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Suu Tov KhmerKrom (mysong myvoice)

Monday, August 3

South Africa, India suffer first swine flu deaths

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 12:59 AM

AIDS-ravaged South Africa on Monday announced its first swine flu victim as Indian media reported a first death on the sub-continent and Russia warned football fans not to travel to Wales.

An Indian nurse writes down swine flu census details at the Andhra Pradesh Chest Hospital in Hyderabad in May 2009. India has registered its first swine flu death after a 14-year-old girl in the western city of Pune died from the disease, media reports said.

As the pandemic sows ever-deeper fears for public health across more territories, South African health authorities said an otherwise healthy student had succumbed after testing positive for the A(H1N1) virus.

The 22-year-old becomes the first fatality due to swine flu in sub-Saharan Africa.

"He died on the 28th (of July), but there had to be some testing done to ensure the cause of death. It was the A(H1N1) influenza," said Fidel Hadebe, spokesman for the department of health.

Western Cape health minister Theuns Botha said the man had no underlying health problems.

With the world's highest number of HIV/AIDS-affected people at nearly 19 percent of a 49 million population, South Africa is particularly at risk given that those with compromised immunity are more likely to fall prey to the disease.

South Africa's swine flu caseload has increased fourfold since the country's first case was reported on June 14. The government has said its Tamiflu stockpile will only be used for the seriously ill, but that schools may also be closed on a case-by-case basis.

The death of a 14-year-old girl in the western Indian city of Pune, attributed to the A(H1N1) influenza virus according to media reports, came six days after the teenager was admitted to a private hospital on July 27.

No one at the state or city health department was immediately available to comment when contacted by AFP but the domestic Press Trust of India news agency said the student had been given the anti-viral drug Oseltamivir.

She failed to respond to treatment and died on Monday evening after suffering multiple organ failure, an unnamed senior health ministry official was quoted as saying.

Precautionary measures there include setting up quarantine centres and a specially-designated hospital with up to 1,000 beds to treat confirmed cases.

Meanwhile, Russian football fans should stay away from the national team's World Cup qualifying tie with Wales in Cardiff next month due to the risk of contracting swine flu, the state health agency said Monday.

"This would be an extremely uneccessary and inappropriate undertaking at a time of a flu epidemic," the head of Russia's state health agency Gennady Onishchenko said, according to local news agencies.

Onishchenko expressed fear that the "the expressions of emotion on the part of football fans involving intense shouting" could lead to the airborne transmission of the flu virus.

The two sides are due to play their group four qualifier on September 9.

Russia has to date been relatively spared by the swine flu pandemic, with just 55 confirmed cases in the country.

Experts remain puzzled why different countries have not always been whacked to the same degree, with the likes of England and Scotland both heavily hit proportionately, yet neighbouring France's tally appearing light by comparison.

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Video Clip ប្រវត្តិសាស្រ្ត​ខ្មែរ ដោយ វិទ្យាស្ថាន​ទំនាក់​ទំនង​អន្តរជាតិកម្ពុជា

Video Clip ប្រវត្តិសាស្រ្ត​ខ្មែរ ដោយ វិទ្យាស្ថាន​ទំនាក់​ទំនង​អន្តរជាតិកម្ពុជា

នេះជា Video Clip ដែល​ស្រាវ​ជ្រាវ​ និង​រៀប​ចំដោយ វិទ្យាស្ថាន​ទំនាក់​ទំនង​អន្តរជាតិកម្ពុជា ត្រូត​ពិនិត្យ​ និង​កែសម្រួល​ដោយ សមាជិក​ពេញ​សិទ្ធិ​នៃរាជបណ្ឌិតសភាកម្ពុជា។

សូមគុណ សុខនី( វិទ្យាស្ថាន​ពុទ្ធសាសនបណ្ឌិត្យ) ដែល​បាន​ផ្ញើ​ Video Clip នេះមក​អោយ ilovekhmer Team

And in English:



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Report: Clinton heads to NKorea to free journalists

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 08:59 AM

South Korea's best-selling newspaper said former US president Bill Clinton was to arrive in North Korea later Tuesday to try to secure the release of two detained American journalists.

Former President Bill Clinton, July 15 in New York City. A South Korean newspaper said former US President Bill Clinton was to arrive in North Korea later Tuesday to try to secure the release of two detained American journalists.

Chosun Ilbo, in a website report citing a diplomatic source, reported that Clinton -- the husband of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton -- was on his way to Pyongyang by chartered plane.

The newspaper gave no other details such as the time of his arrival, saying the US government would soon make an announcement.

"I understand that no US government officials are included in former president Clinton's delegation," the source was quoted as saying.

A South Korean foreign ministry official handling US affairs told AFP he could not comment. "It should be confirmed by the US government," the official said on condition of anonymity.

A US embassy spokesman in Seoul said he had no information. In Washington, State Department spokesman Andrew Laine said: "I have seen the reports but at this time I don't have anything on them.

"I am certainly reaching out to our folks to find out more information," Laine added in a hastily arranged telephone briefing with reporters.

Laura Ling and Euna Lee were arrested on March 17 near the border with China while reporting on refugees fleeing the impoverished North.

A Pyongyang court in June sentenced them to 12 years of "reform through labour" for illegal entry and an unspecified "grave crime".

The pair work for California-based Current TV, co-founded by Clinton's vice president Al Gore.

Relations between the communist North and the United States and its allies are at their worst for years following Pyongyang's second nuclear test on May 25 and subsequent United Nations sanctions.

The North on July 4 -- US Independence Day -- test-fired seven ballistic missiles in defiance of the sanctions, but also indicated last week it was open to dialogue with Washington.

North Korea's official media have said Ling, 32, and Lee, 36, had admitted to a politically motivated smear campaign against the communist state.

It said they crossed the border illegally "for the purpose of making animation files to be used for an anti-DPRK (North Korea) smear campaign over its human rights issue".

Media freedom groups have slammed the sentences against the pair, while their families and Hillary Clinton have appealed for their release on humanitarian grounds.

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Injured F1 racer Massa back in Brazil

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 08:59 AM

Formula One driver Felipe Massa arrived in his native Brazil late Monday, flying in from Hungary where he had surgery for serious head injuries sustained in a June 25 racing accident.

Brazilian Formula One driver Felipe Massa smiles at Albert Einstein Hospital in Sao Paulo. Massa arrived in his native Brazil late Monday, flying in from Hungary where he had surgery for serious head injuries sustained in a June 25 racing accident.

The 28-year-old landed at Sao Paulo airport on a private jet accompanied by wife Rafaela and his doctor, Dino Altman, airport officials told AFP.

The plane landed in a military zone of the facility, away from media lenses, and Massa was transferred to a waiting helicopter that was to fly him to Sao Paulo's Albert Einstein Hospital.

Massa's father, Luiz Antonio Massa, had said his son would just undergo check-ups at the hospital but would not be admitted for a lengthy stay, and that he would return to his Sao Paulo home for convalescence.

The Brazilian driver was struck by a suspension spring which had worked its way off Rubens Barrichello's Brawn GP, resulting in Massa crashing his Ferrari into a tire barrier during a qualifying lap in Budapest on June 25.

He underwent emergency surgery in Budapest's AEK hospital for a fractured skull, but within days was able to get up and walk around.

Seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher has agreed to return from retirement to fill in for his friend at Ferrari, starting with the European Grand Prix in Valencia on August 23.

Ferrari conducted an interview with him in the Budapest hospital before his release and made it available to media.

Asked about the accident, Massa said he did not remember anything.

"I know that something happened to me, but I didn't feel anything when it happened. They told me that I lost consciousness at the moment of the spring's impact on my helmet and I ran into the barriers, then I woke up in hospital two days later," he said.

He added that he was feeling better and "I want to recover as soon as possible to get back behind the wheel of a Ferrari."

As soon as he returned to Brazil, he said, "I want to get back to a normal life. I want to get back into the best possible condition, doing things you do every day."

Read more!

Burma's nuclear bomb alive and ticking

Talk to regional security authorities or their embassy staff about Burma having a nuclear programme and it usually generates two responses - total disbelief or horror. Strategic defence studies expert Professor Desmond Ball and journalist Phil Thornton spent two years investigating rumours, speculation, misinformation and the small truths that all help to conceal the Burmese military regime's nuclear ambitions from serious examination

Published: 2/08/2009 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: Spectrum

Our own starting position was one of deep skepticism, but the testimonies from two defectors forced us to consider the uncomfortable possibilities of a Burma with nuclear capability.


A DONE DEAL: Burmese officials and a delegation of North Korean officials sign agreements during a recent meeting in Burma.

In June 2007, we began separate interviews with two Burmese defectors in what would become the first in a series of clandestine meetings in dingy rooms and safe-houses that would continue until early July 2009. We first interviewed Moe Jo*, a Burmese army defector, on the Thai-Burma border. Moe Jo had recently crossed the border into Thailand and was still in the initial stage of fright brought on by his flight from the army and loss of community support. His hands shook and he worried about what price his family would have to pay for his actions.

Before rejecting his country's nuclear plans Moe Jo was an officer with 10 years of exemplary army service and a former graduate of Burma's prestigious Defence Services Academy.

In 2003 Moe Jo was selected by the regime to spend two years studying at Moscow's Engineering Physics Institute in the Faculty of Experimental and Theoretical Physics. He says he was sent to Moscow to study engineering and did not know he would end up in the nuclear project. He was in the second batch of 75 trainees sent to Russia as part of Burma's nuclear programme to train 1,000.

We also held a series of interviews in 2008 with a civilian, Tin Min*, who before defecting, worked as a bookkeeper for Tay Za, a business tycoon and close associate of senior Burmese army generals, including General Than Swe. Tay Za's company, Htoo Trading Company, organised the nuclear contracts with Russia and North Korea. Tin Min spoke excellent English and presented his reports to us with a touch of self-importance. Tin Min had good reason to know what it was like to feel important. Before defecting, he had scaled the heights of his country's high-society and had reaped the benefits of that position. Tin Min insisted Burma's rationale for having a nuclear programme was nonsense.

"They [regime] say it's to produce medical isotopes for health purposes in hospitals. How many hospitals in Burma have nuclear science? Burma can barely get electricity up and running. It's a nonsense."

Considering the World Health Organisation ranks Burma's health system as the second worst out of 192 countries and the regime spends more than 40% of its budget on the military and less than 3% on health and education, it is unlikely Burma is developing and investing in a nuclear reactor for health reasons.

NUCLEAR REACTIONS

What the defectors told us, and access to transcripts of Burmese Army communications, helped us straighten out much of the confusion and speculation on the public record. It has been widely reported that a nuclear reactor has been built at eight or nine different sites in Burma.

TUNNEL COMPLEX: There have been reports that elaborate tunnels have been built in Burma.

The defectors' detailed and adamant testimonies, coupled with the radio transcripts, contradict this - they say Burma has no more than two reactors, one located at Myaing and the other at Naung Laing.

But not everyone in the region agrees about the extent or the purpose of the Naung Laing operation. A senior regional security officer with extensive up-to-date inside information about the area disagrees.

"Before it was a heavily guarded 'no-go zone'. Now you can drive right up to the buildings. Villagers are allowed to grow crops again. Even though the signs say; 'Military Science and Technology Ministry' and there are soldiers, the level of security has been drastically reduced. I think it's now a decoy site, to distract people away from the Myaing area."

The Myaing reactor is located in Magwe division and is known as the "Nyaungone Project". It is part of the MOU signed with Russia's atomic energy agency Rosatom (the Russian Federal Atomic Energy Agency) in May 2007 to build a 10-megawatt light-water reactor using 20 % enriched Uranium-235, nuclear waste treatment and burial facilities, an activation analysis laboratory, medical isotope production laboratory and to train 300 specialists for the nuclear centre.

At the time, a US State Department deputy spokesman, Tom Casey, was reported as saying that the US "wouldn't like to see a project like this move forward" until Burma has an adequate nuclear regulatory and security infrastructure in place.

The second "secret" or military reactor site that the defectors provided a large amount of detailed information about is built inside the smallest of three mountains by North Koreans at Naung Laing. Both the defectors agreed the underground mountain facilities house another 10-megawatt light-water research reactor.

Cooperation between North Korea and the Burmese regime on nuclear matters began in earnest in September 2000 when a MOU was signed by Burma's Lieutenant General Thein Hla and North Korea's Major General Kim Chan Su. Four more detailed contracts were signed in 2001-02.

The "official" agreements between the two countries covered nuclear related activities at two sites and involved North Korea's assistance to help with installing, maintaining, training and supplying equipment at the uranium refining and enrichment plant at Thabike Kyin. At the second reactor site at Naung Laing the North Koreans agreed to help with the construction of an underground facility and a nuclear reactor. Tin Min's old boss Tay Za paid a construction company in 2004-05 to build a tunnel wide enough for two 10-wheel trucks to pass each other. Moe Jo said the regime had taken steps to defend their reactors by installing air defence radar, one to be "deployed" at the airbase at Pyin Oo Lwin and the other at the reactor site.

In recent months as North Korea struts its nuclear capacity it has forged closer ties with the Burmese regime by selling arms and missile technology to them.

The defectors told us that the Burmese army has been building since 2002 a nuclear research and engineering centre in the vicinity of Naung Laing village, south east of Pyin Oo Lwin in Mandalay Division. Pyin Oo Lwin is also home to the Defence Services Academy, Moe Jo's old alumni. Moe Jo said he was told that after he returned from Moscow he would be assigned to a special nuclear battalion at one of the nuclear sites in Burma.

''After I came back from Russia I was assigned to develop a system to fire 155 howitzers. But first I had to do three months training, run by [North] Korean technicians, on using artillery missile systems.''

BURMA'S URANIUM DEPOSITS

Uranium mining takes place at at least 10 locations in Burma. Burma's Ministry of Energy has identified five areas with confirmed deposits of low-grade uranium. Ore samples have reportedly been sent to Russia and Iran for evaluation. At Taundwingyi, next to one of the uranium sites identified by the Ministry of Energy, the North Koreans have built a large underground bunker. In addition to these sites, high resolution imagery published by GoogleEarth in 2007 shows what many believe is a uranium mine and related refinery at Myit Nge Chaung, about 23km from Mandalay.

In April 2009, it was reported that reactor-grade uranium for Burma's nuclear programme was being mined near Lashio in northern Shan State.

According to radio transcripts, Russian uranium prospectors made three exploration missions to Tennasserim Division in southern Burma in 2004-05. The Russian explorers' movements were tracked as they flew from Rangoon on July 8, 2004, to Myeik and their subsequent prospecting around the area of Theindaw from July 18 to October 5, 2004.

REFINING AND PROCESSING PLANTS

Burma has at least two uranium refining and processing plants in operation for crushing, grinding, cleaning and milling (refining) the uranium ore into ''yellowcake'' (U308), a concentrate of uranium oxides in powder form. Yellow cake is later converted to uranium hexafluoride (UF6) for enrichment to provide fuel for reactors or fissle material for nuclear weapons. Tin Min claims that businessman Tay Za told him the regime has nuclear dreams, and they are serious.

''They're aware they cannot compete with Thailand with conventional weapons. They [the regime] want to play nuclear poker like North Korea. They hope to combine the nuclear and air defence missiles. Tay Za told me the nuclear programme is known as the 'UF6 Project' and is the responsibility of General Maung Aye.''

Both processing plants are close to the Irrawaddy River, one is seven kilometres from the river and is near the Tha Pa Na Military Science and Technology Development Center and the other plant is near the Thabike Kyin township.

Being close to the river allows the regime to use barges to transport the heavy ore rather than rely on the inadequate roads.

Tin Min says as Tay Za controls much of the shipping in and out of Burma it is easy for him to organise getting the equipment to the nuclear sites from Rangoon.

''He arranges for army trucks to pick up the containers of equipment from the North Korean boats that arrive in Rangoon and transport them at night by highway to the river or direct to the sites.''

Moe Jo estimated that there were more than five North Koreans working at the Thabike Kyin plant. He said Russian cleaning machines were used to ''wash'' the ore and that Burma has provided yellowcake to both North Korea and Iran.

GoogleEarth imagery published in 2007 shows a facility with what looks like four giant ''thickening tanks'' in which the uranium bearing solution is separated from the ground ore before being converted to yellowcake.

HAS BURMA THE CAPACITY TO PRODUCE A NUCLEAR WEAPON?

The essence of Moe Jo and Tin Win's testimonies is that Burma has key parts of the nuclear fuel cycle already in place. Moe Jo told us that the army ''planned'' to build a plutonium reprocessing plant at Naung Laing, and that Russian experts were already ''teaching plutonium reprocessing'' at the site.

A ''nuclear battalion'' was established by the regime in 2000 to work on the ''weaponisation'' aspects of the nuclear programme. It is based near the village of Taungdaw, just west of the Naung Laing complex. The operations component is in another underground complex in the nearby Setkhya Mountains. It includes engineering, artillery and communications on operational aspects of weapons design, delivery capability and a command and control centre.

Moe Jo says by 2012, Burma will have 1,000 people trained, access to uranium, is refining yellowcake and has two light water reactors.

''You don't need 1,000 people in the fuel cycle or to run a nuclear reactor. It's obvious there is much more going on.''

These reactors are not as efficient in producing fissionable plutonium as heavy-water reactors, but as North Korea has shown with their reactor, it may be slow and more complex, but it is capable. For Burma to be able to extract plutonium from the spent fuel rods and to separate plutonium-239 from plutonium-240 it needs to construct a plutonium reprocessing plant so it can produce seven to eight kilograms of weapon-grade Plutonium-239 a year, enough for one bomb a year.

In the event that the testimonies of the defectors are proved, the alleged ''secret'' reactor could be capable of being operational and producing one bomb a year, every year, after 2014.

A Burmese nuclear weapons programme would require external support, going beyond rudimentary Russian training and North Korean assistance with the current uranium refining capabilities and reactor operations. But North Korea taking on a greater role in helping Burma get its bomb cannot be rule out. They would be more than interested in providing limited amounts of fissionable plutonium in return for yellowcake.

It would be in North Korea's military interest, and in line with their nuclear posturing, to construct a secret plutonium reprocessing plant in Burma, complementing the secret reactor, in exchange for access to the fissionable product. The defectors talked explicitly of the regime meeting their nuclear programme objectives by having a ''handful of bombs ready by 2020''.

According to all the milestones identified by the defectors, Burma's nuclear programme is on schedule.

It is feasible and achievable. Unfortunately, it is not as bizarre or ridiculous as many people would like to think. Burma's regional neighbours need to watch carefully, especially for signs of a reprocessing plant. If the regime starts building that then the only explanation is that they plan to build a bomb.

A Burma with nuclear capability is a worry, if the regime's response to last year's Cyclone Nargis is a benchmark.

Their response was to treat it as a national security threat, by banning journalists, ignoring offers of outside help for weeks, while leaving their people to die in their thousands. The region cannot expect any more from the regime if there is any sort of nuclear accident.

* Not their real names

  • Professor Desmond Ball works at the Australian National University's Defence Studies Centre. He is the author of more than 40 books on nuclear strategy, Australian defence, and security in the Asia-Pacific. He has served as the co-chair of the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific.
  • Phil Thornton is the author of Restless Souls: rebels, refugee, medics misfits on the Thai Burma border.
Read more!

Burma's nuclear bomb alive and ticking

Talk to regional security authorities or their embassy staff about Burma having a nuclear programme and it usually generates two responses - total disbelief or horror. Strategic defence studies expert Professor Desmond Ball and journalist Phil Thornton spent two years investigating rumours, speculation, misinformation and the small truths that all help to conceal the Burmese military regime's nuclear ambitions from serious examination
Published: 2/08/2009 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: Spectrum

Our own starting position was one of deep skepticism, but the testimonies from two defectors forced us to consider the uncomfortable possibilities of a Burma with nuclear capability.


A DONE DEAL: Burmese officials and a delegation of North Korean officials sign agreements during a recent meeting in Burma.

In June 2007, we began separate interviews with two Burmese defectors in what would become the first in a series of clandestine meetings in dingy rooms and safe-houses that would continue until early July 2009. We first interviewed Moe Jo*, a Burmese army defector, on the Thai-Burma border. Moe Jo had recently crossed the border into Thailand and was still in the initial stage of fright brought on by his flight from the army and loss of community support. His hands shook and he worried about what price his family would have to pay for his actions.

Before rejecting his country's nuclear plans Moe Jo was an officer with 10 years of exemplary army service and a former graduate of Burma's prestigious Defence Services Academy.

In 2003 Moe Jo was selected by the regime to spend two years studying at Moscow's Engineering Physics Institute in the Faculty of Experimental and Theoretical Physics. He says he was sent to Moscow to study engineering and did not know he would end up in the nuclear project. He was in the second batch of 75 trainees sent to Russia as part of Burma's nuclear programme to train 1,000.

We also held a series of interviews in 2008 with a civilian, Tin Min*, who before defecting, worked as a bookkeeper for Tay Za, a business tycoon and close associate of senior Burmese army generals, including General Than Swe. Tay Za's company, Htoo Trading Company, organised the nuclear contracts with Russia and North Korea. Tin Min spoke excellent English and presented his reports to us with a touch of self-importance. Tin Min had good reason to know what it was like to feel important. Before defecting, he had scaled the heights of his country's high-society and had reaped the benefits of that position. Tin Min insisted Burma's rationale for having a nuclear programme was nonsense.

"They [regime] say it's to produce medical isotopes for health purposes in hospitals. How many hospitals in Burma have nuclear science? Burma can barely get electricity up and running. It's a nonsense."

* See companion report: Time for a close look at Burma's nuclear programme

* Also: Report reveals Burma's 2014 nukes target

Considering the World Health Organisation ranks Burma's health system as the second worst out of 192 countries and the regime spends more than 40% of its budget on the military and less than 3% on health and education, it is unlikely Burma is developing and investing in a nuclear reactor for health reasons.

NUCLEAR REACTIONS

What the defectors told us, and access to transcripts of Burmese Army communications, helped us straighten out much of the confusion and speculation on the public record. It has been widely reported that a nuclear reactor has been built at eight or nine different sites in Burma.

TUNNEL COMPLEX: There have been reports that elaborate tunnels have been built in Burma.

The defectors' detailed and adamant testimonies, coupled with the radio transcripts, contradict this - they say Burma has no more than two reactors, one located at Myaing and the other at Naung Laing.

But not everyone in the region agrees about the extent or the purpose of the Naung Laing operation. A senior regional security officer with extensive up-to-date inside information about the area disagrees.

"Before it was a heavily guarded 'no-go zone'. Now you can drive right up to the buildings. Villagers are allowed to grow crops again. Even though the signs say; 'Military Science and Technology Ministry' and there are soldiers, the level of security has been drastically reduced. I think it's now a decoy site, to distract people away from the Myaing area."

The Myaing reactor is located in Magwe division and is known as the "Nyaungone Project". It is part of the MOU signed with Russia's atomic energy agency Rosatom (the Russian Federal Atomic Energy Agency) in May 2007 to build a 10-megawatt light-water reactor using 20 % enriched Uranium-235, nuclear waste treatment and burial facilities, an activation analysis laboratory, medical isotope production laboratory and to train 300 specialists for the nuclear centre.

At the time, a US State Department deputy spokesman, Tom Casey, was reported as saying that the US "wouldn't like to see a project like this move forward" until Burma has an adequate nuclear regulatory and security infrastructure in place.

The second "secret" or military reactor site that the defectors provided a large amount of detailed information about is built inside the smallest of three mountains by North Koreans at Naung Laing. Both the defectors agreed the underground mountain facilities house another 10-megawatt light-water research reactor.

Cooperation between North Korea and the Burmese regime on nuclear matters began in earnest in September 2000 when a MOU was signed by Burma's Lieutenant General Thein Hla and North Korea's Major General Kim Chan Su. Four more detailed contracts were signed in 2001-02.

The "official" agreements between the two countries covered nuclear related activities at two sites and involved North Korea's assistance to help with installing, maintaining, training and supplying equipment at the uranium refining and enrichment plant at Thabike Kyin. At the second reactor site at Naung Laing the North Koreans agreed to help with the construction of an underground facility and a nuclear reactor. Tin Min's old boss Tay Za paid a construction company in 2004-05 to build a tunnel wide enough for two 10-wheel trucks to pass each other. Moe Jo said the regime had taken steps to defend their reactors by installing air defence radar, one to be "deployed" at the airbase at Pyin Oo Lwin and the other at the reactor site.

In recent months as North Korea struts its nuclear capacity it has forged closer ties with the Burmese regime by selling arms and missile technology to them.

The defectors told us that the Burmese army has been building since 2002 a nuclear research and engineering centre in the vicinity of Naung Laing village, south east of Pyin Oo Lwin in Mandalay Division. Pyin Oo Lwin is also home to the Defence Services Academy, Moe Jo's old alumni. Moe Jo said he was told that after he returned from Moscow he would be assigned to a special nuclear battalion at one of the nuclear sites in Burma.

''After I came back from Russia I was assigned to develop a system to fire 155 howitzers. But first I had to do three months training, run by [North] Korean technicians, on using artillery missile systems.''

BURMA'S URANIUM DEPOSITS

Uranium mining takes place at at least 10 locations in Burma. Burma's Ministry of Energy has identified five areas with confirmed deposits of low-grade uranium. Ore samples have reportedly been sent to Russia and Iran for evaluation. At Taundwingyi, next to one of the uranium sites identified by the Ministry of Energy, the North Koreans have built a large underground bunker. In addition to these sites, high resolution imagery published by GoogleEarth in 2007 shows what many believe is a uranium mine and related refinery at Myit Nge Chaung, about 23km from Mandalay.

In April 2009, it was reported that reactor-grade uranium for Burma's nuclear programme was being mined near Lashio in northern Shan State.

According to radio transcripts, Russian uranium prospectors made three exploration missions to Tennasserim Division in southern Burma in 2004-05. The Russian explorers' movements were tracked as they flew from Rangoon on July 8, 2004, to Myeik and their subsequent prospecting around the area of Theindaw from July 18 to October 5, 2004.

REFINING AND PROCESSING PLANTS

Burma has at least two uranium refining and processing plants in operation for crushing, grinding, cleaning and milling (refining) the uranium ore into ''yellowcake'' (U308), a concentrate of uranium oxides in powder form. Yellow cake is later converted to uranium hexafluoride (UF6) for enrichment to provide fuel for reactors or fissle material for nuclear weapons. Tin Min claims that businessman Tay Za told him the regime has nuclear dreams, and they are serious.

''They're aware they cannot compete with Thailand with conventional weapons. They [the regime] want to play nuclear poker like North Korea. They hope to combine the nuclear and air defence missiles. Tay Za told me the nuclear programme is known as the 'UF6 Project' and is the responsibility of General Maung Aye.''

Both processing plants are close to the Irrawaddy River, one is seven kilometres from the river and is near the Tha Pa Na Military Science and Technology Development Center and the other plant is near the Thabike Kyin township.

Being close to the river allows the regime to use barges to transport the heavy ore rather than rely on the inadequate roads.

Tin Min says as Tay Za controls much of the shipping in and out of Burma it is easy for him to organise getting the equipment to the nuclear sites from Rangoon.

''He arranges for army trucks to pick up the containers of equipment from the North Korean boats that arrive in Rangoon and transport them at night by highway to the river or direct to the sites.''

Moe Jo estimated that there were more than five North Koreans working at the Thabike Kyin plant. He said Russian cleaning machines were used to ''wash'' the ore and that Burma has provided yellowcake to both North Korea and Iran.

GoogleEarth imagery published in 2007 shows a facility with what looks like four giant ''thickening tanks'' in which the uranium bearing solution is separated from the ground ore before being converted to yellowcake.

HAS BURMA THE CAPACITY TO PRODUCE A NUCLEAR WEAPON?

The essence of Moe Jo and Tin Win's testimonies is that Burma has key parts of the nuclear fuel cycle already in place. Moe Jo told us that the army ''planned'' to build a plutonium reprocessing plant at Naung Laing, and that Russian experts were already ''teaching plutonium reprocessing'' at the site.

A ''nuclear battalion'' was established by the regime in 2000 to work on the ''weaponisation'' aspects of the nuclear programme. It is based near the village of Taungdaw, just west of the Naung Laing complex. The operations component is in another underground complex in the nearby Setkhya Mountains. It includes engineering, artillery and communications on operational aspects of weapons design, delivery capability and a command and control centre.

Moe Jo says by 2012, Burma will have 1,000 people trained, access to uranium, is refining yellowcake and has two light water reactors.

''You don't need 1,000 people in the fuel cycle or to run a nuclear reactor. It's obvious there is much more going on.''

These reactors are not as efficient in producing fissionable plutonium as heavy-water reactors, but as North Korea has shown with their reactor, it may be slow and more complex, but it is capable. For Burma to be able to extract plutonium from the spent fuel rods and to separate plutonium-239 from plutonium-240 it needs to construct a plutonium reprocessing plant so it can produce seven to eight kilograms of weapon-grade Plutonium-239 a year, enough for one bomb a year.

In the event that the testimonies of the defectors are proved, the alleged ''secret'' reactor could be capable of being operational and producing one bomb a year, every year, after 2014.

A Burmese nuclear weapons programme would require external support, going beyond rudimentary Russian training and North Korean assistance with the current uranium refining capabilities and reactor operations. But North Korea taking on a greater role in helping Burma get its bomb cannot be rule out. They would be more than interested in providing limited amounts of fissionable plutonium in return for yellowcake.

It would be in North Korea's military interest, and in line with their nuclear posturing, to construct a secret plutonium reprocessing plant in Burma, complementing the secret reactor, in exchange for access to the fissionable product. The defectors talked explicitly of the regime meeting their nuclear programme objectives by having a ''handful of bombs ready by 2020''.

According to all the milestones identified by the defectors, Burma's nuclear programme is on schedule.

It is feasible and achievable. Unfortunately, it is not as bizarre or ridiculous as many people would like to think. Burma's regional neighbours need to watch carefully, especially for signs of a reprocessing plant. If the regime starts building that then the only explanation is that they plan to build a bomb.

A Burma with nuclear capability is a worry, if the regime's response to last year's Cyclone Nargis is a benchmark.

Their response was to treat it as a national security threat, by banning journalists, ignoring offers of outside help for weeks, while leaving their people to die in their thousands. The region cannot expect any more from the regime if there is any sort of nuclear accident.

* Not their real names

* Professor Desmond Ball works at the Australian National University's Defence Studies Centre. He is the author of more than 40 books on nuclear strategy, Australian defence, and security in the Asia-Pacific. He has served as the co-chair of the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific.

* Phil Thornton is the author of Restless Souls: rebels, refugee, medics misfits on the Thai Burma border. Read more!

Red shirts to petition on August 17 THAI NEWS


The red shirts will present their petition seeking royal pardon for former PM Thaksin Shinawatra to the palace on August 17, organisers said.
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"There are more than 5 million signatures for the petition. Name checks will likely be completed around August 15 or 16, so the petition will be filed on August 17," said organiser Veera Musigapong.

The red shirts will organise a colourful march to the palace to present their petition, Veera said.

Included in the procession will be the petition placed atop a ceremonial bowl, a giant banner inscribed with 100,000 names and more than 1,000 marchers carrying the remaining signatures. He said the petition was legal, dismissing as futile government attempts to counter the campaign. "Nothing can stop the red shirts from submitting their petition," he said.

Veera said the government was trying to spread misinformation in a move to oppose the petition. He said the red shirts, in turn, had challenged the government to verify all the signatures.

Opponents of the petition risk offending the monarchy by trying to prevent people from airing their plight to His Majesty the King, he said.

Red-shirt co-leader Natthawut Saikua voiced suspicion that the opponents were mainly individuals involved in ousting Thaksin. He said rectors from 26 universities had erred in opposing the petition as they did when they spearheaded a wrongful move to cite Article 7 of the Constitution, seeking a royally appointed prime minister in order to overthrow Thaksin.

He vowed the petition would advance, regardless of the government's intimidation tactics.

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Football: Domenech stuns Ribery with call-up

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 01:59 AM

France coach Raymond Domenech has sprung a surprise by naming Bayern Munich midfielder Franck Ribery in his 22-man squad for the World Cup qualifier with the Faroe Isles in Torshavn on August 12.

France coach Raymond Domenech has sprung a surprise by naming Bayern Munich midfielder Franck Ribery, seen here in May 2009, in his 22-man squad for the World Cup qualifier with the Faroe Isles in Torshavn on August 12.

Ribery is still recovering from a knee unjury and, having last trained on July 12, indicated recently he was not yet match fit.

Domenech said that since Ribery could play for Bayern in their German Bundesliga opener next week, he would have no qualms about using the midfielder for "a brief spell".

"Franck said he would not be match fit for a full match but I've since spoken to him by telephone," said Domenech.

"He is back training with Bayern, and he could play against Hoffenheim (on August 8) and so he could be useful for us even if it's just for a brief spell.

"I wouldn't have called him up if he was in pain. That's not the way I operate."

Meanwhile former midfield marshal Patrick Vieira has not made the squad.

The 33-year-old France skipper has already resumed training with his club Inter Milan but, despite nursing an injured thumb, appears to be paying the price for an apparent lack of form.

Making his return to the squad after a seven-month absence, Vieira was uninspiring in France's 1-0 defeat to Nigeria in a June 2 friendly.

The Frenchman also failed to impress in Inter's friendly against Monaco last week.

While claiming he did not base his decision on Vieira's performance in either match, Domenech was unequivocal about which path Vieira had to take to fight his way back into the team.

"Pat needs a lot of match time before getting back to his normal level," said Domenech.

"He's the captain of France, we know what he brings to the team but he needs to play, get a long series of matches under his belt.

"I hope he starts playing, at Inter Milan or elsewhere, as much as possible."

In Vieira's absence Barcelona forward Thierry Henry wears the captain's armband.

France have an eight-point deficit to group 7 leaders Serbia although 'Les Bleus' have played two games less.

The winners of each group qualify automatically for the World Cup finals in South Africa next summer, with the best runners-up being forced into a play-off.

Squad

Goalkeepers: Hugo Lloris (Lyon), Steve Mandanda (Marseille), Cedric Carrasso (Bordeaux)

Defenders: Eric Abidal (Barcelona/ESP), Julien Escude (Sevilla/ESP), Patrice Evra (Manchester United/ENG), Rod Fanni (Rennes), William Gallas (Arsenal/ENG), Bacary Sagna (Arsenal/ENG), Sebastien Squillaci (Sevilla/ESP)

Midfielders: Alou Diarra (Bordeaux), Lassana Diarra (Real Madrid/ESP), Yoann Gourcuff (Bordeaux), Florent Malouda (Chelsea/ENG), Moussa Sissoko (Toulouse), Jeremy Toulalan (Lyon), Franck Ribery (Bayern Munich/GER)

Forwards: Nicolas Anelka (Chelsea/ENG), Karim Benzema (Real Madrid/ESP), Thierry Henry (Barcelona/ESP), Andre-Pierre Gignac (Toulouse), Loic Remy (Nice)

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Roddick ready to return after Wimbledon heartbreak

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 02:59 AM

Andy Roddick declared himself mentally and physically ready for his return to competition after a month off following his heartbreaking loss to Roger Federer in the Wimbledon final.

Andy Roddick of the US, seen here during the award ceremony after the men's final at Wimbledon in July 2009, declared himself mentally and physically ready for his return to competition after a month off following his heartbreaking loss to Roger Federer at Wimbledon.

The fifth-ranked US star will be back on the court Wednesday after a first-round bye at the 1.4 million-dollar ATP Washington Classic, having found perspective about the Swiss star's historic marathon five-set victory.

"Heartbreaking for me, but at the same time not a lot of people get a chance to play for that title. That was not lost on me," Roddick said Monday.

"Was it the greatest loss I've had as far as afterward?... Yeah, that hurt. But at the same time it's still a pretty good existence to play matches like that.

"I don't sit back and cry in my Cheerios."

Federer won his sixth Wimbledon title and career record 15th Grand Slam crown 5-7, 7-6 (8/6), 7-6 (7/5), 3-6, 16-14. Roddick pushed him for four hours and 16 minutes, holding 37 service games in a row before dropping the last in the July 5 epic.

Asked how he got over the loss, Roddick replied, "I'll keep you posted."

Putting the defeat in perspective has proven elusive as Roddick, whose only Grand Slam title came at the 2003 US Open, sees himself little differently than before.

"It changes daily. I don't think I really understand," Roddick said. "For me it's probably not the same but I understand it might be a good story.

"I've been a pretty good player throughout my career regardless of what has taken place in the last six weeks."

A day after the longest fifth set in Grand Slam final history, Roddick withdrew from a US Davis Cup quarter-final tie at Croatia with a right hip flexor, an injury Roddick said no longer troubles him.

"I feel great. I decided not to make the error of coming back until I was physically ready to play an event," Roddick said. "It's not the type of injury where I expect anything lingering."

The only thing Roddick expects to linger from the thriller loss to Federer as he begins hardcourt matches ahead of the US Open is the emotional lift brought by the entire Wimbledon fortnight's work.

"It does help my confidence going into the US Open that I was able to navigate my way through a major tournament," Roddick said.

"I'm not going to come in expecting to pick up where I left off a month ago. It's a process. This is the start of the process for the US Open. It would be presumptuous of me to expect that in my first match back after a month."

Roddick, who turns 27 on the eve of the US Open, will play fellow American Robby Ginepri or Germany's Benjamin Becker in his first match. Hot-handed US rival Sam Querrey, the champion Sunday at Los Angeles, could await after that.

Roddick has worked to keep his emotions in balance better than in the early days of his career, saying his normal evolution has played out before the world step by step.

"I've pretty much been portrayed as every style thing you can be," Roddick said. "After Wimbledon you are Andy Everyman, who everybody is rooting for. I think the meat and potatoes of who I am hasn't been covered yet."

Roddick, 39-9 this year and two wins shy of 500 career ATP triumph, won his 27th career title at Memphis in February. He won titles at Washington in 2001, 2005 and 2007.

Roddick, who married model Brooklyn Decker on April 17, credits improved nutrition and fitness for better position on the court to enable superior shotmaking.

"It was just a matter of what avenues hadn't I explored," Roddick said. "Once confidence is there, it makes the decision-making process a lot easier when you want to pull the trigger on shots.

"I wasn't playing amazing at Wimbledon until the semis and final. There's still a lot of work to be done."

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Jackson mother granted custody of children

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 07:59 AM

A Los Angeles judge named Michael Jackson's mother as permanent guardian of the star's children, ignoring a surprise late bid by the singer's dermatologist to have a say in their upbringing.

Katherine Jackson, mother of singer Michael Jackson seen here in 2005. A Los Angeles judge named Jackson's mother as permanent guardian of the star's children, ignoring a surprise late request by the singer's dermatologist to have a say in their upbringing.

Lawyers for Katherine Jackson, 79, and the King of Pop's ex-wife Debbie Rowe had last week agreed details of custody arrangements concerning children Prince Michael, 12, Paris, 11 and Prince Michael II, 7.

But what was expected to be a straightforward hearing to approve the agreement on Monday took a bizarre turn when an attorney for Jackson's skin doctor Arnold Klein appeared at the hearing.

Lawyer Mark Vincent Kaplan said Klein wanted to "have a voice" in issues concerning the children's "education, healthcare and welfare."

Asked repeatedly by Judge Mitchell Beckloff to state what Klein's interest was, Kaplan said it was due to his client's "longstanding relationship with the children and longstanding relationship with Mr Jackson."

Klein was "not a presumed parent," Kaplan said, although Monday's twist is likely to stir up fresh speculation about whether the doctor is the biological father of Jackson's eldest two children.

In interviews last month, Klein refused to categorically deny that he was the children's father. "All I can tell you is, to the best of my knowledge, I am not the father of these children," Klein told ABC television.

Judge Beckloff appeared to disregard Klein's request on Monday as a move by "nothing more than a concerned friend" before inking the custody agreement.

"It's in the best interests of the minors," Beckloff said, adding that Klein would have to file a formal request if he wanted to challenge the details of the custody agreement.

Under the terms of the deal, Katherine Jackson, who attended Monday's hearing, gets permanent custody while Rowe receives visitation rights to Prince Michael and Paris, born during her 1996-1999 marriage to Jackson.

The surrogate mother of Jackson's third child, Prince Michael II -- known as "Blanket" -- has never been identified.

Rowe will receive no money beyond an existing spousal agreement, reportedly worth some 8.5 million dollars.

A lawyer for Rowe praised the conduct of the 50-year-old former nurse during the custody negotiations. Rowe did not attend Monday's hearing.

"Everyone sought the same objective -- doing what was best for the children of Debbie Rowe and Michael Jackson," attorney Eric George said.

"I want to applaud Debbie Rowe. She's faced difficulties and pressures none of us know, and today's agreement shows that she responded with heart, integrity and selflessness."

Beckloff meanwhile agreed to provide Katherine Jackson with an allowance, paid by the singer's estate, along with an allowance for the three children. The amount of the payments was not released, but the allowance for the children was only 83.5 percent of what attorneys had requested.

Beckloff said he questioned some of the costs and opted to reduce the amount, although he added: "It is not my intention to deprive the kids of anything that they're entitled to."

A further hearing has been scheduled for October 2 to "review the circumstances of the children" and ensure the custody arrangement has been successful, Beckloff said.

Beckloff later on Monday approved a 2002 will drawn up by Jackson which named two music industry figures, John McClain and John Branca, as co-executors of the singer's estate.

McClain and Branca, who were appointed temporary administrators of the Jackson estate last month, were given an additional 60 days in charge pending a hearing on October 2.

Despite speculation that lawyers for the Jackson family would seek to have Katherine appointed as a third co-executor, no challenge appeared to have been registered as Beckloff entered the will on Monday.

"The judge did the right thing today. He admitted the will to probate. There was no challenge by Mrs Jackson," said Howard Weitzman, a lawyer representing McClain and Branca.

Attorneys for Katherine Jackson were not available for comment.

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Australia foils suicide attack on army base, four arrested: police

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 06:59 AM

Australian police have arrested four people with alleged links to Somali Islamists who were planning a suicide attack on a military base, senior officers said on Tuesday.

Police in Sydney in 2008. Australian police have arrested four people who were planning a suicide attack on a military base, senior officers said on Tuesday.

"The alleged offenders were prepared to inflict a sustained attack on military personnel until they themselves were killed," said Tony Negus, acting chief commissioner of the Australian Federal Police.

"The men's intentions was to go into these army barracks and to kill as many people as possible.... This would have been, if it had been able to be carried out, the most serious attack on Australian soil," he added.

The suspects of Somali and Lebanese descent were arrested in a series of raids across the southeastern state of Victoria, Negus said.

He said the attack would have been carried out with firearms rather than explosives and added the group had been seeking a "fatwah" to justify its actions.

"Members of the group have been actively seeking a fatwah or religious ruling to justify a terror attack on Australia," Negus said.

Negus said members of the group had links with Somalia's Al-Qaeda-inspired Shebab group, which is fighting a deadly insurgency against that country's government.

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Australia foils suicide attack on army base

Writer: AFP
Published: 4/08/2009 at 07:59 AM

Australian counter-terrorist police Tuesday arrested four people in raids that foiled a Somali-linked plot to launch a suicide attack on a military base, senior officers said.

Police in Sydney in 2008. Australian police have arrested four people who were planning a suicide attack on a military base, senior officers said on Tuesday.

The men of Somali and Lebanese descent were arrested in the southeastern state of Victoria in an operation involving about 400 police, they said, adding the attack would have been the "most serious" on Australian soil.

"The alleged offenders were prepared to inflict a sustained attack on military personnel until they themselves were killed," said Tony Negus, acting chief commissioner of the Australian Federal Police.

"The men's intention was to go into these army barracks and to kill as many people as possible.... This would have been, if it had been able to be carried out, the most serious attack on Australian soil," he added.

He said the attack would have been carried out with firearms rather than explosives and added the group had been seeking a "fatwah" to justify its actions.

"Members of the group have been actively seeking a fatwah or religious ruling to justify a terror attack on Australia," Negus said, without giving further details.

Negus said members of the group had links with Somalia's Al-Qaeda-inspired Shebab group, which is fighting a deadly insurgency against that country's government.

He said some of the group travelled to Somalia to "participate in hostilities in that country."

A core group of some 150 police has been investigating the planned attack since January in a "massive physical and electronic surveillance operation," Negus said.

"Police will allege that the men were planning to carry out a suicide terrorist attack on a defence establishment within Australia involving an armed assault with automatic weapons," he said.

The announcement comes after Australian Islamic convert Shane Kent last week admitted plotting to kill thousands of people in an attack on a major sports event in Melbourne.

Eight members of the same extremist cell have already been jailed over plans to bomb the 2005 Australian Football League Grand Final, which attracted a crowd of 92,000.

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Thailand looks into Burma nuclear link

Writer: ANUCHA CHAROENPO and THANIDA TANSUBHAPOL
Published: 4/08/2009 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: News

Thailand is trying to verify reports the Burmese military regime is building a nuclear reactor with a plan to make a nuclear bomb in five years.

National Security Council chief Thawil Pliensri has ordered intelligence officials to check on the reports and said yesterday that so far no evidence has been found that points to a Burmese nuclear programme.

Mr Thawil said regional security could be jeopardised if the plan to build a nuclear weapon was verified.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Vimon Kidchob said the Thai embassy in Burma had not mentioned anything about a nuclear project but the ministry would closely monitor the issue.

Miss Vimon did not believe Burma would violate the agreement to keep Southeast Asia a nuclear-free zone.

"I am confident that all members of the SEANWFZ are adhering to this principle," she said.

The Southeast Asian Nuclear Weapons Free Zone Treaty has been signed by all members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. The treaty entered into force in 1997.

Rumours are circulating the Burmese junta is receiving cooperation from Russia and North Korea to develop a nuclear programme.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed concern about the cooperation between Burma and North Korea during talks with Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and at the Asean Regional Forum in Phuket last month.

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Social, Economic Discrimination Chasing Poorest Out Of Capital: Sam Rainsy

Sam Rainsy's letter as published in
The Cambodia Daily
, August 3, 2009


SOCIAL, ECONOMIC DISCRIMINATION CHASING POOREST OUT OF CAPITAL

On July 29, three separate articles published in The Cambodia Daily (“Controversial Social Affairs Site To Expand” (page 1), “Former Dey Krahorm Residents Deny Preah Vihear Relocation Reports” and “International Groups, Individuals Condemn Relocation Site Conditions” (page 27)) actually reflected one common issue: economic and social discrimination that tends to chase the poorest citizens out of the booming capital city of Phnom Penh.

In today’s Cambodia, more and more people who are resourceless, jobless, homeless and connectionless are falling victims to brutal evictions and forceful transfers conducted by the authorities to purportedly implement city “development programs” or “beautification schemes”. Those destitute second-class citizens are simply expelled from downtown Phnom Penh to be dumped in remote makeshift relocation sites that lack job opportunities and basic necessities. They are actually internal refugees condemned to hopelessly survive in squalid conditions on a day-to-day basis.

The recent evictions and population transfers to the controversial relocation sites through coercion obviously represent expediencies and temporary solutions as part of a piecemeal approach to the pressing issues of urban planning, land speculation and population housing. Such important issues require a comprehensive and consistent approach based on clear vision and sound principles. Any urban policy must be assessed through its geographic, demographic, economic, political, social, cultural and environmental impact on communities that are being created for living, work and play.

What kind of city do we want Phnom Penh to become? A city developed and essentially reserved for the relatively wealthy, or a socially inclusive city where all segments of the population -- the rich, the poor and the in-between -- can live together? A city where any development programs are always left to private companies operating on a purely commercial basis, or a city where the public authorities would promote social housing programs for low-income citizens to ensure a balanced mix of the city population? A city nearly exclusively made up of blocks of cement and concrete buildings, where all newly available plots of land continue to be reserved for profit-based constructions, or a city with an increasing share of available land reserved for public parks, gardens and playgrounds along with sport, social and cultural facilities? A city whose anarchic development is solely based on the rule of profit, or a city whose planners and managers would give more consideration to social integration, equal opportunity, the environment and quality of life?

On the basis of fundamental principles, the Sam Rainsy Party would like to propose the following change in government urban policy.

Each time the city authorities can legally, fairly and peacefully clear any piece of land considered as state asset available for “development”, they should refrain from selling it or leasing it right away to any private company. They should instead divide up the land into three roughly equal parts. One third of the land space could be attributed to a private company for commercial development through an open and transparent public bidding with clearly defined terms of reference. The second third of the land space should be allocated to the construction of social dwellings receiving public subsidies derived from government profits from the commercial development. The final portion of the land should be reserved for the creation or extension of public gardens, playgrounds, libraries, sport and other social and cultural facilities.

It goes without saying that serious economic, social and environmental studies must be conducted before deciding on such a scheme. Furthermore, all concerned people, especially local residents to be re-housed in social dwellings to be constructed on the spot, must be consulted before the implementation of such a multi-faceted project. The SRP is confident that a more transparent and democratic approach to urban management will enjoy broad popular support and will contribute to the country’s equitable and sustainable development.

Sam Rainsy
SRP President
Member of Parliament
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The Odds Are Stacked Against A Fair Trial For Opposition Parliamentarian Mu Sochua


Monday, 3 August 2009
Press Release: Asian Human Rights Commission

Cambodia: The Odds Are Stacked Against A Fair Trial For Opposition Parliamentarian Mu Sochua

Mu Sochua, a Member of Parliament from the opposition Sam Rainsy party, was tried on 24 July 2009. She was charged with defamation against Prime Minister Hun Sen following her announcement of her own defamation lawsuit against the latter in press conference held in April. In Cambodia, defamation is a non-custodial criminal offense punishable by a fine.

She was not able to secure the service of a defense counsel and chose to exercise the right to remain silence throughout the hearing. The verdict is expected to be announced on 4 August. Considering the political control of the judiciary and the intension to terminate her political career, the chances of Mu Sochua getting a fair trial are very remote, however strong her case might be.

Executive control of the court is an established fact and it is known that the court lacks independence. It is evident that it had been used by the powerful against the critics. The government has implicitly acknowledged this shortcoming of the judiciary and has even planned to correct it. For that part, almost all prosecutors and judges are still affiliated to the ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP), formerly a communist party whose discipline on members is still as strict as in the communist State.

Following Mu Sochua’s announcement of her lawsuit against Hun Sen, there seems to be a scheme to get at her and terminate her political activities altogether. Based on the strength of his party, Hun Sen said that it would be easy to lift Mu Sochua’s immunity so that she could be tried. While the lifting of this immunity was pending, Hun Sen suggested to the Sam Rainsy party to prepare for the replacement of Mu Sochua in the parliament, an implied threat of the end of her political career but which was immediately dismissed by her party.

As to the actual lifting of her immunity, there was no respect for the principle of natural justice. There was no impartial mechanism to examine the charge and to hear her case.

Considering of the flaw in the justice system and the scheme to end the political activities of the opposition Member of Parliament (fumus percutionis), the Asian Human Rights Commission hold that Mu Sochua is denied her right to a fair trial by independent, competent and impartial tribunals duly established by law, as stipulated under article 14 of International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which Cambodia is a party. Therefore, any verdict against MP Mu Sochua will not carry any authority of a court of law.

About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.
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