,” AidData’s Russell said.

Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036Radio Free Europe–Copyright (c) 2015. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Cambodia Tells Chinese Casinos Not to Force Staff to Work After One Dies of COVID

Authorities in Cambodia’s coastal city Sihanoukville have threatened to take legal action against casinos and other businesses that force staff to work during the pandemic, after employees accused a Chinese-owned casino of forcing people infected with the coronavirus to keep working.
After one of the sick laborers at The Century Casino died, her family asked authorities to order the Chinese owner to pay them compensation for forcing the woman to continue working while ill, said Ros Leng, cousin of worker Hean Sreynich.
A doctor told the family that the women who died Thursday at the casino had contracted the COVID-19 virus five days earlier and had died of food poisoning and dehydration, he told RFA.
The casino did not inform the family about Hean Sreynich’s death or offer to pay them her salary, he said.
The family learned about her death from her coworkers, Ros Leng said.
“We should like the casino to resolve the issue and to give us compensation,” he said.
RFA could not reach the casino’s human resources manager to comment on the matter.
News that some of the casino’s 437 workers had contracted the virus spread after a group of employees livestreamed videos on Facebook on Thursday.
They said they were forced to perform their jobs, including managing online gambling platforms, while they were ill and that they had been forced to remain inside the building since March without any treatment.
On Sept. 25, the workers called on the provincial labor department to order the casino operator to stop forcing them to work.
Authorities banned the casino from asking employees to work while they were in quarantine, with provincial governor Kouch Chamroeun on Monday warning hotels and casinos not to use forced labor.
“To avoid labor disputes and to avoid forced labor that leads to human trafficking and prostitution and to exploited labor, Sihanoukville provincial authorities have issued strict measures banning forced labor, employing workers in exchange for paying off their debs, fake marriages, producing pornography, and illegal detention,” the governor said in a statement.
“Provincial authorities will take action against any casinos or hotels that detain or force workers to work or [engage in] illegal trafficking,” he said.
Authorities would shut down any business that violates the directive, prosecute the owners, and revoke their operating licenses, Kouch Chamroeun added.
A casino employee who declined to be named out of fear of retribution said the authorities sent two nurses to the casino to distribute medicine after the Facebook video the workers made went viral.
“The treatment we received is acceptable, but we don’t know if this will change in the future. Right now authorities are paying attention to us. There is some improvement needed, but it is acceptable,” she said.
Yow Khemara, director of the Department of Labor and Vocational Training in Preah Sihanouk province, told RFA that medical professionals have provided treatment and medicine to the more than 200 workers who have the COVID-19 virus. He also confirmed that one employee had died.
“Right now, we have doctors stationed there during the day because casino employees have complained,” he said. “We also are giving them four meals daily.”
Chinese investment has flowed into Sihanoukville in recent years, bringing dozens of Chinese-owned casinos and other businesses.
While the businesses create jobs for Cambodians, many complain about what they see as unscrupulous business practices, criminal activities, and unbecoming behavior by Chinese businessmen, residents, and tourists alike.

Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036Radio Free Europe–Copyright (c) 2015. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.