Khmer Times Contributes to Mine Clearance Operations in Cambodia

Khmer Times, a leading English-language print media in Cambodia, has provided financial contribution for mine clearance in Kampong Speu province.

The handover ceremony took place here on June 10 in the presence of H.E. Ly Thuch, First Vice President of the Cambodian Mine Action and Victim Assistance Authority (CMAA) and Khmer Times’s Publisher Mr. Mohan Bandam with the participation of many relevant officials.

The financial assistance will be used to support mince clearance activities on five hectares of land, which was a former battlefield, in Veal village, Srang commune, Kong Pisei district, Kampong Speu province.

Speaking at the function, H.E. Ly Thuch said that the Khmer Times’s contribution reflects the participation of private sector with the government in mine clearance actions in Cambodia.

“I thank Khmer Times for the financial assistance for mine clearance and this reflects the contribution from the private sector with the Royal Government of Cambodia in the mission to clear landmine-contaminated land for people,” he said.

Mr. Mohan Bandam pointed out that the generous contribution aimed to participate with the government in liberating land and reducing danger from landmines.

“Contribution to the Cambodian Mine Action and Victim Assistance Authority in the field of humanitarian demining at a small corner of Cambodia is to provide safe land and reduce the danger for the people of Veal village,” he stressed.

Mr. Mohan Bandam said he will continue to raise funds from charitable people and the private sector through the organisation of charity events until December 2022 to join the Royal Government of Cambodia on mine clearance operations.

For more than 30 years, the Royal Government of Cambodia, with the participation of all stakeholders, has saved more than 2,378 square kilometres of land from landmines and saved land benefited to more than seven million people.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodian, Brunei Leaders Exchange Congratulations on 30th Anniversary of Diplomatic Ties

The top leaders of the Kingdom of Cambodia and Brunei Darussalam have exchanged congratulatory messages on the 30th anniversary of the establishment of the diplomatic relations between the two ASEAN countries.

“On the auspicious occasion of the 30th Anniversary of the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between the Kingdom of Cambodia and Brunei Darussalam, I have the great pleasure to extend my warmest felicitations and best wishes to Your Majesty and, through you, to the friendly people of Brunei,” wrote His Majesty Preah Bat Samdech Preah Boromneath Norodom Sihamoni, King of Cambodia, in a royal message to His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah, the Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam.

“Cambodia and Brunei have enjoyed cordial relations and close cooperation in many areas over the last three decades based on our long-standing bonds of friendship. It is in my conviction that, with the shared commitment and concerted efforts of the two countries, the diplomatic ties and cooperation between Cambodia and Brunei will continue to grow stronger year after year for the best interests and well-being of our peoples,” the Cambodian monarch added.

His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei shared the same ideas over the warm and longstanding ties between both nations, which he is confident will continue to deepen in the years to come. “I look forward to renewed opportunities to strengthen these much-valued relations, for the mutual benefit of our countries and people,” he said.

In his congratulatory message, Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen reiterated his strong commitment to further deepen the two countries’ relations and cooperation in both bilateral and multilateral frameworks for the mutual interests of the two peoples as well as for the maintenance of peace, security, stability and prosperity of the ASEAN Community and beyond. He is also looking forward to welcoming and working closely with His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah during his state visit to Cambodia later this year.

In reply, His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah, also Prime Minister, Minister of Defence, Minister of Finance and Economy, and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Brunei Darussalam, welcomed further opportunities to deepen the cooperation both bilaterally and as close regional partners, and extend Brunei’s full support for Cambodia’s ASEAN Chairman this year. “I look forward to working closely with you in ensuring the success of the 40th and 41st ASEAN Summit and related Summits in November,” he reaffirmed.

The Kingdom of Cambodia and Brunei Darussalam established their diplomatic ties on June 9, 1992.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Myanmar’s junta yet to send execution orders for former lawmaker, democracy activist

Myanmar’s ruling military junta has not issued execution orders for a former lawmaker from the deposed government and a prominent democracy activist sitting on death row after convictions on terrorism charges, despite reports that the men would be hanged Friday evening local time, a Prisons Department spokesman told RFA.

On June 3, the junta announced that it would proceed with the planned executions of former Member of Parliament Phyo Zeya Thaw and Ko Jimmy, a longtime democracy activist and former leader of the 88 Generation Students Group. Anti-regime opponents Aung Thura Zaw and Hla Myo Aung are also facing the death penalty.

Myanmar’s military, which seized control from the democratically elected government in a February 2021 coup, has cracked down on anti-regime activists, sentencing more than 100 to death. The executions of Phyo Zeya Thaw and Ko Jimmy, whose real name is Kyaw Min Yu, would be the country’s first judicial executions since 1990.

Authorities had not received execution orders from the junta for Phyo Zeya Thaw and Ko Jimmy, who are being held in Yangon’s Insein Prison, said Prisons Department spokesman Khin Shwe.

“We haven’t receive anything from the superiors,” he said. “We also don’t know about the news that they will be hanged this evening and that there had been religious rites in prison for the inmates.”

All four inmates are in good health and have been transferred to death row where they are wearing orange prison suits given to those facing execution, he said.

Junta spokesman, Maj. Gen. Zaw Min Tun, told RFA on Tuesday that all four men would be executed under the regular procedures of the Prisons Department.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, current chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), sent a written appeal on Friday to Sen. Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, head of the State Administration Council (SAC), the formal name of the junta regime, to “reconsider the sentences and refrain from carrying out the death sentences.”

“The death sentences and reported planned execution of a number of anti-SAC individuals have attracted great concern among ASEAN member states, as well as ASEAN external partners,” he wrote.

If carried out, the executions “would trigger a very strong and widespread negative reaction from the international community” and hurt efforts to find a peaceful solution to the crisis in Myanmar, Hun Sen wrote.

A former member of the hip-hop band Acid, Phyo Zeya Thaw served as a lawmaker from the National League for Democracy from 2012 to 2020. Following the coup and the subsequent crackdown on peaceful anti-regime protesters, he went into hiding but was arrested in November 2021.

Phyo Zeya Thaw, whose real name is Maung Kyaw, and Ko Jimmy, who was arrested in October 2021, were both sentenced to death by a military tribunal this January for treason and terrorism.

Activist Nilar Thein, who is the wife of Ko Jimmy, said the junta will have to take responsibility for giving her husband the death penalty.

Radio Free Asia –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.

Water Treatment Plant Projects in Kandal Province Unveiled

Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority (PPWSA) plans to build new water treatment facilities in Takhmao town and Arey Ksat area in Kandal province to supply enough piped water to residents in those areas.

PPWSA Director General H.E. Long Naro said at a press conference here yesterday that a working group is undertaking studies of the location to build the facilities.

The water treatment plant projects are supported by the Korean Government, he pointed out.

As planned, PPWSA will expand its water supply capacity in Takhmao town near the new airport area and Arey Ksat area by 2024 and 2025, H.E. Long Naro said.

The PPWSA will soon start the construction of a water treatment plant with the production capacity of 30,000 cubic metres of clean water per day in Takhmao town under Japan’s support.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

U.S.-China defense chiefs meet at Asia security summit

The defense chiefs of the United States and China held their first in-person meeting on Friday at the start of a regional security forum in Singapore where tensions between the two world powers are taking center stage.

U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and his Chinese counterpart Wei Fenghe held their first face-to-face talks since Joe Biden became U.S. president 17 months ago. They met on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual gathering of top security officials and experts, the U.S. Department of Defense, or DoD, and dialogue participants said.

“Secretary Austin discussed the need to responsibly manage competition and maintain open lines of communication,” the DoD said in a statement, adding that Austin “underscored the importance of the People’s Liberation Army engaging in substantive dialogue on improving crisis communications and reducing strategic risk.”

Bonnie Glaser, director of the Asia program at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, told RFA ahead of Friday’s meeting, that in April “Austin and Wei had a 45-minute phone conversation to present some talking points to each other but today they have a chance to express their concerns and bring the conversation beyond talking points.”

“My hope for an outcome of this meeting today is for the two sides to discuss various ways to prevent accidents from happening,” she said.

Since April’s phone call, bilateral security ties between the U.S. and China have suffered more setbacks amid Beijing’s growing assertiveness and changing military postures in the region.

China has signed a security deal with the Solomon Islands and is setting up a naval facility in Cambodia. Both developments have raised concerns among the U.S. and its allies.

Chinese flyovers and naval patrols around Taiwan, in the East and South China Sea, are also posing challenges to the U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy. Austin on Friday called for China “to refrain from further destabilizing actions toward Taiwan.”

Washington has condemned what it calls “China’s provocations,” while Beijing has insisted it is the U.S. that threatens peace and security in the region.

The bilateral meeting in Singapore – “held at the Chinese side’s request,” according to the U.S. side – is not expected to deliver any major breakthroughs. However, it is expected to open a clearer and more regular communication channel between the two sides.

“In general, such dialogues remain rare in a bilateral relationship marked by scant human connections,” said James Crabtree, executive director of IISS-Asia – the Asia program of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies that hosts the Shangri-La Dialogue.

“This lack of communication would be cause for worry in any future regional crisis,” he said.

Preventing miscalculations

The U.S. defense secretary will speak at the dialogue on Saturday. The DoD says he’ll clarify the next steps for the U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy with emphasis on the new approach of “integrated deterrence,” where the U.S. aims to “harmonize both traditional and emerging defense capabilities and priorities, along with non-military tools of power, with partners and allies in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

China’s Defense Minister Wei will speak on Sunday on China’s vision for regional order, in which “he will discuss China’s policies, ideas and concrete actions in practicing true multilateralism, safeguarding regional peace and stability, and promoting the development of a community of a shared future for mankind,” according to Chinese state media.

Austin and Wei are holding various bilateral and multilateral meetings on the sidelines of the dialogue.

The U.S. defense secretary met with some ASEAN defense ministers including the Singaporean and the Vietnamese. On Saturday he’s scheduled to meet with South Korean Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup and take part in trilateral talks with Lee and their Japanese counterpart Nobuo Kishi before heading to Bangkok on Sunday.

The Chinese defense minister, meanwhile, is expected to meet the Japanese defense minister on Sunday to discuss North Korea. He co-chaired the inaugural Singapore-China Defense Ministers’ Dialogue on Thursday afternoon.

Japanese media said Kishi wanted to register with Wei “Japan’s concerns about China’s growing maritime assertiveness, and to urge Beijing to exercise restraint.”

Kishida’s Vision for Peace

On Friday evening, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida gave a keynote address to kick off Shangri-La Dialogue 2022. He is the first Japanese prime minister to attend the dialogue since Shinzo Abe eight years ago.

Kishida outlined his vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific region to strengthen the rules-based international order. He promised to provide US$2 billion in assistance for Asia-Pacific nations for developing maritime security infrastructure over the next three years, while also investing in human resources.

Noting that the status quo “has already been changed by force” in the East and South China Seas, Kishida said Japan “firmly opposes such activities.”

“Many like-minded nations have shared their vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific,” the Japanese prime minister said, stressing that “collaboration with ASEAN on this is essential,” referring to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Kishida called for efforts to “prevent a crisis similar to that in Ukraine from arising in the Indo-Pacific.” He stressed the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.

“Ukraine today may be East Asia tomorrow,” he said.

Chinese state media earlier slammed the Japanese government’s foreign policy, saying that “Japan uses the pretext of ‘preventing a crisis like the Russia-Ukraine crisis from happening in Asia’ to legitimize its move to collude with NATO and to convince regional countries to serve its goal of targeting China.”

“Tokyo’s selfish and dangerous attempt is unlikely to succeed,” Chinese analysts were quoted as saying in the Chinese Communist Party’s mouthpiece Global Times.

Chair of the NATO Military Committee Adm. Rob Bauer visited Japan this week and met with Defense Minister Kishi.

Bauer praised the “natural” partnership between NATO and Japan, saying the two sides “share the same values and challenges.”

Besides regional leaders, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is expected to deliver a special address to Shangri-La Dialogue via video link on Saturday.

The dialogue, staged at a hotel in Singapore, has been held annually since 2002, but was suspended for the past two years due to the COVID pandemic.

Radio Free Asia –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.