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Cambodia strengthens ties with Japan amid US–China tensions

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By Chhay Lim, Royal University of Phnom Penh

2023 marked 70 years of diplomatic relations between Cambodia and Japan. To commemorate this anniversary, Phnom Penh and Tokyo elevated their ties to a comprehensive strategic partnership (CSP). This positions Japan at the highest echelon within Cambodia’s three-tier hierarchy of foreign relations, a position previously exclusively reserved for China since 2010.

This agreement, reached during Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s visit to Phnom Penh in 2022, embeds a strategic adjustment in Cambodia’s foreign relations. It underscores Cambodia’s strategic intent to delicately balance China’s increasing influence and the West’s pressure over Cambodia’s democratic backsliding. In this context, the attention shifts to Japan and its potential role as a leverage point for Cambodia in navigating the complex terrain of US–China strategic rivalry.

Under this upgraded relationship, areas for future cooperation with Japan have emerged. Stronger economic interdependence will create a solid foundation for a mutually beneficial relationship. This aligns with Cambodia’s strategy of economic diversification. The Cambodia–Japan CSP also benefits Tokyo, which is actively seeking security deterrence in response to Beijing’s assertiveness in the South China Sea and is aiming to secure vital sea lanes of communication. This new partnership could also help disprove any lingering suspicions of a Chinese naval presence in Cambodia.

As emphasised during Kishida’s visit to Cambodia, Cambodia and Japan’s upgraded partnership also revolves around digital technology, economic collaboration and security cooperation. While Japan is the United States’ closest strategic ally in Asia, Japan’s approach to Cambodia appears to be in stark contrast to Washington’s, especially on human rights and democracy. In July 2023, the United States questioned the ‘freedom and fairness’ of the Cambodian general election. In contrast, Japan remains the only democratic country to support and recognise the legitimacy of the Cambodian government.

As China continues to back the regime in Cambodia, it makes perfect sense that Japan go along for the ride. This is because Japan’s less confrontational approach to Cambodian democracy is well-received by Cambodia’s ruling elites, who in return pledge their support for Japan’s global initiatives, including its Free and Open Indo-Pacific Strategy and new National Security Strategy. Cambodia’s attempt to strike a balance with China by involving Japan showcases its independent foreign policy stance.

Japan’s substantial economic engagement with Cambodia has significantly contributed to Cambodia’s progress in trade, development and foreign direct investment. Although China surpassed Japan as Cambodia’s primary source of official development assistance in 2007, Japan remains a crucial player. Cambodia has hosted 210 Japanese investment projects totalling US$3.1 billion since 1994. Japan–Cambodia bilateral trade reached US$1.95 billion in 2022. This economic collaboration underscores Japan’s strategic importance and aligns with Cambodia’s objective of diversifying international engagements beyond reliance on China. Maintaining ties with Japan prevents a Chinese monopoly in Cambodia’s economic relations, safeguarding its independent foreign policy.

A new angle in Japan–Cambodia cooperation is the expansion of defence assistance amid Beijing’s efforts to increase military cooperation with Phnom Penh and other Southeast Asian states. In early 2023, Cambodia endorsed Japan’s new National Security Strategy, which China sees as a provocation.

Japan’s willingness to dispatch its Maritime Self-Defense Force to the Ream Naval Base on Cambodia’s southern coast signals a departure from mere economic assistance. The Ream Naval Base, recently accused by the United States of hosting the Chinese Navy, adds a layer of complexity to Cambodia’s strategic landscape. During the ASEAN–Japan Commemorative Summit in Tokyo in December 2023, Cambodia and Japan also agreed to establish defence senior officials’ talks.

In the context of US–China strategic rivalry, Cambodia has often been labelled a virtual client state of China. While Chinese economic reliance has consolidated the power of Cambodia’s ruling elites, the risks of over reliance cannot be overlooked. The challenge for Cambodia lies in balancing interest maximisation and risk mitigation. Japan has emerged as a sophisticated partner for Cambodia’s strategic diversification.

While concerns may arise over potential Chinese backlash due to Cambodia’s shift towards Japan, Phnom Penh’s adept balancing has subtly elevated China above its existing highest status. The newly established Cambodia–China Diamond Hexagon cooperation framework implicitly aspires to move China beyond the scope of a CSP. As Cambodia looks to the future, it is important to sustain and enhance strategic communication with all of its foreign counterparts, reinforcing its commitment to a diversified foreign policy without antagonising any major power.

The Cambodia–Japan CSP is more than a diplomatic milestone. It embodies the evolving dynamics of Cambodia’s foreign relations. Cambodia has assumed a nuanced role in the broader geopolitical landscape, fostering ties with potential third parties like Japan beyond the sphere of US and Chinese influence. It is also in Japan’s interests to foster a more resilient and autonomous Southeast Asia where China is not the sole option for cooperation.

Japan is boosting its proactive regional diplomacy, showcasing that it is not only an economic powerhouse, but also a potential alternative for cooperation and a defender of the rules-based global order. This is evidenced by Japan’s upgraded ties with Vietnam, the inclusion of Malaysia in its Overseas Security Assistance initiative, its coast guard agreement with the Philippines and the provisioning of patrol vessels to Indonesia. As the Japan–Cambodia CSP develops, it will serve as a testament to the delicate art of diplomatic balancing in an era marked by increasing tensions between Beijing and Washington.

Chhay Lim is a Visiting Fellow at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at the Royal University of Phnom Penh and Young Leader at the Pacific Forum. He is also a Japanese Government-MEXT scholar at Ritsumeikan University.

Source: https://eastasiaforum.org/2024/01/24/cambodia-strengthens-ties-with-japan-amid-us-china-tensions/

New Cambodian law seeks to provide thousands with a legal identity

The Cambodian government has introduced new legislation in an attempt to provide a legal identity to the thousands of people in the country who currently lack proof they even exist. The law includes a focus on civil registration – the process of recording births, deaths, marriages and divorces – and is set to be implemented from July 2024. It’ll tackle the issues created where a person doesn’t have a legal identity – for example, limits to their access to public services, human rights and social protections.

The legislation establishes Cambodia as a ‘leader’ in this area, says Romain Santon, Deputy Director for Asia, Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) at global health organisation Vital Strategies. Many countries lack a comprehensive law on CRVS if they have one at all, he adds. Yet a legal identity is considered a human right under Article 6 of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights.

In full: https://www.ibanet.org/New-cambodian-law-seeks-to-provide-thousands-with-a-legal-identity

Sanctioned timber baron wins new mining concessions in Cambodia’s Prey Lang

“I would like to announce to the public and the journalists that on November 2, the Ministry of Mines and Energy requested [Prime Minister Hun Manet] not to expand mining operations nor seek further mining business in Prey Lang Wildlife Sanctuary,” Keo Rattanak, Cambodia’s minister of mines and energy, said at a press conference on Nov. 21, 2023.

According to Rattanak, Manet accepted the request the same day it was made, “demonstrating [Manet’s] will to preserve Prey Lang” by essentially freezing the issuance of new mining licenses inside the hotly contested sanctuary. The ban will also reassess existing mining concessions in Prey Lang, returning land not used for mining purposes to the state, Rattanak added. It will also prevent companies currently mining the roughly 490,000-hectare (1.2-million-acre) protected forest from expanding their concessions.

In full: https://news.mongabay.com/2024/01/sanctioned-timber-baron-wins-new-mining-concessions-in-cambodias-prey-lang/

Democracy remains a waiting game under Cambodia’s Hun Manet

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By Katrin Travouillon, The Australian National University

Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen’s resignation and his subsequent appointment of his eldest son Hun Manet as Cambodia’s new leader puts 2023 among the most significant years in the country’s history.

The announcement of his resignation on 26 July followed an otherwise unremarkable general election with predictable results. After widespread suppression of the remaining independent media and opposition, culminating in the disqualification of the Candlelight Party, the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) declared a landslide victory, securing 120 of the 125 available parliamentary seats.

The Cambodian public and observers alike had long anticipated this dynastic succession. Hun Sen, ever the strategist, spent much of his 38-year reign ensuring a smooth transition. In addition to making full use of his powers over the country’s legal and political institutions to quash any potential opposition to his son’s political ascent, considerable effort went into the careful curation of Hun Manet’s image. Manet was proffered as an open and progressively inclined leader, closely attuned to Cambodia’s young voters and ready to remake the country in the image of their political and economic aspirations.

Considering the long list of imprisoned political opponents and civil rights activists, many have reacted dismissively to the idea that the Cambodian government would soften its autocratic governance by virtue of this political transition. Throughout 2023 the Cambodian government continued its spree of harassment, intimidation and arbitrary detention.

Opposition politician Kem Sokha was sentenced to 27 years imprisonment in March 2023, while human rights advocate Theary Seng was sentenced to six years imprisonment in June 2022. They are among the Cambodian government’s most prominent victims, with several international organisations calling for their release. Meanwhile opposition leaders like Mu Sochua and Sam Rainsy who escaped their prosecution and arrest in Cambodia remain in exile, unable to return to their homeland.

Other international and domestic actors have signalled more readiness to invest in the conviction that 2023 marks a promising juncture in Cambodia’s political trajectory. Central to this notion is the shared assessment that there is an opportunity to bring about positive changes by capitalising on the new government’s desire to build domestic and international legitimacy.

In the realm of foreign policy, this conviction among Cambodia’s democratic partners has overwhelmingly translated into the same wait-and-see approach that already characterised relations with Cambodia under Hun Sen. The United States, Australia and European governments continue to issue carefully worded statements of concern, lamenting the lack of political freedoms in the country while simultaneously reiterating their desire to improve their relations with Cambodia for economic and strategic reasons. Hun Manet is quick to present these meetings as evidence for the international acceptance of his rule.

Domestically, the CPP leadership has clearly stepped up the pace and quality of what might be termed an ‘outreach campaign’. When discussing the ever-growing list of former opposition politicians, scholars or other critical thinkers joining the ranks of the CPP, a small but perhaps significant change is noticeable.

In the past, such decisions were invariably accompanied by rumours of debts, threats or looming dispossessions. Now, the explanations for defections or the acceptance of government posts tend to centre pragmatism and careful assessments of the benefits inherent in the temporary sacrifice of political principles for effective policy and institutional changes in the future.

Billions of dollars spent on trying to politically engineer a democratic path for Cambodia have overwhelmingly failed to produce tangible results. The idea that open-minded, socially conscious, Western-educated actors that have returned to Cambodia to take up positions in the government will be able to seize the momentum and foster progressive reforms from within by improving policy and governance does hold undeniable appeal.

Yet if Hun Manet is truly his father’s son, it will be his government and those he considers vital to furthering his family’s and party’s interests who will ultimately benefit the most from nurturing such hopes.

Katrin Travouillon is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Political & Social Change at the Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, The Australian National University.

This article is part of an EAF special feature series on 2023 in review and the year ahead.

Source: https://eastasiaforum.org/2024/01/23/democracy-remains-a-waiting-game-under-cambodias-hun-manet/

China’s Self-Pitying Empire

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Your columnist finally got around to watching the Chinese film “No More Bets,” a summer blockbuster in the mainland which one can find online, after some struggle, with English subtitles. It’s clearly a work of self-pity with a clear government PR message – try not to get conned by scammers – and it has managed to excite several Southeast Asian governments into banning its screening because of the apparent message that once you step foot outside China, or one foot inside Southeast Asia, it’s nothing but crime and anarchy.

In full: https://thediplomat.com/2024/01/chinas-self-pitying-empire/

France visit offers ‘margin of manoeuvre’ in Cambodia’s bid to ease reliance on China

Cambodian leader Hun Manet’s visit to France last week to discuss defence cooperation, among other issues, gives the Southeast Asian nation “a margin of manoeuvre” of counterbalancing its over-reliance on China, analysts have said.

Together with Cambodia’s increased security cooperation with Japan, foreign policy experts said the Paris trip represented Phnom Penh’s tilt “towards diversification” as it sought to hedge its bets among the great powers vying for dominance in the region.

During Manet’s state visit to France on Thursday and Friday, he met French President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace, where Paris confirmed that it would provide €200 million (US$217 million) in support of Cambodia’s vocational training, energy, and water treatment sectors.

In full: https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/3249083/france-visit-offers-margin-manoeuvre-cambodias-bid-ease-reliance-china

Korea’s Woori backs Cambodia carbon reduction

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Seoul-headquartered Woori Bank has inked a multilateral business agreement with the Forestry Administration of Cambodia and the Asian Forest Cooperation Organization to launch a forest carbon emission reduction project in Cambodia.

The project, which will run for 30 years, aims to promote REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) and global environmental, social and governance (ESG) management.

In full: https://www.theasset.com/article/50776/koreas-woori-backs-cambodia-carbon-reduction

Singapore seeks 2 more suspects in massive money laundering case; assets seized or frozen top S$3 billion

Singapore authorities are seeking two more suspects connected to a massive money laundering case uncovered last year, as the total value of assets seized or frozen in relation to the case rose to more than S$3 billion (US$2.2 billion).

Warrants of arrest and Interpol Red Notices have been issued against two Cambodian nationals – Su Yongcan, 33, and Wang Huoqiang, 29 – for money laundering offences, police said on Friday (Jan 19).

They had left Singapore before police operations relating to the case began on Aug 15, 2023.

In full: https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/billion-dollar-money-laundering-case-suspects-assets-seized-frozen-3-billion-fugitives-4059966

France’s Macron Should Be Consistent and Invite Kim Jung-Un to the Elysée

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French President Emmanuel Macron was asked on 16 Jan. about how he would handle a possible re-election of Donald Trump in the US later this year.

“I take the leaders who are chosen by their people,” Macron replied. The French president two days later received Cambodian prime minister Hun Manet at the Elysée.

Hun Manet, of course, does not meet Macron’s criteria of being chosen by the people. He was not even officially a candidate for prime minister in the last election, which took place without any recognized opposition party, in July 2023.

In full: https://thegeopolitics.com/frances-macron-should-be-consistent-and-invite-kim-jung-un-to-the-elysee/

Centuries-Old Rituals Are Slowly Fading Away in Cambodia

“What on earth are you going to do in Tropeang Krohom?” The driver of the minivan turns his head and gives me a puzzled look. Few passengers want to be dropped off in a settlement between two provincial towns.

Tropeang Krohom or ‘Red Pond’ is located at a junction of the main road. The name refers to the typical blood-red earth in this province of Ratanakiri.

From this point, a motorcyclist will take me to his village. It is a ride of more than two hours, along bumpy and unpaved roads, with large trails of dust behind passing trucks. The leaves of the grayish-green trees are covered with a thick layer of the same red sand.

In full: https://www.ipsnews.net/2024/01/centuries-old-rituals-slowly-fading-away-cambodia/

Cambodian trade bodies, French firms sign 6 MoUs

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Six memoranda of understanding (MoUs) were recently signed in Paris between Cambodian trade bodies and French firms to boost France’s economic ties with Francophonie member countries.

MoUs were signed between the Cambodian Chamber of Commerce (CCC) and the Alliance des Patronats Francophones (APF), the Royal Group and Blue Circle, the L.Y.P. Group and SEMMARIS.

In full: https://www.fibre2fashion.com/news/textile-news/cambodian-trade-bodies-french-firms-sign-6-mous-292448-newsdetails.htm

Reality tempers Cambodia’s renewed economic optimism

Author: Heidi Dahles, University of Tasmania

Only days after Cambodia’s recently elected national assembly endorsed Hun Manet as the country’s new prime minister, the young leader revealed his vision for the next 25 years of economic growth and prosperity.

Cambodia is aspiring to become a high-income country by 2050. To make this happen, Manet released his Pentagonal Strategy, centring on the five objectives of sustained economic growth, more and better employment, human capital development, diversification of the economy and increased competitiveness.

For those who have been advocating sweeping reforms to Cambodia’s economy, the new strategic objectives comprise all the right catchwords. But it remains uncertain whether the ambitious new strategy will help Cambodia reach its targets.

Despite GDP forecasts for 2023 not living up to expectations, the Cambodian government forecasts 6.6 per cent GDP growth in 2024. The Asian Development Bank and International Monetary Fund downgraded their 2023 economic growth projections to 5.3 per cent, down from 5.8 per cent in April 2023, while the World Bank projects 5.4 per cent growth, down from 5.5 per cent in May 2023.

The minor adjustments were made in response to global geopolitical tensions and a worldwide economic slowdown, as well as the country’s structural issues, which include limited productivity and competitiveness, a lack of economic diversification and dependence on a small number of external markets.

The government’s optimistic growth projection for 2024 is based on the anticipated revival of key sectors including garment manufacturing. Cambodia’s garment sector showed continuing decline throughout 2023 but is expected to surge by around 8 per cent in 2024. For Manet’s pentagonal ambitions to become a reality, Cambodia must diversify its product range, upgrade its production capacity and productivity and process resources at home instead of exporting them.

The garment sector is not conducive to such transformations. The sector is already on life support — a tax break is in place for garment factories until the end of 2025 — but a continued reliance on garment manufacturing also exacerbates Cambodia’s economic vulnerability. Primarily a cut, make and trim industry employing low-skilled labour, garment manufacturing relies on the import of raw materials sourced from other Asian countries, predominantly China. It exports to the major economies where Cambodian products enjoy increasingly precarious preferential treatment under the European Union’s Everything But Arms scheme.

To move Cambodia beyond being a cheap labour hub, the Pentagonal Strategy outlines a comprehensive makeover of three sectors identified as the engines of future economic growth — agriculture, micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) and tourism.

With nearly 70 per cent of Cambodian households depending directly on agriculture, an overhaul of this sector is long overdue. The new strategic objectives bolster agribusiness to better serve Cambodia’s export markets. The turn to ‘smart farming’ advances local processing of Cambodian crops and high-value products instead of high-volume cash crops. Loans have also been made available for agribusiness and are being directed to ‘economic poles’ spread across the country.

The transformation of over 500,000 MSMEs in Cambodia is a core agenda under the new strategic plan. MSMEs closely entwined with agribusiness and digitisation will have access to a new loan scheme established in partnership with the private sector and Wing Bank. Efforts will also be made to integrate the informal sector into the formal economy under the National Strategy for Informal Development 2023–2028, encouraging informal businesses to register and receive benefits such as penalty waivers, tax incentives and skills training.

Tourism, heavily impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, is forecasted to bolster GDP as international arrivals, particularly from China, begin to surge. Foreign tourists are returning to Cambodia, with 4.4 million arriving in the first 10 months of 2023. But the rising numbers have not generated the desired income, as most of the arrivals are low-spending visitors from neighbouring countries.

Crowds from China are not as anticipated despite major efforts including the new Siem Reap airport operating direct flights to and from a variety of Chinese destinations, the reintroduction of Chinese package tours and the launch of the China Ready program. Efforts to diversify the tourism sector are ongoing, with India and Indonesia identified as likely markets for outbound tourism. The Ministry of Tourism is also implementing a new tourism strategy and action plan with a focus on cultural heritage, coastal and eco-tourism.

As the new government pushes economic reforms with vigour, old habits die hard. International attention was recently drawn to a new investigation by Amnesty International into the 2022 evictions of 10,000 families making a living on the premises of the Angkor Archaeological Park. The Angkor Archaeological Park, Cambodia’s biggest tourist attraction and a UNESCO World Heritage site, is pivotal to the new tourism action plan. While the Cambodian government claims these families were squatters causing overdevelopment at the complex, the report revealed that the evicted families were relocated to a remote site lacking infrastructure, jeopardising their livelihoods.

Similarly, the voluntary registration of informal businesses under the new development strategy was temporarily suspended due to pushback from small business owners concerned about the regulatory burden imposed by the measure.

The economic reforms outlined in the Pentagonal Strategy are long overdue and will have beneficial impacts on Cambodia’s socioeconomic development. But as Cambodia’s new leadership pursues growth, it should consider that even well-intentioned interventions can have detrimental bearings on people’s livelihoods and may be reminiscent of past injustices suffered at the hands of authorities.

Heidi Dahles is Adjunct Professor in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Tasmania.

This article is part of an EAF special feature series on 2023 in review and the year ahead.

Source: https://www.eastasiaforum.org/2024/01/18/reality-tempers-cambodias-renewed-economic-optimism/

Cambodia-Vietnam trade surges to nearly US$6.6bil 2023

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Bilateral trade between Cambodia and Vietnam has maintained steady growth, reaching nearly US$6.6 billion in 2023, an increase of more than 7% compared to 2022. The kingdom’s exports increased by over 37%, according to the General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE).

Exports and imports between the two nations totalled $6.58 billion in 2023, a surge of 7.3% compared to $5.613 billion in 2022. Cambodia’s exports were valued at $2.97 billion, up 37.1%, while imports from the Asean neighbour were worth $3.61 billion, a decrease of 8.9%.

The trade deficit for Cambodia stood at $639.62 million for 2023, significantly lower than the $1.8 billion recorded in 2022.

In full: https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplus/aseanplus-news/2024/01/18/cambodia-vietnam-trade-surges-to-nearly-us66bil-2023

Lowell legislators testify in support of free and fair elections in Cambodia

Legislators from Lowell testified before the Joint Committee on Veterans and Federal Affairs Tuesday in support of resolutions filed in the the state Legislature that would condemn ongoing political oppression and encourage free and fair elections in Cambodia.

After Cambodia endured the brutal regime of the Khmer Rouge, which committed a genocide on the Cambodian population that killed nearly 2 million people from 1975 to 1979, the Paris Peace Accords were signed in 1991 by 19 nations to establish democracy in the country through free and fair elections. Since then, the Cambodian government has been accused of consistently holding sham elections.

In full: https://www.lowellsun.com/2024/01/17/lowell-legislators-testify-in-support-of-free-and-fair-elections-in-cambodia/

A Cambodian court convicts activists for teaching about class differences, suspends their jail terms

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A court in Cambodia on Monday convicted four land rights activists of plotting to provoke a peasant revolution by teaching farmers about class divisions and gave them five-year suspended prison terms.

The four — Theng Savoeun, president of the Coalition of Cambodian Farmer Community, and his colleagues Nhel Pheap, Than Hach and Chan Vibol — were arrested and charged in May last year by the Ratanakiri provincial court in northeastern Cambodia.

In full: https://apnews.com/article/cambodia-land-farmers-class-activists-ratanakiri-027e2e37c89ca86cf9094e1dac06442b

Sunview in talks on proposed renewable energy project in Cambodia

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Renewable energy player Sunview Group Bhd, through wholly owned subsidiary Fabulous Sunview Sdn Bhd, has signed an agreement with Cambodian partners for the proposed development of a renewable energy project.

The agreement calls for the parties to focus on promoting and establishing the development, operation and management of a renewable energy project with a targeted total capacity of 500-MWac, situated on land within an undisclosed Cambodian province.

In full: https://thesun.my/business/sunview-in-talks-on-proposed-renewable-energy-project-in-cambodia-BA11990274

Cambodian PM Sacks City Mayor Amid Firings and Demotions

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Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet has sacked a prominent provincial city mayor while reports say rank and file members of the police and military, up to the rank of brigadier general, have been fired or demoted amid allegations of corrupt practices.

The shake-up had been forecast by diplomats in recent weeks with Cambodian authorities grappling with organized crime and human trafficking, which have tainted the country’s image as a tourist destination and frightened off potential foreign investors.

Semi-official Fresh News announced Friday that Hun Manet had issued a decree to terminate Kep City Governor Kheng Yuan while the government-friendly Khmer Times reported on Sunday that the ousted mayor had been charged with money laundering and abuse of power.

In full: https://thediplomat.com/2024/01/cambodian-pm-sacks-city-mayor-amid-firings-and-demotions/

Leveraging the hypothetical: The uncertain world of carbon credit calculations

In eastern Cambodia, the Wildlife Conservation Society office is quiet on a Friday morning in early April. Normally a hive of activity, the office has wound down in preparation for Khmer New Year.

Olly Griffin, WCS Cambodia’s forest carbon lead at the time, has stuck around in Sen Monorom to talk to me about the REDD+ project connected to the nearby Keo Seima Wildlife Sanctuary, which WCS facilitates and where I spent a week visiting nearby communities supported by the project.

REDD+ is short for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation. REDD+ project developers can then sell those “additional” carbon savings to individuals and companies interested in mitigating their own impacts on the climate. The proceeds from these carbon credit sales — at least some of them — are then supposed to fund forest conservation tied to community development.

In full: https://news.mongabay.com/2024/01/leveraging-the-hypothetical-the-uncertain-world-of-carbon-credit-calculations/

Cambodian PM Hun Manet sacks mayor over alleged corruption

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Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet on Friday signed a sub-decree to sack Kep municipal mayor Kheng Yorn from his post.

In the sub-decree, the prime minister said “Kheng Yorn is terminated from the post of the mayor of the Kep Municipality in Kep province.”

Hun Manet said the decision was made based on substantial evidence following an investigation launched by the Anti-Corruption Unit.

In full: https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplus/aseanplus-news/2024/01/12/cambodian-pm-hun-manet-sacks-mayor-over-alleged-corruption

Srettha, Cambodia’s Hun Manet to discuss PM2.5

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Thailand and Cambodia will form a joint task force to fight transboundary haze pollution at a planned meeting between Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin and his Cambodian counterpart, Hun Manet in Thailand on Feb 7, Mr Srettha revealed yesterday.

A joint study tour to an area heavily affected by transboundary pollution from fine particulate matter (PM2.5) would also be arranged for the two leaders in Sa Kaeo province during Hun Manet’s visit to Thailand, said Mr Srettha.

In full: https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/general/2723158/srettha-cambodias-hun-manet-to-discuss-pm2-5