Singapore casts net wide for Cup entrants

Singapore soccer chiefs have invited teams from Australia, Hong Kong, Thailand and Cambodia to compete in this year’s Singapore Cup.

South Melbourne, Hong Kong’s Kitchee SC, 2009 runners-up Bangkok Glass and Cambodia’s Phnom Penh Crown will join 12 S.League clubs in Saturday’s draw for the event which kicks off on May 24.

The 2010 tournament is the 13th edition of the Singapore Cup and the champions are rewarded with a place in the regional AFC Cup.

Singapore’s Geylang United won last year’s final 1-0.

(Editing by John O’Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Singapore casts net wide for Cup entrants

Singapore soccer chiefs have invited teams from Australia, Hong Kong, Thailand and Cambodia to compete in this year’s Singapore Cup.

South Melbourne, Hong Kong’s Kitchee SC, 2009 runners-up Bangkok Glass and Cambodia’s Phnom Penh Crown will join 12 S.League clubs in Saturday’s draw for the event which kicks off on May 24.

The 2010 tournament is the 13th edition of the Singapore Cup and the champions are rewarded with a place in the regional AFC Cup.

Singapore’s Geylang United won last year’s final 1-0.

(Editing by John O’Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Myanmar tells ASEAN, EU not to interfere in Suu Kyi trial

Phnom Penh – Myanmar’s foreign minister Thursday warned a meeting of European and South-East Asian leaders in Cambodia not to interfere in the trial of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, currently under way in Yangon.

In his opening address to a meeting of European Union and Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) foreign ministers in Phnom Penh, Nyan Win said Suu Kyi’s trial was an internal legal matter and “international interference” threatened Myanmar’s sovereignty.

“We understand that the international community has taken a great amount of interest in this trial, but in doing so it has overlooked the important issue of non-interference,” he said. “This is an internal legal issue and it is not a human rights issue.”

Nyan Win said last week’s statement by the Thailand-chaired ASEAN Secretariat, which criticized Myanmar’s actions, was an act of interference and threatened the military-ruled country’s democratization efforts.

“The case of one person should not overshadow the process of democratization in Myanmar,” he said. “This process in now entering its most important stage.”

Wednesday marked the sixth anniversary of Suu Kyi’s arrest on charges of undermining national security and the beginning of her most recent detention in her home-cum-prison.

Suu Kyi is currently on trial in Yangon for allegedly violating the terms of her detention by allowing US national John William Yettaw to swim to her lakeside compound on May 3 and stay there until May 6.

No formal discussions on the trial have been scheduled for the two-day meeting in Phnom Penh, but Cambodian Foreign Ministry officials said earlier this week that some delegates were likely to urge Myanmar to release Suu Kyi.

Dozens of protestors gathered outside the Myanmar embassy in Phnom Penh Wednesday and urged ASEAN leaders to expel Myanmar from the regional alliance unless it immediately released all political prisoners.(dpa)

Son accidentally kills father while trying to poison wife’s lover

Phnom Penh – A Cambodian man accidentally killed his father while trying to poison his wife’s lover with a tainted bottle of alcohol, national media reported Thursday.

Police said Chhouy Chhim gave the poisoned alcohol as a gift to Chan Sarith, who he accused of having an affair with his wife, the Cambodia Daily reported.

But Chan Sarith shared the bottle with Chhouy Chhim’s father, who later died in hospital.

Three other men were hospitalized after tasting the deadly drink.

Police said Chhouy Chhim was being held for questioning and his wife planned to file for divorce. (dpa)

Protesters call for Suu Kyi’s release as EU-ASEAN meeting starts

Phnom Penh – Dozens of rights activist gathered outside the Myanmar embassy in Cambodia on Wednesday to demand the release of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi as a meeting of European and South-East Asian foreign ministers began in Phnom Penh.

The protesters urged the ministers to expel Myanmar from the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) unless Suu Kyi and other political prisoners were released immediately.

Sok Sam Oeun, chairman of the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee, said the 17th Annual EU-ASEAN meeting presented an opportunity for European and South-East Asian leaders to use political and economic leverage against Myanmar.

“We support the European Union and the Thai government, the ASEAN secretariat, in their expression of grave concern for the Myanmar Government’s actions,” he said. “But there needs to be stronger action taken and Myanmar needs to be expelled from the EU.”

The protest came on the sixth anniversary of Suu Kyi’s arrest on charges of threatening national security and the beginning of her detention in her home-cum-prison.

She is currently facing trial in Yangon for allegedly violating the terms of her detention by allowing US national John William Yettaw to swim to her lakeside compound on May 3 and stay there until May 6.

No formal discussions on the trial have been scheduled for the two-day meeting in Phnom Penh, but Cambodian Foreign Ministry officials said earlier this week that some delegates were likely to urge Myanmar to release Suu Kyi.

Foreign ministers from 40 countries held private talks Wednesday and will be welcomed by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen at an opening ceremony Thursday. (dpa)

‘Princess Eugenie rescued from rock pelting bandits by bodyguards’

London, May 4 (ANI): British Princess Eugenie was rescued by her two bodyguards who fought against a group of bandits trying to thug her pal’s purse in Cambodia, according to reports.

Queen Elizabeth’s granddaughter, who has been spending her gap year travelling the world with friends, had allegedly been walking at night in Phnom Penh when one thief tried to snatch away her friend’s purse.

The royal protection officers were said to have rugby-tackled a bandit as he tried to escape with the purse and while doing so were reportedly being hit with rocks by another robber.

The brave guards were then claimed to have whisked the 19-year-old to safety, according to a Buckingham Palace source, who showered praises on the SO14 Special Branch officers.

“They feared the incident was escalating out of control and took the decision to focus on the safety of their principal,” the Sun quoted the source as saying.

Eugenie, daughter of Prince Andrew and Fergie and sixth in line to the throne, has been to India, South America, Australia, South Africa and Thailand during her ongoing gap year. (ANI)

Cambodia installs fever scanners at airport to stem swine flu

Phnom Penh – Cambodian authorities Tuesday installed equipment to scan passengers for fever at Phnom Penh’s international airport to stem the spread of swine flu. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Health Ministry said there were no reported cases of the potentially deadly viral infection in the country.

Heath Ministry workers installed thermal imaging equipment Tuesday morning but did not plan to begin using them until officials decided whether to screen all passengers or only those who had recently traveled to affected areas, airport police commander Chor Kimly said.

“We will begin scanning passengers as soon as we receive the orders from the ministry,” he said.

Chor Kimly said scanners were also installed at Siem Reap international airport, where thousands of international tourists arrive every week en route to Cambodia’s famous Angkor Wat temple site.

Health authorities have used the same equipment during regional outbreaks of avian flu, which has killed seven Cambodians since 2003.

A WHO and Heath Ministry joint statement said Cambodia had a “pandemic response plan” and was equipped to manage a swine flu outbreak.

“Cambodia has increased its surveillance for unusual respiratory illnesses in hospitals, health centres and airports,” the statement said. “Cambodia has prepared stockpiles of various resources, including medication to treat viral infections, and has access to additional regional supplies if required.”

There are no direct commercial air routes to Cambodia from Mexico, the United States, Spain or any other swine-flu affected countries, but dozens of flights arrive daily from Thailand, Vietnam, China, South Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan and Singapore.(dpa)

Khmer Rouge torture chief says he never wanted to run prison

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Khmer Rouge torture chief says he never wanted to run prisonPhnom Penh – The Khmer Rouge’s former chief torturer told Cambodia’s UN-backed genocide tribunal Monday he never wanted to become the warden of a notorious prison where more than 15,000 people were sent to be murdered, saying he had hoped to be a teacher after the ultra-Maoist group came to power in 1975.

Kang Guek Eav, known by his revolutionary name Duch, was a mathematics teacher before joining Pol Pot’s Communist Party of Cambodia (CPK) in the early 1960s and said he had “sacrificed everything,” including his job and salary, for the revolution.

“The only thing I loved in life was teaching,” he said. “I wished that when the revolution was over I would be able to teach again.”

In the tribunal’s first trial, Duch, 66, faces charges of crimes against humanity, torture, premeditated murder and breeches of the Geneva Conventions, allegedly committed while he headed the notorious Tuol Sleng torture prison in Phnom Penh.

The born-again Christian last week begged the families of victims and the handful of prison survivors to forgive him for crimes he committed at the school-turned-torture facility.

It was the first time any Khmer Rouge leader or apparatchik had made such an apology.

As the trial entered its second week Monday, judges questioned Duch about his time in the pre-revolutionary CPK and his involvement in the establishment of M-13 – a centre the Khmer Rouge ran during its rebellion against the US-backed military regime from 1971 to
1975.

Duch displayed a sharp memory for dates and names, recalling the exact dates on which he joined the CPK, met various Khmer Rouge members and when he was arrested and detained during the rule of former king and independence leader Norodom Sihanouk.

He said he was sentenced to 20 years prison for sedition in 1968 but was released after General Lon Nol led a coup against the Sihanouk in 1970.

“Lon Nol released political prisoners to show the world that Sihanouk was vicious,” he said. “If Richard Nixon did let Lon Nol start the coup and Sihanouk had not become aligned with the Khmer Rouge, then the Khmer Rouge would never have succeeded.”

Duch is one of five former leaders facing trial for their roles in the deaths of up to 2 million people through execution, starvation or overwork when the group sought to transform modern Cambodian society into an agrarian utopia, erase history and start again at “year zero” during its 1975-1979 reign.

His trial resumed as United Nations legal officials met with the Cambodian government to discuss an investigation into alleged corruption at the hybrid court, which has been riddled with controversy since it was established in 2006.

Peter Taksoe-Jensen, UN Assistant Secretary for Legal Affairs, and Deputy Prime Minister Sok An have pledged after previous discussions to conduct simultaneous investigations into allegations that Cambodian staff at the court were forced to pay kickbacks to their superiors.

The court has also faced allegations of government interference and disagreement between domestic and international prosecutors over plans to extend the investigation and arrest more former leaders.

Prime Minister Hun Sen said last week that arresting more detainees would put the country at risk of civil war. He said he would rather see the court fail than let the country return to conflict.

The court’s 500-seat public gallery was about half full Monday, but the national TV network suspended its live broadcast of the court, which had run throughout the previous week’s sessions

Cambodian, Thai soldiers exchange fire at border

Phnom Penh/Bangkok, April 3 (DPA) Cambodian and Thai soldiers exchanged gunfire Friday morning at a disputed border area where a fatal skirmish between the two South East Asian neighbours erupted last year, officials from both countries confirmed.

No casualties were reported in the clash at the 11th-century Preah Vihear temple, Cambodian government spokesman Phay Siphan said.

He said about a dozen Thai troops crossed the border about 7.15 a.m. and were immediately confronted by Cambodian soldiers.

However, Thai Army spokeswoman Colonel Sirichan Ngathong said the brief skirmish started after a team of Thai investigating soldiers went to the disputed area to find out how a Thai soldier had earlier stepped on a landmine and been badly injured.

When the soldiers where confronted by Cambodian troops the two sides at first talked but the Cambodian side fired shots that triggered an exchange of fire lasting perhaps 10 minutes, she said.

No Thai troops were hurt in the clash. Local regional commanders will meet later Friday with their Cambodian counterparts somewhere nearby to cool things down, Sirichan added.

The firefight came a day after a Thai soldier was badly injured by a landmine near the site, which both countries claim falls within their territory.

Thailand and Cambodia nearly came to blows over the Preah Vihear temple in July, shortly after UNESCO named the ancient Hindu temple a World Heritage Site despite Thai objections. Both countries have kept a troop presence at in the area.

The temple, the object of disputed claims between Thailand and Cambodia since the 1950s, was granted to Cambodia by a ruling of the International Court of Justice in 1962.

But land adjacent to the temple compound, including its main entrance on the Thai side, has been claimed by both countries.

Korean commits suicide after gambling away fortune in Cambodia

Korean commits suicide after gambling away fortune in CambodiaPhnom Penh – A South Korean man committed suicide in a Cambodian hotel after gambling away his fortune in the country’s casinos, media reports said Friday.

Police found Chae Geong Seok’s body hanging in his Phnom Penh hotel room Thursday with a suicide note explaining to his family that his fortune was gone, The Phnom Penh Post said.

The man’s body was taken to the city’s Calmette Hospital to be collected by his family. (dpa)