Archive for May, 2009

Reading: a novel obsession among Cambodian youth

Monday, May 18th, 2009

By Lim Seang Heng

A growing market for works by local writers has seen a rise in the number of new authors, though high print costs and piracy remain a problem.

On the second floor of the International Book Centre in Phnom Penh, 21-year-old Dy Vutheara is working out which book to buy from the hundreds of Khmer-language novels on offer. While she enjoys a variety of genres from detective stories to comics, she eventually settles on a romance.

“Most of them are good, so I have to weigh them up and decide which one would be best,” said Dy Vutheara, an environmental science student at the Royal University of Phnom Penh (RUPP).  Dy Vutheara has bought more than 100 novels in the last three years since her teacher suggested she read more. She is not alone. About 40 of her friends also like to read, and she says between them they keep track of newly published novels.  “We never miss any new releases even though we don’t have much money to buy them,” she said. “So we take it in turns to buy the books and read them.”

Kim Sophat, a secretary of state at the Ministry of Culture, says the growing market in Khmer novels is leading to an increase in the number of writers. “A lot of young people from the provinces and from urban centres are starting to write more and more. They can now make a decent living out of it,” Kim Sophat said.

Steady increase
One of the country’s best-known novelists, Mao Samnang, who writes under the pen name Rabbit, has noticed that the number of books published in each print run has increased steadily over the past decade – reinforcing the notion that more people are reading. But she says print costs remain an obstacle to increasing readership. Mao Samnang earns about US$500 for each of her novels, which take one month on average to complete. She says that if readers knew how difficult it is to write a book, they would complain less about the price. Despite the relatively high cost of books, she says many fans keep up with her new works by renting them from bookstores.

Keo Somaly is a bookworm who has decided to spend her two dollars of food money to buy her favourite book – Neang Macha, or Lady Fish. She says many youngsters share her taste, which helps to offset the cost. “Today is my turn to buy the book, and this one costs 7,000 riels [US$1.69)," she said. "My friends and I take turns [buying books] since we don’t have much money, but we love to read.”

Obstacles
The emergence of soap operas and foreign movies has some local writers worried. But Mao Samnang says her main concern is piracy. “Illegal copies can kill writers. Soon after a novel is printed, there are many photocopies available on the market,” she said. “The copy is much cheaper, but it is really harmful for novelists and for the printing houses.”

The Culture Ministry’s Kim Sophat said authors should sue those who produce illegal copies of their works. Seong Phos, a Royal University professor, agrees and says that counterfeiters should be treated as thieves under the law and should be punished – although he has never seen that happen.

The future
Dy Vutheara says that most themes currently explored in Khmer novels lack deep meaning. “Readers just scan the cover and the first few pages, and they can tell how the story will end,” she said.

Looking to the future, Mao Samnang said she wants to make some changes to her novels. She believes that with greater exposure to foreign books, and a desire to see greater liveliness and creativity in local books, young readers are ready for a new approach.

“Even though we novelists can barely survive, we try to keep our literature alive and maintain the long-lasting tradition of the Khmer novel for the next generation,” she said.

Source:  The Phnom Penh Post 

Somaly Mam – The 2009 TIME 100

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

In its annual TIME 100 issue under “Heroes & Icons”, TIME has named Somaly Mam as one of the world’s most influential people.

By Angelina Jolie

Somaly Mam and Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge regime were born around the same time — when the U.S. began secretly carpet bombing her country. The bombed villages became fertile ground for the Khmer Rouge’s growth and Pol Pot’s revolution.

By the time Mam was 5, the Khmer Rouge controlled Cambodia and had proceeded to kill 1.5 million people as Pol Pot implemented his radical form of communism. Torture, executions and forced labor were widespread. Families fled for safety, and massive internal displacement decimated Cambodian society in the years that followed.

Against this backdrop, 12-year-old Mam was sold into sexual slavery by a man who posed as her grandfather. She eventually ended up in a Phnom Penh brothel, beginning a decade of horrific rape and torture. She describes this period of her life simply: “I was dead. I had no affection for anyone.”

Terror is the weapon of choice for those who hold women in sexual bondage. They depend on their victims’ being frozen with fear. Traffickers hope that with enough pain and degradation, women will simply accept their fate as inescapable.
But Mam was able to escape. With the help of an aid worker from France, she fled Cambodia in 1993.

The fact that she escaped makes her unique, but what makes her truly extraordinary is that she went back. While, understandably, most people would spend the rest of their lives quietly recovering from their wounds, Mam decided to confront the system that continues to victimize Cambodian girls.  Full story>>>

Source:  TIME

Killing Fields: Long Road to Justice

Friday, May 1st, 2009

In its World Untold Stories on “Killing Fields: Long Road to Justice”, CNN sheds new light on the atrocities committed in Cambodia during the Khmer Rouge regime of 1975-1979.

Dan Rivers uncovers never before televised video of Khmer Rouge prison interrogator Ta Chan, allegations of corruption at UN-backed trial of Khmer leaders, and rarely seen archive footage of Pol Pot

In a groundbreaking new documentary CNN’s Dan Rivers on the hunt for Ta Chan, the chief interrogator of the Khmer Rouge’s notorious S-21 prison camp. For the program, CNN obtained exclusive and previously unseen footage of Ta Chan giving a tour of another Khmer Rouge jungle prison. CNN’s Rivers also details corruption allegations at the Phnom Penh trial of Khmer Rouge leaders, reporting on prosecution and defense fears that the trial will be tainted by the allegations. Full story>>>

Airtimes:

May 2: 8:30 a.m., 5:00 p.m., 10:30 p.m. GMT
May 3: 2:30 p.m. GMT
May 4: 2:30 a.m. GMT

Equivalent Cambodia airtimes (Cambodia is +7 hours difference from GMT):

Saturday, May 2 — 3:30 p.m., and then again at midnight
Sunday, May 3 — 5:30 a.m., 9:30 p.m. GMT
Monday, May 4 — 9:30 a.m. GMT

Source:  CNN