PM Urges for Attention to Boost Tourism

Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen this afternoon called on all stakeholders to pay high attention and do their best to boost the country’s tourism sector.

Addressing to the celebration of 11th National Clean City Day 2023 held at Sokha Phnom Penh Hotel under the theme “Clean City, Good Hospitality, the host Cambodia provides warmth”, along with the 3rd Clean City Awards Conferment Ceremony, Samdech Techo Hun Sen said tourism remains a key pillar for the national economy.

“When more tourists come, our nation and people will get more income,” he said, adding that tourism can also provide benefit from the grassroot level up.

“Our people can sell coconuts, fruits and other services to them (the tourists), but we have to ensure good hospitality, security, good hygiene, clean resort, better environment, more forests and wildlife…,” the Premier stressed. “We have to make sure that they come to us and next time they will come again and with their friends or family members.”

At the same time, Samdech Techo Prime Minister kept appealing to the public to pay high attention to the impact of plastic waste to the sea and other water sources.

Cambodia is expected to attract some 4 million foreign tourists and around 15 million internal tourists this year.

In 2022, the Kingdom registered about 2.28 million international visitors, a sharp rise by 1,059 percent compared to 2021

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Japan Provides US$843,946 to Support Three Projects in Cambodia

The Government of Japan will provide US$843,946 in total for three organisations under the framework, the Grant Assistance for Japanese NGO Projects, to raise awareness of environment issues, promote remedial study, and develop quality university for physical education through ICT.

According to a press release of Embassy of Japan in Phnom Penh, the Grant Contracts were signed here on Feb. 27 between Japanese Ambassador to Cambodia H.E. UENO Atsushi and the representatives of the three recipient organisations – Nature Center Risen, Shanti Volunteer Association (SVA), and Hearts of Gold.

The Grant Assistance for Japanese NGO Projects started in Cambodia in 2002 to support activities by Japanese NGOs to help Cambodia’s reconstruction and development efforts at the grassroots level.

Since 2002, the Government of Japan has provided over US$50 million for 149 projects, mainly in the fields of primary education, health, agriculture and mine clearance in Cambodia.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Cambodia’s Hun Sen ramps up efforts to bring political opponents to heel

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen is continuing efforts to compel political opposition figures to back his ruling Cambodian People’s Party ahead of general elections in July.

Activists from the Candlelight Party — the main challenger to the ruling party — say authorities are defacing and stealing party signs and billboards, and police are monitoring their meetings. Candlelight Party activists in almost all provinces have reported cases of intimidation and harassment, party spokesman Kim Sour Phirith said.

Police and local authorities have threatened those who join the party, saying they will take away their state-issued poverty cards that allow struggling families to collect about 176,000 riels, or U.S. $43 per month, to buy dry food ingredients and products with long shelf lives.

Su Yean, deputy chairman of the party’s executive committee in Tbong Khmum province, said authorities directly and indirectly threatened him and others amid an increase of harassment of the party’s leaders and activists in February.

“It is a scheme to discourage the public and Candlelight Party grassroots leaders not to carry out any activities to support the party,” Su Yean said.

‘Not a good son’

Additionally, Prime Minister Hun Sen has lately directed his attention toward Sorn Dara, a prominent political commentator on social media who is now living in exile in France and seeking asylum there.

Thousands of viewers watch Sorn Dara’s talk shows on Facebook during which he routinely attacks Hun Sen and calls for his removal from office.

Speaking at a graduation ceremony at the Royal University of Phnom Penh on Friday, Hun Sen told the crowd that Sorn Dara, whose father is a military officer and a longtime Hun Sen supporter, was not a good son because he didn’t listen to his parents.

“You insult your parents to whom you owe gratitude saying they have less education than you,” he said. “Your parents gave birth to you. You still look down on them. How about the regular people? If you don’t recognize your parents, then you are not human.”

Sorn Dara’s parents appeared in a short video last week posted by the pro-government Fresh News, saying they had severed ties with their son because he didn’t listen to them.

His father, Col. Sok Sunnareth, deputy chief of staff of the Kampong Speu Provincial Operations Area and a ruling party working group official, publicly implored his son on Feb. 22 to stop criticizing Hun Sen and his government, according to a Khmer Times report.

Sorn Dara is a former official of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, or the CNRP, which was dissolved by the country’s Supreme Court in November 2017. He said his father disowned him that same year because he had refused to join the CPP.

Parents held ‘hostage’

“My parents support for the Cambodian People’s Party is a fact,” Sorn Dara told Radio Free Asia on Monday. “However, the fact that he came forward and attacked his own son is not true.”

He went on to say that his father’s criticism of him “was inspired by threats and intimidation” that amounted to his family being held “hostage” by Hun Sen and his government.

“My parents are not politicians,” Sorn Dara said. “If you [Hun Sen] want to target me, go ahead with me, but not my parents. … This is an inhuman act, a crime against humanity and an act of terrorism.”

Ros Sotha, executive director of the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee, a coalition of 22 local NGOs, said Hun Sen is targeting Sorn Dara because he is very influential.

“This will dilute Hun Sen’s popularity,” he said. “Hun Sen worries about it.”

For nearly four decades, Hun Sen has used repressive measures, including violence, arrests, detentions and lawsuits to keep the political opposition at bay so he can remain in power, especially before elections.

Before the last general election in 2018, Cambodia’s Supreme Court dissolved the CNRP and banned 118 of its members from participating in political activities for five years. Now, in the run-up to the July election, Hun Sen and his party are targeting the Candlelight Party.

‘Threatening to a high level’

Khem Monikosal, Candlelight’s president in Pailin province, told RFA on Monday that party members have been photographed while attending meetings. Authorities have also said they would confiscate the poverty cards of those who own the homes where the meetings take place, he said.

Up to now, police have refused to accept party complaints that commune authorities and unidentified men stole and destroyed their signs, he said.

“This situation is threatening to a high level, and it is my concern, and all colleagues in this Candlelight Party, especially activists at the grassroots level, are concerned about their safety after coming under more pressure and oppression at the grassroots level,” Khem Monikosal said.

Election watchdogs urged Candlelight Party members and activists to collect evidence of political persecution and submit complaints to the Ministry of Interior, which governs the country’s police.

RFA could not reach Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak for comment.

Hun Sen, 70, has also tried to lure political opposition and environmental activists to the side of the ruling party by offering them government positions.

RFA recently reported that environmental workers and opposition party members were being offered government jobs by the CPP as a way to weaken any competition ahead of the general elections. At least eight activists have recently joined the ruling party and have taken government positions.

Similarly, Hun Sen publicly offered government jobs to staff members of the recently shuttered Voice of Democracy, saying they could apply for positions without taking the required civil service exam. His government revoked the operating license of the independent media outlet earlier this month, leaving Cambodia with no independent source of news.

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.

WFP Cambodia Country Brief, January 2023

In Numbers

238 mt of food assistance distributed

US$343,000 cash to schools for HGSF

US$10,000 six-month (February – July 2023) net funding requirements

179,400 people assisted

Operational Updates

School Feeding Programme

• To celebrate the new academic year and mark its further commitment for full national ownership of the school feeding programme, the Royal Government of Cambodia took over programmes for an additional 137 schools from WFP into their management. Approximately 40 percent of the 1,113 schools with school meals programmes in Cambodia are now funded and managed by the Government.

• WFP dispatched 363 mt of rice and vegetable oil to 574 schools for use in the first quarter. 100,000 students in the hybrid school feeding programme will benefit from this food assistance, in addition to the vegetables and animal protein procured locally.

• The Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport and WFP conducted a countrywide school feeding programme workshop in Kampong Thom to exchange ideas and experiences among WFP-supported schools and those under the national programme. 103 representatives (25 women) from provincial departments and district offices of education, schools, local authorities and implementing partners attended. They made commitments to enhance coordination mechanisms across implementing levels, strengthen the community-school interactions, fully utilize the information system, ensure healthy eating and a safe learning environment for schoolchildren, and build a vision toward a possible programme expansion to lower secondary schools in the future.

Shock-responsive Social Protection

• WFP and UNICEF sought partnership with the National Social Assistance Fund (NSAF), a new body officially launched this month to provide social assistance and social security interventions to people vulnerable to food insecurity. It was agreed that they work together to integrate activities and tools on shock-responsive social protection and anticipatory action into the NSAF intervention package and to expand the coverage to include people severely affected by floods.

Source: World Food Programme