WEEKEND EDITION The CambODIa DaIly All the News Without Fear or Favor Volume 60 Issue 97 Saturday-Sunday, April 4-5, 2015 2,000 riel/50 cents Obama Hails ‘Historic’ Iran Nuclear Framework reuters switzerland - Iranians celebrated in the streets after negotiators reached a framework for a nuclear deal that could bring their country in from the cold, hailed by u.s. President Barack Obama as an “historic understanding” with an old adversary. The tentative agreement, struck on Thursday after eight days of talks in switzerland, clears the way for negotiations on a settlement aimed at allaying Western fears that Iran was seeking to build an atomic bomb and in return lift economic sanctions on the Islamic Republic. It marks the most significant step toward rapprochement between Iran and the u.s. since they became enemies with the 1979 Iranian revolution. But the deal still requires experts to work out difficult details over three months. Obama and Iranian President Hasan Rouhani, who both took risks to open the dialogue, will each have to sell the deal to skeptical conservatives at home. With many details still up in the air, France cautioned on Friday against overoptimism. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin netanyahu, who has the ear of u.s. opposition Republicans, fumed against an lausanne, Continued on page 6 Reuters Supporters of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa Islamic organization protest Friday in support of Saudi Arabia over its intervention in Yemen during a demonstration in Peshawar, Pakistan. Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said on Friday that they will stand by Saudi Arabia as it leads a campaign against Houthi rebels there. NGO: Role in Child Sex Abuse Case Distorted B y S iMon h enderSon and K hy S oVuthy the cambodIa daIly Child protection nGO Friends International said this week it will contest being officially cited as the originator of allegations of sexual misconduct at Our Home orphanage that led to the center’s closure last month and to the imprisonment of its director, Hang Vibol, on suspicion of sexually abusing boys in his care. Mr. Vibol, a former director of anti-pedophile nGO action Pour les enfants (aPle), ran the Our Home orphanage and school from 1999 until it was shut down by the Ministry of social affairs on March 5 following his arrest two days earlier. The Phnom Penh Municipal Court charged him with indecently assaulting a number of the children under his care and he remains in prison awaiting trial. Following Mr. Vibol’s arrest, aPle stated that its investigation into its former director, which be- gan in June 2014, was done at the request of the Ministry of social affairs, which had received reports of possible abuse at Our Home by Friends International and First step Cambodia. a statement released by aPle on March 9 clarified that Friends International reported the case based on information provided by two unnamed French individuals. Friends International quickly distanced itself from the case, Continued on page 4 Graphic Novel Depicts the Years Before Zero B y M ichelle V achon the cambodIa daIly An excerpt from an upcoming graphic novel by Sera Special Weekend Insert cambodiadaily.com Civil war was the backdrop to the final years of Ing Phousera’s childhood. “I will never forget the evenings around the camp fire when [this soldier] would tell me and my brother about his battles, his injuries,” he said. “But the people dying in the streets or the piles of bodies blackened by fire, this, I saw myself.” What had happened to turn Cambodia into a land where cadavers were a familiar sight for children? This is what Mr. Phousera, an artist who goes by the name sera, sought to explain in his graphic novel entitled “Bitter Cucumbers,” an excerpt of which is featured in this weekend’s edition of The Cambodia Daily. The work, which will be more than 100 pages once completed, will depict the events that led to Cambodia being taken over by the The Daily Newspaper of Record Since 1993 Khmer Rouge forces in april 1975 —40 years ago this month. “It speaks of the moment in history when everything tumbled,” sera said. “Because I realized that, in fact, people hardly know or have misconceptions as to the chain of events and history.” “If you ask [Cambodians] around you why war spread through Cambodia in 1970...whether they are young or old, I have noticed that nearly everyone will answer that it Continued on page 2 The CambODIa DaIly 2 saturday-sunday, aprIl 4-5, 2015 aNd also Man Comes Down From High reuters - a Colorado man who wrecked his car, fled from police and climbed a tree atop a mountain cliff, has been arrested after negotiators spent three hours talking him down from his precarious perch, authorities said on Wednesday. Richard Poula Jr., 32, ultimately surrendered and was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of drugs and a host of other DenVeR Novel... 1 was due to the u.s. bombardments,” he said. “Granted, the secret american bombardments were a reality, but those bombings were not in themselves the cause of the war...but rather one of the consequences. “and so I spent these years rereading and working on [outlining] this history through the vehicle of a graphic novel,” he said. In 1965, then-Prince norodom sihanouk had secretly authorized the communist forces of north Vietnam—the Viet Cong—to set up camps along the Cambodian border and receive military supplies sent by China through the port of sihanoukville, with some of the supplies going to the Cambodian army. as historians note, Prince sihanouk did not really have a choice, considering the strength of north Vietnam. still, in 1969 he tacitly agreed to shut his eyes if u.s. forces supporting south Vietnam were to pursue the Viet Cong in sparsely habited parts of Cambodia. This led to a massive u.s. bombing campaign along the Cambodian border. so Prince sihanouk’s attempt to keep Cambodia out of the war actually plunged the country into the conflict, sera noted. Born in 1961, sera clearly remembers those bombardments and the civil war that tore Cambodia apart in the early 1970s until the Khmer Rouge victory of april 1975. sera and his family were among the people who took refuge at the French embassy when the Khmer Rouge seized Phnom Penh on april 17, 1975. His father, Ing Phourin—a businessman with French university degrees who spoke four or five languages—had to leave the embassy when the Khmer Rouge ordered Cambodian nationals out. However, because sera’s moth- continued froM page charges related to the incident. according to the local sheriff’s office, police outside the city of longmont took a call Tuesday from a person who reported that a motorist was stopped in the middle of a road and was beating on a car with a pipe wrench. “The person reporting this strange behavior decided to follow the vehicle until deputies were able to catch up,” the sheriff’s office said. er was French, he and his siblings were allowed to leave the country with her when the Khmer Rouge evacuated the embassy a few weeks later. sera never saw his father again. He eventually learned that he had been living in a village near siem Reap City prior to the Khmer Rouge defeat. “In December 1978, he was killed by [Khmer Rouge leader] Ta Mok’s troops, who had been sent to ‘clean up’ the siem Reap area,” he said. While living in Paris, where he teaches at the universite Paris 1, Pantheon-sorbonne, sera has made countless trips to Cambodia and conducted numerous workshops in the country since 1993. “This is my country,” he said. sera had hoped to complete his book this month to mark the 40th anniversary of the Khmer Rouge takeover, but he was delayed by another major project: a monument to the victims of the Khmer Rouge genocide. This began in 2011 while he was conducting research on memorials in Cambodia as part of a project funded by international research institutions. “What struck me was that nowhere in Cambodia is there on public grounds something to mark this tragedy,” he said. For example, there is not even a plaque at the sites of the dam projects in Banteay Meanchey and Battambang provinces to indicate that thousands of people died there of forced labor during the Khmer Rouge, he said. While the Tuol sleng Genocide Museum and the Choeung ek Genocidal Center have been set up to acknowledge those killed there, these were specific places where the Khmer Rouge executed political prisoners and especially other Khmer Rouge, sera said. These victims differ from the tens of thousands who died of starvation, forced labor or casual execution by the Khmer Rouge, he said. “and I believe that Phnom Newsmakers ■ Vanilla ice has cut a deal in his south Florida burglary case, which means he’s looking at community service and restitution instead of the potential for a felony conviction. “I never had any criminal intent,” the rapper-turned-TV personality told the Palm Beach Post on Thursday. “It’s just unfortunate, but here we are. I’m moving forward.” Robert Van Winkle—that’s his real name—would be “moving forward” from a February arrest on suspicion of felony home burglary and grand theft after he allegedly entered an abandoned home near one he was renovating for his DIY network series and took items including furniture, bicycles and a pool heater. The 47-year-old “Ice Ice Baby” singer told police at the time that the missing items police found in his possession had been out on the sidewalk, but according to TMZ a witness told them the stuff came from inside the dwelling. (LAT) Penh deserves, for the young generation as well as those who have known that period, something to evoke that drama.” at first, sera conceived of a sculpture that clearly suggested suffering—people dying, bodies without limbs. But after discussing the design with the Phnom Penh authorities, he agreed to change his approach. “Indeed, on public grounds one cannot display something that overly disturbs. so I came up with a much more soothing form.” “It is a figure that invites appeasement and contemplation... meant not so much to recall but to evoke, providing a place for people to reflect and pay homage to those who are no longer here,” he said. The monument, which is now in the process of being cast in bronze in Phnom Penh, will consist of the figure of a man falling backwards, supported by only one pillar touching his shoulders. The bronze figure will stand over a square water basin with a wall made of Cambodian earth as a backdrop. France is providing most of the funding for the monument, which was granted as one of the official reparations approved by the extraordinary Chambers in the Courts ------ of Cambodia to civil parties in the eCCC’s Case 002/01. The French embassy and sera are now in talks with City Hall about the best location for the monument and hope to see it installed in Phnom Penh within the next few months. sera also intends to complete his graphic novel this year. He named the book “Bitter Cucumbers” in reference to a Cambodian tale. as the story goes, a king who loved a particular gardener’s sweet cucumbers—trasak pha’em in Khmer—told him to grow them exclusively for him and gave the gardener a spear to kill anyone trying to steal them. so when the king came without warning to take the cucumbers, the gardener killed him, taking him for a thief. after looking into the incident, government officials named the gardener king Ta Trasak Pha’em. according to historian alain Forest, the story legitimized a change of royal dynasty and a king named by human dignitaries rather than the gods. as the title of sera’s book indicates, heirs of this gardener king brought plague to the land in the 1960s and 1970s: The sweet cucumbers turned bitter. National Brief ------ Vietnamese Jailed for Dealing Ice in Bavet Casinos a Vietnamese couple charged over small-scale dealing of methamphetamine in Bavet City casinos was sent to svay Rieng Provincial Prison on Friday, police said, just a day after Interior Minister sar Kheng implored authorities to target ringleaders rather than their underlings. Bavet City police chief Kao Horn said that Yiv Bavhong and his wife lu Thiha, both 34, were arrested at about 9 p.m. Wednesday after undercover officers received a tip-off. He said the pair confessed to their crimes. “During questioning with...a Vietnamese [interpreter] who can speak Khmer, they said that they had planned to sell the drugs at casinos,” Mr. Horn said. “It was very difficult to get an answer from them because the interpretation was not so clear and they were resistant to our questions,” he added. Kan Ken, provincial anti-drug police chief, said that the couple was sent to the provincial prison Friday evening to await trial after being found in possession of 3.3 grams of the drug. In a speech to close the annual meeting of the national authority to Combat Drugs on Thursday, Mr. Kheng said that a pattern of arresting only low-level traffickers was “a problem.” (Kang Sothear)
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