LUFFOI.COM

My Daily Memo & Global News RSS

  • Home
  • About

 

September 2011
M T W T F S S
« Aug   Oct »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Recent Posts

  • Thailand Cambodia agree to strengthen bilateral ties
  • Thailand, Cambodia agree to strengthen bilateral ties
  • Egypt's Mubarak back in court for retrial
  • Mubarak retrial in Egypt to include new evidence
  • Thailand Cambodia strengthen cooperation
  • Thailand, Cambodia strengthen cooperation
  • Egypt's Mubarak arrives in court for retrial
  • Egypt’s Mubarak says too early to judge Mursi: newspaper
  • Thailand's bilateral trade with Cambodia down 2.3% in Q1
  • ‘The AHMS Collection’ Grows Beyond Thailand With Cambodian Private Island …
  • Egypt's Mubarak talks for first time since detention
  • Egypt paper stands by Mubarak ‘interview’
  • Egat wants coal plants in Cambodia, Myanmar, Krabi
  • Flight Review: Under $100 on Air Asia from Thailand to Cambodia
  • Egypt's Mubarak talks for 1st time since detention

Categories

  • My note
  • News RSS / Thailand x Cambodia
  • News RSS / Turmoil in Egypt

Archives

  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011

Blogroll

  • daily blog
  • essay & poetry
  • Feel the …
  • Fire
  • Global News
  • Love nature & History
  • Lovely places
  • newblue
  • newwon
  • Rainbow blog
  • Simple blog
  • Talk about
  • Wao
  • Yep

Pages

  • About

RSS CNN.com World RSS

  • Nigerian military: At least 20 insurgents killed in raid
    At least 20 insurgents were killed Friday as Nigeria's military carried out an aerial bombardment of suspected militant Islamist camps in the country's northeast, a Defense Ministry spokesman said. […]
  • Police: Suspects ID'd in Madeleine McCann case
    British police have identified a number of suspects in the disappearance of British girl Madeleine McCann during a 2007 family vacation in Portugal, London's Metropolitan Police said Friday. […]
  • Earthquake reported in eastern Canada
    An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.2 struck eastern Canada on Friday morning, the government said. […]
  • Somalia's struggle with rape
    The Elman Peace and Human Rights Center, the first rape crisis center in Somalia, is part of an effort to halt the sexual violence plaguing the country. […]
  • Police: $1 million in Chopard jewels stolen from hotel
    Jewels worth more than $1 million were stolen from a hotel in Cannes, France, police in the nearby city of Nice said Friday. […]
  • Who wants the 'title' of president?
    CNN's Sara Sidner reports on a Palestinian TV show where the winner gets the title of president. […]
  • Gitmo prisoners being force-fed
    102 detainees are on a hunger strike at Guantanamo Bay and 30 are being force-fed. CNN's Chris Lawrence reports. […]
  • Gitmo prisoners being force-fed
    102 detainees are on a hunger strike at Guantanamo Bay and 30 are being force-fed. CNN's Chris Lawrence reports. […]
  • Politician hurt in kangaroo attack
    An Australian politician suffered gashes to one of his legs when a close encounter with a kangaroo during his morning jog turned violent. […]
  • Pacquiao rises for toughest fight
    Manny Pacquiao is not a god, but that doesn't stop millions of Filipinos worshipping him. […]
  • Amanpour's open letter to girls
    CNN's Christiane Amanpour says all the number crunchers have it right on this one: education equals empowerment. And it's time for girls to power the world. […]
  • Clashes raise tension in Iraq
    Iraqi security forces raided a farm belonging to a prominent Sunni tribal leader Thursday, he and two other tribal leaders said, prompting fears that sectarian tensions could escalate in Iraq's restive al-Anbar province. […]
  • Albino activist fights for equality
    Albinos in Tanzania have been attacked and killed because some people believe their body parts bring good luck. But one albino is fighting back. […]
  • Singapore probes American's death
    Holding a black noose over her head, Singaporean forensics expert Lim Chin-Chin explained Wednesday to a packed courtroom how re-enactments showed that American engineer Shane Todd would have been able to hang himself from a similar black strap attached to his bathroom door. […]
  • Cyclone Mahasen pulls its punch
    Tropical Cyclone Mahasen began to lash the coast of Bangladesh with heavy rain Thursday, bringing the risk of flooding and landslides to densely populated, low-lying communities. […]
  • Troubled youth run 'old skool' bistro
    As a juvenile corrections officer in Southern California, Teresa Goines found it rewarding to work with troubled youth and help them turn their lives around. […]
  • Obama: U.S. won't act alone on Syria
    President Obama met with Turkey's prime minister to talk about ways of handling the raging conflict in Syria, but he said "it's not gonna be something that the United States does by itself." […]
  • Australian politician injured in kangaroo attack
    An Australian politician suffered gashes to one of his legs when a close encounter with a kangaroo during his morning jog turned violent. […]
  • Teen describes being trapped in rubble
    In an extended one-on-one interview, a Bangladeshi teen describes how she spent 17 harrowing days buried underground in pitch-black darkness. "I'd crawl, tire and sleep. I would wake up and crawl again," Reshma said. […]

Ad Links

高級デリヘル 渋谷 デリヘル 青山 デリヘル 六本木 デリヘル 高級デリヘル 東京 新宿 デリヘル 池袋 デリヘル 銀座 デリヘル 高級デリヘル 大阪高級デリヘル 品川 デリヘル 鶯谷 デリヘル 高級デリヘル 高級デリヘル

Tags

Cairo Cambodia crossfire Egypt Mubarak Preah Vihear temple Thailand Turmoil World heritage
29 th Sep

Boundary issue likely to be stalled

Posted by luffoi to News RSS / Thailand x Cambodia

No matter who ends up leading the Thailand-Cambodia Joint Boundary Commission (JBC), the task of demarcating the border between the two countries will never be completed if the Kingdom is unable to de-politicise the issue.

No matter who ends up leading the Thailand-Cambodia Joint Boundary Commission (JBC), the task of demarcating the border between the two countries will never be completed if the Kingdom is unable to de-politicise the issue.

The opposition Democrat Party started campaigning against the reshuffle of the JBC once it learned that Foreign Minister Surapong Towichukchaikul had replaced the previous government’s man, Asda Jayanama, with career diplomat Bandit Sotipalalit.

Asda was made JBC chief in much the same way as Bandit, when Kasit Piromya, foreign minister under the Democrat-led government, had him replace career diplomat and legal expert Vasin Teeravechyan last November. Kasit never explained why the move was made and Vasin never complained about the move being unfair.

While Asda was in charge, the JBC only held one meeting in Indonesia this April and made no significant progress on demarcating the boundary or easing the strained relations with Cambodia.

Now, the Democrats are accusing Surapong of making the changes to please Phnom Penh. On Monday, the foreign minister said he would sue Democrat spokesman Chavanond Intarakomalyasut for defamation – thus kicking off a brand-new political game.

Basically, the key difference between Bandit and Asda is their personalities. Bandit is moderate and soft-spoken, while Asda is a hardliner and speaks his mind. However, both are seasoned diplomats who have served at the Foreign Ministry. It would be very difficult to say who loves Thailand more and very unfair to accuse one or the other of putting a foreign country’s interest ahead of their nation.

The boundary between Thailand and Cambodia was delimited and demarcated more than a century ago, when the neighbouring country was still a French colony. Most of the 800-kilometre boundary is marked with pillars with the exception of areas near the Preah Vihear Temple.

Though time, nature, war and humans have removed these pillars, it is the JBC’s task to find them and, through negotiations, clarify the boundary line. The task is very technical and most of the commission’s members are technicians from both countries. Together they need to fine-tune the understanding of treaties and maps that were agreed upon more than 100 years ago. Both sides need to be flexible and ready to make compromises, otherwise they will never find common ground on where the boundary should be marked.

In the 10 years since it was set up, the JBC has made a great deal of progress and has found quite a few of the boundary pillars. However, the JBC’s task was politicised in 2008 when the yellow-shirt nationalist movement and the Democrat Party started voicing anger against late prime minister Samak Sundaravej’s support for Cambodia’s plan to have the Preah Vihear Temple listed as a World Heritage Site.

In reality, the inscription of the site has nothing to do with the demarcation of the boundary, but the Democrats and the yellow-shirt People’s Alliance for Democracy accused the Samak government of losing the territory adjacent to the temple to Cambodia.

In 1962, the International Court of Justice ruled that the temple was situated on land that came under the sovereignty of Cambodia, but Thailand has been disputing this ruling. In 2008, then-foreign minister Noppadon Pattama was forced to step down after he issued a communiqu

Article source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/new/national/Boundary-issue-likely-to-be-stalled-30166307.html

Tags: Cambodia, crossfire, Preah Vihear temple, Thailand, World heritage Comments
29 th Sep

Tiny peppercorns give Cambodian food a big boost

Posted by luffoi to News RSS / Thailand x Cambodia

Phnom Penh, Cambodia (CNN) – The hunt for heat is part of the lure of many Asian cuisines. China has its addictive, mouth-numbing Sichuan peppercorn. Thailand has the “do I dare” burn of the bird’s eye chili.

In Cambodia, heat comes in the form of a Kampot peppercorn, tiny but bursting with spice and an additional depth that ranges from citrus to nutty.

Grown in the Kampot province in Southern Cambodia, this special pepper reached its hey-day in the mid-20th century, when chefs in Europe prized its unique strength and flavor.

The pepper disappeared off the world stage though in the 1970s, when the destructive Khmer Rouge regime isolated Cambodia from the outside world. Farmers neglected their pepper fields and exports from Cambodia were cut off.

Now the farmers of Kampot are trying to rebuild their industry.

Nguon Lay’s family had grown peppers for four generations and he is now the head of Kampot Pepper Farmers’ Association. He explains why Kampot pepper is different from that of other provinces.

“The location here is good,” he says. “It has clay mixed with sand and the talent of the farmers who have learned from their ancestors since the 13th century.”

Last year, the Government of Cambodia granted Kampot pepper geographical indication (GI) status, the same kind of trade label that goes on products like Champagne or Gorgonzola cheese. The distinction is a first for the country and it prevents peppers produced in other places from being called Kampot Pepper.

Nguon Lay says that his prices have gone up 10 to 20% since the product got GI status.

“After we got geographical indication our product got even more famous and even the European Union is recognizing it,” he says.

His association is already sold out of pepper for the year, with a new harvest expected in February.

Cambodian food is often overshadowed by that of its larger neighbors Thailand and Vietnam. Kampot pepper’s GI designation could help raise the profile of the nation’s cuisine

The peppers feature in many of Cambodia’s most famous dishes.

Hun Li Heng, a chef that teaches cooking classes in Phnom Penh, says the fresh, green peppers, still on the vine, are used in stir fries and signature dishes like Kampot pepper crab. The sun-dried black peppers are ground as a seasoning for beef or added on top of green peppers for some extra bite.

“It has much stronger smell than other peppers,” he says.


If you would like to try Kampot Pepper yourself, an organization called FarmLink distributes it in Europe, Asia and Australia. You can also order from them online, but the shipping charges to the United States are high.

Article source: http://business.blogs.cnn.com/2011/09/29/tiny-peppercorns-give-cambodian-food-a-big-boost/

Tags: Cambodia, crossfire, Preah Vihear temple, Thailand, World heritage Comments
29 th Sep

Egypt convicts Mubarak’s information minister

Posted by luffoi to News RSS / Turmoil in Egypt

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt‘s powerful former information minister was convicted of corruption and sentenced to seven years in prison Wednesday, in the latest conviction of a high-ranking figure of Hosni Mubarak‘s toppled regime.

Anas el-Fiqqi joins a growing list of former regime officials to have been convicted of crimes committed during Mubarak‘s nearly 30-year rule, along with the ex-interior minister, tourism minister and a ruling party insider and steel magnate. Former state television chief Osama el-Sheikh also was sentenced Wednesday to five years in prison in the same case as el-Fiqqi.

Meting out justice to former regime officials has been a driving force behind continued protests and frustration among the groups that led the mass uprising that toppled Mubarak in February. Activists have accused the country’s military rulers of dragging their heels in the prosecution of former Mubarak cronies.

Egypt’s military rulers met one of the key demands, however, last month, putting Mubarak on trial on charges of ordering the use of deadly force against protesters in the 18-day uprising that toppled him. His two sons, businessman Alaa and one-time heir apparent Gamal, also are being tried on corruption charges.

El-Fiqqi was acquitted earlier this year of other charges, including channeling state money to help Mubarak’s party election campaigns.

After the Cairo court announced its verdict Wednesday, the families and supporters of the defendants broke out in chants, scuffled with one another and directed slurs at the judges. “Invalid, Invalid,” the crowd chanted.

Despite making some moves to placate protesters, Egypt’s military rulers have been reluctant to implement reforms that would restrict and purge the country’s much-hated security apparatus of its repressive policies.

A recently circulated video showing a dozen policemen and military officers abusing and giving electric shocks to two detainees, served as a reminder of police practices under Mubarak. Hatred of the police was a key motivating force behind the popular uprising that ousted Mubarak in February.

On Wednesday, Egypt’s military prosecutor said it has launched an inquiry into the video taken in the northern Nile Delta province of Dakahliya.

The video surfaced on social networking sites earlier this week showing the two men being beaten up while they were questioned about the source of guns and rifles seized from them, while officers were laughing and filming them with their cell phones.

When they refused to answer, the detainees are repeatedly electrocuted on their ears and chins.

Article source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-convicts-mubaraks-information-minister-104341073.html

Tags: Cairo, Egypt, Mubarak, Turmoil Comments
29 th Sep

U.S. Presses Egypt to Mend Ties With Israel

Posted by luffoi to News RSS / Turmoil in Egypt

Sept. 28: Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton shakes hands with Egyptian Foreign Affairs Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr during a joint news conference following a bilateral meeting at the State Department in Washington.

WASHINGTON – Amid a chaotic post-revolution period, the United States on Wednesday pressed Egypt’s interim military leadership to strengthen Egypt’s partnership with Israel and stick to scheduled elections later this year, even though a new set of leaders much less friendly to the U.S. and the Jewish state may be the winners.

After a meeting with the Egyptian foreign minister, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton went out of her way to describe the country’s ruling military council as “an institution of stability and continuity,” commending it for adhering to Egypt’s 32-year-old peace agreement with Israel. She called the Camp David Accords “essential for stability and, of course, essential for Egypt’s growth, prosperity and peaceful transition.”

But alongside the praise she expressed some growing concerns with the military’s domestic policies, specifically a decision to extend well into next year the emergency laws that were a mainstay of abuse during Hosni Mubarak’s three-decade rule.

“We hope to see the law lifted sooner than that,” Clinton told reporters. “We think that is an important step on the way to the rule of law, to the kind of system of checks and balances that are important in protecting the rights of the Egyptian people, to create the context for free and democratic elections.”

The American demands on Egypt represent in some ways the twin set of hopes and fears with the movements for greater democracy in the Arab world. The Obama administration has championed those movements but hopes to corral their energy so that political transitions from Tunisia to Yemen don’t slide back into military domination or create a powerful new wave of intolerant populism — as occurred after Iran’s Islamic revolution a little more than three decades ago.

The U.S. also hopes populism unleashed in Cairo and elsewhere does not spell the end of Arab alliances with Israel, which while always shallow and filled with suspicion were still a foundation of U.S. policy in the Middle East. With the fall of U.S.-backed autocrats such as Egypt’s Mubarak, however, the U.S. may have less to offer Arab governments in return for their toleration of Israel.

Clinton promised Egypt the Obama administration’s full support for a new beginning. She said the administration was aiming to get congressional support for $1 billion in debt relief for Egypt, so people “can invest that money into new projects that create jobs and give them a better standard of living.” She rejected the call from some in Congress for new conditions on the $1.5 billion in annual U.S. aid to Egypt. And she spoke of helping to create a network of community colleges in Egypt to provide training for new employment opportunities.

With Egypt, the United States is trying to lay the foundation for renewed relations with a future government that will be more democratic if less amenable to U.S. interests. Washington hopes to persuade Egypt’s leaders to salvage ties with Israel and maintain counterterrorism and diplomatic efforts that may be deemed vital for American national security but not necessarily supported by the Egyptian people.

The fraying of relations with Israel has especially concerned the United States, which has been lobbying much of the world in recent weeks against a Palestinian bid for recognition as a state and U.N. membership. Egypt, which under Mubarak often played a key mediation role between the two sides, has come out determinedly for the Palestinian bid over fierce Israeli opposition.

In his opening remarks, Amr told reporters that Mideast peace talks needed to start as soon as possible “with clear terms of reference and with a clearly defined timeline,” pointing the finger specifically at Israel for its approval Tuesday of 1,100 Jewish housing units in disputed east Jerusalem.

“Israeli illegal settlement activities continue to be an impediment in the road for peace, and we would like to see them stopped,” he said.

Clinton praised Egypt’s leaders for helping defuse tensions with Israel after protesters recently stormed the Israeli Embassy in Cairo, and acknowledged the key role it expected the country to play in forging a two-state peace agreement after six decades of conflict.

“Egypt’s leadership in the Arab world and in the region, and beyond, is key to regional progress,” Clinton said. She cited the Israeli-Egyptian model of security cooperation as an example for an accord with the Palestinians.

Clinton reiterated her “very strong support for Egypt’s ongoing democratic transition.”

But with Egyptian elections around the corner, Washington’s relations with Egypt will likely become more difficult. At stake is American influence in a crucial geopolitical space linking North Africa to the Arabian Peninsula, and how the U.S. projects power in a part of the world where Al Qaeda and other Islamist extremists still pose a threat to the United States and where the Israeli-Palestinian conflict continues to hamper American relations with Arab countries

Among American officials, the early hopes of a triumph for democracy and rule of law after Mubarak’s February ouster, alongside a continuum of U.S.-Egyptian cooperation, have slipped somewhat amid increasingly worrying signs: the apparent chaos in the Israeli embassy storming, the arrest of demonstrators and bloggers, the extension of the Mubarak-era emergency law empowering authorities to detain people without charge and stamp out strikes and demonstrations.

The vote for Egypt’s legislative People’s Assembly starts Nov. 28 and the less powerful Shura Council on Jan. 29, with both parliamentary houses to begin their session in March. And well-organized Islamist parties could make significant gains, with the hardline Muslim Brotherhood likely to parlay any new power into a far tougher line on cooperation with the United States and Israel.

While any new government would likely honor the 1979 accords with Israel, the result may be one closer to cold peace than regional partnership. Neither the remnants of the old regime nor youth-driven secular groups are keen to assume the banner of Mubarak’s unpopular legacy or ignore the voices on the streets which mobilized so forcefully against Mubarak.

Clinton conceded that starting a democracy from fresh is no easy task, and one fraught with pitfalls. “We’re well aware, having been working at our own democracy for over 230 years, that this takes time,” she said. “This takes persistence and patience, and it’s often hard to have the latter in a time when there’s so much pent-up demand and hope for a better future.”

The U.S. can’t push too hard right now against the fragile military council guiding the transition. For all its failings, the administration sees it as the best hope for a stable transition. A collapse in the reform process or a retrenchment away from free and fair elections, and toward a military junta, would provide a devastating example for a Middle East that is still largely in revolt.

With Syrian demonstrators desperately pressing for the end of Bashar Assad’s regime, Yemen on the brink of an all-out civil war and Libya’s opposition authorities seeking to destroy Muammar Qaddafi’s remaining resistance, the U.S. is keen to hold up a successful democratic transition that provides an example to the region and safeguards American interests. Having both won’t be easy.

Article source: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/09/28/us-presses-egypt-to-mend-ties-with-israel/

Tags: Cairo, Egypt, Mubarak, Turmoil Comments
27 th Sep

Floods kill 158 in Thailand, 61 in Cambodia

Posted by luffoi to News RSS / Thailand x Cambodia

BANGKOK (Reuters) – The death toll from flooding in Thailand since mid-July has risen to 158, while 61 people have died in neighbouring Cambodia in the past two weeks, authorities in the two countries said on Monday.

More than 2 million acres of farmland in Thailand are now under water, an area 11 times the size of Singapore.

“Twenty-three provinces in the lower north and central Thailand are under water and nearly 2 million people have been affected by severe floods and heavy rain,” Thailand’s Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said.

Flooding has also affected the capital, Bangkok, which sits only two metres above sea level. The Chao Phraya river has overflowed into roads in some areas, although the authorities have reinforced its banks to prevent serious flooding.

The Meteorological Department warned 39 provinces, mostly in central and northeast Thailand, to be ready for possible flooding and heavy rain in the coming week.

Thailand’s main rice crop of the year is normally harvested from October. According to media reports, some farmers have started harvesting early to try to get their crop in before floods hit, which could result in lower yields.

Some may be unable to harvest properly because fields are inundated.

Thailand is the world’s biggest rice exporter. It is forecast to produce 25.1 million tonnes of unmilled rice in the main crop, up from 24 million last year.

Its monsoon season usually runs from August to October.

After a teleconference with governors in flood-hit areas, Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said 40 billion baht ($1.2 billion) was expected to be used in long-term projects for flood prevention, but she gave no detail of the projects.

In Cambodia, Keo Vy, deputy information director of the National Disaster Management Committee (NDMC), said the death toll in provinces along the Mekong River and Tonle Lake was likely to rise once provincial authorities submitted new reports.

“The worry now is about a lack of food, and the health of people and animals,” Keo Vy said, adding that 163,000 hectares (407,000 acres) of rice paddies and 63,000 homes were under water.

NDMC Vice-President Nhim Vanda said flooding in August had already damaged rice paddies around the country.

“The damage is now double,” Nhim Vanda said. “We are worried that the water will go down slowly, which will destroy rice that is already planted.”

Cambodia produces around 7 million tonnes of unmilled rice a year at the moment. Very little of it is directly exported. A great deal goes over the border to Vietnam to be milled and re-exported.

(Reporting by Jutarat Skulpichetrat in Bangkok and Prak Chan Thul in Cambodia; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Article source: http://ph.news.yahoo.com/floods-kill-158-thailand-61-cambodia-065646747.html

Tags: Cambodia, crossfire, Preah Vihear temple, Thailand, World heritage Comments
next page

Copyright 2008 LUFFOI.COM. Designed by Diamonds Designers. Powered by WordPress.

Posts RSS Comments RSS