- Friday, 29 June 2012, Bridget Di Certo
One day after the highly anticipated – and criticised – appeal hearing of the Boeung Kak 13, judges, prosecutors, lawyers and police from every province in the Kingdom attended a Ministry of Justice and UN Office of Human Rights workshop on Cambodia’s Code of Criminal Procedure.
The key issues on yesterday’s agenda were arrest and police custody, pre-trial detention and judicial supervision, access to lawyers and evidence rights.
“In many countries, allegations of human rights violations are often related to the conduct of criminal proceedings,” Geneva-based director of research at the OHCHR Marcia Kran said in her opening remarks.
Ministry of Justice Secretary of State Hy Sophea, however, made it clear that the workshop was a discussion, not a lecture.
“Cambodia has a position of self-determination as the owner of a nation. We will accept theories from developed countries – but don’t wear the woolen shirt in the hot season,” he said, asking attendees not to “insult” or “attack” the government.
The lack of lawyers in the provinces was a common concern shared by attendees, including Cambodian Center for Human Rights Executive Director Ou Virak, who said that there were simply too few lawyers in the provinces for criminal proceedings to run properly.
“The government really needs to look at public funding of legal representatives … there needs to be incentives for them to go to rural areas, like there are incentives for teachers in the education system,” Virak said.
Deputy secretary-general of the Cambodian Bar Association Nou Tepyrith said that the bar was increasing the number of lawyers it admitted by between 5 and 10 per year. Now the number is about 70.
He also echoed Virak’s sentiment, saying the biggest problem is the relatively low pay of lawyers in the provinces.
I am proud of being a Khmer. Sharing knowledge is a significant way to develop our country toward the rule of law and peace.
Monday, 2 July 2012
UN and Cambodia's legal eagles hold forum
International Business Chamber moves to Phnom Penh Tower
Members of the International Business Chamber of Cambodia pose for a
group photograph at the company’s office in Phnom Penh yesterday.
Photograph: Pha Lina/Phnom Penh Post
- Friday, 29 June 2012, Stuart Alan Becker
- The International Business Chamber of Cambodia opened a new office yesterday on the 12th floor of the Phnom Penh Tower.
IBC Chairman Brett Sciaroni said the move demonstrated a trend of business associations giving more visibility and presence for companies that operate in Cambodia.
“This is one more indication of the professionalisation of business associations in Cambodia,” he said.
“As the IBC has increased its range of activities and its commitment to the public-private dialogue process in Cambodia, we needed more staff and facilities. Phnom Penh Tower is a leading address in Phnom Penh. We chose this location to show the significance of the IBC as a leading business association and we’re not the only business association that’s located here,” he said.
IBC executive committee member John Brinsden said the location reflected what the members deserved.
“This is a dream come true and the reason is the IBC over many years has had loyal members and we on the executive committee felt very concerned that we weren’t really giving our members the prestigious location and facilities they deserved.”
The IBC has more than 80 members, organised by company, and the people who attend are representative of those member companies, including many global brand names.
“This is something we’ve been thinking about for a long time: a prestigious office to serve our members. We provide our members and potential investors in Cambodia with a chance to meet in one place.
We’re here with an address; we’re in the yellow pages. Visiting foreign investors, people having a look around Cambodia can come and talk to our staff and get some basic information and contacts they can use,” Brinsden said.
IBC Vice Chairman In Channy, CEO of ACLEDA Bank, said the new location was a place where members could meet and get information. The IBC’s new executive director, Audrey Tugendhat, who runs the office on a day-to-day basis, said members of the public could visit and receive updates on the IBC social events calendar.
“For instance at the next regular general meeting which will take place at lunchtime on July 4 at Raffles Hotel, our members can bring potential candidates for membership.”
A lesson for Iraq in Cambodia
By
Muhammad Cohen
PHNOM PENH - Cambodia's Khmer Rouge mass murder sites affect visitors in different ways. For me, it meant weeping throughout and being unable to reconcile the contrast between massive, deadly brutality on display and the seemingly gentle, friendly Cambodia of today.
Cambodia does itself and the world a great service by preserving the memories of the millions that died during the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge reign of terror under the leadership of Pol Pot. Both Tuol Sleng, the prison known as S-21, and Cheoung Ek, the so-called Killing Fields, remain powerfully evocative even after the passage of decades. But their most important modern day lesson may be waiting to be learned 6,500 kilometers (3,900 miles) away in Iraq.
Some displays at the two sites are positively chilling. At CheoungEk, 15 kilometers south of capital city Phnom Penh, a Buddhist stupa towers over the site's 129 mass graves. The bottom level of the stupa holds clothing from the estimated 20,000 people executed and buried there.
The next eight levels hold skulls from victims arranged by estimated age, many showing signs of fatal blows with shovels or ax handles - favored by the Khmer Rouge as an execution method because it saved bullets. The top eight levels contain bones sorted by type. Paths throughout the two hectare site, once a peaceful mangosteen orchard, still reveal bone fragments and teeth peeking through the soil.
The Khmer Rouge converted Tuol Sleng Primary School and Tuol Svay Prey High School in central Phnom Penh into Security Office 21. The S-21 museum preserves classrooms turned into cells, pieces of the chalkboard still intact; the wire woven into nets across the exterior hallways to prevent inmates from attempting suicide leaps; and metal beds rigged with shackles and car batteries for interrogations.
But the most haunting feature of S-21 are the inmate photographs, row upon row of black-and-white head and shoulder identification shots. Beyond the vacant eyes of the subjects, the portraits are a monument to the banality of evil. The people who took these photographs, developed them, catalogued them, and filed them were simply bureaucrats doing their jobs.
What's too often lost in the use of "banality of evil" is that the banality in no way excuses or explains the evil, which took place on an unprecedented scale in Cambodia. Some two million Cambodians out of an estimated population of 7.3 million perished under the Khmer Rouge regime. By proportion of the national population, that's way more than Stalin, Hitler or Mao murdered, making Pol Pot the all-time leader in mass murder.
Of course, no one kills that many people alone, and that's another incredible thing about visiting those tragic sites in today's Cambodia. Everyone you meet around town seems so pleasant and cheerful, it's hard to fathom how these same people or their parents could have been party to such atrocities.
Examples such as the Soviet gulags, Indonesia's 1965 anti-communist purges, and the 1994 massacres in Rwanda, underline that no nationality, ethnic or racial group has a monopoly on massive scale inhumanity.
Setting the stage
What's also fascinating is that the Khmer Rouge didn't commit murder in the name of religion or ethnicity or nationalism. It was just politics. That's another indication that genocide can happen anywhere when the political conditions are right, as they were in mid-1970s Cambodia.
For centuries, the country was caught between more powerful neighbors, Vietnam to the east and Thailand to the west. Then in the 1960s, Cambodia got caught in the middle of the American war in Vietnam. American planes bombed North Vietnamese bases inside Cambodia, also inflicting massive collateral damage on civilians.
Following General Lon Nol's 1970 rightwing coup that ousted king Norodom Sihanouk, US and South Vietnamese troops crossed the border, pushing North Vietnamese forces further into the interior. More civilian casualties resulted and Cambodia's politics became more deeply dividing.
The US withdrawal from Vietnam in 1973 weakened Lon Nol's government and strengthened the Khmer Rouge. In April 1975, with Phnom Penh surrounded and American aid ended, the government surrendered to the Khmer Rouge.
Academics still debate to what extent the US extension of the Vietnam conflict into Cambodia helped or harmed the Khmer Rouge's cause. The same can be said about the Vietnamese troops. What's clear is that foreigners fighting on Cambodian territory brutalized the population and helped unravel the country's social fabric, paving the way for extremism and tragedy.
A political void following the ouster of a long-serving leader, foreign troops fighting their own war as an away game, and, a neighbor anxious to take advantage of the turmoil - standing amid the mass graves, it seems apparent that Cambodia's past could easily represent Iraq's future.
The American invasion destroyed the political fabric of Iraq (some would argue of America, too). The invaders destroyed Iraq's government, the ruling party, and the army. The country plunged into greater chaos and factional fighting than Cambodia ever suffered before the Khmer Rouge triumph.
Iraq's traditional unfriendly neighbor Iran used the opportunity to fill the power vacuum. According to some, Iran sent in its own operatives. As a bonus, Iran can play the religion card with Iraq's Shi'ite Muslim majority that had been suppressed under Saddam Hussein, who favored the Sunni minority.
The presence of foreign troops fueled an insurgency that forced Iraqis to choose between sides in a fight they didn't want. The violence led to further polarization. It also stunted political growth. Reminiscent of post-coup Cambodia, the government is massively corrupt and largely distrusted.
The withdrawal of American forces hasn't solved Iraq's political problems, just as America's withdrawal from Vietnam didn't lead to Cambodian reconciliation. It was two years after the Americans left Vietnam that the Khmer Rouge came to power and commenced their killing spree.
August marks two years since American combat troops left Iraq. Stay tuned - and hope that in this world vastly more connected than in 1975, genocide can't happen again.
Former broadcast news producer Muhammad Cohen told America’s story to the world as a US diplomat and is author of Hong Kong On Air, a novel set during the 1997 handover about television news, love, betrayal, financial crisis, and cheap lingerie. See his blog, online archive and more at MuhammadCohen.com.
PHNOM PENH - Cambodia's Khmer Rouge mass murder sites affect visitors in different ways. For me, it meant weeping throughout and being unable to reconcile the contrast between massive, deadly brutality on display and the seemingly gentle, friendly Cambodia of today.
Cambodia does itself and the world a great service by preserving the memories of the millions that died during the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge reign of terror under the leadership of Pol Pot. Both Tuol Sleng, the prison known as S-21, and Cheoung Ek, the so-called Killing Fields, remain powerfully evocative even after the passage of decades. But their most important modern day lesson may be waiting to be learned 6,500 kilometers (3,900 miles) away in Iraq.
Some displays at the two sites are positively chilling. At CheoungEk, 15 kilometers south of capital city Phnom Penh, a Buddhist stupa towers over the site's 129 mass graves. The bottom level of the stupa holds clothing from the estimated 20,000 people executed and buried there.
The next eight levels hold skulls from victims arranged by estimated age, many showing signs of fatal blows with shovels or ax handles - favored by the Khmer Rouge as an execution method because it saved bullets. The top eight levels contain bones sorted by type. Paths throughout the two hectare site, once a peaceful mangosteen orchard, still reveal bone fragments and teeth peeking through the soil.
The Khmer Rouge converted Tuol Sleng Primary School and Tuol Svay Prey High School in central Phnom Penh into Security Office 21. The S-21 museum preserves classrooms turned into cells, pieces of the chalkboard still intact; the wire woven into nets across the exterior hallways to prevent inmates from attempting suicide leaps; and metal beds rigged with shackles and car batteries for interrogations.
But the most haunting feature of S-21 are the inmate photographs, row upon row of black-and-white head and shoulder identification shots. Beyond the vacant eyes of the subjects, the portraits are a monument to the banality of evil. The people who took these photographs, developed them, catalogued them, and filed them were simply bureaucrats doing their jobs.
What's too often lost in the use of "banality of evil" is that the banality in no way excuses or explains the evil, which took place on an unprecedented scale in Cambodia. Some two million Cambodians out of an estimated population of 7.3 million perished under the Khmer Rouge regime. By proportion of the national population, that's way more than Stalin, Hitler or Mao murdered, making Pol Pot the all-time leader in mass murder.
Of course, no one kills that many people alone, and that's another incredible thing about visiting those tragic sites in today's Cambodia. Everyone you meet around town seems so pleasant and cheerful, it's hard to fathom how these same people or their parents could have been party to such atrocities.
Examples such as the Soviet gulags, Indonesia's 1965 anti-communist purges, and the 1994 massacres in Rwanda, underline that no nationality, ethnic or racial group has a monopoly on massive scale inhumanity.
Setting the stage
What's also fascinating is that the Khmer Rouge didn't commit murder in the name of religion or ethnicity or nationalism. It was just politics. That's another indication that genocide can happen anywhere when the political conditions are right, as they were in mid-1970s Cambodia.
For centuries, the country was caught between more powerful neighbors, Vietnam to the east and Thailand to the west. Then in the 1960s, Cambodia got caught in the middle of the American war in Vietnam. American planes bombed North Vietnamese bases inside Cambodia, also inflicting massive collateral damage on civilians.
Following General Lon Nol's 1970 rightwing coup that ousted king Norodom Sihanouk, US and South Vietnamese troops crossed the border, pushing North Vietnamese forces further into the interior. More civilian casualties resulted and Cambodia's politics became more deeply dividing.
The US withdrawal from Vietnam in 1973 weakened Lon Nol's government and strengthened the Khmer Rouge. In April 1975, with Phnom Penh surrounded and American aid ended, the government surrendered to the Khmer Rouge.
Academics still debate to what extent the US extension of the Vietnam conflict into Cambodia helped or harmed the Khmer Rouge's cause. The same can be said about the Vietnamese troops. What's clear is that foreigners fighting on Cambodian territory brutalized the population and helped unravel the country's social fabric, paving the way for extremism and tragedy.
A political void following the ouster of a long-serving leader, foreign troops fighting their own war as an away game, and, a neighbor anxious to take advantage of the turmoil - standing amid the mass graves, it seems apparent that Cambodia's past could easily represent Iraq's future.
The American invasion destroyed the political fabric of Iraq (some would argue of America, too). The invaders destroyed Iraq's government, the ruling party, and the army. The country plunged into greater chaos and factional fighting than Cambodia ever suffered before the Khmer Rouge triumph.
Iraq's traditional unfriendly neighbor Iran used the opportunity to fill the power vacuum. According to some, Iran sent in its own operatives. As a bonus, Iran can play the religion card with Iraq's Shi'ite Muslim majority that had been suppressed under Saddam Hussein, who favored the Sunni minority.
The presence of foreign troops fueled an insurgency that forced Iraqis to choose between sides in a fight they didn't want. The violence led to further polarization. It also stunted political growth. Reminiscent of post-coup Cambodia, the government is massively corrupt and largely distrusted.
The withdrawal of American forces hasn't solved Iraq's political problems, just as America's withdrawal from Vietnam didn't lead to Cambodian reconciliation. It was two years after the Americans left Vietnam that the Khmer Rouge came to power and commenced their killing spree.
August marks two years since American combat troops left Iraq. Stay tuned - and hope that in this world vastly more connected than in 1975, genocide can't happen again.
Former broadcast news producer Muhammad Cohen told America’s story to the world as a US diplomat and is author of Hong Kong On Air, a novel set during the 1997 handover about television news, love, betrayal, financial crisis, and cheap lingerie. See his blog, online archive and more at MuhammadCohen.com.
Cambodia gives green light to British life insurer Prudential
PHNOM PENH, June 29 (Xinhua) -- Britain's leading life insurer, Prudential Plc, is going to open its office in Phnom Penh, said the British ambassador to Cambodia Mark Gooding on Friday.
Speaking in a meeting with Cambodian deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Keat Chhon, Mark Gooding thanked the ministry for giving an approval in principle on June 28, 2012 to the U.K.-based Prudential Plc to open a life insurance company in Cambodia.
Keat Chhon said that British investment here reflected British investors' trust on Cambodian economic and political situation, adding that Cambodia's insurance development is in early stage and has much room to grow.
Currently, Cambodia has two life insurers. The first one is Cambodian Life Insurance Company (Cambodian Life), which went into services in May, and the other is the Canada-based insurer, Manulife, which was officially launched on Thursday.
Cambodian Life is a joint venture by Cambodia's finance ministry and four other partners, namely PT Asuransi from Indonesia, Asia Insurance from Hong Kong, Bangkok Life Assurance and Bangkok Insurance Public from Thailand.
According to Cambodia's insurance law, an insurance company is required to have the minimum capital of 7 million U.S. dollars.
Friday, 29 June 2012
ក្រសួងសេដ្ឋកិច្ច៖ក្រុមហ៊ុនផ្ទះល្វែងចំនួន១៧គ្មានអាជ្ញាប័ណ្ណប្រកបអាជីវកម្ម
ដោយ ដែន អយុធ្យា
2012-06-28
ក្រុមការងារអន្តរក្រសួង ដើម្បីគ្រប់គ្រងអាជីវកម្មអភិវឌ្ឍន៍អចលនវត្ថុ នៃក្រសួងសេដ្ឋកិច្ច និងហិរញ្ញវត្ថុ រំលឹកប្រជាពលរដ្ឋឲ្យបានជ្រាបថា សព្វថ្ងៃនេះមានក្រុមហ៊ុនផ្ទះល្វែង ឬបុរីចំនួន១៧ សាងសង់គ្មានអាជ្ញាប័ណ្ណពីស្ថាប័នជំនាញទេ។សេចក្តីជូនដំណឹង ចុះថ្ងៃទី២៥ ខែមិថុនា ឆ្នាំ២០១២ របស់ក្រសួងសេដ្ឋកិច្ចបានបង្ហាញឈ្មោះក្រុមហ៊ុនទាំង១៧ សង់គ្មានអាជ្ញាប័ណ្ណ រួមមាន បុរី រុងរឿង Luxurious Apartment 240 បុរី អាកាសចរណ៍ សំណង់ផ្ទះល្វែង ម៉ៅ យឹម សំណង់ផ្ទះល្វែង តុល លន បុរី មនោរម្យ (ឫស្សីកែវ) បុរី សូនី បុរី កាំង ម៉េង Hawaii Apartment & Resort បុរី ពោធិចិនតុង បុរី ភូមិខ្ញុំ បុរីសែនមនោរម្យ បុរី ទំនើបឡូស៊ីផេង បុរី វាលស្បូវ បុរី New York City ក្រុមហ៊ុនផ្ទះល្វែង កូឡុន កម្ពុជា និងសំណង់ផ្ទះល្វែងរុក្ខជាតិបៃតង។
មន្ត្រីជំនាញឲ្យដឹងថា ក្រុមហ៊ុនទាំង១៧ នេះ កំពុងលក់លំនៅឋានរបស់ខ្លួន គ្មានអាជ្ញាប័ណ្ណប្រកបអាជីវកម្មអភិវឌ្ឍន៍អចលនវត្ថុ ពីក្រសួងសេដ្ឋកិច្ច ឲ្យស្របតាមប្រកាសចុះថ្ងៃទី១៥ ខែធ្នូ ឆ្នាំ២០០៩ ស្តីពីការគ្រប់គ្រងអាជីវកម្មអភិវឌ្ឍន៍អចលនវត្ថុនោះទេ។
ទោះក្រសួងសេដ្ឋកិច្ចបានបញ្ចេញឈ្មោះក្រុមហ៊ុន បុរី ឬផ្ទះល្វែងគ្មានច្បាប់ និងអំពាវនាវឲ្យពលរដ្ឋប្រយ័ត្នប្រយែងក្នុងការទិញផ្ទះក្តី ក៏ប៉ុន្តែត្រូវបានសមាជិកសភាបក្សប្រឆាំង និងមន្ត្រីសង្គមស៊ីវិលរិះគន់ធ្ងន់ធ្ងរទៅវិញ។
លោក យ៉ែម បុញ្ញប្ញទ្ធិ អគ្គលេខាធិការ និងជាសមាជិកសភាគណបក្ស សិទ្ធិមនុស្ស នៅថ្ងៃទី២៨ ខែមិថុនា ឆ្នាំ២០១២ លោកបានចាត់ទុកការគ្រប់គ្រង់របស់ក្រសួងពាក់ព័ន្ធទៅលើក្រុមហ៊ុន សំណង់ផ្ទះល្វែង ឬបុរី ថា មានភាពអន់ខ្សោយ និងមិនទទួលខុសត្រូវ។
លោកថា ក្រសួងជំនាញគួរជាអ្នកទទួលខុសត្រូវ ឬការពារសុវត្ថិភាពផ្នែកច្បាប់ជូនពលរដ្ឋ មិនមែនពលរដ្ឋរងគ្រោះជាអ្នកទទួលខុសត្រូវទេ ព្រោះរដ្ឋាភិបាល ឬក្រសួងជំនាញជាអ្នកអនុញ្ញាតិឲ្យក្រុមហ៊ុនផ្ទះល្វែង ឬបុរីសង់សំណង់គ្មានច្បាប់ ប៉ុន្តែគ្មានវិធានការទប់ស្កាត់ទៅវិញ។
លោក យ៉ែម បុញ្ញប្ញទ្ធិ៖ «ពេលសំណង់សង់ហើយ ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋទិញហើយ ទើបប្រកាសបែបនេះទៅវិញ។ ដូច្នេះ អ្នកដែលរងគ្រោះ គឺប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ ដោយសារលោកមិនបានដឹង ហើយផ្ទះអាចមានគ្រោះថ្នាក់ទៅថ្ងៃអនាគត ដោយសារគ្មានការធានារ៉ាប់រងច្បាស់លាស់ ខាតបង់ច្រើនណាស់។ ការប្រឈមមួយទៀត គឺការខាតបង់ថវិការបស់ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋនេះ ជារឿងមួយដ៏ធ្ងន់ធ្ងរបំផុត។ ខ្ញុំយល់ថា ការគ្រប់គ្រងបែបនេះមានផលវិបាកដល់សង្គមធ្ងន់ធ្ងរមែនទែន»។
មិនខុសគ្នាទេ សម្រាប់មន្ត្រីសង្គមស៊ីវិល ក៏បានរិះគន់របៀបគ្រប់គ្រងរបស់ថ្នាក់ដឹកនាំក្រសួងជំនាញ នៃរាជរដ្ឋាភិបាល ជុំវិញការអនុញ្ញាតិឲ្យសំណង់ផ្ទះល្វែង ឬបុរី សាងសង់គ្មានច្បាប់។
លោក សន ជ័យ ជាមន្ត្រីសម្របសម្រួលបណ្ដាញរួបរួម ដើម្បីគណនេយ្យភាពសង្គម ប្រចាំអាស៊ីបូព៌ា និងប៉ាស៊ីហ្វិក។ លោកថ្លែងថា ការអនុញ្ញាតិឲ្យក្រុមហ៊ុនផ្ទះល្វែង ឬបុរី រកស៊ីខុសច្បាប់ និងប្រាស់ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋស្ថាប័នជំនាញជាអ្នកទទួលខុសត្រូវ។
លោក សន ជ័យ៖ «យើងចង់ឲ្យរដ្ឋាភិបាលបំពេញតួនាទីឲ្យបានគ្រប់ ជ្រុងជ្រោយ។ ផ្ទះដែលបានទិញហើយ រដ្ឋាភិបាលត្រូវតែបំពេញភាពស្របច្បាប់របស់ខ្លួនឲ្យបានត្រឹម ត្រូវ។ ពិសេសក្រសួងរៀបចំដែនដី ឲ្យមានវិធានការជំរុញឲ្យក្រុមហ៊ុនតាមគ្រប់មធ្យោបាយ ដើម្បីឲ្យសំណង់ស្របច្បាប់ជូនពលរដ្ឋ។ បើមិនដូច្នេះទេ អ្នកដែលរងគ្រោះ គឺប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ ហើយអ្នកដែលកេងចំណេញពីផលប្រយោជន៍នៃការលក់អាគារ គឺក្រុមហ៊ុន ហើយអ្នកដែលត្រូវទទួលរងការស្តីបន្ទោស គឺរដ្ឋាភិបាលទៅវិញទេ»។
ទោះយ៉ាងណា ក្រសួងសេដ្ឋកិច្ច និងហិរញ្ញវត្ថុ បានដាស់ស្មារតីដល់សាធារណជន មិនគួរគប្បីទិញលំនៅឋានខុសច្បាប់ ក្នុងគម្រោងក្រុមហ៊ុនចំនួន១៧ ដែលក្រសួងបានជូនដំណឹងនេះទេ ដរាបណាម្ចាស់ក្រុមហ៊ុនមិនទាន់សង់រួច ឬគ្មានអាជ្ញាប័ណ្ណធ្វើអាជីវកម្មអភិវឌ្ឍន៍អចលនវត្ថុ ពីក្រសួងសេដ្ឋកិច្ច និងហិរញ្ញវត្ថុនោះ៕
Thursday, 28 June 2012
ហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត ត្រូវតែងតាំងឲ្យដោះស្រាយជម្លោះដីធ្លី
លោក ហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត (ស្តាំ)អមដំណើរឪពុកទៅប្រាសាទព្រះវិហារ។ រូបៈ ជីវ័ន
ភ្នំពេញៈ លោក ហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត នាយរងខុទ្ទកាល័យ និងជាកូនប្រុសទី២ របស់លោកនាយករដ្ឋមន្ត្រី ហ៊ុន សែន ត្រូវបានតែងតាំងជាអគ្គលេខាធិការរងនៃអគ្គលេខាធិការដ្ឋាន ជាតិដោះស្រាយទំនាស់ដីធ្លី បន្ថែមលើមុខងារបច្ចុប្បន្ន។ នេះបើយោងទៅតាមសៀវភៅព្រះ រាជកិច្ច ដែលបោះផ្សាយដោយទីស្តីការគណៈរដ្ឋមន្ត្រី ចុះថ្ងៃទី១៥ខែមិថុនា ឆ្នាំ២០១២។
យោងទៅតាមសៀវភៅព្រះរាជកិច្ចឲ្យដឹងថា លោកនាយករដ្ឋមន្ត្រី ហ៊ុន សែន បានចុះហត្ថលេខាលើអនុក្រឹត្យនៅថ្ងៃទី៧ ខែមិថុនា ឆ្នាំ២០១២ តែងតាំងលោក ហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត ជាអគ្គលេខាធិការរងនៃអគ្គអាជ្ញាធរជាតិដោះស្រាយទំនាស់ដីធ្លីបន្ថែម លើមុខងារ បច្ចុប្បន្ន។ នៅក្នុងមាត្រាទី២ បានចែងថា ៖ «អនុក្រឹត្យនេះមានប្រសិទ្ធភាពចាប់ពីថ្ងៃចុះហត្ថលេខាតទៅ» ។
កាលពីថ្ងៃទី១៣ ខែមករា ឆ្នាំ២០១២ លោកនាយករដ្ឋមន្ត្រី ហ៊ុន សែន បានចុះហត្ថលេខាលើអនុក្រឹត្យ សម្រេចដំឡើងឋានន្តរស័ក្ដិថ្នាក់ វរសេនីយ៍ឯក នាយទាហាននៃកងយោធពលខេមរភូមិន្ទ ជូនលោកវរសេនីយ៍ទោ ហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត ជានាយករង នាយកដ្ឋានស្រាវជ្រាវចារកិច្ចរបស់អគ្គបញ្ជាការដ្ឋាន។
លោក ហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត ដែលត្រូវបានតែងតាំងជាអគ្គលេខាធិការរងនៃអគ្គលេខាធិការដ្ឋាន អាជ្ញាធរជាតិដោះស្រាយទំនាស់ដីធ្លីនាពេលថ្មីៗនេះ បានបដិសេធមិនធ្វើអត្ថាធិប្បាយទេ កាលពីថ្ងៃពុធ ដោយបានមានប្រសាសន៍ថា «ខ្ញុំមិនអាចជឿថា ជាអ្នកកាសែតភ្នំពេញ ប៉ុស្តិ៍ទេ ព្រោះពុំមានអ្វីអាចបញ្ជាក់តាមទូរស័ព្ទបានថា ជាអ្នកយកព័ត៌មានរបស់ ភ្នំពេញ ប៉ុស្តិ៍» បើទោះជាលោកនិពន្ធនាយកបានឆ្លងឆ្លើយជាមួយតាមទូរស័ព្ទ ដើម្បីបញ្ជាក់ក៏ដោយ។
លោក យឹម សុវណ្ណ អ្នកនាំពាក្យគណបក្សសមរង្ស៊ី បានថ្លែងថា មានកូនខ្មែរជាច្រើនដែលមានបទពិសោធនិងមានសមត្ថភាពនៅក្នុងតួនាទី របស់រដ្ឋ ប៉ុន្តែ គួរឲ្យសោកស្តាយដែលពួកគេពុំមានឱកាសដោយសារតែប្រទេសនេះអ្វីៗ សម្រេចដោយបុគ្គលម្នាក់។ លោកថ្លែងថា៖ «ខ្ញុំសូមជូនពរចំពោះអ្នកដែលទទួលបានតំណែងថ្មីនោះធ្វើការ បម្រើប្រទេសជាតិ និងរកយុត្តិធម៌ជូនប្រជាពលរដ្ឋដែលរងគ្រោះដោយសារតែការពារដី ធ្លីតិចតួចរបស់ពួកគាត់»។
លោក អំ សំអាត អ្នកស៊ើបអង្កេតជាន់ខ្ពស់របស់អង្គការសិទ្ធិមនុស្សលីកាដូបានថ្លែង ដែរ ថា នេះគឺជាការតែងតាំងថ្មីរបស់រាជរដ្ឋាភិបាលទាក់ទិនទៅនឹងគោល នយោបាយដោះស្រាយដីធ្លីថ្មី ដែលរដ្ឋាភិបាលបានចាត់តាំងកម្លាំងយុវជនពិសេសចុះវាស់វែងដី ធ្លីជូនប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ។ លោកថ្លែងថា ៖ «យើងសង្ឃឹមថា លោកហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត នឹងដោះស្រាយបញ្ហាដីធ្លីមានប្រសិទ្ធភាព នោះគឺជាអ្វីដែលពលរដ្ឋចង់បាន»។
លោក ចាន់ សូវ៉េត មន្ត្រីស៊ើបអង្កេតជាន់ខ្ពស់នៃសមាគមសិទ្ធិមនុស្សអាដហុកបានថ្លែង ចាប់អារម្មណ៍នឹងការតែងតាំងលោកហ៊ុន ម៉ានិត ជាប្រធានដឹកនាំបេសកកម្មពិសេសយុវជនចុះទៅវាស់វែងដីជូនប្រជា ពលរដ្ឋថា ជាការល្អបំផុតដែលលោកនាយករដ្ឋមន្ត្រីបានឲ្យយុវជនទាំងអស់នោះ ធ្វើការវាស់វែងដីជូនប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ ដោយមិនឲ្យសួរថា បោះឆ្នោតឲ្យគណបក្សណា ប៉ុន្តែ អ្វីដែលគួរឲ្យបារម្ភនោះ គឺពួកគេស្លៀកពាក់ឯកសណ្ឋានកងទ័ព ប្រើស្លាកសញ្ញា ដែនដីនគរូបនីយកម្ម ដែលវាធ្វើឲ្យប្រជាជនមានការភ័យខ្លាច។ លោកបន្តថា៖ «យើងសង្ឃឹមថា លោកនឹងធ្វើការបានជោគជ័យ ហើយផ្តល់យុត្តិធម៌ដល់ពលរដ្ឋដែលរងគ្រោះនៅក្នុងជម្លោះកន្លងមក»៕
Tips to get a scholarship online
Wednesday, 27 June 2012, Sakol Ven
Attaining a scholarship to study abroad is something many students in
Cambodia desire. However, it is not easily achieved without effort.
“It is neither difficult nor complex to get a scholarship but you first
have to spend time researching for one,” Chea Lyda, a 25-year-old
assistant lecturer at Cambodia Communication Institute said.
She was selected for a scholarship in the Netherlands to complete her Masters degree in social and development studies.
She first found a website that provided information on studying in Europe. Then, she discovered Netherlands Fellowship Programs (NFP) through a website, Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education.
Lea researched on her subject of choice and the university that awarded scholarships for her program. She then submitted her application to both the university andscholarship body.
She said that applicants must demonstrate their eligibility and availability of leave from work.
English proficiency is another criteria to fulfill. For Lea, it took four months for her application to be processed before she was finally selected.
She was the first student from Cambodia in the scholarship program awarded by NFP. Her advice to students is: “Don’t give up. Try to apply for as many scholarships as you can.”
She was selected for a scholarship in the Netherlands to complete her Masters degree in social and development studies.
She first found a website that provided information on studying in Europe. Then, she discovered Netherlands Fellowship Programs (NFP) through a website, Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education.
Lea researched on her subject of choice and the university that awarded scholarships for her program. She then submitted her application to both the university andscholarship body.
She said that applicants must demonstrate their eligibility and availability of leave from work.
English proficiency is another criteria to fulfill. For Lea, it took four months for her application to be processed before she was finally selected.
She was the first student from Cambodia in the scholarship program awarded by NFP. Her advice to students is: “Don’t give up. Try to apply for as many scholarships as you can.”
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