Light to Moderate Rain Forecasted in Cambodia This Week

Cambodia is expected to have light to moderate rain across the country from Feb. 1-7, the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology (MOWRAM) announced this morning.

For the temperature, during the said period, it would vary between 23 and 35 degrees Celsius for the central lowland areas, according to the ministry’s announcement on weekly weather forecast.

For highland and coastal areas, the source pointed out, the temperature would be from 22 to 34 degrees Celsius.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Over 600,000 Tourists Recorded in Cambodia Last Week

More than 600,000 national and international tourists were recorded across the country during the fourth week of January – from Jan. 23 to 29, said the Ministry of Tourism in a report released this morning.

Of the registered number, the source pointed out, some 556,000 were national visitors and nearly 50,000 were foreign tourists.

The most visited destination during the said period was Preah Sihanouk coastal province, followed by the provinces of Kampot, Battambang, Siem Reap and Kampong Cham, and Phnom Penh capital, it said.

Pailin and Kep provinces were also among the eight most popular tourism destinations last week, the report added.

In 2022, the ministry tracked the movement of domestic tourists to 13.93 million, a year-on-year increase of 199 percent, while the number of foreign tourists to Cambodia rose by 1,059 percent to 2.28 million.

Tourism is one of the four pillars supporting the Cambodian economy.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodia Exports Bicycles Worth US$966 Million in 2022

Cambodian exported US$966 million worth of bicycles to international markets in 2022, up 48 percent compared to a year before, the Ministry of Commerce’s report showed on Monday.

The ministry stated that the bicycles had been shipped to more than 50 countries and regions including the European Union, Britain, the United States, Canada, Japan and China.

Cambodia is the top player in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in terms of bicycle export, it underlined.

The Kingdom became the largest bicycle supplier for the EU market since 2017, overtaking China’s Taiwan, which had held the number one spot for two decades.

Currently, five bicycle factories are operating in Cambodia, all located in special economic zones in Bavet city of southeastern Svay Rieng province.

Bicycle becomes one of the main non-garment products, whose export has been on significant surge, said H.E. Heng Sokkung, Secretary of State and Spokesperson at the Ministry of Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation.

The increases in bicycle export reflects the diversification in the industry sector, from labour-intensive to skilled labour manufacturing, stressed the spokesperson.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Myanmar plunges in latest corruption index, but Vietnam rises

Myanmar has fallen 17 places in Transparency International’s latest Corruption Perceptions Index, supplanting Cambodia as Southeast Asia’s worst country for graft for the first time in a decade.

The junta-led nation is now ahead of only North Korea in Asia for clean government. Singapore, despite a fall of one place, remains the cleanest jurisdiction in the region – at 5th of the 180 included – ahead of both Hong Kong and Japan (steady at 12th and 18th).

Vietnam, meanwhile, rose 10 places to 77th, putting it in the vicinity of emerging and middle world powers like Saudi Arabia (54th), South Africa (72nd) and India (85th).

Transparency International’s 2022 graft index, released Tuesday, tracks perceptions of “public sector corruption” around the world, using diverse data from businesspeople, experts and “reputable institutions” like the World Bank and World Economic Forum.

The best performing jurisdictions last year were once again Denmark, Finland and New Zealand, according to the index, while the worst was Somalia, followed by South Sudan and Syria. The United States came in at 24th, just behind the Seychelles, Austria and France.

Taiwan (25th) and South Korea (up one place to 31st) round out Asia’s other good performers.

Lower down the list are Malaysia (down one to 61st) and China (down one to 65th). Closer to the bottom are Indonesia (down 14 to 110th), Laos (up two to 126th), Cambodia (up seven to 150th), Myanmar (down 17 to 150th) and North Korea (up three to 171st of 180).

It’s the first time Myanmar has fallen below Cambodia since 2012, the year of the country’s first round of limited free parliamentary elections after decades of military rule, amid the thaw of relations with Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy. It’s also a fall of 20 places since Myanmar came in at 130th place in 2019.

“While every country faces different corruption challenges, this year’s index reveals ongoing stagnation around the world,” notes Transparency International in a report accompanying the index,

The Berlin-based organization notes that “basic freedoms” key to clean government have been under particular attack across the Americas, Europe and Africa in the past few years, as “multiple crises threaten security and stability, democracy and human rights”

“Similarly, in various Asia Pacific countries, rising authoritarianism dilutes civil society’s function as a watchdog, while many leaders are prioritising economic recovery over anti-corruption efforts,” it says.

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Myanmar junta looks to extend rule as nation counts losses in two years since coup

Myanmar’s top military leaders dropped hints on Tuesday, the eve of the second anniversary of their overthrow of the civilian government, that they may extend emergency rule, declaring an “extraordinary situation” in light of ongoing resistance to junta rule.

The 11-member National Defense and Security Council, which local media said would announce a decision on Wednesday, looks set to offer Myanmar’s people either six more months of harsh military rule, an election later this year that opponents have dismissed as a sham because it is rigged to keep junta officials in power, or a combination of both.

Junta chief Senior. Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the leader of the coup that ousted Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy on Feb. 1, 2021–about two months after their landslide election victory– blamed opposition forces for disrupting its rule.

Junta figures cited groups formed from deposed lawmakers and officials–the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw and the National Unity Government–as well as the numerous local militias known as People’s Defense Forces that have fought the junta across Myanmar since 2021.

“As you can see, some local and foreign organizations are committing destructive activities against this election. But we are trying to hold a free and fair election throughout the whole country,” Maj. Gen. Zaw Min Tun, the junta spokesman, told Radio Free Asia.

The proposed election has been largely rejected by civilian parties because of onerous registration and finance regulations unveiled recently that tilt the playing field in favor of the military-backed Union Solidarity Development Party.

In the two previous parliamentary polls, the party lost badly to Suu Kyi’s National league for Democracy, and its unproven claim of voter fraud in the 2020 election was what prompted the coup.

‘He wants to be president’

Myanmar political analyst Than Soe Naing told RFA that junta chief Min Aung Hlaing would do whatever it takes to stay in power, either by forcing an election within six months or declaring martial law.

“His promise to return to the path of democracy in Myanmar is just a cover story. He wants to be the president,’ he said.

“He wants to gain the presidency himself. But the election will not be accepted by the world, except for Russia and China, of course,” added Than Soe Naing, referring to continued support for the junta from Beijing and Moscow.

In a sign of growing foreign opprobrium toward the junta on the two-year anniversary, the U.S. and its allies on Tuesday announced fresh sanctions on the military regime.

Washington imposed sanctions on the Union Election Commission, mining firms and energy officials, and other regime-linked entities, the Treasury Department said. Similar measures were unveiled by Canada, Australia, Britain and Canada.

Falling currency, worsening corruption

In a sign of falling confidence in the junta, the value of the country’s currency, the kyat, has dropped by 50 percent in the two years to December 2022, according to a report released by the World Bank on Monday.

“The people’s livelihood is becoming more and more difficult. If it goes on like this, it will continue to decline further and the situation of the country will get worse,” said an economist in Myanmar, who requested anonymity for personal safety.

Further fallout from the coup was traced by a leading corruption watchdog.

Myanmar has fallen 17 places in Transparency International’s latest Corruption Perceptions Index, supplanting Cambodia as Southeast Asia’s worst country for graft for the first time in a decade and ahead of only North Korea in Asia for clean government.

Despite all the adverse developments, the head of a pro-military think tank told RFA things were looking up.

“In summary, we are leading to a more stable situation and it’s almost certain that the election is happening,” said Thein Tun Oo, the executive director of Thayninga Institute for Strategic Studies, which is made up of former military officers.

Opponents of the junta, the latest iteration of military governments that have ruled Myanmar for more that 50 of its 75 years since it gained independence from British colonial rule, said the coup had destroyed the country’s fledgling democracy, rule of law and freedom of speech.

“As political parties, we can’t go into the public and organize and spread political awareness among the people,” said Tun Aung Kyaw, a senior official of the Arakan National Party, which represents the interests of the Rakhine ethnic minority in western Myanmar.

“There is a very vast difference between the situation now and that of the previous government,” he told RFA.

“We established political parties in order to create a political environment for the people to develop our democracy, but these parties themselves are struggling,” said Sai Laik, the general secretary of Shan National League for Democracy in northern Myanmar.

“When the military operations have replaced the politics of the parties like now, you can say that their role and political activities have become almost non-existent.” he told RFA.

Targeting the opposition

But it is the party of jailed Nobel laureate Suu Kyi, the National League for Democracy, that bore the brunt of junta atrocities.

According to the National League for Democracy’s human rights research department, junta troops have killed at least 84 party members and officials and arrested at least 1,232 others since the February 2021 coup. Of those killed, 16 died in interrogation, eight in prison, one by execution, and 59 others “for no reason.”

Democracy icon Suu Kyi, 77, was sentenced to another seven years in prison at the end of 2022 on five counts of alleged corruption, bringing the total number of years she must serve in detention to 33 on 24 counts, prison sources said.

“The main reason for the military coup is the military dictator’s power-madness and greed to control all sectors of the country forever, regardless of the people’s needs and interests,” said Kyaw Htwe, an executive of the National League for Democracy.

“The only way to rectify the country’s total deterioration is to overthrow the military dictatorship and build a federal democratic nation.”

Meanwhile, residents of the France-sized country are struggling with surging commodity prices, power outages, transportation difficulties, crime and lawlessness.

“About 50 percent of our country is in a state of disintegration,” said Than Soe Naing, the political analyst.

Radio Free Asia –Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036