Friday, September 30, 2011

BATTAMBANG TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS IN PCHUM BEN DOWN ON LAST YEAR


Although official statistics have not yet available, this year’s traffic accidents and fatalities appear “less serious and smaller in number than last year’s”,  said Him Yan, Director of the Public Order Department at Ministry of Interior.

In Battambang Province, traffic police reported 10 accidents resulting in 2 deaths and 34 injuries during the 15 days between September 13 and 27. That was a decrease, on the 12 accidents and 9 deaths experienced during the same period last year.

Last year, during Pchum Ben nationwide there were 99 traffic accidents, which left 25 dead and 239 injured.

 

BATTAMBANG THOUGHT FOR THE DAY


Wednesday, September 28, 2011

BATTAMBANG's BAMBU HOTEL HAS THE BEST SEATS FOR AUSSIE FOOTBALL GRAND FINAL


The Australian Rules Football, Grand Final takes place this Saturday 1st October between:
 
Collingwood and Geelong.

Pre match entertainment starts at 10.00

Kick off is at 11.30 Battambang time. 
For those interested in watching Bambu Hotel will be showing the game live via a projector in the dining room starting with the build up from 10am.

Breakfast and/or lunch is available and the bar will of course be open. All are very welcome.
Bambu Hotel is located on KO Road. To get there take the road along to East side of the River to the King Hotel follow the street beside the hotel a couple of hundred metres and you will find Bambu on your left.

Use the link below to contact Bambu Hotel

http://www.bambuhotel.com/



Tuesday, September 27, 2011

BATTAMBANG CELEBRATES PCHUM BEN


Pchum Ben or Ancestors’ Day that takes places during the lunar month of Pot-bot, is a Cambodian Buddhist and Brahmanism festival where people pay respect to the spirits of their ancestors and deceased relatives.

It is probably the most important festival in Cambodia and anyone who can, returns to their place of birth to be with family. As a result, schools, government offices and many business closed for several days.

Even though it is called Ancestors’ Day, it runs for three days and there is a lead up of fifteen days where people follow the custom of feeding the ancestors. It is believed that the dead wander the world during this period and the offering of food is meant to make their passage more comfortable.

On the main day Monks chant the Mantras in Pali  language throughout the night as prelude to the gates of hell opening, an event that is presumed to occur once a year, and is linked to the cosmology of King Yama originating in the Pali Canon. During the period of the gates of hell being opened, ghosts of the dead are presumed to be especially active, and thus food-offerings are made to benefit them, some of these ghosts have the opportunity to end their period of purgation, whereas others are imagined to leave hell temporarily, to then return to endure more suffering Relatives who are not in hell (who are in heaven or otherwise reincarnated) are also believed to benefit from the ceremonies.

In temples adhering to canonical protocol, the offering of food itself is made from the laypeople to the (living) Buddhist monks, thus generating "merit" that indirectly benefits the dead; however, in many temples, this is either accompanied by or followed by food offerings that are believed to directly transfer from the living to the dead, such as rice-balls thrown through the air, or rice thrown into an empty field. Anthropologist Satoru Kobayashi observed that these two models of merit-offering to the dead are in competition in rural Cambodia, with some temples preferring the greater canonicity of the former model, and others embracing the popular (if unorthodox) assumption that mortals can "feed" ghosts with physical food.

Pchum Ben is considered unique to Cambodia although similar festivals are found in Sri Lanka.

Interesting fact: All Souls Day that is universally celebrated on November 2, but in Cambodia, Catholic communities celebrate it is during the traditional Pchum Ben.

Source: Wikipedia

Above: packing food for Pchum Ben




Monday, September 26, 2011

BATTAMBANG's RIVERSIDE BALCONY BAR

One of my favourite things to do in Battambang is to head to the Riverside Balcony Bar at around four o’clock on a Sunday afternoon, order a Gordon’s and Tonic, and a plate of very tasty, roasted cashews then sit back and take in the view.

Occupying the upper floor of a large traditional house and nestled in the tree tops beside the Stung Sangker River, it is the ideal spot to watch the sun go down. You can do so from a stool at the bar a restaurant table, a corner sitting area or a decadent day bed.

The service is relaxed and friendly and you will sometimes find the owner behind the bar late of an evening. He has lived here for a long time and is great to have a yarn with.

The food and drinks menu caters for all tastes. For me, that means my occasional fix of Western food. I recently dined there with a friend and we thoroughly enjoyed a steak with pepper sauce, vegetables and scrumptious roast potatoes, accompanied by a very agreeable bottle of red.

Where?:               Street No 1 at the Southern end of town.

When?                 Open from 4.00pm (Closed om Mondays).










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Sunday, September 25, 2011

BATTAMBANG'S GOT TALENT!!!

As  you will see from the photo's below, the opening night of MAKE MAEK, Battambang's newest art space was a roaring success.

A large crowd turned out to view the works of ten Cambodian and two international artists. They were treated to singing, acrobatics break dancing, juggling and a witnessed the antics of some very funny clowns.

Most importantly, some monks performed a blessing ceremony.

Show your support for this local initiative by visiting the gallery which is located in Rue 2 1/2.



IMAGES: Make Maek

Friday, September 23, 2011

BATTAMBANG'S NEW ART SPACE




What?                Join the opening party of Battambang's Make MAEK art space..


Where?              Street 2.5 Battambang



When?               Saturday 24th September 2011 from 5.00 to 7.00 in the evening.

Contemporary art in Cambodia takes off with this launch of a Khmer-founded and run gallery space!

exhibition >>> live music >>> snax (with delicious Khmer treats),

The show in the gallery is 'JURNG MAEK // HORIZONS', a group exhibition of local and international artists.

LOCAL ARTISTS:
Sou Souphy
Poy Chhunly
Lon Lao
Tor Vutha
Phin Sophorn
Mao Soviet
Kchao Touch
Van Chovorn
Ben Thynal
Thang Sothea (Phnom Penh)

INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS:
André Vandam
Kat Eng

Sunday, September 18, 2011

BATTAMBANG TRAVELLER BLOG READERS

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Our followers come from the following countries, listed in order of page views:

Cambodia

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Saturday, September 17, 2011

BATTAMBANG QUIZ NIGHT


What?            Music Quiz Night.

When?           Sunday 18th September starting at 7.00 pm

Where?          Street 2.5 one block west of the White Rose    


Win?               You could win a giraffe of beer and crepes

Map?              http://www.visitbattambang.com/2011/02/21/map_of_battambang/




Tuesday, September 13, 2011

BATTAMBANG FLOODS

Battambang has been receiving a great deal of rain of late and today, the river appears ready to break its banks.

Many areas, including the Central Business District, are affected by low level flooding.

If you have photos of the floods please email them to bbnewscam@gmail.com and they will be published.

( These photos were taken by Visal  Pheoung)





Friday, September 9, 2011

BATTAMBANG ORPHANAGE IN THE NEWS AGAIN

CAMBODIAN GOVERNMENT MOVES TO REGULATE ORPHANAGES.

The following story is from the Phnom Penh Post

The government would today take a necessary step towards regulating services offered to orphans and vulnerable children by its agencies, community groups and hundreds of national and international NGOs that raise funds  to help Cambodian children, child welfare experts said yesterday.

The move comes amid revelations that five of the more than 30 young people  dismissed from an Australian-funded orphanage in Battambang in August have vanished, and that the orphanage’s staff  lack the training required to protect children.

The aim of the new national standards set to be unveiled today was to shift from a model of short-term support “based on donor requirements and good intentions” to a long-term approach that assisted vulnerable children as well as their families, a statement from the Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation explained.

Of critical importance was that the new standards – drafted during a year-long consultative process between government officials and NGOs – aimed to prevent the separation of families by supporting vulnerable households rather than removing children from them, the ministry said.

Unicef Cambodia representative Richard Bridle praised the move as “an important step forward towards progressive realisation of children's rights in Cambodia”.

Earlier this year, Unicef raised concern about the surge in the number of orphanages in Cambodia,  saying it had doubled over the past six years to 269.

Phal Vandy, a program manager at Save the Child-ren, said: “The standards will be an important tool to create an environment for effective communication and collaboration among stakeholders so that the care, support and protection of [orphans and vulnerable children] and their families can be standardised.’’

For Heng Chhailen, however, the standards have arrived too late. The 20-year-old was among those dismissed from the Australian-funded Hope for Cambodian Children orphanage last month.

Children and youths had previously staged a protest, saying they were not getting enough food and the orphanage’s dir-ector was corrupt.

Heng Chhailen said he had nowhere to go and was now living in a pagoda in Battambang. He said he feared for his security because of alleged harassment by orphanage dir-ector Dy Samrach.

The orphanage remains open, despite an inspection last month that found that it had failed to meet the Minimum Standards on Alternative Care for Children set by the Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation.

The inspection, conducted from August 18 to 20, found  the orphanage had no social workers trained in child welfare. It also found that the orphanage did not have a single staff member trained in providing care to HIV-positive children, according an inspection report read by the Post.

Hope for Cambodian Children Foundation, the Australian organisation that funds the orphanage, claims that it helps Cambodian AIDS  orph-ans because their society shuns them.

In its fund-raising activities at Australian schools, it claims there is an AIDS “pandemic” in Cambodia, but  only 26 of the more than 100 children at the facility are parentless, according to the inspection report.

Only 13 of the children were HIV-positive, Dy Samrach admitted last month.

The foundation also claims that it works closely with United Nations agencies.

The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights investigated the orphanage last month, telling the Post it “urged management to consider the claims of the [protesting] children carefully”.

Despite the UN’s urging, more than 30 youths were dismissed from the orphanage following the protest.

They  are aged from 16 to 23, and five of them have “vanished”, according to the inspection report, which  also raises concerns about the death of a disabled child at the orphanage last year.

Heng Chhailen said the four-year-old girl had been ill for several days before staff took her to a hospital, where she died.

Unicef’s Bridle said: “The next step will be to build capacity and resources in order to sufficiently monitor [the new standards’] implementation”.

But child welfare experts warned yesterday that orph-anages had developed close ties with the officials tasked with monitoring them. This could impede efforts to enforce the standards, they said.

Dy Samrach declined to comment yesterday, but confirmed reports that she had received a letter from Interior Minister Sar Kheng giving his full support to both the orphanage and her position as its director.

Khieu Sopheak, spokesman for the Ministry of Interior, declined to comment.

The orphanage was inaugurated by Deputy Prime Minister Sok An, according to Hope for Cambodian Children’s website.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

BATTAMBANG ADOPTION-A MOVING STORY, PART 3.

A TORQUAY family's tragic separation from their adopted Cambodian daughter has resulted in a change to the law that will ensure others don't face the same heartache.
But in a cruel twist the change will not help Meagan and Michael Paterson or their adopted daughter Pisey.
Five-year-old Pisey has been living in a rape crisis centre in Cambodia while the Patersons have been trying desperately to secure a visa for her to come to Australia.
The family faces an 18-month wait to have Pisey's case heard by a Migration Review Tribunal.
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship Chris Bowen, after reviewing the Paterson's case has directed the immigration department to change adoption visa requirements.
Mrs Paterson said while the change in the law would not assist her family's case, she was happy other families would not face the same heartache.

"I think this change shows that the Government is listening to us and has taken on board the fact that this law which is meant to protect children is in fact keeping families apart," she said,
In a letter to the family received yesterday, the Minister said:
"Having reviewed Pisey's case, I have asked the Department to amend the adoption visa requirements so the overseas residency requirement will not disadvantage families like your's who were genuinely living as expatriates but have had to return to Australia in the midst of an adoption process."
The Paterson were living and working as expatriates in Cambodia when they began the adoption process for little Pisey over three years ago.
The couple legally adopted the little girl, working with the Australian Embassy in Cambodia and the Cambodian Government to ensure the adoption was legal and legitimate.
But, when Mrs Paterson's dad Bill Welsh was diagnosed with cancer, the couple flew back to Australia with an assurance from the Australian Embassy in Cambodia that the Australian Government could waive a requirement that the couple be living in Cambodia when they lodged an application for the visa that would allow Pisey to live in Australia with her family.
The couple now know the advice they received was incorrect and the Australian Government refused Pisey's visa in line with Australian intercountry adoption laws.

BATTAMBANG ADOPTION-A MOVING STORY, PART 2

SOURCE: Geelong Advertiser (Australia) 24 08
2011
IT COULD be two years before a Torquay couple get to watch their adopted Cambodian daughter blow out her birthday candles in their own home.
Five-year-old Pisey Paterson has been living in a rape crisis centre in Cambodia while her parents Michael and Meagan Paterson have been trying desperately to secure a visa for her to come to Australia.
The family is now facing an agonising 18-month wait to have Pisey's case heard by members of a Migration Review Tribunal (MRT) who will decide her fate.
If the MRT knocks back the family's case, they can appeal directly to the Minister for Immigration for the visa.
In a heartbreaking twist, Pisey is about to become homeless as the shelter where she lives will close within weeks.
Pisey's adopted grandpa Bill Welsh, who has cancer, last week flew to Cambodia in a desperate race against time to secure accommodation for the little girl.

Speaking to the Geelong Advertiser from Cambodia, Mr Paterson said the trip was heartbreaking.
"I have to leave at the end of August to come home for tests related to my illness so I am desperately trying to make sure I have things in place for my granddaughter," Mr Welsh said.
In another setback for the family, the Australian Government is now questioning the legality of the adoption, even though it was verified and approved by the highest level of Cambodian Government the Council of Ministers.
Adoption advocate Janine Weir, who co-founded National Adoption Awareness Week with celebrity adoption advocate Deborra-Lee Furness, said Australia's inter-country adoption laws were "shameful".
"There is fear surrounding the process of inter-country adoption for the Australian Government and ultimately that is not in the best interests of any child," Ms Weir said.
Mr Paterson, who has devoted 35 years of his life to helping the people of Cambodia, said a social worker at the rape crisis centre where Pisey was living said the separation from her family was causing the little girl to deteriorate.
Member of the Cambodian Parliament Her Excellence Sochhy, who oversees the women's affairs and social justice portfolios, has taken an interest in Pisey's plight, saying the little girl should be urgently reunited with her family.
Mr and Mrs Paterson adopted Pisey while the couple were living and working as expatriates in Cambodia.
The couple ran a shelter for women who had been raped and sexually abused, and began the adoption process when Pisey was 18 months old.
But when Mrs Paterson's dad was diagnosed with cancer, the couple returned home, with the Australian Embassy in Cambodia assuring them that Pisey would be able to obtain a visa to join her family.

BATTAMBANG ADOPTION-A MOVING STORY


 From the Geelong Advertiser (Australia) 23 08 2011


A TORQUAY family has been torn apart by a heart-breaking legal loophole, with their five-year-old adopted daughter languishing in a Cambodian rape shelter while her parents try desperately to bring her home.
All the girl wants to know is when she can play with her brothers and sister again.
Meagan Paterson said the family regularly Skyped with Pisey and were at a loss how to answer their daughter when she asked when she would see them again.
"It is just devastating," Mrs Paterson said.
"She says she loves and misses us and asks when she is coming home and when she can play with her brothers and sister again.
"We have no answers for her."

Pisey recently celebrated her fifth birthday at the rape centre with her family, watching via Skype, huddled around the computer screen, watching her blow out her candles dressed in a princess outfit they sent to Cambodia as a gift.
Just over three years ago, Mrs Paterson and her husband Michael were expatriates living and working in Cambodia, where they had set up a crisis centre for women who had been raped and sexually abused.
It was at the centre that the Patersons fell in love with 18-month-old Pisey, who was born after her mum was raped.
When Pisey's mother decided to give her daughter up for adoption, the Patersons stepped in and legally adopted the little girl, working with the Australian embassy in Cambodia to ensure they abided by Australia's notoriously tough intercountry adoption laws.
However, when a member of Mrs Paterson's family in Australia was diagnosed with cancer, the couple returned home, not knowing their decision would result in years of heartbreak and separation from their daughter.
"We acted on advice at the time that if we returned home and lodged Pisey's adoption visa from Australia, which she needs in order to come here, the Australia Government would invoke a compassion clause and give us the visa," Mrs Paterson said.
"We now know that advice was wrong.
"The Australian Government does not review adoption cases on a case-by-case basis and the law said we had to be in Cambodia when we lodged the application for that visa.
"It has been three years of struggle with the Australian Government to try to get our baby home and with all the bureaucracy and red tape the fact that there is a little girl without her family living in Cambodia is just forgotten."
To make matters worse, Pisey is about to become homeless, with the rape shelter set to to close within weeks.
Immigration Department spokeswoman Laura Stevens said the Government would not compromise on the conditions attached to the visa application.
Mrs Paterson struggled to hold back tears as she recounted her torment over her little girl.
"She is our daughter and we will never give up," Mrs Paterson said. "She is a little person who is full of potential and I just want to see her home with us where she belongs."
amelia.grevisjames@geelongadvertiser.com.au

BATTAMBANG ORPHANAGE SCANDAL

 The following story appeared in the Phnom Penh Post in mid August 2011

More than 30 residents of an Australian-run orphanage in Battambang protested at the facility again yesterday morning, after learning that many of those who had participated in an August 2 demonstration would be sent back to their communities within 12 hours.

The director of Hope for Cambodian Children, Dy Samrach, said 24 youths were being sent out of the orphanage because of a new policy requiring residents aged 18 or older to be reintegrated into their communities.

But she also suggested that financial woes and drug use by the youths were factors.

“I have no choice. If I have no funds, what can I do?” Dy Samrath said.

“If they want to stay here, they can, but they will have no food and no money for their studies.”

This decision was reached  following an earlier protest during which residents of the orphanage said they were not getting enough food or money for school fees and alleged that some managers were corrupt.

Yesterday, some of those being sent away were alarmed  about the future.

“I do not know where to live because I have no parents,” Im Kimthieng, 19, said.

He urged on the orphanage to honour what he called its agreement to allow children to remain at the facility until they finished high school.

Some of the youths dismissed from the orphanage yesterday were also accused of using drugs, a claim Im Kimthieng denied. “If we used drugs, why didn’t they ask the police to investigate us?” he said.

The conflict at the orphanage has resulted in five social workers there being suspended after the August 2 protest.

The protest was investigated by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

“OHCHR is closely following the matter and has urged the centre’s management to consider the claims of the children carefully,” the organisation said yesterday.

The disagreement also follows concerns about the effects of a surge in the number of orphanages in Cambodia, the quality of care they offer and the claims they make about their programs.

In its fund-raising materials, the Australian  foundat-ion that funds the orphanage suggests most of its residents are either HIV-positive or have lost their parents to AIDS.

Dy Samrach said, however, that only 13 of the 134 residents of the orphanage were HIV-positive.

Richard Bridle, Unicef’s country representative for Cambodia, called for better monitoring of orphanages.

“Although regular monitoring and reporting is taking place, this needs to be strengthened in order to regulate the use and conditions of residential care, and ensure that all residential facilities meet national and internat-ional standards,” he said.

A spokesperson for Friends International echoed Unicef’s call, urging donors to think carefully about the immediate and long-term impacts of the assistance they offered.

“Any organisation that is caring for children should have policies, procedures and regulations in effect to ensure that the duty of caring for children meets both their immediate and long-term needs,” Friends said.

Heng Chaiden said the centre had made a long-term commitment to allow him to stay the centre until he finished high school.

“We haven’t finished our studies. Where can we live to continue school?” he asked.

“Some of us don’t have parents. We don’t have jobs. Who can we depend on?”

ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY VINCENT MACISAAC