Cheam Adam outpointed Phan Sothy and Sok Ratha won by second-round disqualification Saturday to advance into the semifinals of CTN’s Kun Khmer Tournament of Champions. Phan Sothy (8-3-0) cut Cheam Adam (29-7-2) early with elbows, on the left temple in the first round and across the nose in the second, but a bloody Cheam Adam battled back, hurting Phan Sothy in the later rounds with kicks to the body and nearly putting him down in the fourth round. In the co-feature, Sok Ratha (6-3) could not recover from a low blow, prompting referee The Sarin to disqualify Seung Kangsan (24-3-9). Semifinals are scheduled for October 10 at the CTN boxing arena. Khun Makara will face Cheam Adam, and Sok Ratha will go against Poy Neurn.

In Brief: New ADB country head


THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) has announced a new Cambodia country head following the appointment of the previous director, Arjun Goswami, to Manila in the role of head of regional integration for Southeast Asia. Putu M Kamayana has already started as the replacement for Goswami in Phnom Penh, an ADB statement said Friday. Kamayana, an Indonesian, has worked for the bank since 1995 in the Philippines, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Bangladesh and Vietnam, the announcement added.

In Brief: Rattan firms to unite


RATTAN suppliers and processors are due to meet today in Phnom Penh to form the country’s first rattan association with support from the global conservation group WWF and the European Union. It would aim to provide Cambodian producers with new knowledge and experience related to rattan, processing techniques, trade and markets, according to a joint press release. “The project identified that processors and exporters are not familiar with using the environmentally friendly production techniques and that there is lack of understanding about international market requirements,” WWF Rattan Project Manager Ou Ratanak said in the statement.

CAAI News Media; South Thailand


Police officers survey the site of a bomb attack by suspected Muslim militants at a Muslim cemetery in southern Thailand's Yala province, about 1,084 km (674 miles) south of Bangkok, September 27, 2009. The bomb attack killed one civil defence volunteer as he was cleaning the grave of his elder brother, police said. REUTERS/Surapan Boonthanom




Police officers survey the site of a bomb attack by suspected Muslim militants at a Muslim cemetery in southern Thailand's Yala province, about 1,084 km (674 miles) south of Bangkok, September 27, 2009. The bomb attack killed one civil defence volunteer as he was cleaning the grave of his elder brother, police said. REUTERS/Surapan Boonthanom



Police officers survey the site of a bomb attack by suspected Muslim militants at a Muslim cemetery in southern Thailand's Yala province, about 1,084 km (674 miles) south of Bangkok, September 27, 2009. The bomb attack killed one civil defence volunteer as he was cleaning the grave of his elder brother, police said. REUTERS/Surapan Boonthanom



A Thai soldier stands guard in Thailand's restive southern province of Yala. Suspected Islamic militants have shot dead three Muslims in separate attacks in Thailand's troubled south this weekend





News in Picture by CAAI News Media









In this photo taken Saturday, Sept. 26, 2009, AIDS volunteers Kajit Klinkachorn, 33, left, Saichon Booncharoen, 3rd left, Aree Gumpolrat, 32, right, and together with an NGO co-ordinator Pitchayapan Sripa, 33, 2nd left, share experience about being AIDS volunteers at Nong Tapan village in Rayong province southeastern Thailand. For the first time, an experimental vaccine has prevented infection with the AIDS virus, a watershed event in the deadly epidemic and a surprising result. Recent failures led many scientists to think such a vaccine might never be possible. The vaccine cut the risk of becoming infected with HIV by more than 31 percent in the world's largest AIDS vaccine trial of more than 16,000 volunteers in Thailand, researchers announced Thursday, Sept. 22, 2009. (AP Photo/Apichart Weerawong) (Post in khmernz.blogspot.com)

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