Telecoms regulator calls for price meeting

Written By Bejata Todd on Wednesday, May 1, 2013 | 2:10 PM

By Rann Reuy and Anne Renzenbrink

The Telecommunication Regulator of Cambodia (TRC) is calling all mobile phone operators to attend a meeting next week in order to reconsider the costs for within- and across-network calls, after disputes over bonus promotions in Cambodia’s crowded telecoms market.

TRC director Mao Chakrya said that for the meeting on Thursday next week he would discuss the “cost base” of phone calls to which all operators’ representatives agree on, in order to avoid having costs below the agreed price.

“We do not know yet about the cost base, but … we will not allow the operators to operate below the cost base,” he said, adding that “this is not correct, and operators must have regulations”.

In an effort to tackle price disputes between the mobile operators and to set minimum tariffs, the Ministry of Economy and Finance and the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications signed the Inter-Ministerial Prakas Number 232 on Minimum Tariffs of Mobile and Fixed Telephone Services and Interconnection Fees in December 2009.

According the prakas, the minimum cost of calls within a network is 4.5 US cents per minute.

The minimum tariff for cross-network calls is 5.95 cents.

In response to suggestions that the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications could affect free market competition in the Kingdom, Mao Chakrya said the using operation cost, which is below the cost base, would lead to companies losing profits and lead to failures.

“We defend the benefits of the people, it is the duty of the TRC,” he said.

Thomas Hundt, CEO of telecom operator Smart, said there’s no official indication of a meeting yet, but that does not mean the meeting is not taking place.

“I cannot give you any idea what could be the direction of the meeting, but I think the public opinion which you can see everywhere is speaking a … strong language, the public, the consumers are not happy,” he said.

The Post reported earlier this month that the TRC had issued warning letters to mobile operators Beeline and Smart over their recent advertisements, saying they violate 2009’s inter-ministerial prakas 232.

Earlier this week Smart sent text messages to its customers, saying “due to Prakas 232 we are presently not allowed to provide any call bonuses.”

According to Anthony Galliano, CEO of Cambodian Investment Management, [the consolidation in Cambodia’s mobile sector] “was a matter of natural selection and will result in a solid and sound group of survivors.

“As the market narrows down to a healthy three operators of significance, expectations are that pricing will be more competitive and consumers will be offered even more attractive packages. The three will scramble for market dominance and thus this should lead to even cheaper rates,” he said.

Galliano said that the regulators, however, may continue to attempt to stabilise pricing at a level they are comfortable with, which puts everyone at the same level.

While not the best scenario for consumers, “it will likely lead to a more financially sound industry, something severely lacking in the past”, he added. “The key differentiation factors will be marketing, coverage, and quality of service rather than price.”

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Upcoming Event Talking Technology and Social Sharing at September 22-23th in Cambodia-BarCamp Phnom Penh

Written By Bejata Todd on Monday, September 10, 2012 | 7:20 AM

BarCamp Phnom Penh
BarCamp Phnom Penh – Source

There are always exciting events happen in Phnom Penh. Don’t misss Cambodia, here I am this weekend.

I have another exiting event to recommend.

We do it once a year and this year 2012 is the 5th one!

What is BarCamp

It’s a free event where all the fans of technology reunite to learn and share experiences.

Thank to Chantra Be, the organizer of BarCamp, and all the volunteers who spend a lot of their time to organize it every year.

Each year, I learned something from the event.

There are not only Cambodian but people come from around the world to join the BarCamp.

This is your chance to make connection and learn about new technology that they are using in other countries.

When

It’s a two days event:

22nd September 2012 08:00 – 17:30

23rd September 2012 08:00 – 17:30

Where

University of Puthisastra
No. 55, Croix Rouge Khmere (St. 180), 12211 Phnom Penh
Check out the map for more details.

Register

It is good if you register in advance to the event, especially if you want to present something. It would help the team organizers to estimate how many people will join the events, and how many presentations etc.
Please take a few minutes to register here.

How can you get involved?

You can be the listener or presenter or you can be both. If you have something to present, prepare it and don’t forget to mention it when you register.

You might need a laptop and electrical power extension. The internet will be provided for free during the two days events.

For this year, I plan to present a topic on how to be a 4-hour workweek blogger. I will share what I know about blogging in Khmer.

This is our chance to meet each other face to face as well.

I will confirm again about the date and time of my presentation. I hope we can reserve it in advance!

Contact detail:

Email: info@barcampphnompenh.org
Web: http://2012.barcampphnompenh.org/
Chantra Be: chantra.be[at]gmail.com

article source from khmerbird.com
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Samsung’s latest tablets arrive in Cambodia



A woman looks at a Samsung tablet yesterday at a dealer in Phnom Penh. Photograph: Meng Kimlong/Phnom Penh Post

Samsung, the largest mobile and smartphone maker in terms of number of sales and market share, officially launched its latest generation Samsung Galaxy Notes – Galaxy Note 10.1 and Galaxy Tab 2 in Cambodia yesterday, two weeks after it lost a lawsuit against Apple over the patent infringements.

On August 24, a California jury decided that Samsung ripped off the technological innovations patented by Apple in its revolutionary iPhone and iPad, and ordered Samsung to pay Apple US$1.05 billion.

However, on September 5 a Japanese court ruled that Samsung hadn’t infringe on Apple’s patent for ‘synchronising music and video data with servers’ and Apple was ordered by Tokyo District Judge Tamotsu Shoji to pay the costs of the lawsuit after he passed his verdict in the latest decision in a global dispute between the technology giants over patents used in mobile devices, according to Reuters.

“As a global leader in digital media and world’s number one smartphone supplier, Samsung Electronics is proudly announcing today the latest generation Galaxy Notes, called Galaxy Note 10.1 and Galaxy Tab 2 series,” Lee Gwi-han, director of Samsung for Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos, said.

“The Galaxy Note 10.1, Galaxy Tab 2 are driven by technology that fits the human dream in which life and technology converge while providing optimum performance, benefits and especially serve as a phone or tablet. The Galaxy Note 10.1’s large screen will provide people with a delightful multimedia experience and allow for efficient communication,” he said.

“Galaxy Note 10.1 offers a complete experience with encircled  multimedia contents, better communication capabilities such as 1.4 GHz CPU, 2GB of RAM, a Precise S-pen, multi-screen and Adobe Photoshop Touch, which is well-deserved for businessman and the creation industry,” he added.

Samsung recently received four EISA awards he continued. “Innovation and excellence are the core of everything we do at Samsung.”

Ekapak Phongohasura, production director of Samsung in Bangkok said a survey by an international company showed that the smartphone and the tablets markets are being overtaken by Apple products while Google’s Android takes around 40 per cent of market share.

“People are using the tablets for entertainment and for the business. Also in the enterprise segment, I mean within in the next five years, the tablets will be integrated into the enterprise segment,” he said.

The forecast from one international research company said that in 2016 the number of shipments of tablets would overtake the number of shipments of laptops, he added.

“As you can see, tablets will be used for entertainment and for the business purposes. The Galaxy Note 10.1 is designed for both entertainment and business purposes. The target users are the business professional, creative designer, citizen and also the journalist,” he continued.

Samsung smartphones are dominating Cambodia’s crowded mobile phone market in terms of market share and the number sold, according to a survey from Gross for Knowledge [GfK] research.

article sourse from phnompenhpost.com
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Acleda takes out $10m loan


Traffic passes in front of an Acleda Bank branch in Phnom Penh. Photograph: Vireak Mai/Phnom Penh Post

Acleda Bank has signed a $US10 million loan agreement with Proparco, a development finance institution held in part by the Agence Francaise de Développement (AFD), according to a statement released on Wednesday.

With the Kingdom’s financial sector expanding rapidly and a growing demand for banking and financial services among Cambodians, the loan seeks to support the growth of the commercial bank’s loan portfolio, according to the release.

“We are happy to support a first-class actor like Acleda Bank in pursuing its business model of providing financial services to all segments of the community,” Proparco deputy CEO Marie-Hélène Loison said in the release.

“Proparco’s loan will contribute to the financial integration of disadvantaged members of the population, while also growing the credit offer for small and medium-sized enterprises.”

Acleda president and chief executive In Channy said the money was needed to finance long-term projects such as housing loans.

In Cambodia’s commercial banking sector, credit grew by 34 per cent in 2011 while deposits increased by 20 per cent, the release says.

The $10 million loan, which has a five-year maturity, and is the second such support Acleda has received from the French institution.

In 2009, Proparco granted a $10 million credit facility to Acleda, the statement says.

According to Acleda executive vice-president Cheam Teang, $10 million is not enough to provide loans for micro-, small and medium- sized businesses.

“The loan demand in Cambodia is increasing,” Teang said. “We need more than $10 million. We need to ensure we have enough to pay the loans.”

Teang said that compared with Acleda’s main assets and  the more than 200 offices nation-wide the money would be divided among, the amount was small. According to him, the commercial bank has also received loans from other institutions such as the International Finance Corporation.

Seng Takakneary, president of the Cambodia Women Entrepreneurs Association, agrees that the demand for loans among Cambodians is increasing.

“Everyone wants to do business,” Takaneary said, adding that her organisation also aimed to provide loans in the future. 

Proparco, founded in 1977, is jointly held by AFD and private shareholders from bothy developed and developing nations. It invests in developing countries to enhance growth, support sustainable development and reach the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals.

The Acleda loan will take the number of Proparco’s interventions in the Cambodian financial sector to six.

Acleda was established in 1993 as an NGO for micro-financing. In 2003, it received a licence from the National Bank of Cambodia to become a commercial bank. Operating in all provinces of Cambodia, Acleda has 237 offices that target micro-, small and medium-sized entrepreneurs.
article source from phnompenhpost.com
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The business of making a difference

Written By Bejata Todd on Thursday, August 30, 2012 | 8:15 AM

Social enterprise may be more than just a buzzword if last Saturday’s attendance at Cambodia’s second-ever conference on the matter was anything to judge by.

The 350 person-plus crowd of attendees consisted predominately of Cambodians, for whom doing business appears to be about more than merely creating jobs and turning a profit.

These aspiring entrepreneurs also want to do good.

Lina, a fourth-year chemical engineering and food technology student from the Institute of Technology of Cambodia, said that she attended the conference at the Cambodia-Japan Cultural Centre to learn how to make any future business she may run socially benefit the community.

“This conference is about social enterprise and I’m interested in participating, because maybe in the future I will run a business and somehow help the community. I want to know what are the things we can repair before running a business.”

Her definition of a social enterprise was much the same as the others at the conference: a business that can both make money and help the community.

Lina’s idea of help from business was in line with the models described by Alissa Caron, country co-ordinator for Population & Development International Cambodia, who in her speech discussed the various models on which social enterprises could be based and emphasised the need for them to be businesses first.

Caron saw a need at the conference to dispell the notion that social enterprises and NGOs are one and the same, even when they may share similar goals.

“[There is] this attitude which I heard this morning in the questions of still thinking of social enterprises as NGOs or not being able to separate in one’s mind the NGO mentality from the business mentality,” she said.

“I think that is really critical when starting a social enterprise. People really have to focus on the profit maximisation and not lose sight of the social goal, but drive the business forward and not think we need to pay our workers extravagant salaries just because they come from this really vulnerable community,” she continued.

The lack of profit maximisation is what Caron feels has limited the growth of social enterprise investments in Cambodia and around the world.

“I think it ultimately comes down to this misconception that some investors feel like social enterprises just really are NGOs trying to help people and they’re not looking to maximise profit. They’re not thinking about the economic aims as much as the social aims. So therefore, they wouldn’t be good on their investment, they wouldn’t be able to repay a loan. They’re just going to lose money. Perhaps that’s because some social enterprises do, but I don’t think for the most part it’s a fair assumption to make."

And just as a social enterprise needs a thought-out business model, it also must have a clear message, she said.

“Your social message has to be integrated or your customers won’t be interested,” she continued, emphasising the importance for a social business to be clearly more than just a business.
article source from phmompenhpost.com
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Famous people died too young in Cambodia

Written By Unknown on Tuesday, July 24, 2012 | 9:35 AM


Chut Wutty
Chut Wutty (Khmer: ឈុត វុទ្ធី; died – 26 April 2012) was the Founder and Director of the Natural Resource Protection Group (NRPG). He was a Cambodian environmental activist best known as the country’s most vocal critic of the military's alleged role in illegal logging conducted by companies granted land concessions in protected forests and related government corruption.

Life

Wutty was born in Svay Meas village, Vihear Sour commune, Kchlach Kandal district, Kandal, Cambodia. Chut Wutty obtained a Masters Degree in Military Studies from Russia in 1992. After his graduation, Wutty worked for the Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC) and as a military trainer at the Ministry of National Defense. In 2003, he was a Deputy Director of Global Witness in Cambodia who acted as a watchdog on the illegal logging all over the country. After the expulsion of Global Witness by the Cambodian government, Wutty founded an organization namely the Natural Resource Protection Group (NRPG) with financial support from Germany with the focus on the protection of the forest and natural resources in Cambodia.

Death

On 26 April 2012, Wutty was shot dead while escorting two Cambodia Daily journalists near a protected forest in Koh Kong province, where he had repeatedly attempted to expose illegal logging rackets that include military officials. He was 48 years old. The human rights group Licadho immediately dispatched investigators, and the organisation’s Koh Kong provincial coordinator, In Kong Chet, said that after talking to ballistics police, he had established that Chut Wutty was shot as he tried to drive away from the military police. Wutty is survived by his wife, two daughters, and a son.


Chea Vichea
Chea Vichea was the leader of the Free Trade Union of Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia (FTUWKC) until his assassination on Chinese New Year, 22 January 2004. Following his death, he was succeeded in his position at the FTUWKC by his younger brother Chea Mony.

Vichea was shot in the head and chest early in the morning while reading a newspaper at a kiosk in Daun Penh district, Phnom Penh. He had recently been dismissed by the INSM Garment Factory (located in the Chum Chao District of Phnom Penh) as a reprisal for helping to establish a trade union at the company. He also had close affiliations with the opposition Sam Rainsy Party.

Investigation

A few days after Vichea's killing, and facing mounting criticism for their failure to act, Cambodian authorities arrested two men and charged them with the murder.

The first, Born Samnang, was arrested in Prey Veng Province and transferred to Phnom Penh overnight. He initially admitted to the killing but then publicly retracted, claiming to have been tortured into confessing. Multiple eyewitnesses have placed Born Samnang in a different part of the country at the time of the murder.

The second suspect, Sok Sam Oeun, has consistently denied any involvement and also has alibis placing him in a party with friends at the time of the murder.

The criminal investigation was done by Phnom Penh's Tuol Kork district police and plagued by irregularities. Officers focused on threatening and rounding up those who provided alibis for the suspects, while witnesses were intimidated.'[1]

On 22 March 2004, the case's Investigating Judge, Hing Thirith, threw out the charges against the two men, citing a lack of evidence against them and weak credibility of the police investigation [2]. The next day, Hing Thirith was removed from his position at the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, and his decision to drop charges was subsequently overturned on 1 June 2004 by the Appeals Court Presiding Judge Thou Mony [3].

The trial took place more than a year after the murder while Born Samnang and Sok Sam Oeun remained in custody in Phnom Penh, despite a Cambodian legal limitation that no one be detained without trial for longer than six months. The case has been taken up by both national and international organisations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and ILO.

Trial

On 1 August 2005, the Phnom Penh Municipal Courts delivered a judgment which was highly criticized by both local and international organizations, who deemed it unfair and politically biased rather than based on independent and reasonable judgment.

Sok Sam Oeun and Born Samnang were judged guilty after a trial where no witnesses testified against the accused and no forensic evidence was brought to court. Both individuals were sentenced to 20 years in prison and ordered to pay $5,000 compensation each to the family of the victim.

Chea Vichea's family turned down the compensation, stating that they did not believe the two convicted were the real murderers.

Piseth Pilika

Oak Eap Pili (February 4, 1965 – July 6, 1999), was a Cambodian ballet dancer and actress. Pilika appeared in hundreds of movies and thousands of karaoke ranging from the 1980s through the 1990s. Her career was brought to a premature end when she was murdered by a gunshot.

Piseth Pilika was very involved in movie making. That was when she met Khai Praseth, also a well-known actor. The two played together in many movies and music videos and in 1990, they became husband and wife. In 1992, their first child was born named Kai Seth Lesak. Piseth Pilika starred in more than sixty movies and was in numerous advertisements. Apart from making movies, she was also very active in stage performance. During her lifetime, she went out to perform in many countries such as India, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Indonesia, China, Korea, Japan, Russia, France, Italy, Denmark, and the United States.

On July 6, 1999, she was shot dead by an unknown gunman while shopping at Orussey Market in Phnom Penh. At 6:30 am on 13 July 1999 she died (UTC+7). In October 1999, following Pisith Pilika's assassination, the French magazine L’Express claimed that the actress’ diary recounted a love affair with

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, and pointed to Bun Rany, Hun Sen's wife, as responsible for arranging the shooting; the magazine also claimed that on her deathbed the actress had named Bun Rany to several people. Bun Rany quickly denounced these charges, and announced that she would press charges against L’Express for defamation. No charges were ever brought against l'Express, however.



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14 Companies join Stock Maket in Cambodia

Written By Bejata Todd on Tuesday, April 24, 2012 | 10:17 PM

Phnom Penh: According the early establisted of Stock Maket in Cambodia, there are 14 companies joined such in list below
    
    ACLEDA Security Plc building
    
  • ACLEDA Security Plc
  • Phnom Penh Security Plc
  • OSK Indochina Security Plc
  • Cambodia-Vietnam Security Plc
  • CANA Security Plc
  • CAMPU Security Plc
  • Tung Yang Security Plc
  • SBI Royal Security Plc
  • Sacom Bank Security (Cambodia) Plc
  • Golden Fortune (Cambodia) Security Plc
  • Sonatra Security Plc
  • Acleda Bank Plc
  • Investment and Delvopment Cambodian Plc
In my idea, still now I have no idea on stock exchange, the governments should spread out of knowledge of stock exchange that is useful for Cambodian.

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