52 New Cases of COVID-19 Reported in Cambodia

Cambodia’s daily cases of COVID-19 continue to drop, to 52 this morning, most of which were linked to the Feb. 20 community outbreak, according to the Ministry of Health.
The source continued that these are PCR test results. The national counts now stood at 119,588, including 19,739 imported cases.
At the same time, the ministry registered 55 new recoveries, but 5 new deaths (4 of them have not been vaccinated); bringing the total cured and death cases in the Kingdom to 115,979 and 2,872, 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 community outbreak.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodia Ready to Host Asia-Europe Cultural Festival Next Week

Cambodia’s Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts is ready to host the Asia-Europe Cultural Festival from Nov. 22 to 26 with a view to enhancing and deepening the cultural ties between Asia and Europe.
At a press conference held here at the ministry this morning, H.E. Dr. Kim Pinun, Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts, and Vice Chairperson of the National Organising Committee for the 13th Asia-Europe Summit (ASEM13) and ASEM side events, said the forthcoming Asia-Europe Cultural Festival will be held under the theme “Asia-Europe Culture Connect”.
It is a side event to ASEM13 which features different forms of performances, exhibitions, film screening and discussions, he continued, stressing that the Festival will enhance dialogue between the 51 countries in Asia and Europe members of ASEM.
For his part, Mr. Tihamer Czika, Head of Political, Press and Information at the EU Delegation to Cambodia, pointed out that the Asia-Europe Cultural Festival will strengthen solidarity and cooperation between countries of the two continents.
The upcoming event will show the cultural richness and diversity between countries in Europe and Asia, as well as the creativity of artists from both continents, he said, adding that the festival will take place virtually in Brussels, Belgium from Nov. 15 to 26 and Cambodia from Nov. 22 to 26.
According to Mr. Ek Buntha, Deputy Director General of the General Department of Cultural Techniques, during the five-day festival from Nov. 22 to 26, artistic events representing more than 20 Asian and European partners, including dance and theater performances, concerts, visual arts, exhibitions and discussion forums with artists, will be officially presented on www.ASEMculturelfestival.com. The festival’s physical programme include six art exhibitions held at the National Museum and four film screenings at Major Cineplex in Phnom Penh.
Other side events of the ASEM13 include Asia-Europe Forum on Women, Peace and Security, the 11th Asia-Europe Parliamentary Partnership Meeting (ASEP11), 1st Asia-Europe Economic and Business Forum (AEEBF1), ASEF Young Leaders Summit, and the 10th ASEF Editors’ Roundtable (ASEFERT10).

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodian PM Holds Talks with Chinese Counterpart

Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen met here this afternoon via videoconference with his Chinese counterpart H.E. Li Keqiang.
According to H.E. Eang Sophalleth, Assistant to the Cambodian Prime Minister, during the bilateral talks, both leaders discussed bilateral trade, agricultural and economic cooperation, as well as people-to-people connectivity.
The two Premiers expressed their commitment to boost trade exchange between both nations to US$10 billion a year and to enforce the Cambodia-China’s Free Trade Agreement on Jan. 1, 2022.
On agricultural cooperation, Samdech Techo Hun Sen and H.E. Li Keqiang agreed to speed up the negotiations on direct export of Cambodia’s agro products to China’s market.
At the same time, the Chinese Premier also promised to further support Cambodia on health sector, especially the fight against COVID-19 and pledged to provide 500 scholarships to Cambodian students for five years.
Besides, H.E. Li Keqiang voiced his support for the Asia-Europe Summit (ASEM) to be hosted by Cambodia this November and Cambodia’s chairmanship of ASEAN for next year.
Both leaders took the opportunity to brief and congratulate each other on the current achievements in Cambodia and China and extended their respective greetings to the His Majesty Norodom Sihamoni, King of Cambodia and Chinese President H.E. Xi Jinping.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

PM to Receive 2 Million Doses of China-donated Vaccines on Nov. 17

Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen, Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia, will personally welcome the arrival of China-donated 2 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines at the airport on Nov. 17, with Chinese Ambassador H.E. Wang Wentian.
The information was shared by H.E. Dr. Yuok Sambath, Secretary of State at the Ministry of Health, while she and Dr. Li Ailan, WHO Representative in Cambodia, were waiting at Phnom Penh International Airport for the arrival of 324,000 more doses of AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine from COVAX Facility this evening.
According to H.E. Dr. Yuok Sambath, Cambodia has so far obtained over 2.5 million doses of vaccines via COVAX Facility and expected to receive in total up to 6.6 million doses.
For Australia-donated vaccines, she added, they would arrive in Cambodia in December or early next year.
With the newly arrived vaccines, Cambodia has now some 38 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines from purchases and donations: 7,800,000 doses of Sinopharm, 27,124,800 doses of Sinovac, 2,063,000 doses of AstraZeneca, and 1,064,600 doses of Johnson & Johnson.
As of Nov. 15, Cambodia has vaccinated about 87.85 percent of the total population of 16 million.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Facebook Papers: Chinese state-linked hackers targeting Cambodian opposition

A hacker collective with suspected ties to Chinese intelligence has engaged in “consistent and long-term targeting” of officials from the Cambodia National Rescue Party, an internal investigation by Facebook found.
A report on the investigation was posted to Facebook’s internal social network on April 1, according to disclosures made to the Securities and Exchange Commission and provided to the U.S. Congress in redacted form by Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen’s legal counsel. The redacted versions received by Congress were reviewed by a consortium of news organizations, including RFA.
Dubbed “Speeding Wall” and seemingly of Chinese origin, the hacker group is alleged in the report to have launched cyberattacks from Cambodian government servers against the CNRP. The party was the country’s main opposition bloc prior to its dissolution by the Cambodian Supreme Court in 2017.
“Leaders and followers of the CNRP have been targets of Speeding Wall through Facebook’s apps and services (notably, Messenger, Pages, and through comments and posts),” writes the report’s author, whose name is redacted.
A spokesperson for Facebook refused to speak about the report, citing a company policy of not commenting on specific incidents.
According to the report, Facebook’s investigator tracked four individuals they assessed with a high degree of confidence to be members of Speeding Wall logging on to Facebook from IP addresses belonging to Cambodia’s Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications.
“It’s probable these servers may have been compromised by these threat actors,” the report’s author wrote, noting that in 2017 hackers targeting Cambodian opposition and civil society groups hosted malicious files on government servers.
A 2018 investigation by US cybersecurity firm FireEye described the 2017 hack as an “example of aggressive nation-state intelligence collection” and concluded that it would likely “provide the Chinese government with widespread visibility into Cambodian elections and government operations.”
Threat to sovereignty
Among those targeted in 2017 was Kem Monovithya, CNRP deputy director-general of public affairs. She told RFA that Facebook has not contacted the CNRP about Speeding Wall’s alleged targeting of the party.
However, on Oct. 12 last year she received a pop-up alert on Facebook that her account had been the target of an attempted hack, she said. It is unclear whether the hack she was alerted to was linked to Speeding Wall.
Regardless, she said, the notion that hackers linked to the Chinese state might be targeting her and her colleagues no longer shocked her.
“This time it doesn’t surprise me at all. My concern now is beyond their espionage on our communication, but the exploitation of Cambodia’s sea and soil at large,” Monoivthya said. “Cambodia lost democracy and also is on the brink of losing our sovereignty.”
Cambodia has become a focal point of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative in recent years, with China becoming the Kingdom’s largest source of foreign investment in 2019. With that increased investment has come what many observers view as an outsized role in Cambodia’s economy and politics.
Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications spokesman Meas Po told RFA that he was unaware of any activity by Chinese hackers.
“I don’t have any information about this, but if you do please share it,” Po said, adding that he was traveling and unaware of any issues at the ministry.
The author of the Facebook report also suggested that Speeding Wall’s activities might be the product of a collaboration between Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party and the Chinese government, “working together … to counter the Cambodian opposition party.”
“This theory offers an explanation why we’re seeing Speeding Wall actors using Cambodian Government infrastructure to target the CPP’s opposition party,” the report’s author wrote.
Support for this theory was discovered by the investigator through Centra, a controversial tool reportedly used by Facebook to track users across the internet, whether they are logged in to their account or not.
Chinese-language titles
Accessing the profile of one of the suspected Speeding Wall hackers, the author noted that the hacker had imported contact information for individuals with the Chinese-language titles Chief, Section Chief, Team lead, Military, Military Chief Staff Officer, and teacher.
“These titles typically indicate an intelligence organization’s structure,” the author wrote.
Another suspected Speeding Wall member had multiple contacts linked to the China-ASEAN Technology Transfer Center, the author noted. The CATTC is part of a Chinese government program to promote research and technology exchanges between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. It established a presence in Cambodia in 2014.
The presence of CATTC employees in a Speeding Wall hacker’s contact list could be an indication of collaboration between the CPP and China, the report’s author wrote.
Alternatively, the author countered, the Speeding Wall hackers could be using employment with the CATTC as a cover to “target Cambodia writ large.”
“While there’s no evidence to prove this assumption, their targeting of Cambodian government servers and long-term targeting of Cambodia may be some indication,” the author wrote.
The CATTC and the Chinese embassy in Washington did not respond to emailed requests for comment on the allegations in the report.
CPP spokesperson Sok Ey San rejected any suggestion the hackers were in cahoots with Cambodia’s ruling party. He said that the government had no cause to spy on the CNRP.
“We have nothing to do with it. Don’t be suspicious of us. They just want to put the blame on us,” he told RFA. “The winning CPP has been busy rebuilding the country and maintaining peace. We don’t have time to investigate those rebels.”
Cambodian authorities have arrested and imprisoned dozens of CNRP activists since the party was outlawed in 2017 – a move that effectively criminalized the main political opposition to longtime ruler Hun Sen.

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