_http://www.nationmultimedia.com/option/print.php?newsid=30116906_ 
(http://www.nationmultimedia.com/option/print.php?newsid=30116906) 
 
        
Business       
____________________________________
   
Samart builds Cambodian empire without  Thaksin's help

Published on November 19, 2009 

While  rumours fly that Samart's ties with ousted prime minister Thaksin  
Shinawatra and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen are close enough to  fake the 
arrest of its employee, an investigation by The Nation  tells a different 
story.
Samart embarked on expansion into the neighbouring country  through 
Charoenrath Vilailuck's personal connection to Cambodian  
politician-cum-businessman Sun Chanthol. 
Chanthol, a Harvard University graduate, was known for his  business 
smarts. He was the public-works and transport minister  until last year.  
Charoenrath is the older brother of Watchai, CEO of Samart.  
Through the connection with Charoenrath, Cambodia handed the  company a 
concession for the nascent mobile-phone market, and  Cambodia Samart 
Communications was born in 1992.  
The following year, Cambodia Shinawatra was set up as a  subsidiary of Shin 
Satellite to penetrate the mobile-phone market in  the neighbouring 
country.  
Telecom insiders recall Chanthol was a close aide to Prince  Norodom 
Ranariddh, who was prime minister before Hun Sen took power.   
"The connection led to the air-traffic-control concession going  to Samart 
in 2001," a source said. "Samart indeed entered the  country before 
Thaksin."  
In that year, Cambodia Air Traffic Services (CATS) was formed to  run the 
22-year concession. Thaksin was present at the ceremony when  Cambodia 
extended the concession from 15 years to 22.  
Back then, Shin Corp, Thaksin's family business, faced troubles  in 
expanding there when the mobile-phone concession was shortened.  
>From CATS, Samart moved to building a power plant to support the  Siam 
Cement Group's new plant there.  
The Vilailuck family also won a 99-year concession to open a  museum in 
Siem Reap, but it has performed badly financially, because  visitors tend to 
flock to a South Korean museum nearby.  
This explains why Watchai was in the hot seat and cried for help  when his 
business was tampered with by the Cambodian government.  Without any 
political involvement now, he is seeking to further  distance Samart from 
politics. 
 
 
____________________________________
Privacy Policy © 2006 Nation Multimedia Group
 (http://truehits.net/stat.php?login=nation)  

November 19, 2009 01:37 am (Thai local  time)
_www.nationmultimedia.com_ (http://www.nationmultimedia.com/)   

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org

Reply via email to