Tuo Jia Sarit Dhanarajata-the Siam royal narcissistic stooge and dictator

2 October 2009

In view of Siam quarrel over Cambodia rights to speak for and defend its property, apparently Bangkok Post misspoke and mischaracterized Khmer nation. Two wrongs can’t be right.

I agree with Bangkok Post and find Hun Sen words are intolerable and unnecessary in dealing with so called modern Siam country. As human endowed with rights to express true feeling, Hun Sen appears to speak his mind in full graphic. But Hun Sen wasn’t highly educated and rooted out from noble clans.

But if we look at the episode from the cause and effect law, Hun Sen isn’t too far from being proper in giving fair warning to those who wanted to harm his home country. Bangkok Post should put itself in Hun Sen shoes to understand how he felt.

Siam royal stooges started border row with premeditated intent to cause burden and anguish for Cambodia. Make it worst, with no authorization Royal Siam Air Force had capriciously and repeatedly flown its aircrafts over Cambodia air space. All say in volume how intense and contemptuous of Siam toward Cambodia. So somebody in Cambodia has to openly give the benefits of the doubt of Siam belligerences and war calling.

Probably it’s a good idea for the ASEAN Summit next month to initiate discussion on Siam violations of neighbors to prevent war. Obviously Siam is the instigator for the whole thing. Thus it would be advantageous for ASEAN 2015 aim to solidify market under singular vision, singular identity in one community under Siam thumb. If not careful, Preah Vihear could be a spark of new Indochina war.

Before it’s broken it must be fixed, so ASEAN can’t sit on hands longer. In due to inadvertent effect, then it should bring in UN Permanent Security Council to help.

The world knows by now that Cambodia has had enough of war. Contrary Siam would not want to enter Cambodia to its imperialist war. Definitely it can’t afford two wars while its southern provinces inhabitants are fighting for independence and home rule. That has not escaped human rights observers and sympathizers attention. Plus the Communist China will not stand idle to watch its investments in Cambodia, its old and loyal ally, gone to waste in Siam unrealistic conquest. So the matter will be taken straight away to UN Permanent Security Council by China anyway.

From records, Siam has been the bully and trespasser toward Cambodia for the past 771 years. Much Cambodia territory and people were annexed to Siam control via manipulation, holding Khmer royal families hostage, or plainly wars. Recently PM Abhisit Avijjajiva wasn’t helpful in the process in launching his private website “I love Thailand” to erroneously insinuate Cambodia had taken Siam land several instances. That’s typical of most foreigner descents born into Siam confused mentality and twisted history. After much criticism and uproars, the website was off.

Subsequently Cambodia was not well received in world view because its Viet Cong trained Khmer Rouge killing fields’ atrocity in 1975-1979. In reality Cambodia has been in defensive and the receiving end throughout history.

The irony of Hun Sen harsh words should not blind Bangkok Post from knowing that Siam started the plots when UNESCO admitted Khmer Preah Vihear into world heritage site in 2008. Cambodia effort to register Preah Vihear with UNESCO was made known to Siam all along.

The real problem is not just UNESCO acceptance of Preah Vihear without listing Siam in partnership but the unilateral Siam drawn map post 1904-1907 Siam–French drawn map. Siam knew then that the colonized Khmer demanding the return all of its provinces along north and west of Dangrek –Cardamom range. But both colonialists french and siam ignored and forced new map down Cambodia throat until to date.

After the narcissistic Sarit Dhanarajata and Thanom Kattikachorn invaded and illegally took control of Preah Vihear, in 1962 the not so modern Cambodia took matter to the International Court of Justice in Hague. The ICJ had ruled that Preah Vihear temple located on and the surrounded site per 1904-1907 map belongs to Cambodia rightly. Also the Court ordered Siam to return all stolen artifacts from Preah Vihear to the proper rightful owner. None was complied and respected.

In retaliation dictator Sarit banned Khmer inhabitants, living under Siam control, from carrying on their tradition and heritage. Khmer language was outlawed and forbidden from teaching to children. Countless old Khmer scriptures and books found in pagodas were confiscated and burned down as an ultimate warning.

Again, in October 1991, Siam has signed Paris Accord to recognize and respect Cambodia territorial integrity and sovereignty. But when Cambodia is ready to demarcate its boundary line, Siam threw fits and tantrum over Preah Vihear admittance to world heritage registry.

It’s ludicrous of Bangkok Post to paint Siam as innocent virgin and victim in matter. The former colonists like France and England knew Siam history and its active intent to conquer Cambodia.

Now under royal backing, Siam current government seems to suffer memory lapse. As long as Siam royal stooge, PAD, will continue to twist politics to pressure the 2006 Royal Junta accomplice, Democrats Party and Abhisit government, the inevitable is expected.

The long range plan is Siam wanting Cambodia land with its concerted diplomacy in ASEAN circle and using US back door to enter UN permanent Security Council.

Cambodia is well aware of Siam twisted history and ill will toward Cambodia dating back to Phlek, Khuong and Sarit eras. Also during the refugee era 1975-1993, many international witnesses have learned first hand how Siam mistreated Khmers from both sides of its present border with Cambodia.

In 1979, Thai Task Force Unit 80 dumped 45,000-49,000 Khmers off Preah Vihear steep cliff to die from landmines, shots, dehydration and starvation. Those who ran back into Siam controlled territory were shot to death at point blank. The number of casualty was unreported and hidden from world press to date. The notorious Siam Task Force Unit 80 terrorized, robbed, raped, murdered and tortured countless refugees in camps. The sad part is many Thai Task Force members are Khmer descents.

Since 1907, in reality Cambodia avoided war with Siam at all costs even it had to lose provinces along Dangrek – Cardamom range. Now Cambodia wants Siam to respect 1904-1907 map and 1991 Paris Peace Accord. Ridiculously Bangkok Post exaggerated the 2003 incident led to destruction of Siam embassy and businesses because of the confused subject of Siam kingdom belittled Cambodia and Angkor Wat.

Nonetheless, Cambodia had not held public protest against Siam on going violations yet. Also note all the Siam property and business damages during 2003 protest were compensated in full. As Kasit Pyromya, current Foreign Minister and active PAD instigator, has called Hun Sen, the thug, who saw to fix problems to sooth Siam investors feeling.

For the so claimed modern Siam, yet it had not compensated Khmer property damages and live losses which caused by the Royal thugs, PAD. Days ago, Siam black clad soldiers arrested, shot and burned one of the 16 Khmer trespassers alive to death.

Other word, if Bangkok Post speaks of Hun Sen retaliation in harsh words that were just words. Yet his reaction was merely a reflection of the Bangkok ruling house hypocrisy. Shamefully Bangkok Post failed to print out Siam hypocritical ruler behavior. One can ask if the ruler lives the hypocrisy how could the subjects not to follow.

Borderline between Siam and Cambodia will never be resolved without the international commission step in to monitor the entire episode. The ASEAN will face the impasse of its 2015 aim unless Siam is fully reformed its present regime to restore 1932 democracy and world confidence. All 16 manipulative military coups to subjugate people into worshipping same hypocrite and inhumane ruler are quite enough. After all, is it Siam modern in broad definition?

Cambodia knows Siam too well and its words from the past or present government can not be trusted. Siam will always try to blame others for its own responsibilities. So the best bet for Bangkok Post to do is to call out the singular vision guy who divides and destroys Siam and its neighbor harmony. Then its condemnation of Hun Sen belligerence shall be heard and lauded. But as long as Bangkok Post dares not to condemn the sole culprit of Siam on going turmoil, then Hun Sen will not do otherwise.

Apparently Bangkok Post journalistic candor and modern civility seems missing from its conscience. Other than that Siam must stop playing victim over its spilled milk.

Court Detains Opposition Activist

Original report from Phnom Penh
01 October 2009


Svay Rieng provincial court on Thursday ruled to detain an opposition party activist after he allegedly cut the leaves from the palm tree of a neighbor in an argument over land.

Kong An, 59, a member of Svay Teap’s district council and supporter of the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, was charged with destruction of property and put into custody.

A complaint was filed against him in May by Prak Sarom, who is the sister-in-law of provincial judge Pang Samon, the same judge who ordered the detention Thursday.

Pang Samon later declined to comment. Park Sarom could not be reached for comment.

Meas Kheng, deputy provincial head of the Sam Rainsy Party in Svay Rieng, said the jailing was unfair, considering an opposition complaint that a member had been held at gunpoint by a district policeman had been dismissed.

Original report from Phnom Penh
01 October 2009


The National Assembly voted against amendments to a new penal code that opposition proponents said would increase freedom of expression and improve justice and democracy.

Eighty-three of 101 lawmakers present voted against the amendments, to 43 of 672 different articles, in an Assembly heavily dominated by the Cambodian People’s Party.

The penal code, drafted with the help of the French government, seeks to update a combination of 1995 laws, tradition, the constitution and principles of international law.

Yim Sovann, a Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker who supported the changes, told the Assembly session: “The amendments aim to open the possibility of pulling some articles that affect the rights and freedoms of expression for people, and to provide a clear definition of each offense, because we worry there are some negative points in the draft of the penal code.”

He later said he regretted the amendments were not approved, but he hoped the president of the Assembly, Heng Samrin, would allow a full-session debate.

Sam Rainsy Party officials said certain articles in the draft law tighten the freedom of expression and public assembly, while allowing for complaints of defamation and insult that are open for abuse.

Cheam Yiep, head of the Assembly’s finance commission, told the session the amendment requests were “illegal.”

“The amendment requests contradict the internal rules of the National Assembly,” he said.

Minister of Justice Ang Vong Vatana told the session the penal code was written “to serve human rights.”

“Nothing we did is to pressure or close human rights,” he said.

Some human rights organizations have said the penal code’s negative points can be corrected during Assembly debate.





[insert caption here]
Chhem Pe and Yon Sophal, youth winners of leadership skills
Two Cambodian youths who won a trip to the US from a television contest in Cambodia are meeting with US government officials and lawmakers.

In the contest, youth exhibit leadership skills, confidence and knowledge of democracy, in a program broadcast on CTN that is gaining in popularity.

This is the third sponsored trip conducted with support from the International Republican Institute and the Youth Council of Cambodia.

Yon Sophal, 21, a-third-year student at the University of Law and Economic Science in Phnom Penh, was one of the winners, in 2008.

In an interview with VOA Khmer in Washington, she said the most difficult of 10 subjects was community development; she had tried to convince villagers in Kandal province to rebuild a bumpy road.

“When I went down to persuade the community to participate with our activities, they always asked us whether the program would benefit them,” she said. “So we had to explain to them and lobby them to participate with our development program.”

Each contestant is required to undertake activities such as gathering signatures for a petition, public speaking, or community activism.

Yon Sophal said democracy so far in Cambodia can be slow, its processes unclear.

“We saw the selection for a leader was made with an election open to the public, but the question is whether the election came from the people’s true will or not,” she said. “We also haven’t seen freedom of expression, and youth participation in politics is still limited. We want the government and organizations involved to develop, encourage and urge more improvement in this field.”

Chhem Pe, 20, a fresh high school graduate from Siem Reap Province, was a winner in 2009.

“The most difficult episode of the contest was when I was trying to lobby people to provide blood in Phnom Penh to contribute their blood to the Cambodian national blood bank,” he said. “Some people did not like it. They said we were collecting blood to sell, not for donation.” They were nevertheless successful, he said.

Chhem Pe was also required to convince people in Svay Antor district, Prey Veng province, to fundraise for a small road, in an area where travelers often had difficulty during periods of flooding.

“Those countryside people have a lot of issues related to the health care services,” he said. “Normally, the health care services in the rural areas is not like in the city. The health care service there is not appropriate for them, so that makes them have serious problems.”

In a two-week trip, the two youths will meet officials and lawmakers and visit the Capitol, as well as museums and a professional baseball game. They will tour New York and visit the UN and the Asia Society.

John Willis, Cambodian country director for IRI, said that the youths will bring back good experiences to improve society.

“They are no longer a frog trapped in a well, who can only see the walls around him,” he said. “Winners come back to Cambodia having seen how a successful society works, and how its component parts fit together. They raise their expectations for their own country. They have met real role models for how they can improve their country themselves.”



Floodwaters caused by Typhoon Ketsana cover the front of the Allson Angkor Hotel in Siem Reap, 320 km (199 miles) northwest of Phnom Penh, October 1, 2009. Cambodia is continuing to battle rising floodwaters from the typhoon that has cut a destructive path through South East Asia and killed about 300 people. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Children ride in a kayak through floodwaters caused by Typhoon Ketsana in Siem Reap, 320 km (199 miles) northwest of Phnom Penh, October 1, 2009. Cambodia is continuing to battle rising floodwaters from the typhoon that has cut a destructive path through South East Asia and killed about 300 people. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
A Cambodian boy collects damaged roof titles after Typhoon Ketsana struck, in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles)north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring some 29 others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
A Cambodian man saws through a tree which fell over his house following Typhoon Ketsana in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring some 29others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
A Cambodian man carries household items on a muddy road of a village hit by Typhoon Ketsana in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring some 29 others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
A Cambodian couple clean inside their damaged house after Typhoon Ketsana struck, in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring some 29 others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
Cambodian villagers carry coffins loaded with bodies of villagers who died during Typhoon Ketsana in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring some 29 others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
Cambodians walk through a flooded road following Typhoon Ketsana in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring some 29 others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
A Cambodian man saws through a tree which fell over his house following Typhoon Ketsana in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring over two dozen others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
Villagers pass damaged houses after Typhoon Ketsana struck the area in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring over two dozen others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
Cambodian villagers carry coffins loaded with bodies of villagers who died during Typhoon Ketsana at Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring 29, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
Cambodian military police officers carry coffins loaded with bodies of villagers who died during Typhoon Ketsana at Teuk Mileang village, in Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring 29, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
Cambodian villagers prepare loaded coffins of villagers who died during Typhoon Ketsana at Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring 29, disaster officials said


A two year-old British boy who was swept out to sea as he played on a beach in Samoa was among the victims of a tsunami that ripped through the South Pacific Islands, killing more than 100 people.


By By Nick Britten and Bonnie Malkin









People walk among a scene of devastation following a powerful quake in Pago Pago village on American Samoa Photo: AP

The toddler was on the beach along with his parents when a huge wave struck and pulled them out to sea. The boy’s mother and father managed to swim ashore to raise the alarm but there was no sign of the boy.

The Foreign Office said he was “missing, presumed dead”.

Huge waves battered Samoa and American Samoa, triggered by an 8.0 magnitude underwater earthquake, at dawn on Tuesday.

Residents said they had little or no warning before a giant wall of water up to 20ft high smashed into their homes, flattening buildings, villages and washing cars into the sea. Some said the first wave hit within 10 minutes of the earthquake.

As huge international rescue and aid mission also swung into operation, the Queen and Prime Minster sent personal messages of condolence.

The death toll included at least 77 in Samoa, 25 in American Samoa and six in Tonga and is expected to rise sharply over the coming days. Three Australians including a six year-old girl, were also among the victims.

Dr Pamela Stephenson Connolly, the wife of the comedian Billy Connolly, who was staying in a house in Samoa when the earthquake struck, described how she “started to whimper, clinging pitifully to my pillow” when the house began to vibrate.

Later after the tsunami she described the scene she saw as “like walking into a terrible dream.”

“Cars teetered where they had been thrown, on top of rubble from collapsed dwellings. Fridges and air-conditioners floated in the sea. A bus sat in a pool of water and mud,” she said. Later she found out that “a dear friend” had been killed trying to escape.

Stephen Rogers, the British honorary consul in Samoa, said the British child’s parents were staying at the New Zealand High Commission in Samoa and had been in contact with the British High Commission in New Zealand.

A New Zealand diplomat said of the parents: “They are completely distressed and have not even informed their families back in Britain about what has happened yet.”

He said he had contacted five other Britons, aged in their 20s and 30s, all of whom escaped unhurt. The Foreign Office has warned against all but essential travel to the islands.

Gordon Brown said Britain was “ready to help in any way we can.”

The Queen said she was “saddened” by the tragedy and sent messages of condolence to the royal family in Tonga and to the Samoan head of state.

Residents described how they were forced to run for the lives after being given little or no warning before the giant wall of water smashed into their homes, flattening villages and washing cars into the sea.

Several coastal towns were wiped out entirely as the sea advanced, sending hundreds of locals running for their lives to higher ground. The south east of the island bore the brunt of the carnage.

The earthquake struck around 125 miles away from the islands.

Mike Reynolds, superintendent of the National Park of American Samoa, said four tsunami waves measuring 15 to 20 feet high roared ashore on American Samoa. He reported dozens of park workers missing.

The Samoa Red Cross, which opened five temporary shelters, estimated that 15,000 people had been affected.

On the island of Samoa, locals said entire tourist resorts were washed away, while one family was reported to have lost nine members in the disaster.

Hampered by power and communications outages, officials struggled to determine damage and casualties.

Rescue teams were scouring the beaches for bodies and hundreds of injured were being treated in hospitals as fears rose that scores more could have been swept out to sea.

Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi, the Samoan Prime Minister, said: “So much has gone. So many people are gone. I’m so shocked, so saddened by all the loss.”

Samoa developed an early alert system following the 2004 tsunami in Indonesia that killed more than 220,000 people and laid waste to huge areas of coastline.

However, the speed of the tsunami this time meant there was little time to raise the alarm.

Australia, New Zealand and the United States have pledged assistance to the Samoan islands, with Barack Obama declaring the situation in the Pacific “a major disaster”.

The effects of the tsunami could be felt nearly 5,000 miles away on a Japanese island.

Typhoon kills dozens in Vietnam, Cambodia


A Vietnamese resident tries to get into his flooded house after Typhoon Ketsana swept through Hoi An. Typhoon Ketsana extended its destructive rampage through Southeast Asia Wednesday, blowing away whole villages in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos as the regional death toll rose to 331. (AFP/Hoang Dinh Nam)


(Post by CAAI News Media)

by Tran Thi Minh Ha Tran Thi Minh Ha – Wed Sep 30

HOI AN, Vietnam (AFP) – Typhoon Ketsana extended its trail of destruction across Southeast Asia Wednesday, killing at least 66 people in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos and unleashing some of the worst floods in a decade.

Tens of thousands of people fled as landslides wiped out homes and rising waters submerged villages and ancient world heritage sites, just days after Ketsana killed 246 people in the Philippines.

Ketsana barrelled towards Laos on Wednesday after being downgraded to a tropical depression, while aid workers struggled to reach stranded survivors and get urgently needed supplies to the homeless.

In Vietnam, officials with the flood and storm control committee said at least 55 people died, including 13 in Kon Tum, a mountainous inland province, and 14 in central Quang Ngai province, where the typhoon made landfall.

Another 11 were missing, an official said.

Cambodia said 11 people died when the storm struck overnight, while there were no immediate reports of casualties from Laos. Scene: Hoi An flooding

Central Vietnam bore the brunt of the typhoon's impact, with the flood and storm control committee saying that six coastal provinces had been evacuated, involving 168,585 people. Many areas were without power.

The town of Hoi An, a UNESCO world heritage site, was under three metres (10 feet) of water. The town is a major tourist draw for its centuries-old pastel-coloured buildings.

On Tuesday flooding hit parts of Danang as well as Hue, the former capital and another World Heritage site, where residents used small wooden and steel boats to move around.

"This flooding might be bigger than the historic floods in 1999," said Nguyen Su, the Communist Party chief in Hoi An.

Aid agency World Vision said in a statement more than 5,800 houses in Vietnam had collapsed in floods and landslides with 163,000 houses having lost their roofs, but this was not immediately confirmed by the government.

Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said military helicopters could be sent to join the rescue effort, adding that they would immediately evacuate households on river banks and areas likely to suffer from landslides.

State-run Vietnam News carried a front-page photograph of houses almost submerged by brown floodwaters in badly hit Kon Tum province.

In Cambodia, authorities said the homes of thousands of people had been evacuated as the storm packed winds of up to 145 kilometres (90 miles) an hour.

Nine were killed and 28 injured in central Cambodia while two died in the northeast overnight as the country was battered by the storm, officials said. The victims included a grandmother, mother and three children in one house.

"At least nine people were crushed last night when their houses fell down," said Chea Cheat, chief of the Red Cross office in central Kampong Thom province, adding that at least 92 houses in his province were destroyed.

"I have never seen such a strong wind in my life," said Pang Phot, a police officer in the Sandann district.

"Many wooden houses were immediately blown away and many others collapsed to the ground. It was raining heavily and people could not flee their homes because the wind hit immediately," he told AFP by telephone.

In Laos, five or six villages had reportedly been flooded in Savannakhet province and aid workers were making their way there by car, World Vision said.

"We have the capability to urgently ready 500 aid packs if our assessment teams find these are needed," World Vision aid worker Vatthanathavone Inthirath said.

The Philippines is still struggling to cope with the aftermath of floods caused by Ketsana that have affected more than two million people, with the US military set to send troops and equipment there to help.

Ketsana, at the time a tropical storm, dumped the heaviest rains in more than four decades on Manila and surrounding areas on Saturday, submerging 80 percent of the nation's capital.



Photo by: Heng Chivoan
Officials hoist coffins containing the bodies of several victims in Kampong Thom, which felt the full force of Typhoon Ketsana when it hit Tuesday night.



Thursday, 01 October 2009 15:03 May Titthara and Irwin Loy

Kampong Thom Province

TYPHOON Ketsana slammed into Cambodia with devastating force Tuesday night, killing at least 11 people and leaving thousands more injured or homeless as 145km/h winds and heavy rain lashed the Kingdom.

The tail end of the storm, which has killed hundreds of people since it smashed into the Philippines on Saturday, was the most severe ever to lash Cambodia, experts said.

“This is the first time that we have seen such a storm,” said Seth Vannareth, director of the Department of Meteorology at the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology.

Disaster officials confirmed on Wednesday that nine were killed and 35 injured in central Cambodia, while two died in the northeast. The death toll is expected to rise, with reports of more fatalities continuing to emerge across the country last night.

Kampong Thom province bore the brunt of the disaster. At least nine people were crushed to death when their homes collapsed on Tuesday night, said Chea Cheat, chief of the local Red Cross office.

In one incident, five members of one family – spanning three generations – died in Teak Mileang, a village in the Sandan district of Kampong Thom province. A 39-year-old woman, her mother, 15-year-old daughter, 14-year-old son and a baby were killed almost instantly when the roof of their house caved in. Only the husband, who was hunting in the forest when the storm struck, survived.



Photo by: Heng Chivoan, Peter Olszewski and AFP
Hundreds of homes were destroyed when Typhoon Ketsana slammed into Cambodia on Tuesday night, killing at least 11 people. Kampong Thom was hardest-hit (above and inset), while heavy rains swelled the river in Siem Reap.

“The family died because they were in the house to shelter themselves from the rain,” said Sin Chea, a relative, who said he barely escaped with his own life. “I was sitting under my house when the storm hit. When the storm came, I ran away. That’s why I survived. Fifteen minutes later, my house was destroyed.”

A neighbour who witnessed the tragedy compared it to the horrors of Cambodia’s bloody civil war. Meas Sophea, 38, said: “My neighbours are all dead and our houses have been destroyed, just as they were during the civil war.” After seeing the storm destroy her neighbours’ home, she fled to the pagoda but suffered a broken leg when it, too, collapsed. “When I saw [my neighbours’] bloodstains on the ground, I ran out of my house to the pagoda, but then the pagoda also fell down,” she said.

Pang Phot, a police officer, said the storm struck quickly. “It was raining heavily and people could not flee their homes because the wind hit immediately,” he said. “I have never seen such a strong wind in my life. It punched the village immediately. It shocked us. Many wooden houses were immediately blown away and many others collapsed to the ground.”

In addition to the official death toll, three more people were reported dead in Siem Reap province, deputy Governor Bun Tharith said. One man was killed in Angkor Thom district when his house collapsed while he slept. Another died when he fell from his fishing boat in Chikrei district. Details of the third death could not be confirmed last night. Severe flooding was also reported in Siem Reap, where the river reached dangerous levels.



By Wednesday, the typhoon was downgraded to a tropical storm. Although the worst of Ketsana is now over, the final death toll is yet to come, officials say.

“We have still not had reports from some districts,” said Ly Samreth, chief of cabinet for Siem Reap province, noting that many people in his province were caught out by the storm depite repeated warnings – including one from Prime Minister Hun Sen – last week. “Cambodian people weren’t prepared for Ketsana despite the forecast,” he said.

A Cambodia Red Cross (CRC) official confirmed that the storm had taken some villages by surprise. “We already informed the local villagers to be careful, but they seemed not to pay much attention on the issue, and when the storm occurred, it damaged a lot of properties,” said Neth Sophanna, the CRC’s vice director of disaster management.

“We have not yet counted the number of families affected. We are still investigating further to evaluate the scope of the damages.”



Residents negotiate knee-deep mud at a remote village in Rodriguez, Rizal province, Philippines on Thursday Oct. 1, 2009. Flood victims from Typhoon Ketsana trudged through sludge in the Philippines as death toll rose from water that submerged the homes of nearly 2 million people. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)



Pham Thi Thu Suong, 7, rides a boa past Hoi An's landmark Japanese Bridge in flooded water in Hoi An, Vietnam, Thursday, Oct. 1, 2009 after Typhoon Ketsana passed the area. Ketsana prompted the worst flooding in the northern Philippines in 40 years when it struck Saturday, and then continued its deadly path across Southeast Asia, blowing down wooden villages in Cambodia and crushing Vietnamese houses under mudslides on Tuesday. (AP Photo/Chitose Suzuki)




Cambodian villagers carry coffins loaded with bodies of villagers who died during Typhoon Ketsana in Teuk Mileang village, Sandan district, Kampong Thom province, about 250 kilometers (155 miles), north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009. Typhoon Ketsana swept into central Cambodia and toppled dozens of rickety homes, killing at least 11 people and injuring some 29 others, disaster officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)


By ROHAN SULLIVAN (AP)
(Post by CAAi News media)

MANILA, Philippines — Asia had little respite Thursday from an already brutal storm season, with warnings the next tempest was en route to the Philippines while three nations counted their dead from the previous typhoon, with the toll reaching 383.

Officials were preparing compulsory evacuation plans for tens of thousands of people in the Philippines as they watched Typhoon Parma track toward the country with winds gusting up to 130 mph (210 kph).

A decision on the evacuations would be made in the next day or so, Social Welfare Secretary Esperanza Cabral said.

Parma could be more powerful than Ketsana, which left the Philippines' capital awash Saturday and then cut a destructive path across Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.

"We are dealing with a very strong typhoon (and) there is a big possibility that this typhoon will gather more strength," Nathaniel Cruz, the Philippines' chief weather forecaster, said of Parma. "Let us all pray."

Meanwhile, the Asia-Pacific region struggled to recover from two major earthquakes. The death toll from Tuesday's quake-triggered tsunami in the South Pacific rose above 140, and Indonesia said the toll from a 7.6-magnitude quake there Wednesday was above 460.

Steady rain fell in Manila on Thursday after several days of clear skies, making conditions miserable for more than 2 million people whose homes were lined with slushy mud by the worst flooding in four decades.

The idea of another storm brought fresh trauma to survivors.

"I hope the typhoon will hit another place," said Glen Juban, whose family was washed from the roof of their shanty by floodwaters last Saturday. Juban, his wife and 13-year-old son survived but his 4-year-old daughter drowned.

"We've been hit so hard. The situation now is just so difficult and I don't know if we can take some more, another calamity."

In Cambodia and central Vietnam, rescuers picked through the remains of houses that were blown down or buried in landslides, and villages remained cut off by mud-blocked roads and the worst floods in decades.

A Vietnamese military helicopter dropped packets of instant noodles to cutoff villages in central Kon Tum province while authorities in Quang Ngai province used speed boats to rush noodles and bottled water to victims in two isolated mountain districts, provincial officials said.

In Cambodia, rain poured down on towns in Siem Reap province already awash in three feet (half a meter) of floodwaters. Schools, markets and other businesses were closed, deputy police chief Kan Sambath said.

Four large trees at the famed Angkor Thom temple complex were felled by the storm but did not cause any damage, he said.

The Laotian state news agency KPL reported flooding and damage to roads, bridges and telecommunications in the country's southern provinces. It said homes and rice fields were damaged when the storm hit Wednesday morning, but there was no information about casualties.

Officials in Vietnam raised the death toll there to 92 on Thursday. Cambodia's rose to 14. The storm was deadliest in the Philippines, with 277 killed.

Parma was 404 miles (650 kilometers) off the Philippines on Thursday morning, heading for the coast north of where Ketsana hit. It was expected to hit on Saturday, but was already bringing rain to eastern provinces.

Cruz said Parma could strengthen into a "super typhoon," a designation given to storms with sustained winds exceeding 124 mph (200 kph). It was carrying less rain than Ketsana, but the stronger winds could be very destructive, he said.

However, the storm could still change course and miss the Philippines, he said.

Typhoons occur year-round in the northeastern Pacific, usually blowing in from the east and tracking a path threatening Southeast Asia and southern China to Japan in the north. They are most common and usually most powerful from August to November.

Ketsana followed on the heels of Typhoon Morakot, which slammed into Taiwan in early August, causing mudslides and the worst flooding on the island in 50 years. Morakot also killed 22 people in the Philippines and eight in China.

Associated Press writers Teresa Cerojano and Jim Gomez in Manila, Minh Van Tran in Hanoi, Vietnam, Sopheng Cheang in Phnom Pehn, Cambodia, and Grant Peck in Bangkok contributed to this report.



A soldier and volunteers search for victims under the ruins of a collapsed four-storey building in Padang on Indonesia's Sumatra island October 1, 2009. Officials estimate that thousands are trapped under rubble and possibly dead after hundreds of houses and multi-storey buildings collapsed. REUTERS/Crack Palinggi (Post by CAAI News Media)



A man walks amid the rubble of an earthquake-damaged building in Padang on Indonesia's Sumatra island October 1, 2009. Rescue teams struggled on Thursday to find people trapped under debris after a powerful earthquake hit Padang, possibly killing thousands. REUTERS/Muhammad Fitrah/Singgalang Newspaper (Post by CAAI News Media)


A resident looks at the wreckage of a house in Padang, West Sumatra province October 1, 2009. Rescue teams struggled on Thursday to find people trapped under debris after a powerful earthquake hit Padang, possibly killing thousands. REUTERS/Dadang Tri (Post by CAAI News Media)


People watch as heavy equipment helps to move rubble from the wreckage of a college, from which 22 students are still missing, in Padang, West Sumatra province October 1, 2009. Rescue teams struggled on Thursday to find people trapped under debris after a powerful earthquake hit Padang, possibly killing thousands. REUTERS/Dadang Tri (Post by CAAI News Media)


Indonesian rescuers search for victims in the rubble of a collapsed building in Padang in West Sumatra after a 7.6-magnitude earthquake hit the area. Experts said that environmental damage, shoddy urban planning, corruption and other man-made problems are magnifying the human cost of natural disasters almost every time they strike in Asia. (AFP/Bay Ismoyo) (Post by CAAI News Media)


Rescuers search for victims at a building damaged by earthquake in Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia, Thursday, Oct. 1, 2009. A second earthquake with a 6.8 magnitude rocked western Indonesia Thursday, a day after the region was devastated by an undersea quake of 7.6 magnitude. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara) (Post by CAAI News Media)


Soldiers carry the bodies of earthquake victims at a hospital in Padang on Indonesia's Sumatra island October 1, 2009. The 7.6 magnitude quake, which struck on Wednesday afternoon, has killed between 100 and 200 people, a disaster agency official said early on Thursday morning. REUTERS/Muhammad Fitrah/Singgalang Newspaper (Post by CAAI News Media)


Residents stand near the bodies of earthquake victims at a hospital in Padang on Indonesia's Sumatra island October 1, 2009. The 7.6 magnitude quake, which struck on Wednesday afternoon, has killed between 100 and 200 people, a disaster agency official said early on Thursday morning. REUTERS/Muhammad Fitrah/Singgalang Newspaper (Post by CAAI News Media)


A resident checks a body as he tries to find his relative at a hospital in Padang on Indonesia's Sumatra island October 1, 2009. Thousands may have died in an earthquake that struck the city of Padang on Indonesia's Sumatra island, a minister said on Thursday, with officials saying many victims remained buried under toppled buildings. The 7.6 magnitude quake hit Padang on Wednesday afternoon, knocking over hundreds of buildings, but with communications patchy it was hard to determine the extent of the destruction and loss of life. REUTERS/Muhammad Fitrah/Singgalang Newspaper (Post by CAAI News Media)



Soldiers and volunteers carry an earthquake victim from a collapsed hotel in Padang on Indonesia's Sumatra island October 1, 2009. The 7.6 magnitude quake, which struck on Wednesday afternoon, has killed between 100 and 200 people, a disaster agency official said early on Thursday morning. REUTERS/Muhammad Fitrah/Singgalang Newspaper (Post by CAAI News Media)

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