Hi Bro!,
 
Now, you see Chao Meanop dream had come true. Do you remember over 20 years 
ago?  Automatic door openers, security alarm with your finger print doesn’t 
exist, but it does in TV and Movie shows, but now the dream came to reality.
 
One dream in Cambodia I don’t want it to existing or can come to play in 
Khmer’s dream is Mon Ar-Kum Bang Rouhn Dey.  “Sort Khmer Land”. This is a scary 
part. 
 
Old folks are using it now.


--- On Tue, 10/20/09, Khoar Chev <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Khoar Chev <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: 'Talk doesn't cook rice' or protect rights
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 3:21 PM







Ta Prum,
Thanks for posting this good commentaire.
***** Just for your humor only ******
Heh, do you remember the old folk tale? Chao Meanop got his automatic rice 
cooking pot from the giant, everytime he needs rice he just said " Cook " and 
he will get rice cooked for him. Today we have Rice-Omatic cooker that operated 
by voice command.
 
Have a Nice day bro!
KC 
Khoar Chev ( Made in Cambodia )

--- On Tue, 10/20/09, Ta Prum <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Ta Prum <[email protected]>
Subject: 'Talk doesn't cook rice' or protect rights
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, 2:25 PM














PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
October 21, 2009 

'Talk doesn't cook rice' or protect rights

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D. 

The Chinese say, "Talk doesn't cook rice"; the Africans, "When deeds speak,
words are nothing"; and an Arab proverb says, "A promise is a cloud;
fulfillment is rain."

There were a lot of words spoken and written 18 years ago today in Paris:
Representatives of 19 governments, including that of Cambodia, adopted
the "Agreement on a Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia
Conflict," endowed with "special measures to assure protection of human
rights, and the non-return to the policies and practices of the past."

Article 15 of the Agreement reads, "All persons in Cambodia ... shall enjoy the
rights and freedoms embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights and other relevant international human rights instruments."

"To this end," the article continues, "Cambodia undertakes to ensure
respect for and observance of human rights and fundamental freedoms in
Cambodia ...," and the other 18 signatory governments "undertake to
promote and encourage respect for and observance of human rights and
fundamental freedoms in Cambodia ... in order, in particular, to
prevent the recurrence of human rights abuses."

In Article 17, the United Nations Commission on Human Rights is tasked
with continued monitoring of the human rights situation in Cambodia,
and "the appointment of a Special Rapporteur" to report his findings
annually to the Commission and the General Assembly.

Two days later, on Oct 23, 1991, the participatory states adopted the
"Final Act of the Paris Conference on Cambodia," and declared to
"commit themselves to promote and encourage respect for and observance
of human rights and fundamental freedoms in Cambodia." The 1991 Paris
Peace Accords promised Cambodia and her people high hopes for the
future.

Today, 18 years after the Paris Accords were signed, Special Rapporteur, Surya
Subedi, a Nepalese professor of international law at the University of
Leeds, United Kingdom, submitted his report to the Human Rights
Council, as required by the Council resolution 9/15, raising concerns
over, among other issues, the need for a "balance between economic
development and human rights protection"; the problem of a "disconnect"
between "people's rights to own land ... (and) widespread land grabbing
and alienation"; a "series of defamation and disinformation charges
filed by or on behalf of the Government against members of opposition
parties and other critics of public policies or practices."

Subedi writes that to allow this "disturbing trend ... to continue, could
seriously undermine the exercise of the constitutional right to freedom
of expression, which is essential to effective media freedom,
pluralism, diversity and democratic debate."

Subedi's predecessor, Oxford and Harvard-educated Yash Ghai, professor of public
law at the University of Hong Kong, appointed as U.N. Special
Representative in September 2006, reported to the U.N. Human Rights
Council his regret that Cambodians' "frequent response" to "concerns"
by special representatives and U.N. bodies, "has been evasion or
accusation, scapegoating and intimidation."

Ghai wrote of "the moral and legal responsibility of the international
community and its members to support Cambodia in its quest to
strengthen human rights and democratic and accountable institutions."

He recommended, "the international community, bound by obligations in the
Paris peace agreements, should do all it can to persuade and press the
(Cambodian) Government to respect its human rights commitments under
the agreements, international human rights treaties and the
Constitution of Cambodia."

"The (Cambodian) Government on its part must declare unequivocally to the
international community and to the people of Cambodia its obligations,
legal and moral, to stop the abuse of rights and to respect the
independence of the judiciary and prosecutorial authorities."

Ghai was refused cooperation, personally insulted, and forced to resign in
September 2008, after a bad relationship with the Hun Sen regime,
which, by virtue of Article 15 of the Paris Accords, agreed to
undertake "to ensure respect for and observance of human rights and
fundamental freedoms in Cambodia ..."

And, today, barely seven months after his appointment by the Council,
Subedi, who reminded in his report that the human rights situation in
Cambodia has been "the subject of extensive analysis" by four former
special representatives, by treaty organs, and the Committee on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, has, like his predecessor, become
a subject of criticism of the ruling regime.

As quoted in the Phnom Penh Post, a lawmaker of Sen's Cambodian People's
Party, accused Subedi of "bias" against the Sen government: "Based on
my observations, Mr. Subedi is not different from Yash Ghai" -- a
charge Subedi rejected.

Subedi's report concluded, "the promotion and protection of human rights in
Cambodia depends on making real and substantial progress in
strengthening the rule of law, creating a clearer separation of power
between the three main branches of the Government, protecting the
independence of the judiciary, including that of the Extraordinary
Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (Khmer Rouge Tribunal), and
addressing issues such as conflicts over land, impunity and control of
corruption."

In the final analysis, the 1991 Paris Accords, and the Cambodian
Constitution it established, remain words not applied, and intentions
not fulfilled, by both Cambodia and the international community, at the
expense of the Cambodian people.

As the first patriarch of the Chinese Zen, Bodhidharma, says, "All know
the way; few actually walk it," and the French Renaissance writer
Michel de Montaigne, "Saying is one thing, doing another."

"You may have a heart a gold -- but so does a hard-boiled egg," a saying goes.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, where
he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at [email protected].

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/200910210300/OPINION02/910210325






      
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