PM Hun Sen Highlights Three Main Points in 2022

Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen held in Brussels, Belgium on Dec. 12 afternoon (time in Brussels) a get-together with some 2,000 Cambodian nationals residing in Europe.
The get-together took place ahead of the ASEAN-EU Commemorative Summit to celebrate the 45th Anniversary of ASEAN-EU Dialogue Relations to be co-chaired by Samdech Techo Hun Sen and H.E. Charles MICHEL, President of the European Council, in Brussels on Dec. 14.
On the occasion, the Premier thanked his compatriots for their warm welcome, love and support for his presence in Europe.
Samdech Techo Hun Sen also updated them on the new developments and achievements in Cambodia by highlighting three outstanding points in 2022, including the successful control of the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to the country’s reopening and resumption of socio-economic activities; the successful organisation of the Commune/Sangkat Council Election in May, leading to the success of the National Election in July 2023, which is a regular democratic process in Cambodia; and Cambodia’s successful chairmanship of ASEAN.
This is the fifth time that Samdech Techo Prime Minister met with his compatriots living in Europe. The first time was on Oct. 19, 2018 in Brussels; the second on Oct. 23, 2018 in Geneva, Switzerland; the third on July 4, 2019 in Geneva; and the fourth on May 21, 2022 in Zurich, Switzerland.
There are about 370,694 Cambodian nationals in Europe, of them 350,000 live in France; 10,900 in Belgium and the Netherlands; 7,000 in Germany, Hungary and Czech Republic; 2,000 in the United Kingdom; and 1,994 in Switzerland.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

CAN Congress 2022 Held under Theme “Promoting Patient-Centred-Care: Nurses’ Roles

The Cambodian Association of Nurses in collaboration with the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) Cambodia Office held at Phnom Penh Hotel late last week a congress to review its past achievements and boost professional development.
Themed “Promoting Patient-Centred-Care: Nurses’ Roles, the “Cambodian Association of Nurses Congress 2022” was presided over by H.E. Professor Mam Bunheng, Minister of Health, Mr. Rho Hyunjun, Country Director of KOICA Cambodia Office, and Ms. Prak Manila, President of the Cambodian Association of Nurses.
Many related entities and distinguished guests including the representatives from the Ministry of Health, KOICA, as well as the representatives from including chief of nurses from 25 provincial hospitals and national hospitals with a total of around 300 participants attended the event.
The congress was aimed to celebrate the main achievements of CAN from 2019-2022, provide Continuing Professional Development focusing on patient centre care with nurses’ roles, motivate nurses from practice settings to implement the concept of patient centre care in practice, share the development of the nursing unit and Ears Nose Throat Project in Preah Ang Duong Hospital, elect the new executive team of CAN, and strengthen the professional networking of nurses across Cambodia.
Speaking on the occasion, H.E. Prof. Mam Bunheng expressed his thanks to KOICA, the Government, and the people of the Republic of Korea for their technical, material, and financial support for Cambodia’s health sector.
In his remarks, Mr. Rho Hyunjun spoke highly of the conference & congress, saying that KOICA has been supporting many projects and programmes in the fields of Water Management and Public Health, Education, Agriculture, and Rural Development, and Transportation of a value of about US$336.7 million dollars from 1991-2022.
Among those projects and programmes, he added, KOICA’s priority is Cambodia’s health sector because the improvement of people’s health has a high priority in Cambodia.
In addition, he mentioned that “this year, 2022, KOICA has the plan to construct another building in the National Pediatric Hospital, and KOICA is considering to construct one more building in Dangkor Referral Hospital from 2024”.
According to KOICA, as a part of its efforts to improve the quality of and access to public health care, KOICA has successfully established 3 buildings of two national hospitals: 1)-Cambodia-Korea Friendship Building at the National Pediatric Hospital and 2)- The eye and ENT Buildings at Preah Ang Duong Hospital, 3)- buildings of 3 provincial hospitals – Maternal and Child Medical Centre in Siem Reap Provincial Hospital, Batheay Referral Hospital, and the Korea-Cambodia Friendship Hospital in Kampong Chhnang – and also the construction of 5 Maternal Child Health Centres in Mondulkiri and Rattanakiri provinces.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Over 20,000 Businesses Registered with Single Portal

More than 20,000 businesses with US$5.70 billion investment capital have been registered with the government’s single platform – Online Business Registration (OBR) – as of Dec. 12, 2022, according to a report from the OBR under the Ministry of Economy and Finance.
Some 12,742 business names are in the stage of checking for approval, the report said, adding that two business names have been rejected.
The investment value by sector was led by construction US$971 million, followed by real estate US$701 million, management consultant activities US$293 million, manufacturing US$275 million, financial and insurance activities US$259 million, and others US$3.2 million.
Men-owned businesses accounted for 62 percent of the total registered businesses, the report pointed out.
The Royal Government launched the OBR platform, known as the Single Portal, in June 2022.
The first phase of OBR was launched in June last year. It covered business registration with the Commerce Ministry, tax registration and notification of the start of a new business at the Labour Ministry.
The second phase expands the scope to allow online applications for licences based on business activities, with specific ministries supervising the companies that fall under their remit.
Four ministries and institution are taking part in phase two: Ministry of Industry, Science, Technology & Innovation; Ministry of Tourism; Ministry of Post and Telecommunications, and the Real Estate Business & Pawnshop Regulator of the Non-Bank Financial Services Authority.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodia seizes 1 ton of ketamine

Cambodian authorities in the resort town of Sihanoukville seized nearly 1 ton of ketamine over the weekend in the latest high-profile drug bust in this country, prompting calls from civil society groups for more transparency and stricter enforcement of measures used to target drug crimes.
The Sunday afternoon raid by a joint force of gendarmes and police on a rented warehouse yielded 34 large containers of the powerful anesthetic known recreationally as “Special K,” National Authority for Combating Drugs Secretary General Meas Vyrith told RFA Khmer.
The seized ketamine, which can put users into a mildly hallucinatory state, is currently being held in a secure location in Sihanoukville, he said, adding that authorities believe it had been illegally smuggled into Cambodia for sale.
“Efforts are underway to locate those who are responsible for the drugs,” he said. “The criminals took advantage of a loophole when the relevant authorities took shifts in carrying out their duties and also employed different tactics to carry out their illegal activities.”
The bust follows several other large seizures this year in Cambodia, which is becoming a transit and production point for illicit drugs in the region.
Authorities shut down a processing site and seized 40.5 kilograms (89 pounds) of ketamine in May, and in July, they seized 1.8 tons of ketamine and nearly 300 tons of chemicals after raiding a processing site and six storage facilities. In August, authorities seized an additional 871 kilograms of ketamine throughout the country.
According to the NACD, authorities in Cambodia arrested more than 30,000 suspects in 10,461 drug-related cases in 2020 and 6,308 cases in 2021.
Meas Vyrith told RFA that the amount of drugs seized by authorities in Cambodia so far in 2022 had increased by more than half of the total seized in all of 2021.
The latest bust also follows an announcement by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in August which said that ketamine seizures had increased sharply in Cambodia from 112.5 kilograms in 2020 to 2.8 tons in 2021 – accounting for more than 50% of all ketamine seized in Southeast Asia (5.4 tons) that year.
UNODC said that the increase was associated with growing evidence of illicit manufacture of the drug in Cambodia, based on the detection of several clandestine ketamine laboratories in the country.
Call for stronger oversight
Speaking to RFA on Monday, civil society groups urged the government to take stronger action against traffickers of ketamine and other illicit drugs to prevent Cambodia from becoming a haven for the drug trade in Southeast Asia.
Cheap Sotheary, the coordinator for human rights group ADHOC in Sihanouk province, said that the authorities need to be more transparent and forthcoming about information related to drug seizures. She said that drug trafficking remains a problem in Cambodia due to corruption.
“We are requesting that the information and photos of criminals be made public because we worry that local authorities may be complicit and allow them to get away,” she said.
“We also have no information about the places where [authorities] keep the seized illicit drugs. We’re talking about hundreds of tons of these drugs. What would happen if the people who look after the confiscated drugs steal them and sell them themselves? It’s very dangerous without proper oversight.”
Other groups have said that the rise of drug trafficking in Cambodia shows that criminals are not afraid to set up manufacturing operations in the country.
Ketamine is widely used in human and veterinary medicine and, while the drug is not under international control, its non-medical use has been related to a number of severe adverse health effects.
According to UNODC, high doses of ketamine used recreationally can cause cardiovascular and respiratory toxicity effects, as well as other adverse effects like bladder problems, anxiety, panic attacks, palpitations, tachycardia, chest pains, depression, aggravated symptoms of existing mental health issues, slurred speech and inability to speak.

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Pakistan ‘Most Exposed’ to Chinese Influence, New Research Shows

A new study on China’s global influence puts Pakistan at the top of the list.
Cambodia and Singapore are in second and third place respectively as the “most exposed” to Beijing’s influence. Among the top 10 countries most exposed to influence by China, eight are in Asia. Paraguay, North Macedonia and Albania were ranked as ‘least influenced.’
The China Index 2022 explores China’s influence in 82 countries by asking experts to respond to questions about China’s activities in their country. The study was conducted and published by the China in the World (CITW) network, an initiative of Taiwan-based anti-disinformation group, Doublethink Lab.
The report asked questions across nine domains to assess each country’s exposure to Chinese influence.
The domains included media, academia, economy, society, military, law enforcement, technology, domestic politics and foreign policy. Some of Beijing’s activities abroad included paid trips for government officials, scholarships for students, journalism training, research funding, trade, investment and military cooperation.
Puma Shen, chairperson of Doublethink Lab told VOA this research lets people around the world see how China approaches their country.
“By comparing all these rankings and comparing all the different strategy, all these countries could learn [about] each other, like how to counter Chinese influence operations,” he said.
Measuring China’s influence
The report measures influence through three indicators, ‘exposure,’ ‘pressure’ and ‘effect.’
Exposure to China’s initiatives abroad make a country vulnerable to China’s influence, for example, economic dependence or receiving other benefits.
How much ‘pressure’ China puts on a specific country includes either direct or indirect actions by Beijing with the aim of altering people’s behavior.
The actual impact or the extent to which a country accommodates China’s demands, is described as ‘effect’ in the study.
Pakistan ranks #1
Pakistan, the county most exposed to China’s influence in the Index received a 70% rating on exposure, 10% on pressure and 75% on effect. However, the report says these percentages “do not suggest some degree out of a “completely influenced” level of 100%. The percentages express the country’s score out of the total achievable amount based on the indicators for each domain.”
According to the report, China’s influence in Pakistan is most active in the domains of technology, foreign policy and military.
Pakistan-China ties
Experts said it is not surprising to see Pakistan at the top of the China Index 2022 as both share an almost 600 km (373 miles) border with each other and a historic rivalry with India.
Decades old strategic ties between the two have deepened since the U.S. ramped up efforts to bolster India to counter China’s growing ambitions in the Indo-Pacific region.
“We cannot decouple and only look at Pakistan and China because to be fair, you also have to look at how the U.S. and India are also working it because there is also this sort of strategic quadrilateral relationship” said Syed Muhammad Ali, non-resident scholar at the Washington-based Middle East Institute.
Others point out that Pakistan’s closeness with China is also a result of Islamabad’s ties with the West cooling off, especially during the last decade.
Arif Rafiq, President of Vizier Consulting, a political risk advisory company told VOA for Pakistan, China is filling a void left by the West.
“China provides Pakistan with goods and materials and funds that it can’t get from elsewhere, …that includes military hardware, …advanced technologies related to satellite remote sensing, and also includes funding for electric power plants and infrastructure,” said Rafiq.
In recent years the two countries have struck deals to jointly build submarines and fighter jets. Between 2017 and 2021, Pakistan imported 72% of its major arms from China according to the Sweden-based Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
While the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) launched in 2015 is considered the jewel in the crown of Beijing’s global Belt and Road Initiative with roughly $60 billion worth of infrastructure and energy projects, in October local media reported Beijing and Islamabad also agreed to officially launch three new corridors in the areas of agriculture, health and technology.
Pakistan’s top spot on the China Index 2022 also shows Beijing’s reliance on Islamabad, said Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia program at Washington’s Wilson Center.
“These results highlight the fact that the strategic interests of China require a significant level of engagement and influence building with Pakistan,” Kugelman said.
He pointed to CPEC, which not only brought much-needed investment to Pakistan but also gives China access to Central Asian markets through the deep seaport of Gwadar in southern Pakistan.
China’s soft power in Pakistan
Beijing also exercises soft power through initiatives that include Confucius Institutes, which teach Chinese language and culture, and provides funding for thinktanks and scholarships to court the Pakistani people, the research notes.
“China has historically had to make a lot of efforts to, not to say infiltrate, to really build out its influence across Pakistani society, to try to gain Pakistani trust,” said Kugelman.
Views critical of China being kept out of mainstream Pakistani media, military officials pushing for cooperation with China, and Pakistan purchasing Chinese-made surveillance cameras were among some of the effects of the exposure to Beijing, the report found.
China, Pakistan, US
However, analysts VOA spoke to differ on the long-term societal impacts of China making inroads in Pakistan.
While Kugelman expressed concern that anti-democratic practices like surveillance could increase, Rafiq said that Pakistan’s military and intelligence already engage in authoritarian practices and do not need inspiration from China.
“The U.S., because of its Hollywood and everything else, exerts a much larger cultural, socio-economic influence still on the country,” said Ali of the Middle East Institute.
Despite bilateral efforts to build on the “all-weather friendship,” the Brookings Institution’s Madiha Afzal told VOA via email that “there are signs that the [Pakistani] state has realized some of the disadvantages of an excessive dependence on China and sought to diversify its options – making overtures to the United States, for instance.”
Pakistani military and political leaders say their country would not like to choose between the U.S. and China.
Pakistan owes the largest portion of its external debt to China, roughly 30%. While Beijing helped provide a chunk of much-needed funds, Islamabad sought a bailout from the International Monetary Fund this summer to avoid defaulting on loan repayments.
The biggest donor to the IMF is the U.S.
Methodology
Some experts have raised questions about the methodology used for compiling the China Index 2022.
Berlin-based Tim Ruhlig of the German Council on Foreign Relations helped gather data from Sweden for the index said it was unclear when an “exposure” would be considered strong or weak.
Shen said to standardize the results, researchers were asked to provide supplemental notes and evidence of exposure which Doublethink reviewed against its own criteria to accurately assess the level of exposure.

Source: Voice of America